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Community comes together for cause

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Community comes together for cause


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Eric Thoemke, Minot Food Truck Festival executive director, and Matthew Maldonado, digital media specialist with ND Strong, pose plates of hot dogs for a food eating contest at the 2023 festival in Oak Park.

Oak Park in Minot will be buzzing on Sunday, Aug. 25, at the seventh annual Minot Food Truck Festival.

The festival is hosted by ND Strong, an education nonprofit that funds The Film Dudes program, which provides opportunities for students throughout the state to get hands-on experience making films and creating content.

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Throughout the year, The Film Dudes travel across North Dakota and work with schools and other academic institutions in teaching the integration of media production into curriculum, conducting workshops with staff and students and exhibiting film opportunities throughout the state.

Eric Thoemke, the festival director, said 20 trucks will be at the 2024 festival, which also will showcase around 20 local vendors, concerts, free food eating contests, music performances, fire throwers, 15 bounce castles and other free activities, such as mini golf and ax throwing for children and families. A majority of the food trucks are based in North Dakota, but Thoemke said some vendors from previous years have hailed from South Dakota and even Las Vegas.

“It’s a perfect time of the year. The weather is normally perfect. Everyone comes to the park one day and it really feels like a bigger city atmosphere. There’s music playing, tons of variety of food. There’s artists doing artwork on the site, and we’re looking to add so much more this year. We’re pretty excited about it. There’s a lot of community involvement, and I think that’s what makes it most special. It’s an awesome event in the park, and you don’t get too many of those in the summer that are this size,” Thoemke said.

The first food truck festival in 2017 had 13 trucks participating, and Thoemke said the community turnout blew away their expectations.

“We were only expecting 500 people to show up. I think almost all the food trucks sold out the first year. We had over 5,000 people show up. We were running around with our heads cut off,” Thoemke said.

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North Dakota State QB Reveals Why He Stayed Amid FBS Move

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North Dakota State QB Reveals Why He Stayed Amid FBS Move



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NDSU’s likely starting quarterback is ready for a new era in the FBS.

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North Dakota State experienced its largest-ever loss of players to the transfer portal before the recent FBS move, and fortunately, the Bison didn’t lose the program’s next starting quarterback.

Senior quarterback Nathan Hayes told Bison  1660 AM that he wasn’t certain it the FBS move up would happen during his years in Fargo. That said, Hayes admitted “that’s not why I stayed” regarding the once-potential FBS move.

“I stayed because of the coaching staff here. I stayed because of my teammates and the relationships that I’ve built with them,” Hayes told Bison 1660 AM on Feb. 11. “So no matter who we play, we’re just gonna go out there and try to prove something and show all the work that we’ve done, all the time that we’ve put in together.”

A West Chicago, Illinois, native, Hayes has been part of the Bison program since 2023 and won a FCS national championship in 2024. He played in just 18 games over the past three years, but he is poised to take the starting job after Cole Payton‘s departure for the NFL Draft.

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Nathan Hayes: ‘Might Be Eye-Opening’

In Hayes’ brief appearances, he completed 59% of his passes for 595 yards and seven touchdowns versus one interception. He also rushed for 178 yards and two touchdowns on 14 carries.

“Yeah, I think the first few weeks might be eye-opening, surreal because thinking back to Colorado [in 2024], I mean, we get to the stadium, it’s a bigger stadium, all the bright lights,” Hayes said.  “We’re playing a team that’s supposed to be better than us from a you know, FBS standpoint. So I think the first few weeks might be a little bit of an adjustment period, but I don’t think that should affect our play.”

And then once we settle in, it’s just gonna be, you know, onto the next the same preparation weekend and week out as far as film, practice, weight room. So yeah, I think by … a few weeks in, we’re just gonna be, you know, the Bison,” Hayes added.


Nathan Hayes Reveals Players’ Vibe Amid FBS Announcement

Hayes talked about the Feb. 8 team meeting when the players knew the FBS move was official after years of speculation over NDSU’s FBS plans.

“Oh yeah, especially the seniors, just because in previous years you have all the, you know, … the periods where you’re gonna be an FCS for another year, but you can’t compete for a playoff,” Hayes said. “So going into this offseason, kind of hearing the rumors like is that something we seniors kind of selfishly is that what we really want? Because we’re just gonna have 12 FCS games and not be able to play for a championship, and then we’re gonna move to the Mountain West next year.”

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“And then we hear officially that Okay, we’re going this year. We get to play this year, and so I think the seniors were really excited,” Hayes continued. Everybody was really excited to, oh, dang, … it’s on now. So standing ovation in the team room for Matt Larsen and coach [Tim] Polasek was really cool. Just the energy in there even after everybody’s talking. Everybody’s in the group chats excited about, you know, who we’re gonna play.”

Matthew Davis covers the NFL, WNBA and college sports for Heavy.com. As a contributing writer to the StarTribune, he has also covered Minnesota prep sports since 2016. More about Matthew Davis





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ND National Guard’s 142nd Engineer Battalion returns from southern border

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ND National Guard’s 142nd Engineer Battalion returns from southern border


North Dakota National Guard’s 142nd Engineer Battalion welcomed home on Feb. 21, 2026.

VALLEY CITY, N.D. (KFGO) – Fifty members of the North Dakota National Guard’s 142nd Engineer Battalion are back home following a year-long deployment to the nation’s southern border in support of U.S. Customs and Border Protection (CBP). 

The unit returns to North Dakota after providing assistance to CBP operations aimed at stemming illegal immigration, drug smuggling and human trafficking.

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“I cannot tell you the exact number as far as the number of drugs, the number of sex trafficking operations, or the exact number of illegal crossings that we prevented and stopped. But the number is significant,” said Lt. Col. Ryan Kaufman.

The unit’s deployment followed the deployments of the 957th Engineer Company, the 1-112th Aviation Regiment and the 817th Engineer Company to the southern border.

“The members of the 142nd Engineer Battalion have served with professionalism and dedication, helping combat illegal immigration, drug smuggling and human trafficking at our southern border,” said Sen. John Hoeven. “We are grateful for their service and proud to welcome them safely home to North Dakota. Border security is national security, and it’s vital that we do everything we can to protect our country.”

At a welcome home ceremony on Saturday, North Dakota National Guard Adjutant General, Brigadier General Mitchell R. Johnson, Command Sergeant Major Kendall Struxness, and Lt. Col. Ryan Kaufman, Commander of the 142nd Engineer Battalion in Valley City, addressed the audience and shared experience of their deployment.

Lt. Col. Kaufman says no soldiers had to use their assigned weapon on this deployment and everyone made it home safely. One soldier was attacked by an illegal immigrant.

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“Thankfully that soldier was a high school wrestler and came out on the better end of that deal,” Kaufman told the audience. “And that was handled about as good as you could possibly hope for.”

He also says the Chaplain is okay after being hit by a car while on deployment.



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Bronze North Dakota Great Seal marks 20 years at State Capitol

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Bronze North Dakota Great Seal marks 20 years at State Capitol


BISMARCK, N.D. (KFYR) – A six-foot bronze version of North Dakota’s Great Seal has stood inside the State Capitol for 20 years.

The seal was placed in Memorial Hall in February 2006. It stretches six feet across and weighs 440 pounds. The plaque beneath it weighs 570 pounds.

Today, it remains a centerpiece in the Capitol.

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