North Dakota
In tiny Neche, North Dakota, a ‘cult’ rules
Editor’s note: This story is part one of a five-part series examining the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church, its beliefs, practices and its role in the North Dakota town of Neche, population 344.
NECHE, N.D. — In 1979, Rob McLean’s life felt full of promise. He was 22 years old, engaged, and eager to start a business. Before he began the rest of his life, however, he had to make a pilgrimage from his New Zealand home to tiny Neche, North Dakota.
McLean was born into the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church, a little-known religious sect — one he calls a cult. He was making the 8,000-mile trip to Neche (rhymes with itchy) because it was a holy site for the Brethren, headquarters and home to its “universal leader” at the time, James H. Symington. The trip was “just one of the things we had to do. And I didn’t want to,” McLean said.
Contributed / Rob McLean
Tucked away in McLean’s suitcase were several white envelopes filled with cash, which he guessed contained about $600 New Zealand dollars — tribute bound for Symington. McLean was fearful of a face-to-face meeting with Symington, which came sooner than he expected. Symington — the “elect vessel,” the “man of God,” and a Neche pig farmer — happened to be on the same flight in an economy seat.
“I wandered down the aisle and gave them to his wife, who thanked me, and I got out of there. I was scared of the guy because he had so much power,” said McLean. To him, Symington was more important than Jesus because he had a direct conduit to God.
“He was a scary person, just because of his presence, and also because he had the power to excommunicate anyone he wanted,” he said. “During his reign a lot of families and marriages got broken up and a lot of Brethren fathers and husbands got excommunicated. I likened him to Leonid Brezhnev, the communist in Russia.”

Troy Becker / The Forum
McLean returned to his seat and continued his holy expedition to Neche and meetings filled with believers from around the world, all bringing similar white envelopes. The indoctrination went on from morning to night, over bottomless glasses of Johnny Walker Red Label Scotch whisky – according to McLean: “the cult drink of choice at the time.”
Neche — a town of 344 on North Dakota’s border with Canada — was improbably the seat of power for the Plymouth Brethren for nearly 17 years, from 1970 until 1987, and remains a historic site for the group, which has about 54,000 members worldwide. The organization has hidden in plain sight, rarely attracting attention until recently, when some of its operations were investigated and raided by tax agents in the United Kingdom and Australia.

Contributed / Carman Drever
Interviews that Forum News Service conducted with 25 people, including Brethren members and 13 former members from Neche and elsewhere, found that they consider the Plymouth Brethren not only a cult, but a “religious mafia” that rules by fear. According to former members, despite its worldwide charitable activities, the Brethren has left a legacy of broken families, abuse and a growing financial ecosystem that is being investigated across the world.
Despite multiple efforts, Forum News Service was denied face-to-face interviews with Brethren leaders or entry to its Neche meeting hall. A Brethren representative did respond to emailed questions.
The Plymouth Brethren rejects former members’ claims it is a cult and says the organization is “guided by the truth of Holy Scriptures,” a spokesperson told Forum News Service.
“It is disappointing and can be quite difficult to hear when we are referred to like this (as a cult), we have families we care for, schools to go to and businesses to run just like everyone. In an increasingly secular world, we recognise that observance of faith is misunderstood and those with little experience or religious values are often afraid of the unknown,” the Brethren spokesperson told Forum News Service.
“While we [recognize] there will be misconceptions, to be referred by such terms as ‘cult’ or ‘sect’ is really intolerant and can be quite upsetting for the individuals and families in our church,” the spokesperson said.

C.S. Hagen / Forum News Service
The word cult has been used in English for more than a century, and is defined as: “A socially deviant group that uses undue influence to create obedience and dependency,” according to Stephen Kent, a retired university professor from Alberta, Canada, who is considered an expert in alternative religions.
Simplified, a cult is a “group that exerts excessive control over members,” said Kent, who stopped short of labeling the Brethren as a cult, but added that the Brethren meet all the aspects of the definition of a cult.
