CSi Weather…

REST OF TODAY…Sunny. Not as cool. Highs in the lower 50s. West winds 15 to 20 mph.

.TONIGHT…Increasing clouds. Lows in the mid 20s. North winds 5 to 10 mph shifting to the southeast after midnight.

.WEDNESDAY…Partly sunny in the morning then clearing. Highs in

the lower 50s. Southeast winds 5 to 10 mph.

.WEDNESDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s. East winds

5 to 10 mph.

.THURSDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s. East winds 5 to

10 mph.

.THURSDAY NIGHT…Increasing clouds. Lows in the upper 20s.

.FRIDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s.

.FRIDAY NIGHT…Mostly clear. Lows around 30.

.SATURDAY…Sunny. Highs around 60.

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

.SUNDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 50s.

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

.MONDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the lower 50s.

 

NDDoH

COVID-19 Stats

Mon. Mar. 1,  2021

11am

Barnes:

New Positives 0

Total Positives 1291

Active 7

Recovered 1253

 

Stutsman

New Positives  1

Total Positives 3291

Active 7

Recovered 3192

COVID-19 Test Results
The results listed are from the previous day. Additional data can be found on the NDDoH website.

Please note that from now on the daily news release will be sent Monday – Friday. The NDDoH dashboard will continue to be updated daily.

 

BY THE NUMBERS
133,262 Residents who received at least one dose of vaccine
224,184 Total COVID-19 vaccine doses administered
1,983 Total Tests from yesterday*
1,661,084 Total tests completed since the pandemic began
45 Positive Individuals from yesterday*****
28 PCR Tests
17 Antigen Tests
99,852 Total positive individuals since the pandemic began
3.09% Daily Positivity Rate**
571 Total Active Cases
-34 Change in active cases from yesterday
69 Individuals with a recovery date of yesterday****
97,836 Total recovered since the pandemic began
25 Currently hospitalized
+4 Change in hospitalizations from yesterday
3 New death(s) since 2/26
1,445 Total deaths since the pandemic began

 

INDIVIDUALS WHO DIED WITH COVID-19
Woman in her 60s from Bowman County
Man in his 70s from Burleigh County
Woman in her 80s from McKenzie County
 

NEW POSITIVE CASES REPORTED MONDAY BY COUNTY

Adams 0 Grant 0 Ransom 0
Barnes 0 Griggs 0 Renville 0
Benson 0 Hettinger 0 Richland 2
Billings 0 Kidder 0 Rolette 2
Bottineau 0 LaMoure 0 Sargent 0
Bowman 0 Logan 0 Sheridan 0
Burke 0 McHenry 1 Sioux 1
Burleigh 5 McIntosh 0 Slope 0
Cass 19 McKenzie 0 Stark 2
Cavalier 0 McLean 0 Steele 0
Dickey 0 Mercer 0 Stutsman 1
Divide 0 Morton 0 Towner 0
Dunn 0 Mountrail 2 Traill 0
Eddy 0 Nelson 2 Walsh 0
Emmons 0 Oliver 0 Ward 5
Foster 0 Pembina 0 Wells 0
Golden Valley 0 Pierce 0 Williams 2
Grand Forks 1 Ramsey 0

 

* Note that this includes PCR and antigen; it does not include individuals from out of state. 

**Individuals (PCR or antigen) who tested positive divided by the total number of people tested who have not previously tested positive (susceptible encounters). 

*** Number of individuals who tested positive with a PCR or antigen test and died from any cause while infected with COVID-19. Please remember that deaths are reported as they’re reported to us by the facility or through the official death record (up to 10-day delay). 

**** The actual date individuals are officially out of isolation and no longer contagious.

*****Daily positive numbers include people who tested with a PCR or antigen test. Totals may be adjusted as individuals are found to live out of state, in another county, or as other information is found during investigation.

For descriptions of these categories, visit the NDDoH dashboard.

For the most updated and timely information and updates related to COVID-19, visit the NDDoH website at www.health.nd.gov/coronavirus, follow on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram and visit the CDC website at www.cdc.gov/coronavirus.

Valley CCHD  Free COVID-19 testing events for the VCSU and Valley City communities will be held this week:  Again Friday March 5,  at the W.E. Osmon Fieldhouse, “The Bubble”.Rapid testing events will be held.  Each day request if you would like either the BiNax Rapid testing or the PCR test.

These are WALK-IN testing events. Colder temperatures have moved operations indoors. If you wish to be tested, please park your vehicle and enter through the west entrance. Handicap parking spaces and access are available at the east entrance. Preregistration at testreg.nd.gov is encouraged; one only needs to register once.

Jamestown  (CSi)  The Jamestown City Council met in Regular Session Monday evening at City Hall.  All members were present.

Under Resolutions:

Considered was approving an emergency measure effective 2021, and expiring , for a temporary moratorium on the enforcement of the Jamestown City Code pertaining to the sale and possession of alcohol on a public right-of-way at the location of an on-sale license holder with a temporary city permit by the on-sale license holder, to protect the public health, safety and welfare, and limit the impact of the pandemic upon the citizens of Jamestown, North Dakota.

