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Gladys Laney

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Gladys Laney


Gladys J. Laney, age 79, of Elkhorn, NE. passed away on March 10, 2024 at Marquis Place Assisted Living in Elkhorn, NE.

Gladys Gunsch was born on July 31, 1944 in Jamestown, North Dakota to the late August and Lydia (Kirschenmann) Gunsch. Gladys worked as an Account Collector for CITI Financial, later worked as a Cashier for Walmart at 168th and Harrison, retiring in 2009.

Survivors include daughter, Tracy Marcinski of Fremont, NE.; son, Scott and Christine Helgelien of Mainleus, Germany; 3 granddaughters, Marcella and Sven Helgelien of Mainleus, Germany; Shea and Shane Ahrens of Fremont, NE.; Kaley Marcinski of St. Louis, MO.; grandson, Patrick Helgelien; 3 great grandchildren, Sophia Helgelien; Anna-Lena Helgelien and Luca Fortsch all of Mainleus, Germany. Gladys was preceded in death by her brother, Melvin Gunsch.

Graveside service will be 11:00 AM, Monday, March 18, 2024 at Highland Home Cemetery, Jamestown, ND.

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Eddy Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements.





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Continental Resources halts Bakken drilling for first time in 30 years

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Continental Resources halts Bakken drilling for first time in 30 years


FARGO, N.D. (Valley News Live) – For the first time in more than 30 years, North Dakota’s Bakken shale formation will be without drilling rigs operated by Harold Hamm’s Continental Resources Inc., the company’s founder announced in an interview with Bloomberg last week.

The shutdown decision comes as falling oil prices have eliminated profit margins for Bakken operations, according to Hamm, who spoke with Bloomberg News over the phone.

“There’s no need to drill it when margins are basically gone,” said Hamm, 80, the billionaire oilman whose company pioneered modern drilling techniques in North Dakota’s oil fields.

Continental Resources’ exit from active Bakken drilling represents a turning point for the region where Hamm first demonstrated that hydraulic fracturing could unlock vast oil reserves trapped in shale rock. Those innovations transformed the U.S. into the world’s leading oil producer.

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Current economics make Bakken drilling unprofitable. Wells in the formation need oil prices of at least $58 per barrel to break even and generate modest returns, according to research firm BloombergNEF. Drilling costs have climbed nearly 4% in the past year.

But oil prices have moved in the opposite direction. West Texas Intermediate crude, the U.S. pricing benchmark, closed Thursday at $59.19 per barrel, down 26% from a year ago. Market analysts attribute the decline to anticipated oversupply.

The pullback extends beyond North Dakota. Across the U.S., the active rig count has fallen 15% year-over-year, with Texas’ Permian Basin seeing the steepest cuts at 60 rigs.

Hamm, whose company also operates in Oklahoma and Texas, said the industry is reevaluating drilling programs nationwide.

“A lot of people are assessing their activity in all the basins,” he said in his interview with Bloomberg.

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The Continental Resources founder indicated the company could resume North Dakota operations if market conditions improve.

“We’re price takers, as you’re aware, not price makers,” Hamm said. “See what we can get.”



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North Dakota man who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. dies

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North Dakota man who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. dies


BISMARCK — A former North Dakota elected official who marched with Martin Luther King Jr. has died.

Byron Knutson died Dec. 6 at the age of 96, according to his family. His daughter alerted media to his death on Thursday, Jan. 15.

A member of the Democratic-NPL Party, Knutson served as a state legislator, insurance commissioner and labor commissioner.

Knutson was surrounded by family at the time of his death. He is survived by his wife of 59 years, Bernice (Hofstad) Knutson, daughters Rebecca and Harmony Knutson, and grandchildren John, Olivia and Sophia Gowin.

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“Profoundly inspired by King, our father devoted his life to public service,” Rebecca Knutson said via release. “There are still so many injustices happening in our world. Leaders like King and our father are desperately needed.”

A celebration of life for Knutson will be announced at a later date, the release said. To mark Knutson’s death, The Forum is republishing the following column by Jim Shaw, which was originally published in 2021.

‘No time for fear’ North Dakota man joined MLK in 1965 march from Selma to Montgomery

Monday is Martin Luther King Jr. Day. A day when we remember the extraordinary civil rights leader and the enormous impact he had.

One of the people King had a huge impact on was Byron Knutson, 91, of Bismarck.

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Knutson grew up in the small North Dakota town of Harlow, near Devils Lake. It was far away from a sizable community of African Americans, and very far away from the segregated South, where Black Americans were degraded, humiliated and had few rights.

Knutson started thinking about racial injustice in the 1950s when he was a Marine sergeant serving in the Korean War. Three of his closest companions in the war were Black Americans from Louisiana and South Carolina. They lived together, ate together and fought together.