“It is the case that groups that exercise excessive control over their members and have unusual beliefs are going to get called cults. It’s been an accepted term in the English language for 150 years or so,” Kent said.
The
Brethren
traces its roots to the 1800s and to Plymouth, UK. Once called the Exclusive Brethren, it is a conservative, male dominated
religion
, which tightly controls and monitors members’ behavior. Practicing one of the
strictest forms
of Christianity, they believe the
Bible
is the supreme authority for church doctrine, and that they must
keep themselves separate
from the outside world and non-members.
Former members say most Brethren are born into the religion, and they’re told from childhood that they are special. And while the Brethren claim they have no clergy hierarchy, they have historically followed the directions of consecutive universal leaders whose word is law.
Breaking the rules can lead to harsh punishment, including being ostracized by family members. Anyone found to be varying from rules can face excommunication, which some say also means eternal damnation.
While the Brethren reject claims they are a cult, the group’s practices fit many categories outlined by another leading expert on the subject, Steven Hassan, in the
BITE Model
of Authoritarian Control. Hassan developed the model to describe cults’ methods to recruit and maintain control over people.
Current Brethren practices, according to former members and the sect’s own statements, check off several boxes listed under Hassan’s BITE Model, including areas of behavior, information, thought and emotional control.

Contributed / anonymous
How the Brethren arrived in Neche isn’t known, although there are newspaper stories as early as 1895 that mention
Brethren members
near the town. The Christian group began in the 1820s after growing dissatisfied with the Anglican Church in England. Wanting to focus on a person’s direct relationship with God, its members began meeting for what they call Lord’s Supper, or communion, and formed their first permanent meetings in 1829.
By the middle of the 19th century,
members began
immigrating to the Americas, Africa, Australia and New Zealand, according to the group’s website. They’ve always been discreet, choosing to remain outside the mainstream, and rarely recruit new members, according to former members.
“I was one of God’s chosen people and so I was better than anyone else,” said Richard Marsh, a former Brethren member who said he’s living in hiding from the Brethren in Canada.

Contributed / Carman Drever
The Brethren has managed to stay out of the public spotlight despite scandals and splits, including the
Aberdeen incident, a sex scandal
in 1970 involving former “universal leader”
James Taylor
Jr., who was accused of sexual assault. Taylor served as leader until his death in 1970, when leadership was turned over to James H. Symington.
Symington was worth more than $10 million when he died in 1987, the equivalent of $27,646,919 in 2024, according to his will, which was obtained by Forum News Service. During a tax investigation of the former universal leader in the 1970s, which did not result in any charges, he hid his cash in jars in the fruit cellar, according to a descendant.
Some “universal leaders” like Symington, who ruled from 1970 until 1987, were considered tyrants who split families apart, several former members said. The former Brethren leader is dead, but he left a long-lasting legacy as well as many Symington family members — all related — in Neche, and who own
265 properties
across the county, according to Pembina County government records.
Recently, the Brethren has chosen to slowly emerge from the shadows. In 2019, the charitable arm of the Brethren called the Rapid Relief Team, or RRT, was featured in news articles after serving
lunches to federal employees
during a government shutdown.

Contributed / ATO’s Facebook page
Raid, investigation raise concern
Neche — whose population is approximately half Brethren, half non-Brethren — may be in a remote rural North Dakota town, but is not isolated from the group’s problems that have recently made headlines across the world.
Brethren-linked companies make up a global organization with finances tied to Australia, where an ongoing investigation began in March this year after SWAT-like agents from the
Australian Tax Office
raided Sydney-based Universal Business Team, or UBT, which is a company that offers services to about 3,000 Brethren-linked businesses. Shortly afterward, UBT’s Australian accounting firm,
UBTA, announced
to clients that it had closed.
Spokespeople for the Brethren told Forum News Service that “UBT is in full cooperation with all requests for information from the ATO and has not been advised of any principal changes that will be required of the entity” and that UBT North America is not affected by the ATO investigation.
