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Walsh County, ND High School Girls Basketball Schedule, Streaming Live Today – February 3

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Walsh County, ND High School Girls Basketball Schedule, Streaming Live Today – February 3


We have high school basketball action in Walsh County, North Dakota today, and information on how to stream these matchups is available below.

Follow high school basketball this season on the NFHS Network! Keep tabs on your family or alma mater and tune in!

Walsh County, North Dakota High School Girls Basketball Games Today

Grafton High Schools at Rugby High School

  • Game Time: 3:30 PM CT on February 3
  • Location: Rugby, ND
  • How to Stream: Watch Here

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North Dakota

The Women’s College Fan Guide To 2026 Junior Nationals – FloWrestling

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The Women’s College Fan Guide To 2026 Junior Nationals – FloWrestling


Justin Fairbanks went to work! He created this incredible breakdown of Fargo participants and their college commitments. Email kyle.klingman@flosports.tv with updates. 

Here’s the full Fargo schedule so you don’t miss any of the girls’ action.

2026 U.S. Marine Corps Junior Nationals

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Junior Girls Freestyle
Thursday, July 16 at 2:00 p.m. ET – Session XI
Friday, July 17 at 10:00 a.m. ET – Session XIII
Friday, July 17 at 4:00 p.m. ET – Session XIV
Saturday, July 18 at 11:00 a.m. ET – Session XV
Saturday, July 18 at 3:00 p.m. ET – Session XVI
Saturday, July 18 at 4:30 p.m. ET – Finals

16U Girls Freestyle
Thursday, July 16 at 6:00 p.m. ET – Session XII
Friday, July 17 at 10:00 a.m. ET – Session XIII
Friday, July 17 at 4:00 p.m. ET – Session XIV
Saturday, July 18 at 11:00 a.m. ET – Session XV
Saturday, July 18 at 3:00 p.m. ET – Session XVI