The City Council approved moving on to draft an Ordinance, making it permanent, rather than a temporary emergency measure. The First Reading will come before the City Council

Considered was approving an existing emergency measure that expired February 5, 2021, for a temporary moratorium on the enforcement of the Jamestown City Code pertaining to the off-sale, sealed liquor sold with food curbside by on-sale liquor license holders, to protect the public health, safety and welfare, and limit the impact of the pandemic upon the citizens of Jamestown, North Dakota. The Council failed to approve a motion to continue the temporary moratorium.

 

Considered was extending the current emergency measure of requiring prior approval for indoor and outdoor gatherings of 50 or more people and a plan to limit the spread of the virus, with the listed exceptions, effective October 30, 2020, originally approved and intended to protect the public health, safety, and welfare and limit the impact of the pandemic upon the citizens of Jamestown, North Dakota. The City Council motion to extend the measure failed due to lack of a second.

Considered was extending the current emergency measure of requiring face coverings for all public-facing retail and service employees including liquor and eating establishments, and employees that may come in contact with the general public, effective October 30, 2020, originally approved and intended to protect the public health, safety, and welfare and limit the impact of the pandemic upon the citizens of Jamestown, North Dakota. The City Council voted 3-2 to extend, to be taken up again at the April, 5 2021 City Council meeting.  Council Member Kamlitz and Schloegel voting opposed.

The council unanimously approved that Monday’s actions supersede previously approved emergency measures.

Also on Monday’s agenda:

A  PUBLIC HEARING:

HEARING FROM THE AUDIENCE: No one spoke.  (Any person may address the City Council about any item not contained on the agenda. A maximum of 15 minutes is allotted for the hearing. If the full 15 minutes are not needed, the City Council will continue with the agenda. The City Council will take no official action on items discussed at the hearing, with the exception of referral to staff or Committee.)

CONSENT AGENDA ITEMS:

To provide more time to discuss controversial or disputed issues, the Council will consider the items on the consent agenda together at the beginning of the public meeting. These items are considered to be routine and will be enacted by one motion. If a member of the City Council or public requests to be heard on one of these items, the Council will remove the item from the consent agenda and consider that item individually.

Mayor Heinich removed Item F for further explanation, a Resolution to approve granting State of ND CARES Act reimbursements in the amounts of $200,000 to the Jamestown Parks and Recreation District to modify restroom facilities in the parks as the District determines to meet ADA compliance, and to approve $300,000 toward the City’s share of the aerial fire truck purchase to be transferred to the Equipment Replacement Fund. Mayor Heinrich explained the motion is to delete the ND CARES Act portion, with the funds, actually coming from the city and not federal funds.

The amended Resolution passed unanimously.

REGULAR AGENDA

 BIDS          

Considered opening bids for the University of Jamestown Storm Sewer Improvements Project, J20-00-120. Interstate Engineering’s Travis Dillman said bids were received, some of which were unable to be opened.

Assistant City Attorney Abby Gerioux explained the defects or other issues, making the bids unopenable and rejected.  One bid was opened from Nustad Brothers in the amount of $430,264 with alternated “A” at $64,000.

To consider opening bids for the 2021 Jamestown Water Main Improvements, IE project # J20-00-090, DWSRF NO. 4700498-12, City Project # 21-61.  Two bids were received one unable to be opened, as explained by Abby Gerioux, with not waivable defects.  A bid was  sumitted from Sellend Brothers at $1,749,604 dollars.

Considered was opening the bid for the 2021 Jamestown Civic Center Roofing Removal & Replacement of Area A. Four bids were received, three were rejected.  The low bid opened was from A&R at $118,280.

After review of the bids, they were discussed for council approval later in the meeting.

OTHER RESOLUTIONS:

Approved was  the request to allow chickens to be kept within city limits at 1301 4th St NE.

Discussed was whether a city Ordinance (Section 8.8, Appendix C, of the City Code) applies only to outbuildings or whether it also applies to single family dwellings. City Building Inspector, Tom Blackmore questioned corrugated steel siding for single family dwellings.

Mayor Heinrich said the so-called Shouses, (Shed-houses) and Barndominiums are becoming popular and that the type of siding needs to be further addressed, for all structures.

The City Council voted to approve further review of the issue.

Approved the Special Use Permit application submitted by Scott and Shannon Bintz for the property located at 8382 31 ½ Street SE, Jamestown, ND, as recommended by SRF Consultants.

BIDS CONTINUED:

Approved was a Resolution to award the bid for the University of Jamestown Storm Sewer Improvements – J20-00-120, to Nustad Brothers, in the amount of $430,264 .

Approved a Resolution to award the bid for the 2021 Jamestown Water Main Improvements, IE project # J20-00-090, DWSRF NO. 4700498-12, City Project # 21-61, in the amount of $1,508,966.64 , with the award contingent upon ND Department of Environmental Quality approval.

Approved  a Resolution to award the bid for the 2021 Jamestown Civic Center Roofing Removal & Replacement of Area A, A&R Roofing in the amount of $118,280 .

ORDINANCES:

Approved a FIRST READING: Concerning an ordinance to amend and re-enact Ordinance No. 329 by amending the District Map to change the zoning of a portion of Government Lot 1 within the NE ¼ of Section 26, Township 140N, Range 64W, laying and being North of a line extended from the intersection of the South boundary line of 9th Street with the East boundary of said lot, consisting of 8.4 acres in Stutsman County, North Dakota from R-1A (One-Family Residential District and Duplex or Two-Family District) to P-U-D (Plan Unit Development). The property is located at 901 4th Ave NW. (Proposed Hidden River Acres).