Across the Tasman Sea in New Zealand, the Brethren — along with other faith-based institutions — have been under scrutiny for two years by a
Royal Commission of Inquiry
investigation. The commission, which is similar to a Senate hearing in the U.S., is exploring how
people in care were abused
by institutions meant to protect them.
Since the current universal leader, Bruce D. Hales, replaced his father in the position in 2002, the
organization has acquired great wealth
: A total of about $65 billion, according to
Damian Hastie, a researcher with Open & Candid – an organization focused
on investigating corruption in government contracts.
It is an age of prosperity for the Brethren. Reporting by Forum News Service and others indicates that decades of those white envelope donations have built an internal financial ecosystem that, according to former members, controls nearly all aspects of members’ lives. The Brethren also won more than $4 billion in competitive government PPE contracts during the COVID-19 pandemic.
C.S. Hagen / Forum News Service
‘I was told my dad is the devil’
When non-Brethren Neche residents are asked about the Brethren, an awkward silence usually follows. Then, they start by saying the group’s members are good neighbors.
Years ago, children in Neche called the Brethren “bings,” because families had so many children. “Bing, bing, bing,” said Neche resident Pam Gizinski, motioning to the different heights of multiple children.
Once a holy site attracting pilgrims, the town is quieter than it used to be. When Gizinski first moved to Neche in 1985, Brethren children would preach at a street corner along Main Street. “Worldly” children would respond by blaring rock ‘n roll music from boom boxes while on riding bikes, she said.
While the international crowds in Neche are lacking today, the town hums with the sounds of renovation, large trucks and construction. The old school is closed, but offices like Bordertown Retail Systems in Neche are being remodeled to make room for more space, said Ian Symington, sales manager and a member of the Plymouth Brethren.

Contributed / Click Content Studios
Across the world in New Zealand, Craig Hoyle knows Neche as a historically important Brethren town. Hoyle is a former member of the Brethren who left in 2009. He told Forum News Service and Australian news outlet Fairfax Media that he was
prescribed chemical castration
medication when priests and the current universal leader Bruce D. Hales learned he was gay.
“Huge numbers of Brethren were going through Neche at that point. Quite an impact on a North Dakota town,” said Hoyle, who spoke to Forum News Service through Google Chat.
At CVR Industries USA, Inc., a family-owned trailer remodeling company in Neche, Kristi Sharp, administrative manager, said many of her customers are Brethren members.
“I don’t have a problem and I don’t believe in their beliefs. They’re very willing to help us out. Always friendly, positive. They have been good for the town,” Sharp said.
Carl Symington, a farmer and a member of the Plymouth Brethren Christian Church in Pembina, North Dakota, came out of his house — glass of whiskey on ice in hand — when Forum News Service arrived at the Brethren’s Pembina Meeting Room on June 25.

C.S. Hagen / Forum News Service
At first, he hesitated to answer questions, but eventually agreed. When asked about the importance of Neche as a historically sacred site, he replied that the town wasn’t important.
“We don’t place a lot of value on locations here because we’re looking for a heavenly city. We live our lives here and some people call us the Exclusive Brethren, but we believe in being separate from the world so we can maintain the values our forefathers taught us,” Carl Symington said.
Stuart Symington wears many hats: mayor, fire chief and president of CVR Industries USA, Inc. He took his family out of the Brethren in 2001 because “We felt that we were looking for something different,” he said.
He works hard to stay impartial as mayor of Neche.
“It’s got its challenges, definitely. In the main, the Brethren help out a lot. There are some Brethren in the fire department, and during floods they definitely do their part to help us,” he said.
“On the other side of things I know there are people who are bitter against them and that’s hard to deal with because at times they look at me like I’m giving them a break or whatever, but I’m simply just trying to do the right thing for the town,” Stuart Symington said. “Everyone as a citizen should be treated equally and I don’t try to let my past affect my job as mayor.”
Much of the town’s success is due to Brethren members, Stuart Symington said. With about half the population belonging to the Brethren, members control most of the businesses in the town, he said.
