CSi Weather…

.TONIGHT…Mostly cloudy. A 30 percent chance of light snow after midnight. Lows around 30. Northwest winds 5 to 15 mph.

.SATURDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs around 40. Northwest winds 15 to 20 mph.

.SATURDAY NIGHT…Partly cloudy. Lows around 20. West winds 5 to

15 mph.

.SUNDAY…Mostly cloudy. Highs around 40. South winds 10 to

15 mph.

.SUNDAY NIGHT…Decreasing clouds. Lows in the lower 30s.

.MONDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.

.MONDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows in the upper 20s.

.TUESDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs around 40.

.TUESDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows in the mid 20s.

.WEDNESDAY…Partly sunny. Highs in the mid 40s.

.WEDNESDAY NIGHT…Mostly cloudy. Lows around 30.

.THURSDAY…Mostly sunny. Highs in the upper 40s.

 

After 9 pm Friday night, through early Saturday morning there will be a
chance for a wintry mix of sleet, light freezing rain and light
snow. The amount of precipitation in the form of sleet or freezing
rain is uncertain, but trends suggest any amounts will be very
light.

 

 

Jamestown  (CSi)  The Annual Dazzle on Main parade returned to Downtown Jamestown on Friday November 26, 2021.

Jamestown Downtown Association, President, Lynn Lambrecht reports the 2021 Dazzle Parade Float Winners:

Best Dazzle: Otter Tail Power Company

 

Most Original Theme: Alpha Opportunities

 

Most Outstanding Amateur Built:  Premium Property

 

Most Outstanding Civic or Non-Profit: Anne Carlsen Center

The Parade was recorded by the CSi Cable Roving Cam  Be watching and listening for the showing dates

 

Previously…

Jamestown (Downtowner News Letter)  The Jamestown Downtown Association will host its Annual Holiday Dazzle on First Avenue Parade on Friday November 26 at 7-p.m.

The parade will start at McElroy Park and travel north on First Avenue, ending at the railroad tracks.

Downtown Jamestown will again be filled with lights and pageantry , giggling children and Santa and his sleigh.

This year’s grand marshal will be Robin Iszler, the 2020 recipient of the Jamestown Chamber of Commerce Above & Beyond award.

Following the parade Shady’s will host a get together with Christmas Carols, cookies, hot beverages, and the awards for the Best Floats.

CSi File Photos from 2016

  • Best Dazzle - James River Correctional Center - CSi Photos by Amy Best Dazzle - James River Correctional Center - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Best Dazzle - James River Correctional Center - CSi Photos by Amy Best Dazzle - James River Correctional Center - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle Parade 2016 Grand Marshalls Charlie & Marge Kourajian with driver Casey Stoudt Holiday Dazzle Parade 2016 Grand Marshalls Charlie & Marge Kourajian with driver Casey Stoudt
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Most Original Theme:  First Community Credit Union - CSi Photos Most Original Theme: First Community Credit Union - CSi Photos
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Most Outstanding Amateur Built:  University of Jamestown - CSi photos by Amy Most Outstanding Amateur Built: University of Jamestown - CSi photos by Amy
  • Most Outstanding Amateur Built:  University of Jamestown - CSi photos by Amy Most Outstanding Amateur Built: University of Jamestown - CSi photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade 2016 - More photos at Facebook - CSi Photos by Amy
  • Holiday Dazzle 2016 airs on CSi TV 10 - More Spectator "SMILES" at Facebook. Holiday Dazzle 2016 airs on CSi TV 10 - More Spectator "SMILES" at Facebook.
  • More community photos at Facebook More community photos at Facebook
     

More CSi Photos from 2015

  • 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel
  • 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel
  • 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel
  • 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel
  • 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel 2015 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade - Video on CSi TV 10 The Replay Channel
     

Also more photos at Facebook.com/TheReplayChannel

View the 2019 Holiday Dazzle on Main Parade here online, at Facebook.

 

 

The North Dakota Department of Health dashboard is updated daily by 11 am and includes cases reported through the previous day. The investigations are ongoing and information on the website is likely to change as cases are investigated. The information contained in this dashboard is the most up to date and will be different than previous news releases. This dashboard supersedes information from previous news releases or social media postings.

Check out our other dashboards: The COVID-19 Vaccine Dashboard, NDUS Dashboard.COVID- 19 stats:

 

Fri. Nov. 26, 2021

10:30 -a.m.

