National Sponsors
October 27, 2011 Golden Valley News | ![]() |
©
Golden Valley News. All rights reserved. Upgrade to access Premium Tools
PAGE 2 (2 of 6 available) PREVIOUS NEXT Jumbo Image Save To Scrapbook Set Notifiers PDF JPG
October 27, 2011 |
|
Website © 2025. All content copyrighted. Copyright Information Terms Of Use | Privacy Policy | Request Content Removal | About / FAQ | Get Acrobat Reader ![]() |
Page 2 Golden Valley News October 27, 2011
CDC report on usual sodiun intake compared with dietary recommendations
Americans are eating too much M.D., president of the American adults should be included in the agencies, other health organizations
sodium, and the American Heart Heart Association, and the Michel 1500 mg/day of sodium restriction, and the restaurant and food indus-
Association believes that we need to Mirowski, M.D., professor of cardi- In the absence of new science, this try, including those areas influenc-
Leonard Lardy
LEONARD LARDY 78, died
October 9, 2011 in Fontana, CA. He
was born in Sentinel Butte, North
Dakota on July 16, 1933.
He attended Dickinson State
University and graduated in 1955
with a Bachelors Degree in English,
He received his Masters Degree in
1959 from the University of
Montana. He began his teaching
career in North Dakota, and in 1961
moved to California to teach at
Eisenhower High School in Rialto,
CA. He later taught at San
Gorgonio High School in San
Bernardino before leaving to teach
at San Bernardino Valley College
where he retired in 1995.
After retiring; he continued to
teach part-time at San Bemardino
Community College and Crafton
Hills Community College. He vol-
unteered as a tutor for the Yucaipa
branch of the San Bernardino
County Literacy Program until the
time of his death. Leonard was very
active in his church, and served as a
lector and parish council member
for St. Catherine's Catholic Church
in Rialto prior to moving to
Yucaipa. Since moving to Yucaipa,
he was a member of St. Frances X.
Cabrini Catholic Church in
Yucaipa, CA.
For over 40 years Leonard was
very active in the sport of beagling,
and was president of the Mount
Baldy Beagle Club.
He is survived by his wife of 55
years, Joan, and his children, Tim
(Danielle), Ron (fianc6 Sallie),
Becky Teel (Jeff), Lisa Hall (Steve),
10 grandchildren, 5 great-grand-
children and brothers Matt
(Deanna), Larry (Edith), Maurice
(Sharon), Bill (Dixie), Dennis, and
sisters Susan, Teresa Davis and
Helena Gregoire (Terry), and was
preceded in death by his brother
Pete. Leonard will be sincerely
missed by his family and many
friends.
Rosary is scheduled for Sunday,
November 6 at 3:00PM at Weaver-
Hughes Mortuary, 33629 Yucaipa
Blvd., Yucaipa, CA.
Services are planned for
November 7, 2011 at 10 a.m. at St.
Frances X. Cabrini Catholic
Church, 12687 Calitbrnia Street,
Yucaipa, CA. followed by a gather-
ing at the parish center. The family
requests that donations be sent to
the Leonard A. Lardy Memorial
Scholarship Fund, c/o Dickinson
State University, 230 8th Avenue
West, Dickinson, ND 58601 in lieu
of flowers. Arrangements entrusted
to Weaver-Hughes Mortuary,
Yucaipa, CA.
William Alfred Larson
Bismarck, North Dakota:
William Alfred Larson, age 67, of
Beach, North Dakota passed away
on Sunday, October 23,2011 at the
Medcenter One Hospital in
Bismarck. A Mass of Christian
Burial will be held at 2:00 P.M. on
Thursday, October 27,201.1 at the
St. John the Baptist Catholic
Church in Beach, with Reverend
Father Russell Kovash officiating.
Lunch will' b served in the base-
ment of the clurch following serv-
ices. Silvernale-Silha Funeral
Home of Beach has been entrusted
with the arrangements.
William Alfred Larson was born
on April 22, 1944 the son of Francis
S. and Burness (Henderson) Larson
in Langdon, North Dakota. He
spent his early years being raised in
Clyde, North Dakota. In 1952, the
family moved to Calvin, North
• Dakata,-where William graduated
high school with the class of 1962.
He attended college at North
Dakota State School of Forestry,
currently the Minot State
University-Bottineau Campus in
Bottineau, North Dakota, graduat-
ing with the class of 1964. William
then went to Utah State in Logan,
Utah graduating with the class of
1967. Education was a passion and
a goal obtained by William through-
out his life
Following his college studies
William worked most of his life in
Law Enforcement for the National
Park Service and the Federal
Government.
