News

The Community Newspaper

When I was growing up in the early 1980s, we had a weekly newspaper in our town. There was a woman assigned to cover our little neighborhood. I remember her calling each week to ask my mother what was new in our family. Did Jeremy make the honor roll this quarter? Had we gone on vacation recently? Did we get a new pet? She would take this information from anyone in the neighborhood who was willing to share it and would write a column each week. When the paper came out on Wednesdays, my mother was always excited to read what was going on in the neighborhood. Everyone on our street knew each other. We played outside with the kids every day until dusk. My parents were in a bowling league with our neighbors. We had a block party in the street in the summer. When a new family moved in everyone welcomed them and introduced themselves. I guess you could say it was a great community.

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Nettingham travels to Boston Marathon, dedicates run to the local community

Shi-Quan Nettingham spent his first winter in Minnesota after moving from Las Vegas a little over a year ago running the frigid prairie to train for his longtime goal of running in the Boston Marathon. Nettingham, the Sports Director at KDMA, has been running for nearly 13 years, starting out with track and cross country in high school. It wasn’t his intention, originally, to become so involved in running, as at the time, basketball was his preferred sport. He says he used running as a way to stay in shape in the off-season, but soon discovered a love for the sport. “I kind of just fell in love with it. It’s a healthy lifestyle, and really something that became kind of an addiction,” he says. When he started running, Nettingham says he thought he would be a sprinter. “I never even imagined I was going to be a distance runner, and then my coach said I think we should try, and that’s how I was introduced to it. She persuaded me to do cross country and that’s when I really fell in love with it. It was like I’m not just running in a circle around the track. In cross country, you’re running on different terrain, and you have a purpose – to run somewhere. I was hooked,” he says.

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Council receives quotes for equipment purchases

At the regular midmonth meeting of the Granite Falls City Council, the possibility of purchasing a mower to be designated for use at Memorial Park was discussed. The Public Works Department has requested the purchase, as the park has historically been mowed through a contracted mowing service but considering the City has added a Park Caretaker Position, it was suggested that a mower could be purchased for that employee to complete the work.

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Bothun joins FM Insurance

Ben Bothun started his role as an Insurance Agent with F&M Insurance on March 14th. Prior to joining the agency in Clarkfield, Bothun worked for an insurance agency in Madison for five years. “This opportunity came up and it was a better fit for my family,” he said. Bothun says he appreciated the culture at F&M Insurance, and that he has found the company culture to be just as described. “I’m happy here. The people have been great, and the customers I’ve met have been great,” he says. Bothun lives outside of Dawson where he and his wife of sixteen years, Chelsie are raising two sons, Mason and Max, ages 13 and ten. Both Chelsie and Ben grew up in the Austin area, and lived in the cities after college for around 10 years. The couple decided to move back to the area for the slower-paced lifestyle. “We wanted our kids to grow up in a similar town around relatives and family,” Bothun says.

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Clarkfield Assembly of God Church gets new piano

Last week, the Clarkfield Assembly of God Church had a special delivery of a new piano, purchased from Carlson Music in Alexandria by way of donations. The original piano was purchased in 1949 by Inez Appleseth Carlson in memory of her first husband. The current pianist for the Assembly of God Church is Paulette Heald (photographed with the new piano). The Clarkfield Assembly of God Church has only had a few pianists in their history. The first was Evangeline Landmark, followed by JoAnn Hildahl and Elsie Carlson, then Lillian Falkum. Photo by Jessica Stolen-Jacobson

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COURT NEWS

Yellow Medicine County Sheriff’s Office Villata Reyes, Hector Alexander, Montevideo; Offense date 2/1/22 Driving without a Valid License or Vehicle Class/Type (Misdemeanor); Plea 4/10/22 Guilty; Disposition 4/10/22 Convicted; Court Decision 4/10/22 Payable without appearance; $100 Fine. Beery, Ryan John, Park Rapids; Offense date 9/4/21 Fourth Degree DWI – Operate Motor Vehicle – Body Contains Any Amount Schedule I/II Drugs – Not Marijuana (Misdemeanor); Plea 4/18/22 Guilty; Disposition 4/18/22 Convicted; Court Decision 4/18/22 Sentenced Local Confinement (90 Days, Stay 0 Yr 0 Mo 0 Days); $50 Fine.

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Notes from the Granite Area Arts Council

As Prince said, sometimes it snows in April. Yesterday, as snowflakes tumbled in gale-force winds, I found myself longing for a gorgeous day in early fall: blue sky, leaves tinged with orange, grass deep green instead of stubbly half-brown tundra. Minnesota’s weather, while always interesting, may not always be pleasant. I’m confident in saying, though, that late summer / early autumn is most reliably beautiful. The weather – along with all of the fun fall activities (see: -the Meander) – is part of the reason our new -community artist in residence will come to Granite Falls in August, September, and October. What will they do when they get here? A few weeks ago, in this column, you read a brief overview of what a CAIR program is. Essentially, cities host an artist who teams up with local organizations, community members, and government to create new projects that foster cohesion, equity, collaboration, and play. These differ from usual artist residencies (in which an artist works on projects more or less alone) – in that the emphasis is on community-building rather than on, say, having the time and space to finally finish one’s novel. CAIR programs have a lot of different names: for instance, Minneapolis calls its version Creative City-Making. They also range widely in shape. In Pittsburgh, one residency is only three weeks long; artists work out of a retrofitted shipping container on the banks of the Allegheny to collect stories about the river. Pittsburgh has also hosted visual artists, who created Snapchat filters that used augmented-reality technology to offer new perspectives on familiar locations. In Japan, a centuries-old paper factory hosted an American artist who learned traditional materials and techniques to create a contemporary art project – a map of the town – in her style, along with drawings of gifts like plants and produce that were given to her by the residents as she worked.

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RIVER RAMBLINGS…

Spring might finally be -here, and with it always -comes an anxiousness to clean up and get rid of the -things we don’t need or are cluttering up our homes or our yards. That also holds true for the waste that has piled up along our streets, our ditches, our parks, and along the river. Earth Day is always on

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