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Page 8 Golden Valley News October 19, 2017
What's
Happening?
Listings for high school sport-
ing events, plus public events that
are free to anyone and aren't
fund-raisers or aren't family or
business invitations, can be pub-
lished free of charge in this col-
umn.
• State Insurance Department
Medicare Part D enrollment
event, 9 a.m.-4 p.m., Tuesday,
Oct. 24, Biesiot Activities Center,
398 State Ave., Dickinson
• Varsity football, 1:30 p.m.
Central Time, Oct. 21, second
round playoff game, Beach vs.
Mohall, at Mohall
• Varsity volleyball, 7 p.m.,
Oct. 24, Beach vs. Dickinson
Trinity, at Beach
Pieces of the Past Jane M. Cook
• Varsity volleyball, 7 p.m.,
Oct. 24, Heart River vs. Bowman
County, at Bowman
• Varsity volleyball, 7 p.m.,
Oct. 26, Heart River vs. Watford
City, at Watford City
Sheriff's report
Golden Valley- County Sheriff's
Office c alls for service in Septem-
ber:
suspicious person, circumstance,
5
agency assist, law enforcement, 2
burn ban violation, 3
disorderly conduct, 2
traffic violation, 1
fraud, 1
fuel drive-off, 1
animal problem, 2
traffic accident with injuries, 1
citizen dispute, 3
domestic disturbance, 4
citizen assist, 1
parking problem, 1
welfare check, 1
sick animal, 1
trespassing, 1
traffic hazard, cattle, 2
child abuse or neglect, 1
motorist assist, 2
traffic hazard, 3
agency assist, fire, 1
agency assist, medical, 1
Belfield man
fa felony
charg
A trial has been scheduled for a
Belfield man accused of corruption
of a minor.
The class C felony charge alleges
that Ian Fugere had sex with a girl in
July 2017 in Golden Valley County
when she 16 and he was 24. The
charge carries a maximum penalty of
five years in prison and a fine of
$10,000, or both.
A preliminary hearing for Fugere
had been scheduled for Sept. 28, but
he waived the hearing and pleaded
not guilty.
He is free on his personal recog-
nizance. District Judge Rhonda Ehlis
in August ordered Fugere to not have
contact with the alleged victim•
A jury trial is scheduled for 9 a.m.
on Jan. 10, 2018, at the Golden Val-
ley County Courthouse.
Oct.5- Mass was held at 9 a•m. mother- in - law Billie VanHorn. Berger visited Florence Miske. Sally
Exercises and In-town Shopping fol- Oct. 8 - Adoration was held in the and Rella Abernathy visited Billie Van
lowed at 10 a.m. The residents en- Chapel at 8:30 a.m. Word and Com- Horn.
joyed an afternoon trip to Medora. munion followed at 9:30 a.m. In the Oct. 11 - Mary and the residents
There they toured the Visitors Cen- afternoon, residents enjoy ed cards and spent the afternoon making Halloween
ter and enjoyed looking at all the his- game time at 2:30, with coffee follow- and other greeting cards. Coffee and
torical exhibits. They watched a ing. Some oftheresidentsenjoyedthe ice cream cones were enjoyed at 3
presentation on the history of Medora Beach fire d epartment Hog Feed held p.m. The p ublic h ealth n urse was up
and the Medora meat plant. With fall in town. Run and Mary Barthel, Rick to distribute flu shots to the residents
in full bloom, the beauty of the land and Elaline Null, and Sarah and in the afternoon. Ted and Jowayne
was thoroughly enjoyed. Kara Lund Hunter McCaskey were afternoon vis- Nunberg celebrated their 68th w ed-
and Lois Miske took Florence Miske itors of Marilyn Carlson. Carey ding a nniversary!
for an outing to Glendive. Alicia Schneider, from Billings, Mont., vis- Many ofthe residents have been at-
Heick visited her mother, Florence ited her grandmother Donna Sygulla. tending the Mission Retreat that was
Finneman. It was Jeanie Carlson's Alan Begger was up to wish AI and held at St. John's Catholic Church in
birthday! Jeanie is one of our head Lucille a happy 66th anniversary. Beach. This was held from Sunday to
cooks at the Manor. Oct. 9 - In the afternoon, Reading Thursday at 7 p.m.
