Wayne Byers Show Weekdays on CSi 2

CSi Weather…

.TONIGHT…Cloudy. Areas of fog through the night. Lows around 20. Northeast winds 5 to 10 mph shifting to the northwest after midnight.

.FRIDAY…Partly sunny. Highs in the upper 20s. Southwest winds 5 to 15 mph.

.FRIDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows in the lower 20s. West winds

10 to 15 mph.

.SATURDAY…Partly sunny. Highs around 40. Southwest winds 5 to

10 mph shifting to the west around 15 mph with gusts to around

30 mph in the afternoon.

.SATURDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows in the lower 30s.

.SUNDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 30s.

.SUNDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows 15 to 20.

.MONDAY…Mostly cloudy. Highs in the lower 20s.

.MONDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows zero to 5 above.

.TUESDAY…Sunny. Highs 15 to 20.

.TUESDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows 5 to 10 above.

.WEDNESDAY…Mostly cloudy. Highs in the mid 20s.

 

Thursday Afternoon and night…

Continue to expect areas of light snow, mixed precipitation, and
fog through the rest of the day. However, any additional
accumulations will be minimal. Use caution if traveling as roads
and intersections will still be slippery.

 

Jamestown  (CSi)  The Jamestown Optimist Spaghetti Supper will be on Friday January 31, from 5-p.m., to 7-p.m., at the Jamestown Civic Center, Exchequer Room, held in conjunction with the Sport & Recreation Show.

On Thursday’s Wayne Byers Show on CSi Cable 2, Optimist Club member’s Ken Astrup and Bob Toso said, proceeds to toward supporting youth in the community, including sports activities, and providing bike helmets.

Ken said this year 60 pounds of hamburger will go into the 45 gallons of spaghetti sauce, and 60 pounds of pasta will be cooked.  Bob said about 30 Optimist Club members will take part in the cooking and serving, expecting to feed around 500 people.

UJ Football players will participate, assisting the Optimist Club members.

Adult tickets at $10, Students $5, children under 5, free.

Tickets available at the door or from any Optimist Club member.

 

Valley City  (CSi)  The annual Valley City Fire Department’s Fireman’s Smoker will be held Friday, January 31st, at 6-p.m., at  the Valley City Eagles Club.  Those attending must be 21 years of age or older to attend. A $10 ticket includes food, games, a raffle and a pinochle tournament. The event starts at 6pm.

Valley City  (CSi)  The District 24 Democrat-NPL Party nominated its candidates for the 2020 election to the North Dakota Legislature on Sunday, January 26.

Larry Robinson was nominated for the North Dakota State Senate, along with Naomi Muscha and Bradly Edin for the North Dakota House of Representatives.

District 24 includes Barnes County as well as portions of Cass and Ransom counties

MINOT, N.D. (AP) — Bond was set at $1 million for a man charged as an accomplice to a fatal shooting in Minot. Twenty-four-year-old Michael Dennis II had been on the run for more than two weeks since the shooting death of 29-year-old Dominick Stephens and the attempted murder of a second man. He turned himself in Wednesday and appeared in district court in Minot. The Minot Daily News says police investigated a report of gunshots in a neighborhood Jan. 12 when a dispatchers received a report of a traffic crash. They found the driver of the vehicle, Stephens, had been shot. Two others are charged in the case, including one who has pleaded guilty to being an accomplice.

 

SISSETON, S.D. (AP) — Two North Dakota parents are suing the City of Sisseton and others, claiming their young daughter got sick after swimming in the local pool and suffered permanent kidney damage. A federal lawsuit filed by Christopher and Katie Cameron of West Fargo says the 8-year-old girl was diagnosed with E.coli at the Sanford Fargo Medical Center a few days after swimming in the Sisseton pool last July. KELO-TV reports the lawsuit claims at least four other children were sickened as well. The South Dakota Department of Health says a definitive source of the illness was not identified.

In world and national news…

GENEVA (AP) — The World Health Organization has declared the outbreak of new virus from China a global emergency after the number of infected people spiked more than tenfold in a week. The United Nations health agency made the determination on Thursday as more cases of human-to-human transmission were being reported worldwide. To date, China has reported more than 7,800 cases, including 170 deaths. Eighteen other countries have reported cases, as scientists race to understand how exactly the virus is spreading and how severe it is.

 

NEW YORK (AP) — Health officials are reporting the first U.S. case of person-to-person spread of the new virus from China. The latest patient is the husband of the Chicago woman who got sick after she returned from a trip to China. The new case announced Thursday is the sixth in the United States. The other five were travelers who fell ill after returning from China. Experts have said they have expected additional cases in the U.S., and that at least some limited spread of the disease in the country was likely.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Donald Trump’s impeachment trial has lurched into a final day of questions and answers before a crucial vote on calling witnesses. In the meantime, attention is focusing on a Trump attorney’s controversial defense and a Republican senator’s effort to expose the whistleblower who started the impeachment probe. Retired professor Alan Dershowitz is now saying his sweeping argument against conviction in the trial was misunderstood. Even some of Trump’s Republican supporters have been backing away from the argument _ basically that a president cannot be impeached for actions that would help him win rerelection if he believes his reelection would be in the public interest. Dershowitz says that’s not what he meant and not what he said.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the Senate is immersed in impeachment, the House is focusing its debate on matters of war and peace. The Democratic-controlled House has approved measures intended to reassert congressional authority over war powers. The House has approved a proposal to repeal the 2002 congressional authorization for the war in Iraq. And the House voted to prevent tax dollars from being used to take military action against Iran without congressional approval. The actions follow a Jan. 9 vote by the House asserting that President Donald Trump must seek approval from Congress before engaging in further military action against Iran.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Trump administration is continuing _ at least for two months _ its policy of not sanctioning foreign companies that work with Iran’s civilian nuclear program. But to signal that its pressure campaign against Tehran continues, Treasury announced new sanctions targeting the head of Iran’s nuclear program and the agency he directs. Separately, Treasury announced that a new financial channel has been created in Switzerland to allow monetary transactions that benefit Iranian medical patients and that shipments of cancer and transplant drugs have already been shipped to Iran through the channel.

 

 

 

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