Wall of papier-mache bricks to portray
Transcription
Wall of papier-mache bricks to portray
People. Places. Faces. The Herald has your community covered. What’s going on in your town? Send ideas to [email protected]. valley Thursday l February 4, 2016 l Grand Forks Herald l Page 3 The news that’s close to home. Gear Daddies set to play in Crookston EGF hopes to hold more bit on social media. People are very excited about it, so I think it was a good choice.” This will be the second concert in the history of the Crookston Sports Center, which opened in 2010 and is located on the University of Minnesota-Crookston campus. Hairball, a popular hard rock cover band, played at the venue last summer. Because of that show’s success, the arena is looking at booking more concerts, with Gear Daddies the only scheduled show so far in 2016. For a concert, the sports center can hold around 2,000 people, and the Hairball show drew about 1,300 fans. Stassen said everything went well and that’s why they are looking to have more concerts in the venue. The date of the Gear Daddies show was picked to attract college students from the UMC campus. Stassen said they scheduled the concert the weekend between the last day of classes and finals week so students could blow off some steam and attend the event. “They’re a Minnesota band that a certain segment of the population up here enjoys, and we’re going to have a great time,” he said. Advance tickets cost $20 and are available at the Crookston City Hall, Crookston Hugo’s and online at geardaddiesincrookstonmn. splashthat.com. Tickets will be $30 the day of the show. events at sports complex. By Wade Rupard Grand Forks Herald CROOKSTON — The Crookston Sports Center is gearing up to host its second of what city officials hope will be many more concerts. Gear Daddies, a popular ’80s and early ’90s Minnesota rock band, will play at the arena April 30 with The Billy’s opening the show. Gear Daddies have released three albums and one extended play. The band is best known for their song “Zamboni,” which is commonly played during intermissions at hockey games and was featured in the movies “D2: The Mighty Ducks” and “Mystery, Alaska,” as well as the TV show “Malcolm in the Middle.” The band rose to prominence about 25 years ago and performed on NBC’s Late Night with David Letterman in 1991 before breaking up. Now, the band plays a few select dates around the Upper Midwest, where they still have a following. “We’ve talked to a lot of different acts and bands, and the Gear Daddies have tremendous support,” Crookston City Administrator Shannon Stassen said. “Even though we haven’t been pushing the show that much so far, we’ve been getting a lot of response by word of mouth and a little “ “They’re a Minnesota band that a certain segment of the population up here enjoys, and we’re going to have a great time.” Shannon Stassen Crookston city administrator High-risk sex offender to seek GF employment By Kevin Bonham court of having sexual contact with multiple female victims under age 14 and videotaping them on numerous Hamley occasions. The incidents occurred in Rolette County. As of January, there were 114 sex offenders registered with the Grand Forks Police Department as living, working or going to school in Grand Forks, six of whom are assigned a risk level of “high,” according to the news release. The remaining offenders have a risk level of “moderate” or “low.” In North Dakota, sex offenders are assigned a risk level by a nine-member committee appointed by the attorney general. Among the criteria are the seriousness of the offense, offender’s prior history, the offender’s characteristics and the availability of community supports to the offender. Grand Forks Herald Grand Forks police alerted residents Wednesday to a high-risk sex offender in the Grand Forks area. David Jonathan Hamley, 59, who is incarcerated at Grand Forks County Correctional Center in connection with his federal probation, is being permitted to leave the jail to seek employment, Grand Forks Police Department said in a news release. While outside the jail, he will wear an electronic monitoring device under the supervision of the North Dakota Department of Corrections. Hamley is listed as a Level III, or high-risk, sex offender who is subject to lifetime registration in North Dakota. He had been living in Devils Lake for the past few weeks until being transferred to the Grand Forks jail by federal probation officers, according to a report from the Devils Lake Police Department. In October 1999, Hamley was convicted in federal SMILE Are you unhappy with your smile? BEFORE Bonding with non-metal porcelain produces strong, natural, beautiful smiles. FREE CUSTOM MADE BLEACH TRAYS AFTER - For all new patients Your name will also be entered into a drawing for UND Hockey Tickets! (Saturday Night games) Call today to schedule your appointment! DR. JAMES O’CONNELL DR. BLAKE RISTVEDT 001279581r1 117 North Washington St., Grand Forks, ND Toll Free (888) 740-1481 Local 746-1481 Story Jennifer Johnson Photo Eric Hylden Artists Terry Jelsing (left) and Matt Wallace of the North Dakota Museum of Art, survey the Spirit Wall, a collaborative art project between Jelsing and members of the Spirit Lake Nation at Fort Totten, N.D. A wall that