Wayne Byers Show Weekdays on CSi 2

Wayne Byers Show Weekdays on CSi 2

CSi Weather…

.TONIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS 40 PERCENT IN THE VALLEY CITY AREA. AREAS OF SMOKE. LOWS IN THE MID 60S. NORTHWEST
WINDS 5 TO 15 MPH.
.TUESDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS, 40 PERCENT IN THE VALLEY CITY AREA.  HIGHS IN THE MID 80S. NORTH WINDS AROUND 10 MPH. 

TUESDAY NIGHT…DECREASING CLOUDS. A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS, 40 PERCENT CHANCE IN THE VALLEY CITY AREA. LOWS IN THE MID 60S. EAST WINDS 5 TO
10 MPH SHIFTING TO THE SOUTH AFTER MIDNIGHT.
.WEDNESDAY…PARTLY SUNNY WITH A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS, 50 PERCENT CHANCE IN THE VALLEY CITY AREA. HIGHS IN THE MID 80S. SOUTH WINDS 5 TO 10 MPH.
.WEDNESDAY NIGHT…SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS LIKELY. LOWS IN THE
MID 60S. CHANCE OF PRECIPITATION 60 PERCENT.
.THURSDAY…PARTLY SUNNY WITH A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE MID 80S.
.THURSDAY NIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 20 PERCENT CHANCE OF
SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE MID 60S.
.FRIDAY…MOSTLY SUNNY WITH A 30 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS AND
THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE UPPER 80S.
.FRIDAY NIGHT…PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 40 PERCENT CHANCE OF SHOWERS
AND THUNDERSTORMS. LOWS IN THE MID 60S.
.SATURDAY THROUGH SUNDAY…PARTLY CLOUDY WITH A 20 PERCENT CHANCE
OF SHOWERS AND THUNDERSTORMS. HIGHS IN THE LOWER 80S. LOWS IN THE
LOWER 60S.

 

DAILY CHANCES FOR THUNDERSTORMS ARE EXPECTED THROUGH THE WEEK. THE
 MOST ACTIVE PERIOD WILL BE WEDNESDAY AND THURSDAY DURING WHICH
 TIME THERE WILL BE A CHANCE FOR STRONG THUNDERSTORMS WITH GUSTY
 WINDS AND HAIL.

 

Jamestown (CSi) Ave Maria Village in Jamestown hosts the 1st Annual Fun Walk August 1, 2015, starting at 9-a.m.

On Monday’s Wayne Byers Show on CSi Cable 2, volunteer, Lisa Wagner said, the public is invited to the walk, along with residents family and friends.

Family members may push their loved ones in their wheelchairs as part of the event.

The walk can be made along the one-mile loop, marked out on the north side of Ave Maria Village once, twice of three times, as participants of all ages and capabilities are invited.

Registration includes, the Early Bird Special, $10 per person with registration by July 24, child 10 and under are free.

Otherwise registration is $15 per person, and the first 12 registrants receive a $15 Road ID Gift Card.

Sign up to win a free Spa Day, from Top Designers Salon and Spa, a $185 value.

Register the day of, as well, and be at Ave Maria Village that day by 8:30-8:45 a.m.

 

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) – Authorities believe they’ve cracked the case of cattle mysteriously shot to death in western North Dakota on the Fourth of July three years ago, with the arrest of a Hensler man this week.
 
     But they’re still seeking to solve a similar cattle-shooting case in the eastern part of the state that same year.
 
     Thirteen cows and a calf were killed in David Kluge’s (KLOO’-gees) Richland County pasture about two months before the Oliver County case in which nine cattle owned by Miles and Marjorie Tomac and John and Kim Dixon were killed.
 
     North Dakota Stockmen’s Association official Fred Frederikson says such investigations take time. He says investigators have “persons of interest” in the Richland County case but an arrest isn’t imminent.
 
     Mary Kluge says she and her husband are frustrated.

 

BISMARCK, N.D. (AP) – Howard Wrigley, a Fargo businessman and father of North Dakota’s lieutenant governor, has died. He was 79.
 
     The Boulger Funeral Home says Wrigley died unexpectedly Saturday at a remote fly-in fishing lodge in northern Saskatchewan. The cause of death was not reported.
 
     Wrigley was the CEO of Wrigley Mechanical, a Fargo-based industrial contractor he started in 1978. The company’s website says he earned a mechanical engineering degree from the University of North Dakota in 1961.
 
     Wrigley served as chairman of the North Dakota Racing Commission but resigned in 2003 because his son, Lt. Gov. Drew Wrigley, was the U.S. attorney at the time and was overseeing a criminal investigation into a Fargo-based simulcast company.
 

In world and national news…

 WASHINGTON (AP) – The United States is promising to help Mexico’s government bring escaped drug kingpin Joaquin “El Chapo” Guzman to justice. He escaped Saturday from a maximum-security prison through a tunnel, setting off a massive manhunt. White House spokesman Josh Earnest says the U.S. government is offering its full support to Mexico. He’s pointing out that Guzman has also been charged with serious crimes in the U.S.
 
     BRUSSELS (AP) – The eurozone’s top official says he thinks it will take around four weeks for a new bailout program for Greece to be worked out. He says in the meantime, finance ministers are looking at how to get some immediate help for Athens to meet upcoming commitments. Under the deal reached today, Greece must take certain measures to reform its economy in order to start negotiations on a third multi-billion-dollar bailout package.
 
     WASHINGTON (AP) – The Associated Press has learned that Pentagon leaders are finalizing plans aimed at lifting the ban on transgender individuals serving in the military. Senior U.S. officials say an announcement is expected this week. They say the military would have six months to determine the impact and work out details, with the presumption that they would end one of the last gender- or sexuality-based barriers to military service.
 
     WASHINGTON (AP) – The commander of U.S. Army forces in Europe says the United States is considering a plan to train Ukrainian army soldiers beginning in late November. Lt. Gen. Ben Hodges told reporters at the Pentagon that the training would be an extension of current U.S. training of Ukrainian national guardsmen. They operate under the Ministry of the Interior and are not front-line combat forces. The U.S. has provided non-lethal aid to Ukraine, but not lethal arms, in its struggle against Russian-backed separatists.
 
     WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP) – As a voting rights trial on a 2013 North Carolina law begins, early arguments and testimony are focusing on whether Republican state lawmakers illegally weakened the ability of minority voters to take part in the political process. The trial stemming from three federal lawsuits opened Monday in Winston-Salem and could last two to three weeks. The U.S. Justice Department, state NAACP and others sued over provisions that scaled back early voting and prevented the counting of Election Day ballots cast in an incorrect precinct.