 

APPOINTMENTS:

Appointed was Carol Jean Wolf to serve as the City member and Charlotte Freborg to serve as the Joint City/County member of the James River Valley Library System Board for three year terms to March 2024.

Appointed Leroy Gross to serve as the City employee representative and Dan Buchanan, as the City Council representative on the Pension Committee for one year terms to March 2022.

 

MAYOR AND COUNCIL MEMBER’S REPORT:

Council Member Steele commended Central Valley Health District and Robin Iszler in coordinating the Stutsman and Logan county vaccine distribution.

Mayor Heinrich said the one third funding for the City Fire Department ladder truck has been approved by the ND House and moves on to the state senate.

OTHER BUSINESS:

Approved was a Resolution to approve renewal of the Farm Lease Agreement with Ben Busch for the 2021 crop year.

The Meeting was shown live on CSi Cable 67 followed by replays.

 

Update

Valley City  (NDHP)  The North Dakota Highway Patrol, Barnes County Sheriff’s Office  investigated a two vehicles crash Saturday about 12:50-p.m.at the intersection of North Dakota Highway 1 and Barnes County 22, one mile east of Sanborn.

A 2015 Nissan Murano operated by 70 year old Thomas Gawronski, of Cooperstown, was southbound on ND State Hwy. 1 approaching the intersection with Barnes Co. Rd. 22.

A 2017 Chevrolet Equinox operated by 20 year old, Celeste Piatz, from Valley City, ND was westbound on Co. Rd. 22. Hwy. 1 is the through road and traffic on Co. Rd. 22 must stop and yield to traffic on Hwy. 1.
Piatz entered the intersection as Gawronski was entering it. Gawronski’s vehicle struck the right rear of Piatz’s vehicle at a right angle. After the collision, the vehicles blocked the southbound lanes of Hwy. 1.

Barnes County Ambulance transported Gawronski and 63 year old Kath Soma-Gawronski, of Cooperstown to Mercy Hospital in Valley City. They were treated and released. The 70 YOA female from Piatz’s vehicle was transported by private party Mercy Hospital in Valley City and treated and released. Celeste Piatz, was not injured.

The  occupants were all wearing seat belts.
Piatz was cited for Failed to Yield at a Stop Intersection, a traffic citation.

At the scene were: NDHP, Barnes County SO, Sanborn FD, Barnes County Ambulance.
The crash remains under investigation by the North Dakota Highway Patrol.

 

Valley City  (Chamber 3-1-21)  This week, Valley City Mayor Dave Carlsud is sending another message to Valley City residents.

Hello Folks,

THE NORTH DAKOTA WINTER SHOW will be March 10-14. Get your event tickets now. FREE ENTRANCE to the building.

 

A note from “the power outage” we incurred here awhile back. There were a number of events creating the outage from supplementary power sources to timely notifications and they are being researched through the federal level. Though it was a “perfect storm”, knowledge gained from this experience will help going forward. “Never let a good crisis go to waste”.

 

Missouri River Energy Services, our supplier, successfully hedged the market purchasing energy and fuel prior to the weather event. Those purchases will help stabilize our current rates.

 

We had good ice on the river a few days ago, though now runoff has caused substantial amounts of water on top and changes in currents may have caused thinning ice in places. Please be careful. ICE always has a “degree of danger”!

 

For no particular reason, be nice to someone today.

 

“LOVE OF LOCAL”. Buy Chamber Bucks in the Rosebud Center or City Hall at a discount and redeem them in Valley City businesses at full face value. Each person can purchase up to $1,000.00 worth (including prior purchases). (buy $1000 get $1250)

 

COVID VACCINATIONS, visit the City-County Health District website, citycountyhealth.org or call 845-8518.

 

“We must be interested in finding the best way, not in having our own.”     

(John Wooden)                                                    

 

Blessings, Pray, Be Safe and Be Kind,

Dave

Dave Carlsrud

Jamestown  ( CSi) Middle School Principal Ryan Harty has been named as the Region 5 Secondary School Principal of the Year by the NDASSP.

All principals from their regions are making application for becoming the 2021 North Dakota State Principal of the Year.

If selected, Harty would represent North Dakota at the 2021 NASSP National Conference and be in the running for the 2022 National NASSP Principal of the Year.

The North Dakota POY will be selected in March and announced in the beginning of April 2021.

 

Bismarck  (NDDPI) State School Superintendent Kirsten Baesler is encouraging North Dakota public school students and families to take part in an online survey to describe their K-12 learning experiences during the current school year.

The brief survey asks several questions, including whether student participants went to school in-person, via distance learning, or a combination of the two from August 2020 through February 2021. It is intended for public school students and families in grades K-12, and should take no more than 15 minutes to complete, the superintendent said.

 

The survey asks about whether students had reliable internet service and whether their school provided a tablet or similar connection device. It inquires about whether school staff kept in touch with students, whether “more challenging lessons were available, if needed,” and whether class grading and assessment was “clear and consistent.”

 

The survey is a collaborative project between the Department of Public Instruction and the North Dakota University System. It provides students and their families an opportunity to express how North Dakota’s public education system worked for them during the COVID-19 pandemic.

