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  • In the Culinary Department....

    Aug 12, 2015

    Dixie Shephard displays the several entries that earned her top honors at the fair this year. She earned rosettes for her cake, jam, and whole wheat bread; the Degree of Honor sponsored-award of best selection of canned goods and creative display was also won by Shephard. She continued her winning with the best overall culinary award for her white cake frosted and tiered – sponsored by Dave Pippin - and the best pickle award for her refrigerator pickle sponsored by Rod Karst.... Full story

  • 4-H Is Alive and Strong in Valley County

    Aug 12, 2015

    Jack Cornwell won Overall Grand Champion, Heavy Weight Grand Champion and Pre-Jr. Reserve Showmanship Champion for his sheep.... Full story

  • Fair Garners Mixed Reviews, Plenty of Smiles

    James Walling, The Courier|Aug 5, 2015

    At press time, the 2015 Northeast Montana Fair is concluding with a finale in the way of Tuesday's Milk River Motorsports Derby. Carnival workers will then begin breaking down the midway and rides, many of which, by some accounts, were visibly broken down to begin with. Doris Ozark told the Courier that officials are well-aware of the raised eyebrows regarding rides: "Members of our board have been out there walking around periodically. Carnivals are a hard subject in rural communities. People...

  • Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame Announces 2015 Inductions

    Ariel Overstreet-Adkins, For The Courier|Aug 5, 2015

    On July 29, the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame & Western Heritage Center (MCHF & WHC) announced the eighth class of inductions into the Montana Cowboy Hall of Fame. The inductees were chosen from a field of candidates nominated by the general public. Inductees are honored for their notable contributions to the history and culture of Montana. “The board of trustees, our volunteer network from around the state, has reviewed this year’s nominations and completed the voting process,” said Bill Galt, White Sulphur Springs rancher and MCHF and WHC p...

  • Bottle Rocket Experiments take Center Stage in Library's Summer Program

    Patrick Burr, The Courier|Aug 5, 2015

    Twenty young boys and girls gather around two waist-high wooden tables strewn with rolls of masking tape, crayola pens, and scissored bits of clear plastic. “It’s called Newton’s Third Law of Motion,” says librarian Karen Anderson, reading from a loose sheet of paper. “To every action, there’s an equal and opposite reaction.” The children, upon the constructing and decorating of their rockets, amble over to a green trash can, above which a young assistant stands armed with a garden hose and a smile. Each child waits his or her turn at the f...

  • Traffic Fatality Claims Glasgow Resident

    Patrick Burr, The Courier|Aug 5, 2015

    Brenda Isakson Cook, 44, of Glasgow, died on Sunday night after her car flipped over near Hwy 2. “[The] vehicle was heading westbound on 1st Avenue North,” relayed Patrolman David Moon. “It struck a pothole and spun out [towards the] southwest. The driver lost control, and the vehicle left the road to the south, struck railroad ties and other metal objects, hit a loading ramp, then went airborne. It came down on its front end past the loading ramp before striking a barrel full of metal objects and rolling onto its top.” The accident was dis...

  • Crazy Days Winners Chosen

    Aug 5, 2015

    The winner of the Glasgow Courier's Crazy Days Costume Contest was The Fashionette. For their efforts, the ad they placed in the Courier will be free of charge. Pictured in the watermelon costumes they resurrected just for the occasion are L-R: Alexis Stahl, Kimberly Monson, Darlene Riggin-Stratton and Nita Pederson.... Full story

  • Local Gallery Features Work from GHS Senior

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 29, 2015

    Amy Nelson is 17 years old and a student at Glasgow High School. She's also a budding photographer with her own show filling the western wall of the Sean R. Heavey Gallery downtown for the month of August. Largely self-taught and self-directed, Nelson describes coming from an artistic family and seeking an outlet of her own. "I began experimenting with point-and-shoot cameras," Nelson explains in her artist statement, "and spent endless hours photographing my surroundings." The work on display...

  • City Council Lurches Forward With Fire Truck Plan

    Patrick Burr, The Courier|Jul 29, 2015

    July 20’s city council meeting proved a kinetic affair replete with town-altering decisions and the reactionary, hot-steam discord which oft accompanies the dynamism of purpose in such high anxiety scenarios. Change sends the flustered mind into a panic if one stops to inhale the fetid scent of its rotting roses. The council’s steady conviction towards action over the course of last Monday’s hour-plus-long session spared it from disagreement’s and miscommunication’s dual debilitations; questions into the perhaps irresponsible actions of others...