“Per capita this is one of the most industrious towns in North Dakota. A fair bit of it would be the Brethren, they often stick together, they work together and it helps produce that industriousness, right?” Stuart Symington said.
C.S. Hagen / Forum News Service
Today, massive $800,000 houses, called “McMansions” by local residents, are being constructed by the Brethren alongside houses that are little more than $20,000, according to data from Pembina County Assessor Zelda Hartje.
Gizinski lives across the street from two of the newly-constructed homes and has mixed feelings about the Brethren.
“They’re very nice people and they keep to themselves. When we had the big flood in ’97, they made all the food and laid sandbags,” said Gizinski.
Gizinski said she’s annoyed that Brethren members have their own grocery and liquor store called Campus & Co. nearby, where she isn’t allowed to shop. Instead, Neche residents must travel to Cavalier, Pembina or Grand Forks, North Dakota, about 100 miles away, for groceries.
“The thing that bothers me is they have that shop here. It’s not right,” Gizinski said.
Gizinski and other non-Brethren residents in Neche are upset about a recent $5 million dike proposal that the town’s mayor said the Brethren supports. Others don’t like the possibility their property taxes might rise with the recent additions of the large homes.

C.S. Hagen / Forum News Service
Another Neche resident scratched his head when asked about the Plymouth Brethren, saying he knew them only as Symingtons, and kept his distance.
Damian Symington, the mayor’s son, was a child when the family left the Brethren.
“I was born in it. When I was little I would get picked on by some of the Brethren kids because of who I was and because we left,” Damian said.
“I was told my dad was the devil, so I went home and told my mom that my dad was the devil,” said Damian, chuckling. “Now I understand that it was all just the hurt that they would have felt for someone willing to leave their church.”
But not everyone in Neche believes the Brethren are that harmless, or their presence in the town is not a concern.
Once, shortly after Gizinski moved to Neche, a little Brethren girl came up to her and told her she was going to hell because she was wearing shorts. Gizinski laughed as she recalled the memory, but grew more serious when she talked about Brethren who want to leave.
“They put the fear in them and they’re afraid to leave,” Gizinski said. “That makes me wonder, what are they trying to hide?”
North Dakota
Markhi Strickland has 15 as North Dakota State defeats Oral Roberts 79-77 in double OT
FARGO, N.D. (AP) — Markhi Strickland had 15 points in North Dakota State’s 79-77 double overtime victory over Oral Roberts on Saturday.
Strickland also contributed five rebounds for the Bison (12-5, 2-0 Summit League). Trevian Carson added 14 points while going 6 of 10 (2 for 3 from 3-point range) and eight rebounds. Damari Wheeler-Thomas finished with 14 points, while adding six rebounds.
Yuto Yamanouchi-Williams led the way for the Golden Eagles (5-12, 0-2) with 19 points, five rebounds and two blocks. Connor Dow added 15 points and two steals for Oral Roberts. Ofri Naveh also put up 14 points.
A foul sent Wheeler-Thomas to the line with seven seconds to play, where he sank one of the shots to send the game to overtime. Jack Turner tipped in a shot for Oral Roberts to send the game to a second overtime. Noah Feddersen tipped in a shot for North Dakota state with one second to play for the win for the Bison.
___
The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
North Dakota
Today in History, 1970: North Dakota faces population decline with the hope of a new decade
On this day in 1970, a Forum staff writer assessed North Dakota’s promise and challenges entering the new decade, highlighting opportunities in resources, industry, modernization, and recreation while warning that population decline, outdated government, and deep inequities—especially on reservations—would shape whether the 1970s became a boom or a setback.
Here is the complete story as it appeared in the paper that day:
Heavenly Seventies in N.D.?
By PIIL MATTHEWS
Staff Writer
North Dakota enters the 1970s with footings solidly built for the future:
Lots of wide open spaces when many parts of the nation are hurting for room. The promise of abundant water from Garrison diversion for irrigation and municipal and industrial use. A tax climate favorable for new industry and for the diversification of the state’s economic base. And its major resource — an intelligent and dependable people.