 

Baesler says, “We need to hear the voices of our students and families about the conditions they experienced during the current school year. This information is important as we try to pinpoint successes in North Dakota public education, and how and where we need to improve.”

 

A link to the survey is here. The link will also be available through the Department of Public Instruction’s social media channels. North Dakota students and families who wish to take the survey are asked to do so by Sunday, March 14.

 

Jamestown  (Chamber)       Members of the Jamestown Area Chamber of Commerce Ambassadors held a ribbon cutting ceremony for Jamestown Inflatables. They recently opened a new business called Party Crashers Jamestown at 1211 8th St SE here in Jamestown. This new business offers year-round fun for the whole family with open play times and birthday party rentals.

 

Businesses qualify for a ribbon-cutting ceremony if they open, move, remodel, are under new ownership or change their name.  For more information, contact Emily Bivens by emailing: director@jamestownchamber.com or call the chamber at 701-252-4830.

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — James Leiman has been appointed North Dakota Commerce Commissioner after serving for three years as one of the agency’s directors. Leiman has been the department’s director of economic development and finance since March 2018. Prior to working for the state, Leiman served as city administrator in Ada, Minnesota from 2015 to 2018 and as chief of integration and synchronization for the U.S. Department of Veterans Affairs from 2011 to 2015. He replaces Michelle Kommer, who resigned in October to rejoin the private sector. Shawn Kessel filled in as interim commissioner for the last four months. Kessel will continue as the agency’s deputy commissioner and chief operating officer.

 

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — The state of North Dakota seized about $500,000 in forfeited assets from criminal activity in a nearly a year’s time. In the first report compiling statewide data on civil asset forfeitures, nearly $522,000 in cash was seized statewide from August 2019 to June 2020. Of that total, about $34,000 was returned to defendants and $10,000 went to North Dakota Child Support Enforcement. The remaining amount was forfeited and divided among the agencies involved in investigation and prosecution of the criminal cases. In 2019, the law was changed to require a higher standard of proof for forfeitures and a conviction to initiate forfeiture proceedings in court.

OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — A new monthly survey shows continued economic improvement in nine Midwest and Plains states, but business leaders expressed concerns about rising inflation and bottlenecks in the supply chain causing delays. The Creighton University Mid-America Business Conditions for February released Monday came in at a strong 69.6 from January’s 67.3. Any score above 50 on the survey’s indexes suggests growth, while a score below 50 suggests recession. But Creighton University economist Ernie Goss, who oversees the survey, said more than eight out of 10 supply managers reported supply bottlenecks and delays of up to five months. The monthly survey covers Arkansas, Iowa, Kansas, Minnesota, Missouri, Nebraska, North Dakota, Oklahoma and South Dakota.

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — An Iowa company is leading a $2 billion effort to capture carbon monoxide from Midwestern ethanol plants and pipe it to North Dakota where it would be buried deep underground. The greenhouse gas is generated during the fermentation process and contributes to climate change when it’s released into the atmosphere. Summit Carbon Solutions says the plan is to gather carbon monoxide from at least 17 ethanol plants and pipe it to North Dakota where it would be injected into wells and stored underground. The carbon monoxide would be compressed into liquid form at the ethanol plants where feeder pipelines would send it to a larger pipeline that would extend across the Upper Midwest to North Dakota.

In sports….

BOYS PREP BASKETBALL=

Class B District 5=

Region Qualifier=

Edgeley-Kulm-Montpelier 66, Griggs Central/Midkota Co-op 50

Ellendale 70, Carrington 46

 

Class B District 6=

Championship=

Linton-HMB 55, Kidder County 41

Region Qualifier=

Napoleon 54, South Border 40

Strasburg-Zeeland 60, Medina 55

 

Class B District 7=

Championship=

Four Winds/Minnewaukan 73, New Rockford-Sheyenne 32

Region Qualifier=

Benson County 60, Dakota Prairie 49

Harvey/Wells County 66, Lakota 46

 

Class B District 8=

Championship=

Langdon-Edmore-Munich 70, Dunseith 64

Region Qualifier=

North Star def. Rolla, forfeit

Rolette-Wolford def. St. John, forfeit

 

Class B District 9=

Championship=

Flasher 57, Shiloh Christian 56

Region Qualifier=

New Salem-Almont 59, Solen 50

Standing Rock 61, Grant County 32

 

Class B District 10=

Championship=

Garrison 62, Central McLean 57

Region Qualifier=

Washburn 67, Center-Stanton 47

Wilton-Wing 60, Max 38

Tournament=

Oakes 59, LaMoure-Litchville-Marion 49

 

Class B District 11=

Championship=

Drake-Anamoose 78, Rugby 49

Region Qualifier=

Bottineau 61, Nedrose 51

Velva 62, Westhope-Newburg 48

 

Class B District 12=

Championship=

Our Redeemer’s 53, Bishop Ryan 41

Region Qualifier=

Lewis and Clark-Berthold 57, Mohall-Lansford-Sherwood 47

Surrey 57, South Prairie 37

 

Class B District 15=

Championship=

White Shield 70, Lewis and Clark North Shore 32

Region Qualifier=

Trenton 64, Parshall 37

Trinity Christian 83, Alexander 42

 