  • High-Flying Tarzan Marks Directorial Debut

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 29, 2015

    There is palpable excitement among area theatergoers about the prospect of Fort Peck Summer Theatre actors swinging from the old-growth rafters during their upcoming production of Tarzan. The Disney-inspired show, which opens July 31 and runs through August 16, is definitely going to involve some aerial acrobatics, albeit of the DIY variety. "Tarzan will swing," promises director Megan Wiltshire. "The space isn't very conducive to flying people," she adds, "so we've had to get creative."...

  • Police Brief: Parking Advisory

    Gwendolyne Honrud, The Courier|Jul 29, 2015

    Increased truck traffic due to harvest and construction is causing parking issues and crashes around Glasgow, according to Police Chief Barstad. Motorists are reminded not to park in the yellow no-parking zones or crosswalks and to exercise caution when pulling out around trucks and other vehicles. The Public Works department will be doing street maintenance throughout the month of August. Director Bob Kompel asks drivers to be vigilant around workers. Crack sealing is planned for the first part of the month. Asphalt patching and painting...

  • Longest Bowling Alley Event Planned for Spillway

    Jul 29, 2015

    Participants gather for the Fort Peck Spillway Bowling event August 1, 1965. Pictured L-R: Paul Dostert (age 11), Vernon Dostert, Tom Lund, Dick Fisher, and Joe Joseph (throwing the ball). Seated on right table: Ed Reddick and unidentified.... Full story

  • Hail, Hinsdale: July 27, 2015

    Jul 29, 2015

    The Courier's Virgil Vaupel measures hail collected in Hinsdale after thunderstorms hit the area on July 27. Elsewhere, the National Weather Service in Glasgow found that a large macroburst hit Glendive and the surrounding area, with higher intense microburst winds within the line of storms. Many residents reported these phenomena as a tornado, but photos and videos investigated by NWSG indicated a large shelf cloud with considerable scud clouds condensing ahead of the line. According to NWSG... Full story

  • FWP to Host Bison Impact Study Hearings

    JOLEEN TADEJ, For The Courier|Jul 29, 2015

    State wildlife officials will host five public hearings to discuss and take comment on a draft environmental impact statement (EIS) for bison conservation and management in Montana. Bison are currently designated as both a wildlife species in need of management and a species in need of disease control in Montana. The draft statewide bison conservation and management EIS, prepared by Montana Fish, Wildlife & Parks, considers the possibility of bison restoration somewhere in Montana where animals could be managed as a native species. Each... Full story

  • NE Montana Relay for Life Set for August 14-15

    Georgie Kulczyk, For The Courier|Jul 22, 2015

    Relay for Life is more than just an event. It's an experience. It's powerful. It's uplifting. It's HOPE. The Relay began in May 1985 when Dr. Gordy Klatt walked and ran around a track in Tacoma, Wash., for 24 hours. He ultimately raised $27,000 for the American Cancer Society and inspired others to join the movement. To date, Relay for Life has raised over $5 billion to fight cancer. Northeast Montana's Relay for Life will be held at the Valley County fairgrounds in Glasgow beginning August 14 a...

  • Rocky Mountain Vet Brings Mobile Clinic To Glasgow

    Georgie Kulczyk, The Courier|Jul 22, 2015

    It seems that some of the people who do the most good in the world are also the most unassuming. That was my immediate impression of Dr. Jeff Young. Although Animal Planet premiered a ten-part series starring Young as Dr. Jeff: Rocky Mountain Vet just four days prior to his visit in Glasgow, the compassionate vet was not the least bit "Hollywood." He was all business at times and it was clear that his priority was the care of the animals brought to him, but he also made himself available to his...

  • Community Heroes Day at Library Unites Public Service Branch Leaders, Educates Youth

    Patrick Burr, The Courier|Jul 22, 2015

    Flanked by an idle airboat, three ambulances, and a police cruiser, Glasgow Fire Department's blood-red truck sits unmanned on Third Street South, its hard-hued exterior baking in the sun's midday slow-burn. The driver, Rob Brunelle, stands a few yards away, clad in a milk-white GFD uniform, among a group of the other rescue vehicle's operators. At their feet a group of 20 children ages 4-and-up, crosslegged and, apart from one boy who takes it upon himself to crush a half-full plastic water bot...