But how North Dakotans respond to their opportunity will determine whether the next ten years will be the heavenly seventies or a decade of decline.
Faced with a decreasing population, low farm prices, disappearing farms and small towns, North Dakotans may well be forced to take vigorous action if the trends are to be reversed.
The blueprint for tomorrow already is off the drawing boards. The roads, schools and colleges, the productive land and the natural resources of oil and lignite are already here.
“Our environmental setting is good for industrial development,” said a prominent Republican. “The depopulated Midwest states will find reversal of the trends of large-scale movements from the rural to urban centers. People want to get away from the smog and the crush of the cities and find someplace where there is clean air.”
A group of Eastern delegates arriving in Fargo for a convention were amazed because they could not see the air. Air, to them, was the smog of the cities. All they could see here was blue sky.
“There is tremendous disillusionment of life in the cities,” the Republican spokesman continued. “They are not nice places to live in. People want to get away. And to go someplace where there is clean air.”
But the overriding question is whether the opportunities will be seized. Do we want to trade our clean skies and wide-open spaces for the pollution and smog and congestion of industrial progress? Or is there an alternative?
North Dakota enters the new decade with some disturbing features marring its potential. Population which reached about 650,000 in the mid-60s, is on the decline. On July 1, 1969, the United States Census Bureau estimated the state’s population at 615,000.
The trend toward fewer and larger farms continues and is expected to continue in the years ahead. While there were 84,000 farms in the state in the 1930s, there are 43,000 today. Increased mechanization and reduced farm population spell a continued decline in the small towns.
Political Pains
In government and politics the state continues to struggle along with an outdated Constitution and laws that hamper instead of enhance its steps toward progress.
Grave concern is expressed across the state about the survival of a two-party system in North Dakota as the result of flounderings in the Democratic party both at the national and state level.
And when North Dakotans boast, “We have no ghettos,” someone can aptly point out, “Your ghettos are on the Indian reservations.”
The plight of the Indian is unquestionably the gravest problem confronting the state as it enters the decade. And the people are responding with a frenzy of activity to find new ways to cure old ills.
An Indian tribal leader observed, “With all the various governmental programs under way, you would think that life on the reservation is a utopia. But it isn’t. The people are confused. They are being pulled in many different ways by the various agencies working in different directions. This fragmentation of services is not good. It leaves the Indian confused.”
One glimmer of hope in this proliferation of proposed remedies is the United Tribes Employment Training Center that opened at Bismarck in 1969. By enrolling whole Indian families in the program, the Center aims to provide the breadwinner with job skills while at the same time instructing the parents and children in school subjects and personal living — a wholesale attack on the total problem.
“We’ve put all our eggs in one basket,” said the Indian leader. “This is a new concept — Indians training Indians. When Indian trainees walk in here and see a non-Indian, they feel resentment. They’ll respond to you when they won’t respond to me.”
He is enthusiastic about the Center and predicts it will flourish in the years ahead.
“It’s not what the people can do for the Indians,” he remarked. “It’s what the Indians can do for themselves. They have sat on their haunches, their arms folded and listened long enough to what the other people are going to do for them. It’s about time they start doing their own thinking and stop being a political football.”
He said the Center program is aimed directly at the root of the interrelated problems of unemployment, family disintegration and despair.
As new directions are being charted for the Indian, there are movements elsewhere in the state that augur well for the future.
A legislative leader said there is a mood across the state for government reorganization aimed at more streamlined and efficient services.
“The 1970s will see strides taken to reorganize government by making the executive branch stronger,” he said. “Instead of 14 elected state officials, we will be electing only five or six.”
North Dakotans will vote this year on the question of whether a constitutional convention should be held to redraft the Constitution. The legislative expert said the convention would present an opportunity to make a basic set of laws more suitable to the times than a document enacted in 1889.