Class B District 16=

Championship=

Powers Lake 65, Ray 50

Region Qualifier=

Burke County 44, Divide County 41

Stanley 51, Kenmare 39

 

Class B Boys Basketball Poll

(First-place votes in parentheses)

12th POLL

Team Rec. Pts. LW

1. Four Winds/Minn. (20) 19-1 200 1

2. Grafton 19-2 168 3

3. Enderlin 17-3 154 4

4. Edgeley/KM 18-2 114 2

5. Dickinson Trinity 18-3 104 6

6. Langdon/EM 17-3 87 5

7. Beulah 17-4 82 7

 8. Powers Lake 18-2 76 8

9. Linton/HMB 17-3 37 10

10. North Border 16-2 31 NR

Others receiving votes: Kindred (15-4), Central Cass (16-4), Ellendale (17-4), Flasher (16-3), Oakes (15-6), Dunseith (16-3), Hillsboro-Central Valley (14-6).

DICKINSON   (VCSU) – The Valley City State volleyball team dropped a five-set battle to Dickinson State in a non-conference matchup Monday, 26-24, 17-25, 16-25, 27-15, 12-15.

Dickinson State started out to an early 11-7 lead in the first set when Valley City State took a 9-1 run to build a 16-12 lead. The Blue Hawks rallied back to tie the set at 20-20 on a kill from Ashlyn Hamilton. Then, trailing 24-23, VCSU scored the next three straight points including a Bailey Nelson kill to take set one, 26-24.

The Vikings narrowly trailed 10-7 in the second set when the Blue Hawks took a 6-1 rally to lead 16-8. Valley City State got back within four points on a kill from Bailey Nelson at 19-15 but couldn’t get closer as Dickinson State took the second set 25-17.

Vikings opened the third set with an early 10-5 lead on back-to-back kills from Macey Kvilvang and Maara Nelson. The Blue Hawks took a nine-point rally and later found a six-point rally to take the third set 25-16.

Trailing 18-21 in the fourth set, a kill from Katie Juarez and ace serve from Maara Nelson helped the Vikings inch closer. A solo block from Bailey Nelson tied the game at 23-23. Trailing 24-25, Dickinson State committed back-to back errors followed by a Caitlyn Fischbach kill to give the Vikings the fourth set 27-25.

Vikings opened the final set with a 5-2 run when Dickinson State answered with five straight points to lead 7-5. A Katie Juarez kill followed by a block from Juarez and Bailey Nelson tied it up at 7-7. The Vikings would tie it up again at 9-9 on a solo block from Nelson. Dickinson State took the next four points and put it away on a kill from Karlie Cleveland to take the final set 15-12.

The Vikings drop to 4-10 overall and go into the second half of conference play with a 3-3 record in the North Star. Dickinson State improves to 4-4 overall and currently sits at 3-3 in conference play.

Sophomore Bailey Nelson led the Vikings with 12 kills and six blocks Monday while Katie Juarez added seven kills and seven digs. Maara Nelson recorded a team-high 13 digs and Jakenda Short posted a team-high 16 assists. Kallene Klever recorded 12 digs and 12 assists for the Vikings.

Dickinson State’s Baylie Dashner recorded a game-high 19 kills while Mackenna Johnson added 13 kills Monday. Karlie Cleveland recorded 42 set assists and Sarah Dobitz added 17 digs for the Blue Hawks.

UP NEXT: The Vikings go on the road to open the second half of conference this weekend. VCSU faces Waldorf on Friday, March 5, at 7 p.m. The Vikints then take on Viterbo on Saturday, March 6, at 12 p.m.

 

Jamestown  (UJ) The top-ranked University of Jamestown women’s volleyball returned to action since winning the GPAC regular season title last November, sweeping NCAA Division 2 University of Mary Monday night at Harold Newman Arena. Set scores were 25-13, 25-11, and 25-12.

Jamestown moves to 19-1 overall while the game was an exhibition for the Marauders.

Jayla Ritter (JR/Forest Lake, Minn.) helped get the Jimmies going in set one, finishing with four kills while hitting .429. Anna Holen (JR/LaMoure, N.D.) and Kalli Hegerle (JR/West Fargo, N.D.) each had three kills in the set, as UJ outhit the Marauders .171 to -.108. Tied at 8-8 in the first, UJ won 10 of the next 12 points, opening up an eight-point lead after a block by Hegerle and Ritter.

Holen provided the hot hand for UJ in the second set, hitting .500 with five kills. Corina Huff (SR/Breezy Point, Minn.) had three kills in the frame, hitting .750. UMary held a 5-4 lead early in the set, but Kadyn Mehring (SO/Carrington, N.D.) started a string of three straight Jimmie kills as part of a 10-2 run that put Jamestown in front for good. Jamestown won 11 of the final 15 points in the set to take a 2-0 match lead.

Huff, Hegerle, and Holen all had three kills and Taylor Sabinash (JR/Kensal, N.D.) added a pair in the third set. Jamestown only hit .175 in the set, but took advantage of four service aces and seven UMary attack errors. Leading 13-6, the Jimmies rattled off nine straight points for a commanding 22-6 lead.

Holen finished with 11 kills while Huff had eight and Hegerle seven. Huff hit a team-high .462 on the night.