Barnes

New Positives:  1

Total Positives: 2041

Active: 42

Recovered:  1956

Breakthrough Incidents Per 10K Fully Vaccinated Individuals: 310

 

Stutsman

New Positives: 6

Total Positives: 4816

Active: 104

Recovered: 4595

Breakthrough Incidents Per 10K Fully Vaccinated Individuals: 369

North Dakota

NEW CASES REPORTED FRIDAY, NOV. 26: 174

ACTIVE CASES: 3,008

DAILY POSITIVITY RATE: 4.65%

TOTAL KNOWN CASES THROUGH OUT PANDEMIC: 160,724

TOTAL RECOVERED THROUGHOUT PANDEMIC: 155,842

The 14-day rolling average positivity rate was 7.36%.

ACTIVE HOSPITALIZATIONS: 178

NEW DEATHS REPORTED SINCE WENDESDAY: 7

TOTAL DEATHS: 1,874

 

 

 

Drive up clinics at the Buffalo mall are being held on

Fridays  Buffalo Mall from 9:00 – 11:30am
– Sundays: Buffalo Mall from 12:00 – 5:00pm

The clinics are open to anyone 12 years of age and older no appointment is needed you can preregister at https://www.ndvax.org.

For more information, please call CVHD at 252-8130.

Wednesdays:S&R Truck Plaza from 12:00 – 7:00pm

More information on Buffalo Mall Vaccination Clinics. and S&R Truck Plaza

 

Jamestown  (CVHD 11-9-21  – COVID-19 continues to circulate in the community. Central Valley Health District (CVHD) encourages residents of Stutsman and Logan Counties to get vaccinated for COVID.
VCHD Unit Adinistrator, Robin Iszler says, “There are ample opportunities in the community to be vaccinated; whether you are getting your first dose of COVID vaccine or seeking a booster dose, we can help.”
Upcoming vaccination opportunities include:
– Fridays  Buffalo Mall from 9:00 – 11:30am
– Sundays: Buffalo Mall from 12:00 – 5:00pm
– Wednesdays: S&R Truck Plaza from 12:00 – 7:00pm
For more information or to register for an appointment, visit the CVHD website at www.centralvalleyhealth.org/covid-vaccine/.

 

 

CVHD Regularly Scheduled  Vax Clinics

Monday, November 29, 2021

Vaccine Available: Influenza, COVID — PFIZER, MODERNA, JOHNSON & JOHNSON

Event Time: 9:00 – 11:30am

Event Location: Central Valley Health District

 CLICK HERE TO REGISTER 

 

 

 

Valley City (CCHD)  City County Health in Valley City announces their COVID-19 testing days and site location in Valley City.

Testing is at the REC Center at 140 4th Street Southwest.

Testing will be 12:30-2:30 Mon, Weds, and Fridays.

There are opportunities for vaccinations, both for annual influenza and for the COVID vaccine.  Call 845-8518 to make an appointment.

 

 

 

 

(VCSU)  Valley City State University (VCSU) will host the 2021-2022 North Dakota High School Activities Association (NDHSAA) Eastern Dakota Conference (EDC) music contest for wind and percussion soloists.

The contest begins at 8 a.m. Thursday, Dec. 2, at Foss Music Hall. More than 500 soloists are expected to participate. Faculty from VCSU are helping facilitate and judge the event.

Jerrold Heide, Chair of the VCSU Music Department, sai,“We are so happy to host this event and bring musicians from so many excellent schools to our campus. It will be a busy day for our faculty and staff as we help conduct the contest, but it’s a great way to help students learn and perform.”

High schools participating in the contest include Wahpeton, Fargo Davies, Shanley, Fargo North, West Fargo, Grand Forks Red River, Grand Forks Central, West Fargo Horace, West Fargo Sheyenne, Fargo South, Valley City and Devils Lake.

 

 

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — An apartment fire in Minot, North Dakota on Thursday displaced people living in four apartments. Firefighters said the blaze was from a basement laundry room that had an electrical panel. As firefighters first arrived at the apartment, they saw light smoke exiting the structure from a basement window. They quickly entered the building and put out the fire. People living in the building evacuated without any injuries, but authorities shut off power to four apartments due to damage to an electrical panel. Authorities are still investigating the cause of the fire.

 

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) — An agency key to implementing new in-state investment components of North Dakota’s $8.3 billion oil tax savings has a new leader. The State Investment Board named Retirement and Investment Office interim Executive Director Jan Murtha to take over the role on a permanent basis. The office oversees about $20 billion of assets. Murtha, who is an attorney, has led the agency in the interim role since June, when Dave Hunter resigned for a job in Alabama. Murtha was hired in 2020 and previously was the office’s deputy executive director and chief retirement officer.