William worked at Theodore
Roosevelt National Park in Medora,
North Dakota , Grand Canyon
National Park in Arizona, Yosemite
National Park in California, Hawaii
Put Your Money .
Where Your' House Zsl
al i,'O6nt ., str our
bussses are t comu
your best va and our economy
Volcanoes National Park in Hawaii
and Lake Mead Recreation Area in
Nevada. William was also
employed at Mount Rainier
National Park in Washington state,
where he was in charge of Search
and Rescue, and worked there until
his retirement in 2001.
William married Jeanne Iverson
on November 22, 1967 in Gravel
Canyon National Park, Arizona. He
was very conscious about physical
fitness. He enjoyed teaching Hunter
Safety and he. was ,algngmith and
enjoyed competitive shooting.
William lived an active lifestyle full
of passionate hobbies, faith and
unconditional love for his family.
William was preceded in death
by his parents, Francis and Burness
Larson. William is survived by his
wife, Jeanne of Beach; sister,
Myrna (James) Greenwood of
Grafton, North Dakota; niece,
Jacqueline (Kit) Midgarden of
Hoople, North Dakota; and his
nephew, Jaymes Greenwood of
Hoople.
Memorials may be made to a
charity of the donor's choice.
Remembrances and condolences
may be shared with the family at:
www.silvernale-silhafuneral-
home .com.
ABBREVIATED NOTICE OF
INTENTTOAMEND
ADMINISTRATIVE
RULES
relating to
the Board of Clinical Laboratory Practice
North Dakota
Board of Clinical
Laboratory Practice
will hold a public healing to address proposed changes
to N.D. Admln. Code.
Board of Clinical
Laboratory Practice Office
2900 E. Broadway Ave.
Suite 2
Bismarck, ND
Tues., Dec. 6, 20JJ
9:00 a.m. CT
A copy of the proposed rules may be ob-
tained by writing the Board of Clinical Labo-
ratory Practice at NDBCLP, PO Box 4103,
Bismarck, ND 58502-4103 or by calling
(701) 530-0199. Also, written comments
may be submitted to the above address
until December 16, 2011. If you plan to
attend the public hearing and will need spe-
cial facilities or assistance relating to a dis-
lability, please contact the North Dakota
Board of Clinical Laboratory Practice at the
above telephone number or address at least
5 days prior to the public hearing.
Dated this 18th day of October, 2011
Nikki Owings
Board Administrator
increase our public health efforts to
encourage the public and private
sectors of the food industry to
reduce sodium in the food supply, a
point emphasized in a report issued
today from the US Centers of
Disease Control and Prevention
(CDC).
Currently, more than 75 percent
of the sodium we consume comes
from packaged or prepared foods,
and sodium levels are high in many
restaurant foods. Statistics present-
ed in the CDC report underscore the
urgency of reducing sodium in the
U.S. food supply. Experts agree that
people in certain population groups,
such as those who either have high
blood pressure or who are at high
risk of developing it, should aim for
a sodium target of less than 1500
mg a day. Ninety-eight percent of
the people in the highest risk
groups, which include African-
Americans, older adults (51 +) and
persons with hypertension, dia-
betes, or chronic disease, are not
achieving that goal.
"However, we believe this CDC
report is too conservative in its sug-
gestion that only 47.6 percent of
American adults fit into the popula-
tion group that should be consum-
ing no more than 1500 mg a day of
sodium," says Gordon Tomaselli,
ology at Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine in Baltimore,
Maryland. "With the direct and indi-
rect costs of cardiovascular disease
already at $444 billion a year and
rising, and with high blood pressure
the single largest driver of those
costs, this suggestion doesn't go far
enough to address either the human
or economic burden that our exces-
sive intake of salt costs. Other
countries have realized this and are
addressing it agressively."
The American Heart Association
believes that many more Americans
should heed a target sodium intake
of 1500 mg a day or less. "Given
that most of us - as many as 90%'-
will develop high blood pressure
with age, we all should be consum-
ing less than 1500 mg a day of sodi-
um, unless your healthcare provider
has told you that this doesn't apply
to you," says Clyde Yancy, M.D.,
former American Heart Association
president and the Magerstadt pro-
fessor of medicine and chief of the
division of cardiology;
Northwestern University, Feinberg
School of Medicine; Chicago,
Illinois.
Yancy points out that a prior
2009 report from the CDC on this
same topic suggested that approxi-
mately 70 percent of American
target certainly shouldn't be
reduced. Yancy says, "The data
which drove us to this new target of
1500 mg of sodium per day cannot
be minimized and conversely the
benefits of significant sodium
reduction globally and especially in
those at risk cannot be overstated."