Oct. 6 - Hair Time took place at 8 with Gary was held at 2 p.m. Tracy The Manor would like to welcome
a.m. at the Manor. This week's hair and Olivia Trask visited AI and Lucille to our home, Billie VanHorn. Billie
ladies were Nancy Schafer and Wendy Begger. Mike and Karen Efta were up spent many working years in the bank-
Ekre. It was Leroy Pfau's birthday! to visit Tony Efta. Jo Heckaman vis- ing field in Beach. She greeted us all
Oct. 7 - Gary Riederer held news- ited Dorothy Stolberg. dally with her smile and warm person-
paper reading at 2 p.m. Jessica Savini Oct. 10 - Bingo was held in the ac- ality so please come say hello and wel-
enjoyed a visit from her grandmother tivity room. The ladies from First come her to her new home!
and aunt from Belfield. Tracy Trask Lutheran Church held the activity.
visited her grandparents A1 and Lucille Coffee and snacks were enjoyed fol-
Begger• Robin Jandt visited his lowing a wonderful afternoon. Irene
Oct.19, 1967, 50 3,ears ago: the tw0-mile race by covering the course in 10 min-
The VFWAuxiliary of the Alex Sygulla Post 4306, utes and 12 seconds. Coach Miller felt that Beach
Golva, has started its membership drive for 1968. Be- would have taken second place if Jim Tishmack had-
sides cooperating with the local post in rehabilitation, n't been forced to quit because of a leg injury.
Americanism, Eaton Rapids Home and other youth Oct. 15, 1992, 25 years ago:
and veteran's programs, it offering a cancer insurance Boxer Virgil Hill made the rounds in Beach on
program, which is available to their members. Thursday, Oct. 8. He started at Beach High School
Signs of approaching winter - the announcement of talking to the students and staff and answering many
the closing date of Mastel's Dairy Queen here - the day questions• During lunch he put in an appearance at the
this popular spot will close its doors for the season is Soup and Sandwich Luncheon at St. John's Catholic
Wednesday, Oct. 25. Church.
Beach cross-country runners ran at the Dickinson ~ Arnie Schnell has been hired by the city of Beach as
meet last Saturday, and Dave Wherry of Beach won public works superintendent.
Distraction
(Continued from Page 1)
gies to make a call, send a text message,
tune the radio or program navigation, dO~ --.-.
all while driving down the road. ~j] (~[° o
Programming navigation was the
most distracting task, taking an average tune raclio, text.'-~g
of 40 seconds for drivers to complete, call/dial
When driving at 25 mph, a driver can i
travel the length of four football fields
during the time it could take to enter a ~¢.~11~ /~\
destination in navigation--all while ~,~
distracted from the important task of i~
driving. Programming navigation while ' :'
driving was available in 12 of the 30 ve- l~te:~f~Og navi-0-oti-o~
hicle systems tested.
None of the 30 vehicle infotainnaent
systems produced low deinand, while
23 systems generated highor very high HOW Distracted
levels of demand on drivers: Are You?
12 systems generated very high ..... ::,
demand ::' ill:
• 11 systems generated high demand
7 systems generated moderate de- surfing the web -- tasks we have no ing, social media and programming
mand business doing behind the wheel:' said navigation while the car is in motion.
"Drivers want technology that is Doney. "Automakers should aim to re- In 2012, the National Highway Traffic
safe and easy to use, but many of the duce distractions by designing systems Safety Administration (NHTSA) re-
features added to infotainment systems that are no more visually or mentally leased a set of voluntary safety guide-
today have resulted in overly complex demanding than listening to the radio or lines advising automakers to block
and sometimes frustrating user experi- an audiobook. Drivers should avoid the access to tasks when vehicles are not
ences for drivers," said Marshall temptation to engage with these tech- parked.