unites Artwork aims to portray community on Spirit Lake Reservation A new exhibition depicting Spirit Lake Indian Reservation called “Songs for Spirit Lake — Part II” will open Saturday at the North Dakota Museum of Art in Grand Forks. A 10-foot-high wall of about 2,000 papier-mache bricks created by hundreds of Spirit Lake members is among the works featured. Inside the bricks are the “hopes, dreams, memories, songs and drawings” of the people who created them, said Terry News Jelsing, a Rugby, N.D., artist behind the project. “The bricks are individual, but when you put them together, it’s the community, they’re the world,” he said. “They’re diverse, and yet when they come together, they form a whole.” The exhibition is the second part of a years-long collaboration between NDMOA and six regional artists, including Jelsing, to capture the sights and sounds of Spirit Lake culture. Funded by the Robert due Feb. 19. “Project 88” is the second notable PAC-involved project to take place this year. In January, “Ghosts” was installed along South 42nd GF Public arts ask Street, bringing three pieces of white-painted farm equipfor applications ment to farm fields on the Public art groups in Grand city’s west side. Forks are issuing a call for Wednesday’s statement applications for a new projgives a brief look at how ect. those pianos could be “Project 88” seeks to place placed, hinting at a public inthree playable, artist-painted stallation process that’s just pianos at three locations in as artistically involved as the the Grand Forks area: the project itself. Grand Cities Mall, River “Artists’ visual concepts Cinema Mall and an Altru should engage and enliven Health System rehabilitation the public space,” the statebuilding. Jointly organized ment reads. “Artists can by the Grand Forks Public paint their designs on-site, Arts Commission, the North encouraging public engageValley Arts Council and a ment through art, perforUND student group named mance and music.” “Project 88,” coordinators — Sam Easter are looking to give $300 to capable artists to cover painting expenses, plus 40 percent Man sentenced to 5 months for theft for the cost of the pianos. In a statement released A Grand Forks man was Wednesday by both the Arts sentenced to just under five Commission and NoVAC, the months in prison for a Degroups called on artists to cember car theft in Grand submit applications for the Forks. project. Guidelines for those Patrick Michael Peltier, applications can be found 26, was charged with theft of property, a Class C felony, in online at novac.org and are A re a Rauschenberg Foundation’s Artistic Innovation and Collaboration grant, the first “Songs for Spirit Lake” exhibition was unveiled in 2013 at the foundation’s gallery in New York. Artists Bill Harbort of Minot and Tim Schouten of Winnipeg will speak along with Jelsing about their work during the 5-7 p.m. opening. Their exhibition is the first of three to be shown throughout 2016. Director Laurel Reuter said she would call the Grand Forks District Court after he was found and arrested Dec. 28 by North Dakota Highway Patrol with a reported stolen vehicle on Interstate 29 north of an exit near Reynolds, N.D. The vehicle, a silver Pontiac Grand Prix, belonged to Joshua Bina, 30, Grand Forks, who reported the car stolen Dec. 27. Bina said in December the car’s motor was “blown” when it was returned to him. On Wednesday, Peltier pleaded guilty to the charge, and a judge sentenced him to 18 months in prison with 12 months suspended and credit for 38 days served. Peltier will serve his sentence at the same time as a sentence he was given in a separate case. Peltier was sentenced Dec. 1 to no jail time for unauthorized use of a vehicle, a Class A misdemeanor. The judge ordered him to serve 365 days at the Grand Forks Correctional Center, with 330 days suspended and credit for 35 days served, but he was ordered to two years of probation and $45 in restitution in the case. In the car theft case, Pelt- new exhibition “Horses, Skins and Basketball/ Wishes, Lies and Dreams.” “It’s very much about the landscape at Spirit Lake,” she said. “When I look at this exhibition compared to the last one, this is much stronger and it’s more closely aligned with the people of Spirit Lake.” The new exhibition will be on display until Feb. 29. Call Johnson at (701) 787-6736, (800) 477-6572 ext. 1736 or send email to [email protected]. ier also was ordered to two years of probation and $836 in restitution. — Becky Jacobs Stolen GF semi found in Fargo Police found a semitrailer that was stolen Saturday from a Grand Forks gas station. A white 1994 Peterbilt 379, stolen from Simonson Travel Center on Gateway Drive, was found Tuesday afternoon in Fargo, said Grand Forks Police Lt. Brett Johnson. The vehicle was left running Saturday at the Simonson Travel Center in Grand Forks and was stolen while the driver was away from it, Johnson said. The Grand Forks Police Department had asked for the public’s help in the search by posting information and a photo of the semitrailer to its Facebook page Tuesday morning. The Police Department posted several hours later the vehicle had been found. No arrests regarding the theft had been made as of Tuesday afternoon, Johnson said. — Herald staff report