Megan Gaffaney (JR/Jamestown, N.D.) passed out 19 assists and Jackie Meiklejohn (JR/Dickey, N.D.) 18. Holen racked up 20 digs while Sydney Ellingson (SR/Langdon, N.D.) was also in double figures with 17. Huff and Hegerle each had three total blocks.

Jamestown travels to Bismarck Wednesday to face the Marauders at 7 p.m.

NBA…

UNDATED (AP) — Joel Embiid had 24 points and 13 rebounds, and Shake Milton and Furkan Korkmaz came off the bench to help the Philadelphia 76ers to a 130-114 rout of the Indiana Pacers. Ben Simmons had 18 points and six rebounds. Milton led the Sixers with 26 points and Korkmaz hit six 3-pointers and scored 19 points. Malcolm Brogdon led the Pacers with 20 points.

In other NBA Monday action:

— Damian Lillard had 23 points and 10 assists and the Portland Trail Blazers snapped a four-game losing streak with a 123-111 victory over the Charlotte Hornets. Robert Covington had a season-high 21 points and 10 rebounds while Carmelo Anthony added 29 points off the bench for the Blazers, who got off to a sluggish start but led by as many as 19 points in the final quarter. LaMelo Ball had 30 points for the Hornets, who have not won in Portland since March 2008.

— James Harden had 30 points, 15 assists and 14 rebounds and the Brooklyn Nets overcame a collapse in the final seconds of regulation to beat the Spurs 124-113 in overtime. The Nets snapped a 17-game losing streak in San Antonio. Kyrie Irving added 27 points and Bruce Brown had 23 for Brooklyn, which bounced back after a loss to Dallas on Saturday ended its eight-game win streak.

— Zion Williamson had 26 points, 10 rebounds and five assists, and the New Orleans Pelicans held off the NBA-leading Utah Jazz, 129-124. Brandon Ingram scored 26, Lonzo Ball added 23 and JJ Redick scored 17, highlighted by two four-point plays. Bojan Bogdanovic hit seven 3s and finished with a game-high 31 points for Utah, which lost for just the eighth time this season, but the second time in three games.

— Nikola Jokic (NEE’-koh-lah YOH’-kich) dominated with 39 points and 14 rebounds, and the Denver Nuggets beat the Chicago Bulls 118-112. The three-time All-Star scored 17 in the fourth quarter to help the Nuggets come away with the win after blowing a 15-point lead. Jokic also finished with nine assists, just missing his 50th career triple-double. All-Star Zach LaVine led Chicago with 23 points and grabbed nine rebounds. Coby White added 20 points and 10 rebounds.

— Luka Doncic had 33 points, 10 rebounds and nine assists, Kristaps Porzingis played a nearly flawless second half and the Dallas Mavericks beat the Orlando Magic 130-124. Jalen Brunson scored 17 of his 24 points in the second half as the Mavericks broke open a close game. Dallas has won four of its last five and nine of 12. Nikola Vucevic had 29 points, 15 rebounds and eight assists for the Magic, who dropped their fourth straight.

— Collin Sexton had 39 points and the Cleveland Cavaliers handed the hapless Houston Rockets their 12th straight loss with a 101-90 victory. The Cavaliers have won four straight after losing their previous 10 games. It’s Houston’s longest losing streak since dropping 15 in a row in 2001 and the first time the Rockets have lost five straight at home since March 2006.

NBA-HAWKS-PIERCE FIRED

Hawks fire Pierce as coach following disappointing start

ATLANTA (AP) — Atlanta Hawks coach Lloyd Pierce has been fired following a slow start to a season of heightened expectations. Hawks president Travis Schlenk announced the move Monday in a short statement released by the team.

The Hawks are 14-20 and 11th in the Eastern Conference, following a 109-99 loss at Miami on Sunday night. The teams play again in Miami on Tuesday. Schlenk says the move, which comes less than a week before Atlanta hosts the All-Star Game, is timed to help the team enjoy a second-half resurgence. Pierce, hired in 2018, was 63-120 (.344) with the Hawks. He missed the playoffs in each of his two completed seasons.

In other NBA news:

— Toronto’s game against Detroit that was scheduled for today is being postponed until Wednesday, a move that the NBA hopes gives the Raptors time to get back onto the floor. The Raptors were scheduled to play Chicago on Sunday and that game was postponed indefinitely because of positive tests and contact tracing issues. The league cautioned that Wednesday is a tentative rescheduling date for the game against the Pistons and is “pending additional test results.”

COLLEGE BASKETBALL-NIT-MOVING TO TEXAS

NIT moves 2021 event to Texas, interrupting 83-year NY run

DALLAS (AP) — The NIT is moving the entire 2021 event to Texas, taking the semifinals and championship game out of New York’s Madison Square Garden for the first time in the 83-year history of college basketball’s oldest postseason tournament.

The pandemic is also reducing the field to 16 teams from the usual 32. All games are set for two venues in the Dallas area. First-round games will be played March 17-20, with the quarterfinals March 25. The semifinals are set for March 27, followed by the championship game the next day. Last year’s event was canceled because of COVID-19.

TOP 25-COLLEGE BASKETBALL

UNDATED (AP) — Sam Hauser scored 18 points and No. 21 Virginia ended a three-game skid by handing Miami its sixth loss in a row, 62-51. Trey Murphy III added 12 points for the 16-6 Cavaliers, who took command with a 14-2 run to end the first half. Miami closed within six points several times after halftime, but each time Virginia kept the Hurricanes from getting closer.