Doney, AAA's president and CEO. nologies, especially for non-driving "These are solvable problems. By
Frustration resulting from unsatis- tasks." following NHTSA's voluntary guide-
factory use of these systems increases Researchers developed an advanced lines to lock out certain features that
cognitive demand and the potential for rating scale to measure the visual (eyes generate high demand while driving,
distracted driving, off road) and cognitive (mental) de- automakers can significantly reduce
"AAA has met with interested auto mands and the time it took to complete distraction," said Amy Stracke, m
manufactm'ers and suppliers to discuss a task experienced by drivers using anaging d irector, Traffic Safety Ad-
our findings. We welcome the opportu- each vehicle's infotainment system, vocacy for AAA - The Auto Club
nity to meet with other interested par- The scale ranged from low to very high Group. "Just because a technology is
ties to discuss the report's levels of demand. A low level of de- available while driving does not mean
recommendations and ways to mitigate mand equates to listening to the radio it is safe or easy to use when behind
driver distraction," added Doney. or an audiobook, while very high de- the wheel."
According to a new AAA publicmand is equivalent to trying to balance A total of 120 drivers ages 21-36
opinion survey, nearly 70 percent of a checkbook while driving. AAA be- participated in the study of 30 new 2017
U.S. adults say they want the new tech- lieves a safe in-vehicle technology sys- model-year vehicles. The latest report
nology in their vehicle,but only 24 per- tem should not exceed a low level of is the fifth phase of distraction research
cent feel that the technology already demand, from AAA's Center for Driving Safety
works perfectly. Researchers found that most info- and Technology. The Center was cre-
"Some of the latest systems on the tainment systems tested could easily ated in 2013 with the goal of studying
market now include functions unrelated be made safer by simply following the safety implications for how drivers
to the core task of driving like sending clearly stated federal recommenda- interact with new vehicle technologies
text messages, checking social media or tions such as locking out text messag- when behind the wheel.
Acelyn Bishop has her cap decked out for the Oct. 14 playoff
game. (Photo by Renee Orluck)
Buccaneers
(Continued from Page 1)
his own 34-yard touchdown run and conversion for TGU's only points of the
game. Beach came out on top with a final score of 40-8.
Beach's record improves to 7-2 overall, sending them on to the second
round playoff game in Mohall on Saturday, Oct. 21 at 1:30 p. m. CT. This is
the third football playoff victory in Beach school history and since Zier has
been coaching, ties a school record for season wins. The coaches, players
and fans all are quite pumped. Individual statistics:
Rushing: Clay Mattern 13-105 3 TD, Josiah Orluck 16-88 3 TD, Tyson
Mattern 3-22, Gage Swanson 4210
Passing: Josiah Orluck 11-16 128 yards, two points, one interception
Receptions: Trevor Losinski 1-11, Cole Erickson 2-20, Gage Swanson 3-
33, John Summers 1-3 1 2PT, Jared Wojahn 2-39 1 2PT, Clay Mattern 2-22
Buc netters drop two at home
By Renee Orluck momentum in the second with a
Correspondent much closer score of 25-21. The
The volleyball girls had two home third game - the Buccaneers won 25-
games last week. Bowman County 20, which caused the football team
was here on Tuesday. and the rest of the fans to cheer
The first two games were ex-wildly. Unfortunately, the Raiders
tremely close with Bowman taking also took the fourth game 25-20,
the first, 25-22, and Beach the sec- which ended the play for that night.
ond, 26-24. Bowman decisively Individually, Catie Losgard had an
claimed the last two games 25-9 and impressive night with 50 digs and
25-15. The Beach girls were led in two aces. Abby Wilhelmi had 18 digs
assists by Bree Davidson, 11; and and one block. Bree Davidson and
Mikayla Paul, 10. Abby Wilhelmi Mikayla Paul led the Bucs in assists
had 5 kills. The tall sophomore Sam with 12 and 9, respectfully. Top kills
Oech had four blocks. Digs were led went to Sam Oech, 10, and Mikayla
by Catie Lofsgard a t 33 and Bree Paul, 5. Sam Oech had four blocks.
Davidson, 14. Mikayla Paul had two Tuesday, Oct. 24, is Parent's
aces. Night at home against Dickinson
Thursday, the Richardton raiders Trinity, and their last regular season
arrived ready to play. They took the game will be Oct. 31 against Heart
first game 25-18. The Bucs gained River.
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