He foresaw more interstate cooperation for providing costly services for the woman prisoner, the psychotic child, the hardened juvenile, the tubercular patient, the criminally
insane.
He envisioned more inter-governmental cooperation in the sharing of services:
“I think county government will remain close to the local level much as it is today, but economies will be realized by having one county official serve more than a single county — as is already being done by some county school superintendents.
The computer center in the Capitol, he explained, will be utilized in many ways to do a lot of jobs more efficiently and more accurately. A central data bank of common information needed by several departments of government will become a reality, he said, in place of many duplicating sets of files in various offices containing the same information.
The North Dakota Century Code of laws, comprised of 14 volumes, probably will be placed on tape, he said, for easy access via the computer. This will speed up code searches, drafting and enrolling of the bills.
“North Dakota will become one of the leaders in using computer for its state government operations,” he predicted.
Other changes in governmental affairs are in the wind, in the opinion of other state leaders. Both the Republican and Democratic spokesmen saw the implementation of revenue sharing from the federal government which would become a source of tax relief for North Dakota.
The state sales tax was raised to 4 per cent this year to provide replacement revenue for the abolition of the personal property tax.
“I would be opposed to increasing the sales tax any more,” said the Republican. “If there were any consideration of an increase I would be absolutely in favor of exempting all food and lower-cost clothing.”
A labor leader saw the government taking a more vigorous role in providing jobs for the young people and in providing vital services.
“The railroads want to discontinue certain trains and branch lines because they aren’t making any money in that particular operation,” he said. “But the railroads are a service. It would be like the post office saying they aren’t going to deliver mail to a certain part of town because it doesn’t make a profit there.”
The labor leader contended that the government would have to socialize distribution and transportation functions where the problems of private ownership have become burdensome.
“Either the government will have to subsidize or take over these operations — so what’s the difference? If a private organization serving the public fails to do the job because it can’t make a profit, then the government will have to take over and run it as a service.”
He said the state could halt the exodus of young people by establishing some industries that free enterprise does not see fit to do.
“If we can operate a state mill and a state bank, it would seem to me that we would be able to operate other state industries — such as the processing of our farm products,” he said.
Another proposal he raised would serve to maintain a more uniform cycle in the construction industry. Because of weather and climate there is high unemployment at certain times of the year. “By some general planning promoted by organized labor and the contractors with the state government participating, it could spread out the work throughout the seasons of the year. It would be a benefit to the worker and to the economy as a whole,” he said.
State government is assuming a more active role in providing employment and business opportunities. The Municipal Industrial Development Act contains provisions for property and income tax exemptions for up to five years for certain new ventures.
A business economist pointed out that new manufacturing plants are being added in North Dakota at the rate of about one a week. There are about 600 manufacturing plants in the state and he expected the growing trend to continue during the decade.
The diversion of water from Lake Sakakawea will not only see the beginning of irrigation farming but will also provide abundant supplies of water for municipal and industrial uses, which will prove beneficial to the economy.
North Dakota has the largest lignite coal reserves in the nation and three large plants have tapped this resource for producing electric power. More plants will be established.
Recreation is due to have a growing economic impact in the years ahead, in the opinion of many state leaders. The age of the snowmobile is making winter sports the “in” thing and states with four seasons will offer a variety of leisure activities the year around.
But even with opportunities glittering on the horizon, there is the question of whether the people will exploit them. Some prefer the state as it is. Some like to make their money here but choose to spend it elsewhere.
A North Dakota historian observed, “We live in a small state and therefore we feel defensive, even inferior. There is an attitude of fatalism. With the present declining population, we tend to think that this trend is bound to continue.”
He said there is a need for larger and less governmental and geographical units in the state, but that, too, can reach a point of diminishing returns. School district reorganization, he noted, often faces a great deal of resistance from people who want their small towns to survive: “They want to have a sense of community, a sense of belonging.”
But as the life in the big cities becomes more unbearable, he said, the life in the small towns and rural areas will become more desirable.