VIRUS OUTBREAK-COLLEGE BASKETBALL

Washington State-Arizona State game canceled

UNDATED (AP) — The men’s basketball game between Washington State and Arizona State scheduled for Monday has been canceled due to COVID-19 issues in the Cougars’ program.

Arizona State won 77-74 in overtime when the teams played on Saturday, but a Washington State player tested positive for COVID-19 Monday morning.

The game had been rescheduled from earlier in the season due to coronavirus issues at Arizona State.

The Sun Devils close out the regular season against Colorado and Utah this week.

NHL

— Max Pacioretty scored twice, including the game-winner in overtime, to lift the Vegas Golden Knights to a 5-4 win over the Minnesota Wild. The Golden Knights erased a third-period, two-goal deficit to earn the victory in a matchup between the West Division’s top two teams. After Alex Tuch scored the tying goal with 42 seconds left in regulation, it was Pacioretty punching home the game-winner after Vegas captain Mark Stone fed him with his fifth primary assist of the game.

 

UNDATED (AP) — Martin Necas scored 1:59 into overtime and the Carolina Hurricanes beat the Florida Panthers 3-2 on Monday night. Brett Pesce and Vincent Trochek also scored for the Hurricanes, who won their second straight at Florida. Alex Nedeljkovic had a career-high 44 saves. Frank Vatrano and Eetu Loustarinen scored in the third period to give Florida the lead, and Chris Driedger finished with 24 saves. The Panthers have lost three of four.

In other action on the ice:

— Michael Hutchinson stopped 31 shots or his sixth career shutout, and the Toronto Maple Leafs beat the Edmonton Oilers 3-0. Morgan Rielly and William Nylander each had a goal and an assist, and Zach Hyman also scored for Toronto. The Maple Leafs blanked Edmonton for the second straight game, following a 4-0 win Saturday. Mikko Koskinen started in goal for the Oilers and allowed three goals on 10 shots before being replaced by Mike Smith to start the second period. Smith had 13 saves in relief. The teams meet again Wednesday night in Edmonton to finish a three-game series.

— Dakota Joshua scored in his NHL debut and Zach Sanford got two goals in the St. Louis Blues’ 5-4 victory over the Anaheim Ducks. Jordan Kyrou and David Perron also scored for the Blues, who won for the second time in five games. Ville Husso made 29 saves for the Blues in the same arena where he earned his first NHL victory on Jan. 31. Isac Lundeström scored three goals for the Ducks, whose winless skid stretched to a season-worst seven games. John Gibson stopped 30 shots.

 

— Drake Batherson scored twice, giving him six straight games with a goal, and the Ottawa Senators beat the Calgary Flames 5-1. Artem Anisimov and Thomas Chabot also scored for the Senators, and Colin White had an empty-netter. Tim Stutzle contributed two assists to help Ottawa win for the fourth time in five games. The 22-year-old Batherson has seven goals in his last six games. He matched Jason Spezza for the longest goal streak in franchise history. Matt Murray, who was pulled from Saturday’s 6-3 loss to the Flames, stopped 27 shots for the win.

— Thatcher Demko stopped 27 shots for his first career shutout as the Vancouver Canucks scored three goals in the first period and beat the Winnipeg Jets 4-0. Nate Schmidt, J.T. Miller and Nils Hoglander scored early to help the Canucks end a four-game losing streak (0-3-1). Elias Pettersson added an empty-netter. Connor Hellebuyck had 15 saves for Winnipeg, which snapped a four-game winning streak, The teams finish their two-game series Tuesday night in Winnipeg.

NFL…

—The Chicago Bears have hired former Texas coach Tom Herman in an analyst role on Matt Nagy’s staff, his first NFL job after more than two decades of college coaching. Herman led Texas to a 32-18 record and four bowl victories the past four seasons. But he failed to deliver a Big 12 title or lead the Longhorns into national championship contention and got fired in January, with Steve Sarkisian replacing him.
TEMPE, Ariz. (AP) — J.J. Watt has agreed to a two-year contract with the Arizona Cardinals. The team announced the deal with the free-agent edge rusher on Monday.Watt was released last month by the Houston Texans, for whom he won three NFL Defensive Player of the Year awards. The 31-year old Watt has been one of the NFL’s best players for a decade, but asked out in Houston, which is undergoing a roster upheaval. Watt joins another former Texans star, wide receiver DeAndre Hopkins, in Arizona. Hopkins was acquired by the Cardinals in a one-sided trade a year ago.

In other NFL news:

—The Houston Texans released veteran quarterback Josh McCown on Monday, likely ending his 18-year NFL career. The Texans signed the 41-year-old in November, but he did not appear in a game. McCown joined the Texans after spending the early part of the season on the Eagles practice squad.

— The Kansas City Chiefs expect Patrick Mahomes to be ready for offseason workouts following surgery on his toe, and they are optimistic that offensive tackles Eric Fisher and Mitchell Schwartz could be available for the start of training camp. Mahomes had surgery on Feb. 10, shortly after the Chiefs were walloped by the Tampa Bay Buccaneers in the Super Bowl, to repair a turf toe injury that had hobbled him throughout the playoffs.

