South Dakota
How to Stream the North Dakota vs. South Dakota State Game Live – February 29
The South Dakota State Jackrabbits (17-12, 10-4 Summit League) will attempt to extend a three-game winning streak when they visit the North Dakota Fightin’ Hawks (17-12, 9-5 Summit League) at 8:00 PM ET on Thursday, February 29, 2024 at Betty Engelstad Sioux Center. The game airs on Summit League Network.
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North Dakota vs. South Dakota State Game Info
- When: Thursday, February 29, 2024 at 8:00 PM ET
- Where: Betty Engelstad Sioux Center in Grand Forks, North Dakota
- TV: Summit League Network
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North Dakota Stats Insights
- The Jackrabbits are the rebounding team in the country, the Fightin’ Hawks rank 58th.
- The Fightin’ Hawks score an average of 75.1 points per game, just 2.5 more points than the 72.6 the Jackrabbits allow to opponents.
- North Dakota has put together a 14-3 record in games it scores more than 72.6 points.
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North Dakota Home & Away Comparison
- In 2023-24 North Dakota is averaging 5.4 more points per game at home (78.4) than on the road (73).
- At home, the Fightin’ Hawks allow 69.1 points per game. On the road, they allow 74.7.
- North Dakota sinks the same number of 3-pointers at home as away (8.3 per game), but it has a higher 3-point percentage at home (32.8%) than on the road (32.6%).
Rep your team with officially licensed college basketball gear! Head to Fanatics to find jerseys, shirts, and much more.
North Dakota Upcoming Schedule
Date | Opponent | Score | Arena |
---|---|---|---|
2/15/2024 | @ Denver | W 92-78 | Hamilton Gymnasium |
2/17/2024 | @ Oral Roberts | W 78-65 | Mabee Center |
2/24/2024 | @ North Dakota State | L 73-68 | Scheels Center |
2/29/2024 | South Dakota State | – | Betty Engelstad Sioux Center |
3/2/2024 | South Dakota | – | Betty Engelstad Sioux Center |
© 2023 Data Skrive. All rights reserved.
South Dakota
Spiritual run from Nebraska passes through South Dakota
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (KELO) — A group that’s running from Nebraska to Montana is making its way through South Dakota right now.
For nearly 30 years the annual Fort Robinson Outbreak Spiritual Run is a 400 mile run that is held January 8th through the 14th. It started out as 14 runners as a tribute to Northern Cheyenne ancestors but has grown into now over 80 youth completing the journey.
The South Dakota highway Patrol is asking drivers to slow down and move over if you see them trying to accomplish their journey. Today the group will be in the area of Hill City.
South Dakota
Support South Dakota libraries | Letter to the Editor
8 reasons why you should read every day
As well as being enjoyable and relaxing, reading has been found to have a number of benefits for our mental health.
unbranded – Lifestyle
Have you ever visited your local library? Has your child or grandchild, student or family member? Maybe you don’t check out books, but do you attend programs at your library or participate in a summer reading program or read a book through the Libby app?
I hope for everyone reading this the answer is a resounding yes, and I also hope that means that you will reach out to your elected officials urging them to fight Gov. Noem’s proposed $1 million cut to the South Dakota State Library.
The proposed cut would be devastating for local libraries like our vibrant Doland Community Library, the Watertown Regional Library and all of the patrons who rely on the programs and services offered through them.
Consider this: In 2024, more than 6,200 people visited the Doland Community Library. In a community of fewer than 200 people. That’s incredible.
Now imagine if the proposed cut to the State Library funding happens – what programs and services will be lost? Well, take a look at what’s at stake:
The State Library helps with the costs associated with this service to allow patrons who are registered users to check out e-books on their devices.
The Doland Community Library has a certified librarian thanks to the State Library, which opens our library up to additional services and grants.
Our State Library provides crucial guidance and education to our librarian and library board members in the operating of our library as an accredited library.
The Doland Community Library offers a top-notch Summer Reading Program that brings hundreds of adults and children to our community on several days of the six-week event. The training, manuals and funding for the program comes from the State Library.
Interlibrary Loan Support: Thanks to this program from the State Library, patrons can access books from across the state.
SD Reads: This program promotes reading across the state and you yourself were a recent participant who read to our students.
Legal guidance: The State Library holds each library accountable and helps ensure applicable laws are being followed.
The State Library pays for several free databases available such as Ancestry.com, SAT study guides and practice tests.
The State Library provides additional tools to promote literacy such as Birth to Five, 1,000 Books Before Kindergarten, Canva, and the Stephanie Miller Summer Reading Program Grant.
It goes without saying that the State Library is an incredible resource for our local libraries. Any cut would be felt not just at the state level through reduced staff and diminished services, but also by me, my family and every other patron in our rural area.
If you’re alarmed by this potentially devastating proposed cut, please consider contacting your elected officials. You can find your legislators at https://sdlegislature.gov/legislators/find. The more we can let our elected officials know how valuable our State Library is, the more inclined they will be to preserve the funding for our State Library, which serves so many of us at the local level.
Danielle (Troske) Teigen, Doland Community Library Board Member, Turton
South Dakota
South Dakota Childcare Task Force report says funding is needed
SIOUX FALLS, S.D. (Dakota News Now) – A new report from the South Dakota Childcare Task Force, along with additional research from the Hunt Institute, revealed the difficulties of finding and paying for childcare in South Dakota.
Over seventy percent of young children in South Dakota have all parents working. With weekly costs for a toddler being as much as $260 per week, affording childcare expenses can be difficult.
Adding to the burden is finding daycare for your children.
Senator Tim Reed believes a higher wage for childcare workers will allow centers to open existing rooms they already have.
“We need to be able to increase what we’re paying at the childcare assistance level and I think it’s going to have to increase in other levels too, but we need to start there,” Sen. Reed said.
There are communities that have demonstrated how working together can solve the problem. The focus of the future: Braided funding.
“Tri share is three entities that are helping to cover child care for the family. The parent has a part of it. The employer has part of it and then some other funding source has part of it and in most states that other funding is coming from the state. What’s really unique about the program in Rapid City is that it’s coming from philanthropic funds,” said South Dakota Association for the Education of Young Children executive director Janessa Bixel.
The Black Hills Area Community Foundation is funding a portion of a childcare program in Rapid City.
In Madison, TIF funding is helping the launch of a new childcare center. Could more state funding happen in South Dakota?
“And the budget cuts, obviously that makes some of the items that we want to do tougher to get done because they all do cost money. And so, I mean, we’re going to have to work on that, you know, and promote how important this is. We just. To talk through all of the possibilities of where we can fund this,” Sen. Reed said.
Reed said the lack of affordable childcare is costing South Dakota $329 million each year.
Copyright 2025 Dakota News Now. All rights reserved.
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