North Dakota
Letter: Understanding the soul of LGBTQ+ persons

I used to be born in North Dakota in 1937 and my mom was born in 1917 and raised in rural McKenzie County.
In 1955-56 I visited a side-show at a good in a small North Dakota city. The attraction was to see somebody with each female and male genitals. To my amazement that was what I noticed. Nonetheless I used to be much more amazed once I shared with my Mother. Her response was not of shock and instructed me there was one residing within the neighborhood when she was rising up. She added that that particular person was known as a morphodite.
That phrase doesn’t seem in my Webster’s New Pocket Dictionary – copyright 2000 by Wiley Publishing Inc, Cleveland Ohio. By looking the net I realized that morphodite is slang for hermaphrodite which I did discover (n. one with each female and male components). Additionally realized the slang model could be present in Merriam-Webster Unabridged.
This early information gained has helped me perceive all of us have a few of each female and male attributes and that start certificates classifications of male or feminine could also be completely different than what the soul of an individual dictates. My dictionary has soul described #1. religious a part of an individual, #2. very important half, #3. particular person.
My hope and prayer is that we North Dakotans can change into extra accepting and never afraid of others; each who’re completely different from what is taken into account the norm in same-sex relationships and that we respect individuals whose soul tells them they don’t seem to be the intercourse assigned at start.

North Dakota
For 21st straight year, North Dakota tops U.S. states in honey production

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North Dakota
North Dakota fires hockey coach Brad Berry after 10 seasons

North Dakota fired hockey coach Brad Berry on Sunday, after the Fighting Hawks failed to make the NCAA tournament for the second time in three seasons.
Berry won a national championship in his first season as coach at his alma mater in 2015-16, when North Dakota beat Quinnipiac 5-1 in the championship game in Tampa, Fla. But the Fighting Hawks have had little postseason success since, with four NCAA tournament appearances and only one victory, coming in 2021. They have not appeared in the Frozen Four since Berry’s first season, when he took over after Dave Hakstol left to coach the NHL’s Philadelphia Flyers.
“Coach Berry has had a tremendous decade run at his alma mater,” UND athletic director Bill Chaves said in a statement. “Not many coaches win a national title and he’s one of a very few. His time will be cherished, but today was the right time to move in a new direction for UND hockey.”
Berry went 227-119-35 with the Fighting Hawks, including 21-15-2 this season, with five NCHC Penrose Cups and one NCHC Frozen Faceoff championship. North Dakota’s season ended Friday with a 4-2 loss to top-seeded Western Michigan in the NCHC semifinals at Xcel Energy Center.
Chaves said Dane Jackson will serve as interim coach while a national search for a replacement will begin immediately.
North Dakota
John Wheeler: Today's date presents an illustration of March weather extremes

FARGO — March 23 is an interesting day in the Fargo-Moorhead weather record book. With records dating to 1881, there are two versions of this particular date that stand out. In 1910, it was 80 degrees. This remains the only 80 degree day in March in the history of Fargo-Moorhead. The spring of 1910 was extraordinarily warm and dry and with the drought lasting well into summer, it was a year of many crop failures.
From the opposite end of things, March 23, 1974, remains the latest day in the year on record with a subzero high temperature. The year 1974 was one of those years in which spring seemed to never show. Following a week of cold days and a fresh 2-inch snowfall on March 22, the next day delivered a low of 11 degrees below zero and a high of 1 below. These are two extreme illustrations of how variable our weather can be in March.
John Wheeler is Chief Meteorologist for WDAY, a position he has had since May of 1985. Wheeler grew up in the South, in Louisiana and Alabama, and cites his family’s move to the Midwest as important to developing his fascination with weather and climate. Wheeler lived in Wisconsin and Iowa as a teenager. He attended Iowa State University and achieved a B.S. degree in Meteorology in 1984. Wheeler worked about a year at WOI-TV in central Iowa before moving to Fargo and WDAY..
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