Given that an estimated 90 per-
cent of adults will develop high
blood pressure in their lifetime, this
is not the time to be moderate in this
recommendation. People who don't
currently have high blood pressure
may be able to prevent it or blunt
the rise in blood pressure that
accompanies
aging by lowering their sodium
intake and achieving that limit.
As a science-based organization
focusing on the strong evidence
linking sodium intake with blood
pressure -- and on the major adverse
outcomes of heart disease, stroke
and kidney disease - the American
Heart Association will continue to
advocate specifically that the daily
intake of sodium for all American
adults should be limited to 1500
mg.
Public policy efforts to reduce
sodium consumption, much like the
early work in reducing tobacco con-
sumption, will not be easy.
Collaborations with government
The Real Great Pumpkin- New Initiatives for
growing the next farm and ranch generation
The Peanuts character Linus,
spends Halloween waiting for the
Great Pumpkin - and some look for a
silver bullet for the decline of family
farming and ranching. The U.S. has
lost 80 percent of its youngest farm-
ers and ranchers in 30 years. And
new generations on the land have
and will always be vital to small
towns and rural communities across
America.
Unfortunately, there is no Great
Pumpkin, and no silver bullet for
reversing the exodus of America's
farms and ranches. There are, how-
ever, proven strategies that create
opportunities for beginning farmers
and ranchers. It will take hard work
to build the next generation of
American.amily.farmers and ranch-
ers.
Representatives Tim Walz (D-
MN) and Jeff Fortenberry (R-NE)
recently introduced the Beginning
Farmer and Rancher Opportunity
Act, an initiatiwe aimed at helping
the next generatior of farmers and
ranchers overcome barriers into agri-
culture and take advantage of emerg-
ing markets.
The bill is smart, cost-effective
public policy that will create jobs
and invest in the future of America,
by investing in training, mentoring,
business planning and marketing
services for beginners, and funding
for the Value Added Producer Grants
program with special emphasis on
projects benefiting new farmers and
ranchers.
Moreover, the bill will create sav-
ing and enhanced lending provisions
. that help beginners access credit and
establish savings while also provid-
ing incentives to assist them in estab-
lishing conservation and sustainabil-
ity practices on their operations, and
the list goes on. Thank you Rep.
Fortenberry and Rep. Walz for your
vision and courage.
(John Crabtree, johnc@cfra.org,
Center for Rural Affairs)
The best
coverage of
the area's
news, sports
ano
community
events! •
You'll find it
here!
ing prepared and packaged foods,
will be necessary. However, if the
majority of Americans achieved a
daily sodium intake of 1500 mg/day
or less, we might save an estimated
$24 billion in healthcare costs per
year. Americans deserve the free-
dom to choose how much sodium
they eat-and with the levels of sodi-
um currently so high in the food
supply, that choice has been taken
away.
The association receives funding
primarily from individuals; founda-
tions and corporations (including
pharmaceutical, device manufactur-
ers and other companies) also make
donations and fund specific associa-
tion programs and events. The
association has strict policies to pre-
vent these relationships from influ-
encing the science content.
Revenues from pharmaceutical and
device corporations are available at
www.heart.org/corporatefunding.
Golden Valley News
P.O. Box 156, Beach, ND 58621
(U.S.P.S. Pub.
No. 221-280)
Staff: Richard Volesky,
editor, reporter, advertising
and office manager and Jane
Cook, office and news assis-
tant.
The Golden Valley News is
published each Thursday, 22
Central Ave., Suite 1, Beach,
ND 58621 by Nordmark
Publishing. Periodicals postage
paid at Beach, ND and addi-
tional mailing offices.
POSTMASTER • Send
address changes to: Golden
Valley News, P.O. Box 156,
Beach, ND 58621.
Please allow two to three
weeks for new subscriptions,
renewal of expired subscrip-
tions and for address changes.
Contact Information
• Phone: 701-872-3755
• Fax: 701-872-3756
Email: gvnews@midstate.net
Subscriptions
• 1 year: $34 Golden Valley
County
• 1 year: $38 elsewhere in
- • North Dakota
• 1year: $42 out-of-state
," 0 morrths $25 In-state .. '
college rate
The Golden Valley News is a proud
member of the North Dakota
Newspaper Association.
All content is copyrighted.
BEACH BELFIELD Belfield Baptist Church
St. John the Baptist Catholic St. Peter's Lutheran - LCMS , .... Rev. Robert Hlibichuk
Church Rev. Scott Hojnacki Sunday Worship: 9 a.m.