Name State WT College Division
Sydney Babi Colorado 115 Adams State D2
Brooklynn Gustafson Colorado 115 Adams State D2
Payton Hinkle Pennsylvania 130 Albright D3
Monique Teal New York 170 Alfred State D3
Angelina Spachman Pennsylvania 140 Arcadia D3
Madison Beauregard Massachusetts (HS: NH) 190 Arcadia D3
Ariana Martinez New Mexico 120 Augsburg D3
Isabella Ortiz Colorado 120 Augsburg D3
Veda Carlblom North Dakota 140 Augsburg D3
Sam Hinman Minnesota 140 Aurora D3
Malaya Cockcroft Nebraska 115 Baker NAIA
Paiges Arsola Arkansas 120 Baker NAIA
Brylee James Missouri 140 Baker NAIA
Parice Jones Colorado 190 Baker NAIA
Olivia Wie-Sel Nebraska 190 Baker NAIA
Finnley Kellerman Kansas 235 Baker NAIA
Elizabeth Ramirez Kansas 105 Barton CC NJCAA
Yessenia Castro Kansas 115 Barton CC NJCAA
Harmony Moore Missouri 207 Barton CC NJCAA
Shelby Garten Idaho 135 Bellevue NAIA
Laura Almanza New Mexico 140 Bellevue NAIA
Emma Acampora New Jersey 95 Bethany D3
Teegen Bowen Virginia 170 Bethany D3
Rainna Castilleja Washington 235 Big Bend CC NJCAA
Aleiya Cullinan North Dakota 130 Bismarck State NAIA
Kenley Hamley North Dakota 145 Bismarck State NAIA
Isis Alston-Bey Georgia 135 Brewton-Parker NAIA
Nalani Jordan Wyoming 140 Brown Club
Rhys Bernier Colorado 120 Calgary U SPORTS
Cami Bird New Jersey 125 Campbellsville NAIA
Dalani Hornbuckle Arkansas 110 Carl Albert NJCAA
Anna Dux Arkansas 130 Carl Albert NJCAA
Lucia Campbell Nebraska 145 Carl Albert NJCAA
Ashley Thompson Arkansas 155 Carl Albert NJCAA
Kiely Domyancich Illinois 125 Carthage D3
Anastasia Simon Iowa 170 Carthage D3
Julissa Ortiz Pennsylvania 130 Cedar Crest D3
Taya Hollingsworth Iowa 155 Central College D3
Caroline Owens Missouri 140 Central Methodist NAIA
Martynique Davis Arizona 125 Chadron State D2
Katie Snyder South Dakota 155 Chadron State D2
Jinet Demanou Minnesota 170 Chadron State D2
Addysin Mollendor Mississippi 120 Colby CC NJCAA
Annie Wilson Colorado 130 Colby CC NJCAA
Amelia Bacon Colorado 125 Colorado Mesa D2
Eloise Woolsey New Mexico 155 Colorado Mesa D2
Francesca Gusfa New Jersey 95 Columbia D1
Maddie Ngo Massachusetts 130 Columbia D1
Aaliyah Brown Indiana 95 Cumberlands NAIA
Gabriella Gelnett New York 115 D’Youville D2
Cateri Yellowhawk South Dakota 130 Dakota Wesleyan NAIA
Molly Root Michigan 105 Davenport D2
Samiyah Rahming Pennsylvania 120 Delaware State D1
Willow White Florida 130 Delaware State D1
Elena Carter Virginia 145 Delaware State D1
Irelynn Laurin Tennessee 170 Delaware State D1
Deionna Borders Ohio 235 Delaware State D1
Jillian Hradec Washington 145 Dickinson State NAIA
Layla Giuntoli California 145 Dickinson State NAIA
Allison LeBlanc Wyoming 110 Dickinson State NAIA
Taimane Benemerito Alabama 130 Doane NAIA
Kolbi McElwain North Dakota 170 Doane NAIA
Kylee Kurszewski Wisconsin 130 Dubuque D3
Alexis Ferg Wisconsin 207 Dubuque D3
Brenda Banks Pennsylvania 235 East Stroudsburg D2
Susannah Duke Tennessee 125 Eastern D3
Kamiah Gaerlan Washington 120 Eastern Oregon NAIA
Kyler Scott Idaho 135 Eastern Oregon NAIA
Emma Moore Kentucky 100 Edinboro D2
Killian Evans Missouri 110 Edinboro D2
Jenny Kramer Pennsylvania 120 Edinboro D2
Anaiah Kolesar Pennsylvania 125 Edinboro D2
Kailani Barrientos Florida 135 Edinboro D2
Zoe Furman Pennsylvania 135 Edinboro D2
Daisy Glessner Pennsylvania 207 Edinboro D2
Cadence Grulla Georgia 95 Emmanuel (GA) D2
Clarion Fager Utah 170 Emmanuel (GA) D2
Meili Shao Massachusetts/HS Rhode Island 130 Emmanuel (MA) D3