  • Northeast Corner Represented in Montana State Elks Association

    Jul 22, 2015

    Smiley Johnson, Exalted Ruler of Glasgow Elks Lodge No. 1922, pictured with Wolf Point Elks Lodge Exalted Ruler and new Montana State Elks Association President Darla Downs at the MSEA summer convention in Wolf Point, July 17.... Full story

  • Hi-Line Hospitality Extends to Young Travelers

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 22, 2015

    Riding the Hi-Line as a freight hopper is a hit and miss proposition at the best of times. The threat of jail and/or harassment for repeatedly trespassing on railroad property is real enough. The physical challenges of spending one's days around masses of hulking metal where every surface is alternately hot and cold, dirty and bare, sharp and unforgiving, make this pastime a very serious high risk sport. It's dangerous. It's illegal coming and going. But according to the handful of adventurous...

  • Smoke, Health Risks Persist In Region

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 15, 2015

    Smoke from massive Canadian fires continues to affect air quality locally, according to Tanja Fransen of ​​National Weather Service Glasgow. Despite varying weather patterns, fire​s in Alberta, British Columbia, NW Territories, Saskatchewan and elsewhere continue to produce smoke that is entering the local weather system.​ The region has had over 5 million acres burn so far this year. "When the ​mid- and upper- level winds are right," reports Fransen, "it​ gets moved across Northeast Montana." A...

  • Wild Horse Stampede Kicks Up Dust, Weathers Storms

    Jul 15, 2015

    Taylor Price of Huntsville, Texas, competing in the bareback riding event Thursday, July 9. Street dance festivities were interrupted Friday night, July 12, due to thunderstorms. Other events were carried off without incident. See full rodeo results, Page 2B....

  • Fair Schedule Set, Vendors Sought

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 15, 2015

    The 2015 Northeast Montana Fair & Rodeo is coming up fast. This year's schedule features the Northern Prairie Auto Ram Rodeo Series, which includes the PRCA Rodeo/Wild Horse Race (August 2 at 6 p.m.), the Calf Scramble Calcutta, and the Ladies Calf Scramble. Other entertainments include country singer Cale Moon, the Prairie Pals petting zoo, Dr. Susan Rosen (aka the Mistress of Mesmerism), entertainer Freddy Prez, Steve's Fun Balloons, music from Ringling 5, and the Funtime Carnival. Themed evenings include the "tough enough to wear pink"...

  • Improvements Planned for Skylark Road

    James Walling, The Courier|Jul 15, 2015

    Valley County Commissioners have released plans to address road conditions on the 1.6 mile stretch of Skylark Road from Hwy 2 to the Sunnyside Golf and Country Club. At a hearing held at the Valley County Courthouse on May 11, 2009, a consensus was reached among members of the public amounting to an expressed wish that the county halt any major road resurfacing that would include the removal or reclamation of paved sections of the road. Six years later, commissioners have resolved to proceed with plans to replaced the badly-damaged asphalt...

  • Coast-to-Coast Via Glasgow

    Gwendolyne Honrud, The Courier|Jul 15, 2015

    Danielle Cummings and Ted Olds, of Brooklyn, N.Y., are cycling their own version of the American Cycling Association's Northern Tier route. The couple stopped in Glasgow July 10, met some new friends and gained followers for their blog. Cummings recently completed a master's degree and Olds is set to enter law school in August. Making the most of the time between these events, they are taking their dream vacation, cycling cross-country. Unlike other travelers through the area, they are not...

  • Where There's Smoke...

    Frank and Linda Vargo, For The Courier|Jul 8, 2015

    St. Marie Fire Chief Rob Esaias had his firefighters begin patrolling St. Marie over the holiday weekend in the hopes of preventing the shooting of fireworks that might cause a structural fire. On a nightly basis, our volunteer firefighters gave up family time to assist him in patrols. In spite of such efforts, the radio sounded at around 3:30 p.m. on July 4 and Esaias's voice came across with a sharp hint of concern, "I see black smoke billowing behind the old bowling alley. Alert all...

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