Rev. Russ Kovash :i! . Worship Se}ce: Sunday 8 a.m. i Sunday Bible Study: 10 a.m.
Mass: Saturday 6:30 p.ml :: St. Bernard s Catholic Church Belfield Church of God
Pastor Ron Hudson of Calvary Chapel :• -Cffessions: 3:15-3:45 p.m,
Sundays - 6:30 Communion, first Sun-:(- < - Mass 8 30 a m
day m each month : ' s"7.45--8:15 a.m.
St. Paul's Lutheran Church,
LCMS
Rev. Scott Hojnacki
Sunday Worship - 10:15 a.m.
Sunday School - 1 t: 15 a.m.
First Lutheran Church - ELCA
Pastor J.T. Burk
Sunday School - 8:10 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 9:30 a.m.
Beach Evangelical Church
Visiting Pastors
Sunday School: 9:45 a.m.
Sunday Worship - 10:45 a.m.
United Community. Church
Pastor Warren Maxted
Sunday Worship 9 a.m.
St,:Jg'ian Catholic
., R, Ta Miles
Divi 8 a.m. on first, third
::: d fifth Sundays,
10 a.m. onsccad and fourth Sun-
days
Belfield Lntlkerlm - ELCA
Rev. Roger Dietetic
Sunday School (all ages): 11 aa-n.
Sunday Worship: 10 a.m.
Daglum Lutheran Church-
ELCA
R,o, rle
SundayWorship -11.45 a.m. on
first and th Sllry of each month
" " 781 Milissa Ave.
PastorsHarold & Marge Sundgren
: Thursday, 7 p.m.
. ,:FAIRFIELD
et Ukrainian Catholic
- lChurch
Rev.;Taras Miles
Sunday Divine Liturgy: 8 a.m. on
-' seeOnd and fourth
Silvernale-Silha Funeral Homes
Please
support your
local merchants!
221 N. Meade Ave. 204 South Wibaux St. 53 1st Avenue S.E.
Glendive, MT 59330 Wibaux, MT 59353 Beach, N.D. 58621
406-377-2622 or 406-796-2421 or 701-872-3232 or
1-800 -368-2690 1-800-892-6424
www.silvernale-silhafuneralhome.com
Union Congregational Church
June, July and August only
Sunday worship - 10:30 a.m.
SENTINEL BUTTE
Trinity Lutheran Church
Pastor J.T. Burk
Sunday Worship - 8 a.m.
SOUTH HEAR T
St. Mary's Catholic Church -
Rev. Shannon G. Lucht
Sunday Mass: 10:30 a.m.
TROTTERS
Trotters Church
.tmd 3rd Sunday of each month
WIBA UX
United Methodist Church
Pastor Ruth McKenzie
St. Marv's Catholic Chh :i Sunday Worship: 9 a.m.
Rev. Russ Kovash ? ? Calvary Temple, Assembly of God
:_ Mass: 8 a.m., Sy ::.: Pastor Andy Lam
. - MEDOR: -- ` l I:--" : Sunday Worship - 10:30 a.m..
Medora Luth - ELCA Sunday School 9:30 am.
Rev. R.olrDieterle . ii !::. Trinity Lutheran Church - ELCA
Sunday Worship - 8:30 j-. Pastor J.T. Burk
"= SttlSchool: 3:30 p.t,'Wed:i( Sunday Worship- 11:15 a.m.
St. Mary's Catholic Church
Saturdays 4:00 p.m.
May 3 - end of Oct.
.No Masses during.winter months
Ii L ceose0 n.o.h Dakotaao0 Mon,ana
II 41 Central Ave. South
II t.O. Box970
II Beach, North Dakota 58621
II 701-872-4321
Christian Fundamental Church
Pastor Jeremy Stradley
Sunday School 9:45 a.m.
Sunday Worship 11 a.m .....
Buckboard Inn
Beach ND • 701-872-4794'
i
Farmers Union Oil Co.
701-872-4471
Interstate Cenex
701-872-3590
Hot Stuff Pizza
701-872-3190
Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday Monday
Mostly Sunny Sunny Mostly Sunny Mostly Sunny Sunny
48/30 51/34 56/37 53/35 53/31
Precip Chance: 5% Precip Chance: 0% Precip Chance: 5% Precip Chance: 5% Precip Chance: 0%
moving in a spiral
around low pressure? •
Tuesday Wednesday
Sunny Partly Cloudy "uoDD :SAsuv
58/34 60/39
Precip Chance 0% Precip Chance: 10%