North Dakota
North Dakota senator recovering after falling, hitting head on the ice
REPUBLICAN U.S. SENATOR KEVIN CRAMER OF NORTH DAKOTA IS RESTING AT HOME AFTER SUFFERING SERIOUS INJURIES WHEN HE FELL ON THE ICE IN HIS BACKYARD IN BISMARCK OVER THE WEEKEND, .
KRAMER POSTED ON FACEBOOK THAT QUOTE “ WHILE WALKING ON THE HILL DOWN TO THE DOCK, I STEPPED ON ICE AND EVIDENTLY FELL HARD, HITTING THE BACK OF MY HEAD. I DO NOT REMEMBER ANYTHING FROM THE FALL UNTIL ARRIVING AT SANFORD HEALTH EMERGENCY ROOM WITH KRIS,” END QUOTE. KRIS IS THE SENATOR’S WIFE.
THE LAWMAKER IS NOW TAKING TIME OFF FROM HIS DUTIES IN WASHINGTON TO REST. DOCTORS HAVE TOLD HIM, HE HAS A SEVERE CONCUSSION, SUFFERED A SEIZURE AND A SLIGHT BRAIN BLEED. HE HAS STAPLES IN HIS HEAD WHERE THERE IS A CUT. CRAMER ALSO REVEALED HE IS TAKING THE ANTI-SEIZURE MEDICATION KEPRA.
THE INJURY DREW THE ATTENTION OF PRESIDENT DONALD TRUMP WHO POSTED ON HIS TRUTH SOCIAL ACCOUNT : OUR GREAT SENATOR FROM NORTH DAKOTA, SENATOR KEVIN CRAMER, JUST RECENTLY SLIPPED ON ICE AND HIT HIS HEAD, CAUSING QUITE AN INJURY. HE IS NOW RESTING COMFORTABLY, BUT WENT THROUGH A LOT. HIS WONDERFUL WIFE, KRIS, IS WITH HIM, AND I’M SURE HE WILL BE FINE, BUT IT WAS A CLOSE CALL! GET WELL SOON KEVIN, AND THANK YOU TO KRIS FOR HER QUICK AND VERY ALERT RESPONSE TO KEVIN’S DIFFICULT MOMENT.!”
THE 64-YEAR-OLD CRAMER DID NOT OFFER A SPECIFIC TIMELINE FOR HIS RETURN TO THE NATION’S CAPITAL BUT POSTED THAT HE IS READY TO RETURN QUICKLY IF EVENTS REQUIRE IT. HE IS CURRENTLY SERVING HIS SECOND TERM. FOR MORE UNBIASED UPDATES, DOWNLOAD THE STRAIGHT ARROW NEWS APP.
North Dakota
Millions of bees released after truck rollover near Valley City
VALLEY CITY — A truck hauling bees rolled over Thursday, May 28, on westbound Interstate 94 near mile marker 292 near Valley City, releasing millions of bees and closing the right lane of traffic.
The crash was reported at about 4:45 p.m. Thursday, according to the North Dakota Highway Patrol. Officials said the westbound right-side lane was closed following the rollover.
Millions of bees were released in the crash, and beekeepers were called to the scene to help recover and contain the insects.
Officials said the cable barrier area marked where large groups of bees had clustered.
Drivers were asked to slow down, follow directions from emergency responders and give crews and the bees plenty of space while work continued at the scene.
North Dakota
Large fire reported near Wibaux
WIBAUX, Mont. (KFYR) – Several fire departments from both North Dakota and Montana are fighting a grass fire about 40 miles south of Wibaux in the Pine Unit area.
The editor of the Wibaux Pioneer Gazette tells us no structures are in danger at this time, and the Wibaux, Beach, Golva and Glendive Fire Departments are working to put out the flames.
The public is asked to avoid the area at this time.
Copyright 2026 KFYR. All rights reserved.
North Dakota
Today in History, 1937: Records reveal purchase of North Dakota land by William Rockefeller
On this day in 1937, uncovered records revealed that William A. Rockefeller, father of oil magnate John D. Rockefeller, once lived near Park River, N.D., where he bought and sold land in the late 1880s.
Here is the complete story as it appeared in the paper that day:
N. D. Chapter In Rockefeller Saga Revealed
Exhumation of dusty records reveals a North Dakota chapter in the lives of the Rockefeller family.
Almost forgotten in the near half century, but revived with the death Sunday of John D. Rockefeller at his Ormond Beach home in Florida, is the story of the bizarre William A. Rockefeller, the oil tycoon’s father, who lived in Park River in the ’80s.
Search for records began after Daniel E. Flynn, Bismarck businessman, reported he recalled hearing a story that Rockefeller lived in the Park River vicinity.
Establishing the veracity of his residence in Walsh county is a musty document in the register of deeds’ office in Grafton. It tells the story of William A. Rockefeller buying seven quarter sections of land for $6,000 on June 23, 1886, from P. D. Briggs.
On Oct. 10, 1890 — slightly over four years later — another transfer is recorded. With Rockefeller business sagacity the transfer price had gone to $10,000. Part of the present city of Park River is located on the land.
The story of the Park River Rockefeller dovetails with the Rockefeller life story. The elder Rockefeller was shrouded in mystery. Supposedly he abandoned his family.
Always in funds, he led a sequestered existence, revealing little of his life before coming to North Dakota. He later was known as Dr. William Rockefeller and the deed on the land transfer bore that name.
He sold patent medicine cure-alls, old timers in the Park River area recall. He remained in the Park River district for about four years. In Freeport, Ill., in 1910, well past 90, he died.
Harry O’Brien, publisher of the Walsh County Press at Park River, said C. D. Lord, a pioneer banker and real estate man, still a Park River resident, handled the land transfer in 1889.
Another story, unsubstantiated, is that John D. Rockefeller visited his father on several occasions. He came by private train, the train routed by night into Park River, and few people were aware that he had come into the community.
Kate Almquist is the social media manager for InForum. After working as an intern, she joined The Forum full time starting in January 2022. Readers can reach her at kalmquist@forumcomm.com.
-
Lifestyle11 minutes agoTrump’s name must come off of the Kennedy Center, judge rules
-
Technology23 minutes agoAcer’s launching a Linux handheld for streaming your PC games
-
World29 minutes agoPentagon hosts first-ever Israeli–Lebanese military talks aimed at curbing Hezbollah
-
Politics35 minutes agoFederal judge orders Trump’s name removed from Kennedy Center, says only Congress can rename it
-
Health41 minutes agoSingle infusion of controversial drug changed severe depression symptoms within hours, study finds
-
Sports47 minutes ago2026 World Cup Odds: Spain Narrowly Favored Over France
-
Technology53 minutes agoFake grant email promises $4.5 Million but could steal your identity
-
Business59 minutes agoAnother tech company says it will cut hundreds of jobs amid pivot to AI