 

MINNEAPOLIS (AP) — Based on the numbers, there is a good chance that a Thanksgiving turkey came from Minnesota. Minnesota farmers grow about 45 million turkeys a year on more than 500 farms, or nearly 18% of the country’s turkey supply, according to the Minnesota Department of Agriculture. The U.S. Department of Agriculture says Americans should eat about 46 million turkeys on Thanksgiving. Minnesota was the nation’s leader in turkey production in 2020 with 40 million birds. That is nine million more than North Carolina, which is No. 2 in production. South Dakota produces about 5 million turkeys a year and North Dakota about 1 million.

 

In world and national news…

BRUSSELS (AP) — The world is confronting a new coronavirus variant, and officials have named it “omicron.” A World Health Organization panel has classified it as a highly transmissible virus of concern. Its discovery in southern Africa sent a chill through much of the world as nations raced to halt air travel, markets fell sharply and scientists held emergency meetings. The overall risks of omicron are not yet known. But the United States, the 27-nation European Union and some other countries quickly announced restrictions on travel from southern Africa and stepped up other precautions.

 

NEW YORK (AP) — Stocks sank Friday, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average briefly falling more than 1,000 points, as a new coronavirus variant first detected in South Africa appeared to be spreading across the globe. The S&P 500 index fell 2.3%, its worst day since February and the Nasdaq composite had its worst drop in two months. The Dow closed with a loss of 905 points. Travel and energy stocks were among the biggest losers, with Royal Caribbean dropping 13%, United Airlines falling more than 9% and Exxon losing 3.5%. The price of oil fell 13% and bond yields fell sharply.

CAPE TOWN, South Africa (AP) — Golf, cricket and rugby have become the first major sports to be affected by the new COVID-19 variant. The emergence of the new variant has prompted fears of renewed travel restrictions and disrupted events just as they were returning to normal nearly two years into the pandemic. European golfers withdrew midway through the season-opening DP World Tour tournament in Johannesburg and were scrambling to catch flights out of South Africa. Visiting cricket and rugby teams were doing the same. The new B.1.1.529 variant that was first identified in South Africa is causing concern over fears that it may be more transmissible than current variants and resistant to vaccines.

NEW YORK (AP) — On this year’s Black Friday, things almost seem normal. Malls and stores report decent-sized crowds, if not the floods of people that used to fight over the latest toys and electronics. Online shopping is much too common for that now, and big discounts are spread out over the weeks leading up to Christmas, on both websites and in stores. But out-of-stock items due to supply crunches, higher prices for gas and food, and labor shortages that make it more difficult to respond to customers are also causing frustrations for shoppers.

 

BELLINGHAM, Wash. (AP) — Flood watches were issued for much of western Washington as storms associated with multiple “atmospheric rivers” threaten parts of the Northwest that saw heavy damage from storms earlier this month. The National Weather Service warned that flooding was possible through Monday afternoon in places like Bellingham and the greater Seattle area as heavy rains were expected over the weekend in the Cascade and Olympic mountains, which could cause rivers to rise. The moisture is from huge plumes of moisture extending over the Pacific and into the Northwest, known as atmospheric rivers. They could bring up to 3 inches of rain in some areas hit by the recent flooding. Washington is still assessing millions of dollars in damage from the last storms.

 

MEXICO CITY (AP) — Nineteen people are dead and 20 more are injured after a bus apparently carrying pilgrims to a religious site in central Mexico crashed. An official in the State of Mexico says the accident occurred Friday southwest of Mexico City. The bus was heading from the western state of Michoacan to Chalma, a town visited by Roman Catholic pilgrims for centuries. There is no immediate information on the condition of the injured passengers. Many Mexicans go on religious pilgrimages as Dec. 12, the day of the Virgin of Guadalupe, approaches. Because they often walk or bike or travel in aging buses, accidents are not uncommon.

 

WASHINGTON (AP) — The Biden administration has recommended an overhaul of the nation’s oil and gas leasing program to focus on areas that are most suitable for energy development and raise costs for energy companies to drill on public lands and water. The long-awaited report by the Interior Department on Friday stops short of recommending an end to oil and gas leasing on public lands, as many environmental groups have urged. But officials say the report will move toward a more responsible leasing process that provides a better to return to U.S. taxpayers for oil and gas drilling on the nation’s vast public lands and waters.