Nevaeh Grunhuvd Maine 135 Emmanuel (MA) D3
Sophie Grunhuvd Maine 155 Emmanuel (MA) D3
Delialah Betances Georgia 125 Felician D2
Haley Gonzales New York 135 Felician D2
Kyrian Perez Oklahoma 100 Fort Hays State D2
Kyrstan Perez Oklahoma 105 Fort Hays State D2
Alanna Harwell California 135 Fort Hays State D2
Kiley Dillow Kansas 170 Fort Hays State D2
Presley King Texas 140 Frank Phillips NJCAA
Kennedy Grizzle Kansas 110 Friends NAIA
Danica Dautel Kansas 135 Friends NAIA
Triniti Green Maryland 130 Frostburg State D2
Kamil Johnson Maryland/HS in Virginia 207 Frostburg State D2
Tamya Bouie Ohio 115 Georgetown NAIA
Kaitlin Wood Illinois 155 Georgetown NAIA
Callie Hess Pennsylvania 125 Gettysburg D3
JaeLeigh Miller-Tuttle Nebraska 235 Graceland NAIA
Julia Horger Pennsylvania 105 Grand Valley State D2
Eva Zimmerman Utah 110 Grand Valley State D2
Isabella Crompton Michigan 120 Grand Valley State D2
Madilyn Peach Wisconsin 125 Grand Valley State D2
Naima Ghaffar Indiana 135 Grand Valley State D2
Alexis Lazar Michigan 140 Grand Valley State D2
Halle Spears Michigan 207 Grand Valley State D2
Lauren Whitt Iowa 115 Grand View NAIA
Shaniyah McDaniel Georgia 120 Grand View NAIA
Skylar Slade Iowa 155 Grand View NAIA
Haley Armstrong Iowa 235 Grand View NAIA
Marilynn Mejeur Ohio 110 Heidelberg D3
Sophia Harris Ohio 190 Heidelberg D3
Kate Van Coutren Montana 145 Hope International NAIA
Naima Harvey-Bowen Maryland 155 Illinois Wesleyan D3
Jaylen McCammon Indiana 120 Illinois Wesleyan D3
Alauni Muex Illinois 125 Indian Hills CC NJCAA
Elise Burkut Illinois 140 Indian Hills CC NJCAA
Nyla Bolles Nebraska 145 Indian Hills CC NJCAA
Katelyn Rowles Indiana 95 Indiana Tech NAIA
Klaire Redwine Indiana 125 Indiana Tech NAIA
Avery Lynch Michigan 140 Indiana Tech NAIA
Evie Parmelee Ohio 190 Indiana Tech NAIA
Madison Nieuwenhuis Michigan 105 Iowa D1
Nora Akpan Minnesota 145 Iowa D1
Serenity Turner Iowa 110 Iowa Central CC NJCAA
Avah Blakeman Iowa 125 Iowa Central CC NJCAA
Lauryn Metcalf Iowa 145 Iowa Central CC NJCAA
Tayla Stiefel Iowa 145 Iowa Central CC NJCAA
Brooklyn Perez Arizona 135 Iowa State D1
Greta Brus Iowa 145 Iowa State D1
Elena Bridges Nebraska 120 Iowa Western CC NJCAA
Maia Dolinar Kansas 145 Iowa Western CC NJCAA
Garianne Levy Nebraska 170 Iowa Western CC NJCAA
Kate Crockett Virginia 140 Ithaca D3
Marlie Stremick North Dakota 130 Jamestown D2
Paige Menough Ohio 145 John Carroll D3
Joanna Torres Ohio 170 John Carroll D3
Vanessa O’Connor Illinois 145 Joliet JC NJCAA
Valeria Ramirez New Jersey 145 Kean D3
Lacie Knick Ohio 130 Kent State D1
June Treser-Pyles Ohio 120 Kent State D1
Mia Pedersen Oregon 130 King D2
Vivienne Gitke Colorado 140 King D2
Esperanza Calvillo Minnesota 155 King D2
Isabella Lorenzana California 207 King D2
Reese Adams New York 130 Lehigh D1
Ryen Hickey Colorado 145 Lehigh D1
Sarah Henckel Connecticut/HS in New Jersey 155 Lehigh D1
Ana Carolina Lockard New York 155 Lehigh D1
Phoenix Molina Illinois 207 Lehigh D1
Devlynn Albrecht Wisconsin 115 Life NAIA
Madisyn Mikels Indiana 105 Lindenwood D1
Sky Kopp North Dakota 190 Lindenwood D1
Savannah Chao Georgia 140 Lindsey Wilson NAIA
Laila Colon Pennsylvania 140 Lock Haven D2
Izabella Riebe Wisconsin 235 Luther D3
Mallary Flory Arkansas 145 Lyon D3
Laine Peppler Indiana 170 Manchester D3
Sophia Hodges Maryland 135 McDaniel D3
Mika Yoffee Nevada 135 McKendree D2
Trinity Roberts Tennessee 145 McKendree D2
Kiera Partello Florida 110 Menlo D2
Khloe Meisenbach California 140 Menlo D2
