North Dakota
Today in History: April 4, 1915 – University of North Dakota Men's Glee Club
Today in History takes a look back at an article from April 4, 1915, about University of North Dakota’s Men’s Glee Club and their annual tour of the state. Read ahead to learn about the UND Men’s Glee Club, some of its members, and what their tour entailed.
University of North Dakota Men’s Glee Club which starts on tenth annual tour of the state tonight making ten cities in circuit
This evening (April 4, 1915), the University of North Dakota Men’s Glee Club will leave Grand Forks on its tenth annual tour of the state, which will include visits to ten cities, ending on the sixteenth with the home concert. In order to accommodate the number of cities that desired to hear the club this year, a short trip was made between semesters in February, which took in Mandan, Bismarck, New Salem, and Dickinson.
The annual tour is always made during the spring vacation as this is the only time that the men can absent themselves from their studies long enough to make the trip. The early trip was a valuable experience to the new men this year and the club that starts out tonight is one that is among the best that ever represented the school, well-balanced and rounded into excellent condition.
The club this year is composed of thirty-five men, twenty of whom have been selected for the tour, after tryouts held in quartets by Director W. W. Norton. The competition is always keen and this year it was unusually so. The men are chosen on the following basis:
- Knowing the songs and their rendition.
- Work as soloists or readers.
- General value to the club.
The men of the different sections are as follows:
First Tenors – Howard Flint, J. J. Webber, McLain Critchfield, Joseph Snowfield, H. H. Schlafer.
Second Tenors – Orval McHaffie, Walter S. Tostevin, John Muir, R. W. Manuel, Meecham.
First Bass – S. Cuyler Anderson, Louis G. Telner, Howard Bertelson, Alvin Stommer.
Second Bass – McKinley Tubbs, John Fraine, Clarence Lee, John Moore, W. W. Norton.
The club is particularly fortunate this year in its soloists. There will be two tenors who will appear on the present trip, Rowland Philip Manuel, associate professor of voice in Wesley College, whose group of three songs will be one of the features of the concerts, and Registrar Schlafer, whose work is of the highest class and who never fails to please an audience.
The baritone soloist, S. Cuyler Anderson, of Jamestown, is making his third tour with the club and is well known to audiences of the state. He has a wonderfully musical voice of great range, and his rendition is most pleasing.
Director Norton appears as a bass soloist and also on the violin. His work needs no comment. He is familiar to every music-loving audience in the state and is always enthusiastically welcomed wherever he appears.
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North Dakota
North Dakota officials celebrate being among big winners in federal rural health funding
North Dakota
Tony Osburn’s 27 helps Omaha knock off North Dakota 90-79
OMAHA, Neb. (AP) — Tony Osburn scored 27 points as Omaha beat North Dakota 90-79 on Thursday.
Osburn shot 8 of 12 from the field, including 5 for 8 from 3-point range, and went 6 for 9 from the line for the Mavericks (8-10, 1-2 Summit League). Paul Djobet scored 18 points and added 12 rebounds. Ja’Sean Glover finished with 10 points.
The Fightin’ Hawks (8-11, 2-1) were led by Eli King, who posted 21 points and two steals. Greyson Uelmen added 19 points for North Dakota. Garrett Anderson had 15 points and two steals.
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The Associated Press created this story using technology provided by Data Skrive and data from Sportradar.
North Dakota
Port: 2 of North Dakota’s most notorious MAGA lawmakers draw primary challengers
MINOT — Minot’s District 3 is home to Reps. Jeff Hoverson and Lori VanWinkle, two of the most controversial members of the Legislature, but maybe not for much longer.
District 3, like all odd-numbered districts in our state, is on the ballot this election cycle, and the House incumbents there
have just drawn two serious challengers.
Tim Mihalick and Blaine DesLauriers, each with a background in banking, have announced campaigns for those House seats. Mihalick is a senior vice president at First Western Bank & Trust and serves on the State Board of Higher Education. DesLauriers is vice chair of the board and senior executive vice president at First International Bank & Trust.
The entry into this race has delighted a lot of traditionally conservative Republicans in North Dakota
Hoverson, who has worked as a Lutheran pastor, has frequently made headlines with his bizarre antics. He was
banned from the Minot International Airport
after he accused a security agent of trying to touch his genitals. He also
objected
to a Hindu religious leader participating in the Legislature’s schedule of multi-denominational invocation leaders and, on his local radio show, seemed to suggest that Muslim cultures that force women to wear burkas
have it right.
Hoeverson has also backed legislation to mandate prayer and the display of the Ten Commandments in schools, and to encourage the end of Supreme Court precedent prohibiting bans on same sex marriage.
Tom Stromme / The Bismarck Tribune
VanWinkle, for her part, went on a rant last year in which she suggested that women struggling with infertility have been cursed by God
(she later claimed her comments, which were documented in a floor speech, were taken out of context)
before taking
a weeklong ski vacation
during the busiest portion of the legislative session (she continued to collect her daily legislative pay while absent). When asked by a constituent why she doesn’t attend regular public forums in Minot during the legislative session,
she said she wasn’t willing to “sacrifice” any more of her personal time.
The incumbents haven’t officially announced their reelection bids, but it’s my practice to treat all incumbents as though they’re running again until we learn otherwise.
In many ways, VanWinkle and Hoverson are emblematic of the ascendant populist, MAGA-aligned faction of the North Dakota Republican Party. They are on the extreme fringe of conservative politics, and openly detest their traditionally conservative leaders. Now they’ve got challengers who are respected members of Minot’s business community, and will no doubt run well-organized and well-funded campaigns.
If the 2026 election is a turning point in the
internecine conflict among North Dakota Republicans
— the battle to see if our state will be governed by traditional conservatives or culture war populists — this primary race in District 3 could well be the hinge on which it turns.
In the 2024 cycle, there was an effort, largely organized by then-Rep. Brandon Prichard, to push far-right challengers against more moderate incumbent Republicans.
It was largely unsuccessful.
Most of the candidates Prichard backed lost, including Prichard himself, who was
defeated in the June primary
by current Rep. Mike Berg, a candidate with a political profile not all that unlike that of Mihalick and DesLauriers.
But these struggles among Republicans are hardly unique to North Dakota, and the populist MAGA faction has done better elsewhere. In South Dakota, for instance, in the 2024 primary,
more than a dozen incumbent Republicans were swept out of office.
Can North Dakota’s normie Republicans avoid that fate? They’ll get another test in 2026, but recruiting strong challengers like Mihalick and DesLauriers is a good sign for them.
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