“These men served our nation hontrably,” Knutson said. “However, when they returned to their home states, they did not have the right to vote even though they had been willing to give their lives in defense of our nation’s actions. What an injustice. … I vowed to one day try to help people like these good young men.”

After the war, Knutson started following the news accounts from the Jim Crow South.

Byron Knutson started thinking about racial injustice in the 1950s when he was a Marine sergeant serving in the Korean War.

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“I was angry with how Blacks were treated,” Knutson said. “It was dreadful that in many states, segregation kept them from attending schools of their choice, from living and working wherever was best for them, from shopping at stores, from being served at lunch counters, from sitting wherever they wished in public transportation and from using a bathroom unless it was marked Black or Colored.”

Knutson read and watched news stories about King and was inspired by the young, charismatic Baptist minister from Atlanta. King led such events as the Montgomery bus boycott and the 1963 March on Washington, always preaching nonviolent protests.

It was during the March on Washington that King delivered his memorable “I Have a Dream” speech. Knutson saw it and was moved.

In Alabama and other Southern states, Black Americans were denied the right to vote. Sometimes they were given a poll tax they couldn’t pay, a literacy test they couldn’t pass or were simply rejected without explanation. Black people trying to register to vote risked being beaten, arrested or fired from their jobs.

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So, in 1965, King announced there would be a voting rights march from Selma to Montgomery, Alabama. Knutson enthusiastically volunteered to participate.

“When Reverend Martin Luther King, Jr. called upon the nation’s clergy and lay people to support the rights of African Americans and all people to vote without fear of losing their lives, I was ready to do my part,” Knutson said. “I had seen the dreadful reports of the killings of innocent Blacks by hate mongers such as KKK members and the trampling of civil rights marchers by Southern police. … It was unthinkable that North Dakota would not be represented in this all-important call by Reverend King.”

Actually, Knutson signed up to take part in the third march. The first two ended in tragedy. The first march was on March 7, 1965. During that event, Alabama State Troopers beat the unarmed marchers with billy clubs, shoved them and fired tear gas at them. It became known as “Bloody Sunday.”

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Demonstrators clash with police in 1965 in Selma, Alabama. The event helped push President Lyndon Johnson to sign the Voting Rights Act.

Alabama Department of Public Safety / TNS

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Two days later, they tried marching again but turned back. That night, three of the white marchers were attacked and beaten with clubs by four members of the KKK. One of the victims, James Reeb, was killed.

So, Knutson, then 35, knew the potential dangers he was facing when he took a 10-day leave from his job at the Soo Line Railroad and headed to Selma along with Frank Woodall, a pastor at the Oberon, North Dakota, Swedish Lutheran Church.

They were advised not to drive a car with North Dakota license plates to Alabama. Thus, they drove 16 hours to Nashville, then took a train to Montgomery, and then were picked up in a station wagon for the ride to Selma. They were joined in the car by a young Black man who was going to march in honor of his uncle, who was recently lynched.

“Upon boarding the station wagon, the driver told us to keep our heads low,” Knutson said. “No raising of our heads, no talking. We obeyed, but through a slit in a curtain, we viewed police, whips in hand, mounted on white horses near us.”

A couple of days before the march, Knutson and 70 others were walking through a white neighborhood in Selma.

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“Suddenly, curtains closed on the windows of residents and police appeared,” Knutson said. “They tapped on each of our shoulders, telling us we were being arrested for our own safety. We were ushered to our buses and brought to prison. Since the prison was full, we were incarcerated in what appeared to be an old warehouse where we were kept for the night.”

The next day, they went to the courthouse with local Black citizens so they could register to vote.

“We were told the registrar was just not available,” Knutson said. “Was the registrar suddenly unavailable because Black citizens were coming to legally be registered to vote? It was dismaying to witness this act against them.”

On March 21, 1965, it was time for the third march. This time, the walkers were to be protected by the Alabama National Guard, which had been federalized by President Lyndon Johnson.

“We were instructed in methods of nonviolent action to assure that the march would be peaceful,” Knutson said. “March organizers asked for persons who had been in the military and had experience in dealing with crowds to come forth to help in making sure that the thousands of marchers walked peacefully, and to assist the marchers if they needed it. I volunteered.”

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So, led by King, Knutson and 8,000 peaceful participants started walking 54 miles to Montgomery.

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Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., arm in arm with Reverend Ralph Abernathy, leads marchers as they begin the Selma to Montgomery civil rights march from Brown’s Chapel Church in Selma, Alabama, March 21 1965. From left: An unidentified priest and man, John Lewis, an unidentified nun, Ralph Abernathy, Martin Luther King Jr., Ralph Bunche, Abraham Joshua Heschel and Fred Shuttlesworth.