Arshiya Kachroo California 135 Menlo (NCWA Team) Club
Ella Japp Nebraska 100 Midland NAIA
Jordyn Campbell Nebraska 140 Midland NAIA
Sydney Cannon Illinois 130 Millikin D3
Annabelle Melton Illinois 135 Millikin D3
Natalin Hout California 145 Millikin D3
Kaylie Julander Wyoming 145 Minot State D2
Alyssa Hoyles North Dakota 135 Minot State D2
Madison Worden Nevada 140 Missouri Valley NAIA
Breanne Gibbs Missouri 155 Missouri Valley NAIA
Shreevidya Rohini Florida 135 Mount Olive D2
Auston Brown Ohio 135 Mount Union D3
Teyanna Fields Oklahoma 140 Murray State NJCAA
Avrey Taylor Arkansas 140 Murray State NJCAA
Natalie Edmisson Missouri 145 Murray State NJCAA
Genesis Escorcia Florida 130 New College of Florida NAIA
Rachel Hayes South Carolina 115 Newberry D2
Katelynne Blythe South Carolina 145 Newberry D2
Lily Enos Illinois 95 North Central D3
Valeria Pesantes Illinois 105 North Central D3
Alexandra Sebek Illinois 105 North Central D3
Tylene Tran Nevada 110 North Central D3
Karina Lojowski Illinois 130 North Central D3
Lilly May Nevada 130 North Central D3
Brooke-Lynn Murray New York 140 North Central D3
America Cabrera Illinois 155 North Central D3
Me’kala James California 125 North Central D3
Vina Nguyen Washington 100 North Central D3
Eva Garcia Arkansas 120 Northeastern State D2
Makaylee Cannon Oklahoma 155 Northeastern State D2
Lillee Denson Michigan 95 Northern Michigan D2
Cheyenne Frank Michigan 120 Northern Michigan D2
Kandice Spry Ohio 125 Northern Michigan D2
Calyse Clark Alaska 145 Northern Michigan D2
Belicia Manuel Michigan 145 Northern Michigan D2
Maddie Hayden Michigan 190 Northern Michigan D2
Kanata Richardson Michigan 190 Northern Michigan D2
Mya Brandenburg Michigan 207 Northern Michigan D2
Kinsey Hooper Wyoming 125 Northern Oklahoma NJCAA
Mariaha Benedict Iowa 135 Northwestern (IA) NAIA
Riley Paulsen Wisconsin 135 Northwestern (IA) NAIA
Kendall Moe Indiana 115 Norwich D3
Tayla Skelley Texas 135 Oklahoma City NAIA
Jaelyn Skelley Texas 130 Oklahoma City NAIA
Angela Bianchi Wisconsin 120 Oklahoma State Club
Gabrielle Severin New York 120 Oklahoma State Club
Kayla Dean New York 115 Onondaga CC NJCAA
Pagan Lester Alaska 125 Ottawa NAIA
Kenya-Marie Bruno Alaska 170 Ottawa NAIA
Jaida Hawkins Kansas 190 Ottawa NAIA
Andrea Acheampong Ohio 115 Otterbein D3
Arden Heckman Ohio 120 Otterbein D3
Victoria Gonzalez Ohio 125 Otterbein D3
MaKayla Taylor Pennsylvania 155 Penn State Altoona D3
Aubrey Bartkowiak Indiana 235 Point Park D2
Camdyn Elliott Florida 115 Presbyterian D1
Ailee Briggs Florida 145 Presbyterian D1
Bianca Connell South Carolina 155 Presbyterian D1
Alexis Stinson Missouri 235 Presbyterian D1
Caddy Tverdy Idaho 125 Providence NAIA
Grace Loutzenhiser Alaska 100 Quincy D2
Lorelei Weaver Missouri 155 Quincy D2
Ava Angelo Michigan 145 Rochester Christian NAIA
Jillian Blake Connecticut 120 Sacred Heart D1
Mai Graham Pennsylvania 120 Sacred Heart D1
Madison Black California 130 Sacred Heart D1
Ella Gregg New York 140 Sacred Heart D1
Mikaella Green Texas 207 Schreiner D3
Lilly Breeden Missouri 100 Simpson (IA) D3
Lylah Gheen Ohio 110 Simpson (IA) D3
Alex Gregorio Perez Illinois 110 Simpson (IA) D3
Isabel Kaplan Indiana 110 Simpson (IA) D3
Sydney Stifter Missouri 115 Simpson (IA) D3
Anna Bowles Missouri 125 Simpson (IA) D3
Aeryn Cox California 140 Simpson (IA) D3
Kayden Sipp Nebraska 140 Simpson (IA) D3
Lauren Luzum Iowa 155 Simpson (IA) D3
Vivian Schroeder Minnesota 155 Simpson (IA) D3
Aarianna Bloyd Illinois 207 Simpson (IA) D3
