Most Recent

julie

Why eat vegetables and fruits?

Jonathan Anderson, director of the Tribal Business Information Center on the campus of Sitting Bull College in Fort Yates since 2002, is part of a steering committee working to establish a credit union. If successful, Oyate Community Credit Union would be the first – and only – financial institution in Sioux County. Photo by NDAREC/Liza Kessel

“A credit union is the right fit for our community and would be owned by the people of the tribe,” says Joseph McNeil Jr., Standing Rock Sioux Trib

rox

Have I mentioned I hate math?

Edgeley/Kulm/Montpelier's Alex Huber (24) lays one up against Grafton defenders in the semifinal game of the 2021 North Dakota State Class B Boys Basketball Tournament. Huber and the Rebels went on to win the game by three points, earning a place in the state championship game. Photo courtesy Rhonda Tjernlund/Tjernlund Photography

That’s when Edgeley and Kulm shook hands to form the first of an ever-expanding sports co-op that eventually stretched to Montpelier for basketball

al

I thought, too, of ranch wives as business partners. Our neighbor married a small-town girl from Minnesota.

9

“This facility gives our summer camp program a physical presence in the eastern part of the state and complements our camp facility in western Nort

Roxanne Henke and her granddaughter, Simone. Courtesy photo

Three hours turned into five. Then the flight was canceled.

Sylvie Winje

The second habit is exercise. Make a goal of going outside for a walk every day.

Indian Springs Bison owner Roy Krivoruchka and his family have raised bison near Belfield the past 30 years, expanding the ranch’s reach to the consumer with the opening of 701 Meats just a mile down the gravel road from the ranch.

“It’s a niche market, but it’s getting more popular,” Jayden says.

Communities across rural America are engaged in revitalization efforts to renew downtown areas and restore them to their former prominence as a center of community activity. In 2020, HomeSnacks named Oakes, pictured here, one of the 10 best places to live in the Peace Garden State. Photo by NDAREC/Liza Kessel

“It will never go back to the way it was,” says Becky McCray. “We have to start from here and move forward.”