William Lovelace / Getty Images / TNS

“It was a joyful march,” Knutson said. “I was in charge of several lines of marchers. I made sure that marchers stayed in formation, with no one wandering off the designated road. We looked out for those who needed extra help and assisted them in finding food, first aid and latrines. … The marchers were kind, cooperative, serious and determined souls, dedicated to bringing voting rights to African Americans. I felt blessed to be able to help them in this epic time.”

Many onlookers shouted ugly slurs at the walkers.

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“We reminded marchers that they were instructed to disregard critical comments that were shouted at them,” Knutson said. “My responsibilities required a positive, kind bravery that had no time for fear.”

Four days after the start of the march, 25,000 joyful walkers arrived at the steps of the State Capitol in Montgomery. The joy turned to grief that night. One of the marchers, Viola Liuzzo, a white mother of five from Detroit, was shot dead by the Klan.
Still, the march received extensive news coverage, and the powerful images strongly influenced public opinion. Soon, Congress passed the Voting Rights Act, and Johnson signed it into law on Aug. 6, 1965. Shortly afterwards, millions of Black Americans registered to vote.
“I am proud that I took part in the March for Voting Rights,” Knutson said. “It is one of the most important events of my life, in that it promoted the right for all of us to vote in our nation’s elections.”

Knutson went on to serve in the North Dakota House of Representatives, as North Dakota insurance commissioner and as North Dakota labor commissioner. In his office at home, there’s a picture of Martin Luther King Jr. on the wall that Knutson proudly displays.

“Martin Luther King Jr. continues to be the most inspirational leader of human and civil rights of our time,” Knutson said. “His messages of love, kindness and nonviolence, and of commitment of furthering the rights of all people, are as true today as they were when we marched 55 years ago.”





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Three games from around southwest North Dakota you won’t want to miss

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Three games from around southwest North Dakota you won’t want to miss


DICKINSON — The North Dakota winter sports season is in full swing, with boys and girls basketball conference play well underway. With the girls district tournament officially less than one month away, The Dickinson Press takes a look at the biggest games of the week from around southwest North Dakota.

Trinity @ Watford City — Girls Basketball — Monday, Jan. 19

The Trinity Titans fell at home to Rapid City Christian 76-30 on Saturday, Jan. 3, at Trinity High School.

Carter Dooner / The Dickinson Press

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The top of Region 4 remains relatively wide open, and Trinity and Watford City will battle for the second spot in the region behind Hazen.

The Titans nearly knocked off Hazen last week, but a strong closing stretch from the Bison allowed them to stake their claim as the top team in the region heading into the middle of January.

Trinity enters the matchup with a 5-1 region record, while Watford City sits right behind in third place at 3-1.

The Titans are beginning to find production outside of Dickinson State University commit Annabel Scheeler. In their 57-51 loss to Hazen, Kambree Fleck scored 20 points to lead the way and nearly willed the team to an upset victory.

Tip off is slated for Monday, January 19, at 6:30 p.m.

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Belfield @ New England — Boys Basketball — Tuesday, Jan. 20

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The New England Tigers fell 60-42 against Bowman County on Tuesday, January 7, at Bowman County High School.

Carter Dooner / The Dickinson Press

Belfield will head to New England with a perfect District 7 record and will put it on the line against the Tigers.

For New England, Jordan Jung, Gage Madler, and Mark Fitterer form one of the most dangerous trios in the entire district, but production outside of that group has been limited at times this season.

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Production for the Bantams has come from up and down the lineup. Carter Corneil and Shane Stroh will lead the way offensively, while emerging contributions from George Locket and Noah Obrigewitch have Belfield eyeing another Region 4 Tournament appearance.

Tipoff is slated for Tuesday, Jan. 20 at 7 p.m. at New England High School.

Bowman County @ Richardton-Talyor — Boys Basketball — Thursday, Jan. 22

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Jonah Njos lays it in on the fast break in the Bulldogs 60-42 win over New England on Jan. 6 at Bowman County High School.

Carter Dooner / The Dickinson Press

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Bowman County has emerged as the hunted so far in District 7, sporting a perfect 2-0 record in district play. Jonah Njos and Cansas Duffield have led the way, helping the Bulldogs win three of their last four games.

The Richardton-Taylor Raiders have had a solid start to the season, placing third at the Roughrider Tournament and already matching their win total from last season before even playing their first home game.

Chase Christensen and Kyler Krank lead the way on offense, and they’ll have their hands full against a solid Bowman County defense that has held opponents under 50 points six times so far this season.

Tipoff is slated for Thursday, Jan. 22 at 7 p.m. at Richardton-Taylor High School.

Carter Dooner

Carter is a sports reporter for the Dickinson Press. Born and raised in Minneapolis, Minnesota, he graduated from the University of Minnesota in 2025 with a journalism degree.

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