Talea Nichols Idaho 110 Sioux Falls D2
Lauren Elsmore Minnesota 130 Sioux Falls D2
Jorgie Johnston Missouri 130 Sioux Falls D2
Aaliyah Morrow New York 145 Sioux Falls D2
Chloe Sanders Iowa 145 Sioux Falls D2
Sally Johnson Tennessee 170 Sioux Falls D2
Allison Konrad South Dakota 190 Sioux Falls D2
Anica Barze Minnesota 120 Sioux Falls D2
Ellianna Schendel Minnesota 207 Sioux Falls D2
Makenzi McCoy Utah 120 Snow NJCAA
Margaret Hutchings Idaho 190 Snow NJCAA
Harleigh Cubbage Oregon 235 Snow NJCAA
Kate Doughty Colorado 135 Southeast CC NJCAA
Raye Aldag Nebraska 140 Southeast CC NJCAA
Stella Harbols Nebraska 145 Southeast CC NJCAA
Sarah Hammond Utah 105 Southern Oregon NAIA
Dezirae Martinez Oregon 105 Southwestern Oregon CC NJCAA
Aileen Esquivel Oregon 110 Southwestern Oregon CC NJCAA
Jasmin Lopez Hernandez Oregon 145 Southwestern Oregon CC NJCAA
Vanessa Keller Oregon 120 Southwestern Oregon CC NJCAA
Emjay Neumann Wisconsin 120 St. Ambrose NAIA
Webeline Naklen North Dakota 145 St. Ambrose NAIA
Marli Denmark Texas 145 Texas Wesleyan NAIA
Kalynn Lyons Nebraska 130 Texas Woman’s D2
Jordyn Parker Texas 140 Texas Woman’s D2
Kaelyn Reynolds Texas 140 Texas Woman’s D2
Marisa McCartin Ohio 130 Tiffin D2
Lilly White Illinois 135 Tiffin D2
Emma Stansell Idaho 145 Treasure Valley CC Club
Lilli Marti Idaho 207 Treasure Valley CC Club
Adysen Maupin Oregon 155 Treasure Valley CC Club
Kaida Hull Colorado 170 Umpqua CC NJCAA
Cyane Taylor Utah 110 UNLV Club
Ivy Brandenburg Minnesota 115 Upper Iowa D2
Lana Schafer Iowa 135 Upper Iowa D2
Lexus Hernandez Texas 155 Upper Iowa D2
Riley Lancaster Florida 170 Upper Iowa D2
Maggie Campbell Massachusetts 110 Ursinus D3
Princessstorm Woody New Jersey 115 Ursinus D3
Caitlin Castoldi Massachusetts 125 Ursinus D3
Bella Andes New York 145 Ursinus D3
Charlize Schlam New Jersey 155 Ursinus D3
Jade Hahn New Jersey 190 Ursinus D3
Nia Hagler Utah 135 Utah Tech Club
Dakota Frogge Utah 145 Utah Tech Club
Hannah Behrndt Wisconsin 170 UW Oshkosh D3
Bryn Keberlein Wisconsin 105 UW Oshkosh D3
Olivia Hofrichter Wisconsin 145 UW Stevens Point D3
Sophie Kelner Illinois 190 UW Stevens Point D3
Katie Biscoglia Iowa 110 Wartburg D3
Kayleigh Milam Missouri 110 Wartburg D3
Nesa Selmani Iowa 130 Wartburg D3
Mia Cienega Washington 207 Wartburg D3
Izzy Levine Arizona 145 Wartburg D3
Makayla Walden Utah 190 Washington State Club
Dru Turner Oklahoma 130 Wayland Baptist NAIA
London Yelder Florida 155 West Liberty D2
Hazuki Sykes Florida 190 West Liberty D2
Alyaah Bravo California 100 Westcliff NAIA
Tessa Fortenbaugh California 110 Western Colorado D2
Roxy Robinson Arizona 115 Western Colorado D2
Olive Dubois Kansas 125 Western Colorado D2
Riley Levin Utah 130 Western Colorado D2
Keagan Edwards Illinois 135 Western Colorado D2
Timberly Martinez Colorado 145 Western Colorado D2
Elizabeth Padilla Colorado 145 Western Colorado D2
Daisy Padilla Colorado 155 Western Colorado D2
Mary Snider California 155 Western Colorado D2
Sarah Toribau Idaho 170 Western Colorado D2
Emiliana Mendoza Colorado 190 Western Colorado D2
Katherine Luna California 235 Western Colorado D2
Chloe Obuhanych Hawaii 105 Western New England D3
Iyana Graves Maryland 155 Wilkes D3
Sierra Ripka Pennsylvania 190 Wilkes D3
Abigail Paglia New Jersey 235 Wilkes D3
Jayden Keller Missouri 110 William Jewell D2
Abbigail O’Kelly Oklahoma 120 William Jewell D2
Sophiea Quinn Missouri 207 William Jewell D2
Atti Nielson Utah 105 William Penn NAIA