 

MLB-IN-GAME VIDEO

In-game video returning to baseball for 2021

UNDATED (AP) — Major League Baseball has cleared the way for the return of in-game video on dugout iPads beginning on opening day, with catcher signals obscured by a computer program.

For decades, baseball players retreated to a clubhouse video room to check out their at-bats or take a closer look at a reliever coming into the game. But that practice was prohibited in 2020, contributing to a down year for offense during the pandemic-shortened season. Washington Nationals first baseman Ryan Zimmerman, who opted out of last season because of COVID-19 concerns, calls video “a huge part of the game.”

In other MLB news:

— Washington Nationals slugger Juan Soto had to sit out the team’s exhibition home opener because he fouled a ball off his right foot a day earlier. Manager Dave Martinez said the 2020 NL batting champion originally was scheduled to play Monday against the Houston Astros. But then the mishap happened during live batting practice Sunday.

— The New York Mets will honor the late Tom Seaver by wearing a “41” patch on their home and away jerseys this season. The Mets say they’ll pay tribute to the Hall of Fame pitcher by putting his number on the right sleeves of their uniforms. Seaver died Aug. 31 at age 75. The right-hander is the Mets career leader in wins, ERA and strikeouts. He earned three Cy Young Awards with the Mets and pitched them to their first World Series championship in 1969. The Mets plan to unveil a Seaver statue at Citi Field this year.

— Vi Ripken, matriarch of the famed Orioles family that includes Hall of Fame son Cal Ripken Jr. and once the victim of a bizarre kidnapping, has died. She was 82. Family spokesman John Maroon said she died Friday, a day before her birthday. Violet and Cal Ripken Sr. married in 1957 and he managed in the late 1980s, when sons Cal Jr. and Billy played for him.

OBIT-ANDY HOFFMAN

Father of boy who stole show at ’13 Huskers spring game dies

ATKINSON, Neb. (AP) — The father of the young cancer patient who captured the hearts of college football fans when he ran for a touchdown in Nebraska’s spring game eight years ago has died after a seven-month battle with brain cancer.

The Team Jack Foundation announced Andy Hoffman died Monday. He was 42. His son Jack was diagnosed with brain cancer in 2011. Wearing a miniature Cornhuskers uniform, Jack took a handoff and ran 69 yards into the end zone, with players mobbing him and lifting him on their shoulders. Andy was diagnosed with cancer last summer.

In world and national news…

WASHINGTON (AP) — Democrats’ hopes of including a minimum wage increase in their huge COVID-19 relief bill seem all but dead. That’s become clear as Senate leaders prepare to bring their own version of the House-passed aid package to the chamber’s floor as early as Wednesday. Aides say top Democrats have abandoned a potential amendment threatening tax increases on big companies that don’t boost workers’ pay to certain levels. Last week the Senate parliamentarian said the chamber’s rules forbade inclusion of a straight-out minimum wage increase in the relief measure. For now, Democrats seem to have exhausted their most realistic options for quickly salvaging the pay hike.

 

A new report by the Geneva-based Insecurity Insight and the University of California, Berkeley’s Human Rights Center has identified more than 1,100 threats or acts of violence against health care workers and facilities last year. The report says about 400 of those attacks were linked to the coronavirus, underscoring the dangers surrounding health care workers at a time when they are needed most. Researchers saw the most attacks last spring and summer as the coronavirus swept across the globe. Yet recent events in Nigeria, where two nurses were attacked last month, and the Netherlands, where rioters in January set fire to a coronavirus testing center, prove the threat remains.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — President Joe Biden’s choice to head the Securities and Exchange Commission is coming before a Senate panel in a virtual hearing Tuesday as a roiling stock-trading drama spurs clamor for tighter regulation of Wall Street. A chairman of the Commodity Futures Trading Commission during the Obama administration, Gary Gensler has experience as a tough markets regulator amid the financial crisis. More recently he has been in the academic world. Biden’s selection of Gensler to lead the SEC signals a goal of turning the Wall Street watchdog agency toward an activist role after a deregulatory stretch during the Trump administration.

 

BEIJING (AP) — Global stock markets and Wall Street futures are lower after a selloff in U.S. Treasury bonds eased, helping to allay concern about a possible rise in interest rates. Shanghai, Tokyo and Hong Kong closed lower and Frankfurt retreated in early trading. London opened higher. The future for Wall Street’s benchmark S&P 500 index was off 0.5%. Overnight, the index closed up 2.4% for its best day in nine months after Treasurys edged higher. That would lead to lower market interest rates and less downward pressure on economic growth. Investors were watching Washington as an economic stimulus bill by the House of Representatives advanced to the Senate.

 

BOSTON (AP) — The business that preserves and protects Dr. Seuss’ legacy has announced it will stop publishing six titles because of racist and insensitive imagery. Dr. Seuss Enterprises tells The Associated Press in a statement on Tuesday, the author and illustrator’s birthday, that the books portray people in ways that are hurtful. It says the decision to cease publication and sales of Seuss books including “And to Think That I Saw It on Mulberry Street” follows months of deliberations. Books by Dr. Seuss, who was born Theodor Geisel in 1904 and died in 1991, have been increasingly criticized over the way Blacks, Asians and others are portrayed.

 

 

 

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