A Fargo housewife saw great hope for North Dakota because of the quality of life it can offer its people.
“In North Dakota we still have time to preserve and improve our surroundings,” she said. “The flower beds along the Red River — that’s the best thing that has happened here for years. We’re so busy pulling down trees and putting up architectural monstrosities and allowing these horrible strip developments along the highways.”
“There is every opportunity to attract and hold the young people by offering a good place to live rather than the lure of big money,” she contended.
Because North Dakota does not have the problems of the industrial and metropolitan centers, she advocated strong control to preserve and protect the environment as it is.
“We still have a clear sky, the wide open spaces and a lot of do-it-yourself opportunities. It’s that quality of life that will attract,” she said.
North Dakota
Today in History: December 29, 1959 – Sioux ice champs North Dakota team of the year
Today in History revisits the Tuesday, December 29. 1959 edition of the Grand Forks Herald and highlights a story on the UND Hockey team being names North Dakota team of the year.
The University of North Dakota hockey team was named “Team of the Year” after winning the NCAA Championship in a 4-3 overtime victory over Michigan State. Forward Reg Morelli was voted the tournament’s Most Valuable Player. Runner-up honors went to the Bismarck High basketball team for winning its third straight Class A title.
Sioux Ice Champs N. D. Team Of Year
By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS (as published by the Grand Forks Herald on Dec. 29, 1959)
North Dakota hockey stock reached a peak early in 1959 when the University sextet captured the NCAA championship with a 4-3 overtime victory over Michigan State.
The feat earned the Sioux icemen the accolade of “team of the year” in the annual Associated Press poll of sports editors and sports directors.
Runner-up honors in the balloting went to the Bismarck high school basketball team, which won its third straight Class A high school title.
The St. Mary’s high school football team, which came from no- where to win the Class A grid crown, won third place.
The University hockey team had taken western championship for the first time the year before, and finished second to Denver in the 1957-58 NCAA tournament.
As the 1958-59 campaign rolled around there were many problems to be solved if the Sioux were to maintain their position atop the college hockey world.
One by one the questions were resolved, and on March 14, at Troy, N. Y., North Dakota went into overtime to cop the coveted NCAA title.
Tremendous spirit marked the Sioux climb to the top. The North Dakota team won four games during the season in overtime, including two in the NCAA meet.
Members of the championship team included George Gratton and Bob Peabody, goalies; Ralph Lyndon, Julian Butherta, Pete Gaze- ly and Bob Began on defense; and Jerry Walford, Stan Paschke, Guy LaFrance, Art Miller, Ed Thomlinson, Joe Poole, Les Merrifield, Ron King, Bart Larson, Bernie Haley, Garth Perry and Reg Morelli, forwards.
Morelli Voted Most Valuable
Morelli was voted most valuable player in the NCAA tourney. Morelli and Thomlinson were on the first team and Lyndon and Poole on the tournament’s second team.
The Bismarck basketball feat of three straight state championships tied a record set by Fargo in 1922- 23-24. The Demons had an overall 21-3 record, averaged 61.6 points per game and held opponents to 49.3 per tilt on the season.
Starters were Ron Carlson and Bob Smith at forward, Rod Tjaden at center and Art Winter and Rich Olthoff at guards.
Carlson and Winter were all-west choices.
Here are “team of the year” choices, points in parenthesis:
- UND hockey (37)
- Bismarck high basketball (24)
- St. Mary’s high football (16)
- Bottineau high basketball (11)
- Valley City Teachers basket- ball (10)
- Williston high wrestling (5)
- Grand Forks Legion baseball (2)
- Shanley high football (1)
- NDAC football (1).
Our newsroom occasionally reports stories under a byline of “staff.” Often, the “staff” byline is used when rewriting basic news briefs that originate from official sources, such as a city press release about a road closure, and which require little or no reporting. At times, this byline is used when a news story includes numerous authors or when the story is formed by aggregating previously reported news from various sources. If outside sources are used, it is noted within the story.
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