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San Francisco plots risky socialist bank modeled after controversial experiment

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San Francisco plots risky socialist bank modeled after controversial experiment


San Francisco voters will decide whether the city should have a public bank after city supervisors this week approved such a proposal to appear on the November ballot.

The city would be the first in the nation to have a municipal government-owned bank. Only the state of North Dakota runs a major public bank in the nation.

But the city’s proposal gives no answer as to where the estimated $325 million in start-up costs will come from as the city faces a $643 million budget deficit.

Supervisor Jackie Fielder has been pushing for a public bank. Facebook/Jackieforsf

“In a moment like this, asking voters to commit San Francisco to potentially running a financial institution is asking for trust the city has not yet earned,” said Supervisor Alan Wong, one of the two votes against placing the measure on the ballot.

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“Our city’s track record shows that meeting those demands is harder than it sounds, even for institutions designed with the right intentions,” he added.

Socialist Supervisor Jackie Fielder, who just returned from a months-long mental health leave, indicated that future legislation would figure out a revenue steam. Supporters of a bank wanted to get ahead of a 2028 expiration date for a state law that gives cities the power to create their own public banks.

“It feels like an incredible tool to add to the city’s tool kit,” Misha Steier, a spokesperson for the San Francisco Public Bank Coalition, told the San Francisco Chronicle. The coalition was founded by Fielder.

“This is the culmination of years and years of movement effort,” Steier said.

A city bank, supporters say, would unlock financing for thousands of housing units that lack funding to address the housing crisis. It could finance climate goals or lend to small businesses in the area.

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“This ensures we have an institution run by real bankers that is accountable, nevertheless, to public priorities and public policy priorities,” Fielder said.

Supervisor Chyanne Chen City and County of San Francisco

“We can build a public bank that prioritizes reinvesting back into what we all need to sustain our local communities,” added Supervisor Chyanne Chen, who brought forth the measure. “Let us use every tool at our disposal to keep the city affordable and to drive an economic recovery that leaves no one behind.”

The bank would be run by qualified bankers appointed by an oversight committee whose members would be selected by local officials. While it does not establish a revenue stream, the ballot measure would at least enshrine the bank’s rules, structure and mission in the city’s charter — including a provision that it would never lend to fossil fuel corporations or weapons manufacturers.

San Francisco financial district skyline at dusk on a clear evening. Getty Images

How startup costs will be funded seems to be difficult to answer. Fielder in February attempted another ballot measure that would impose a higher tax on lending companies to help fund such a bank, though that effort was paused to focus on this new ballot proposal.

Any new taxes may be difficult in the current political environment; this past June, voters in the progressive city even voted down a tax hike on highly paid CEOs.

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North Dakota’s bank sees deposits mostly from the state’s collections of taxes and fees and corporate accounts. A very small portion comes from residents as “it is the Bank’s policy not to compete with the private sector for retail deposits,” it said on its website.

The bank has mostly seen success and has turned a profit for many years, which can be returned to the state government’s general fund or used for economic development initiatives. A lot of the success can be traced to the the state’s fracking boom, according to research by University of Illinois Chicago professor Robert S. Chirinko.

But unlike commercial banks, deposits into the public bank are not insured by the federal government, which means North Dakota takes on all the risk. California’s law requires federal insurance, which will give the city more regulatory hurdles as no public bank has sought that approval before.

Chirinko said any success replicating North Dakota’s model will heavily depend on funding. San Francisco’s proposed focus on investing in climate-friendly technology or housing may also not pay off immediately.

“There could be a role there for government, but you have to recognize that you’re not going to get your money back,” he said.

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Such banks also can face accusations of unfair political influence. In 2016, North Dakota’s bank financed local law enforcement’s militarized response to controversial protests against the Dakota Access Pipeline, sparking liberal backlash.

Already, critics in San Francisco are saying the same political favoritism could happen for how loans and other financial products would get issued.

“What do they want? An SF Public Bank staffed by cronies of absentee SF Supervisor Jackie Fielder,” claimed tech figure and Y Combinator CEO Garry Tan. “It’ll be a tremendous grift mill robbing the city blind.”


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Today in History, 1975: Earthquake rattles portions of Minnesota and the Dakotas, including Fargo-Moorhead

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Today in History, 1975: Earthquake rattles portions of Minnesota and the Dakotas, including Fargo-Moorhead


On this day in 1975, a moderate earthquake centered near Morris, Minnesota, shook parts of North Dakota, Minnesota and South Dakota, startling residents but causing no major damage or injuries.

Here is the complete story as it appeared in the paper that day:

Earth Tremor Felt Across Wide Area Including F-M

An earth tremor at 9:56 a.m. today was widely felt in the Fargo-Moorhead area as well as other parts of North Dakota, Minnesota and South Dakota, but the National Weather Service here said it had no reports of damage.

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The tremor lasted from two to five seconds, Keith Blessum of the Weather Service said, and ignited telephone reports from a wide area.

The earthquake measured 5.0 on the Richter Scale. Waverly Person of the National Earthquake Information Center in Denver, Colo., said: “The earthquake was moderate and was centered in the Morris, Minn., area. It could have caused much damage in a heavily populated area.”

See more history at Newspapers.com

The quake also was felt in northwestern Iowa. Carl Stover of the Earthquake Information Center said it affected an area 300 miles long and 180 miles wide in four states. He said the exact center of the quake was 10 miles west of Morris.

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Person said the earthquake that struck California’s San Fernando Valley in February 1971, killing 54 persons and causing millions of dollars in property damage, measured 6.5 on the Richter Scale.

There were no injuries reported, but authorities in several communities in Minnesota and North and South Dakota reported that residents were startled, buildings shook, dishes rattled and books fell off shelves. Some residents in Alberta, Minn., and Wheaton, Minn., also reported cracked foundations.

Among the first to report locally was Mrs. Paul Dutt, 909 27th St. N., Fargo, who told the Weather Service pictures on the walls moved and a vase moved across the top of the television set.

Marjorie Henderson, who lives on a farm between Enderlin and Lisbon, N.D., reported that the house shook and windows rattled during the tremor, while Mrs. Wesley Belter, who lives south of Casselton, N.D., said that she and four neighbors had similar experiences.

Mrs. Earl Ernst, who lives eight miles east of Wolverton, Minn., also reported that the walls of her trailer home shook and dishes rattled.

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Other reports received by the Weather Service at Hector Airport here were from Hankinson and Wahpeton, N.D., and Breckenridge and Ottertail, Minn.; Milbank, S.D., White Rock Dam on the South Dakota border and Canby, Minn.

The earth tremor shook much of northeastern South Dakota and parts of southeastern North Dakota and western Minnesota but apparently caused no injuries, the Associated Press reported.

Donald Johnson, Codington (S.D.) County Civil Defense Director, said the strongest tremors were felt in the South Shore area, about 12 miles northeast of Watertown.

Johnson said a school was evacuated in South Shore, but there were no injuries or major damage reported.

A University of Minnesota professor said that part of that state has a history of minor earthquakes, with about half a dozen reported since the mid-1800s.

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Residents in the Willmar, Alexandria, Morris and Long Prairie areas all felt the tremor. It hit about 9:55 a.m., and lasted five to 10 seconds.

No major damage was reported, although the tremor startled many people and shook household furnishings. Some residents in Alberta, near Morris, reported cracked foundations.

Dr. Harold Mooney, professor of geophysics at the University of Minnesota, estimated the tremor would have measured 4 or 4.5 on the Richter Scale. Mooney’s seismograph wasn’t operating when the tremor struck, and he said his was the only such measuring device in the area.

“The motion of a fault in the western part of the state sent out seismic waves at thousands of feet per second, and that’s what the people felt,” Mooney said.

“There is a history of earthquakes in that area, so this one was not without precedent.”

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The most recent was near Alexandria in 1950, he said. The most severe was near Brainerd in 1917; that one broke some windows and knocked things off shelves.

An ad featured in The Forum on July 9, 1975. Newspapers.com

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