Transcript of March 9, 2015 (Monday)
515 2nd Ave. S • Glasgow, MT 59230 406-228-4558 • fax:
406-228-4578
bscentral@nemont.net
9 , 2 0
a pair of Aarons: Aaron Fjeld (passenger)
and Aaron Carrick, as he got his Harley
out of the garage and dusted it off before
taking a country cruise out to Tampico.
“It helps me keep my sanity,” he says of
putting on some miles whenever opportunity
knocks. We’ll probably be seeing plenty of
motorcycle traffic all week long as warm, dry
days continue well into next weekend and
hopefully beyond as spring officially arrives
on Friday, March 20th .
Thursday • Broadview-Lavina 43,
Circle 39 • Gardiner 44, Cascade 39 • Twin Bridges 53, Park
City 48 • Saco-Whitewater-
• Cascade 46, Circle 30, loser out
• Belt 55, Park City 22, loser out
• Gardiner 58, Broadview- Lavina 48, seminal
• Saco-Whitewater-Hinsdale 54, Twin Bridges 45, seminal
Saturday • Belt 65, Broadview-Lavina
consolation • Gardiner 55, Saco-
(Two teams advance) Thursday
• Choteau 62, Plentywood 15
43 • Faireld 53, Harlem 47
Friday • Malta 56, Plentywood 36,
loser out • Glasgow 72, Harlem 45,
loser out • Choteau 70, Shelby 62,
seminal • Rocky Boy 44, Faireld
42, seminal Saturday • Shelby 46, Glasgow 37, loser
out • Malta 50, Faireld 33, loser
out • Malta 54, Shelby 45,
consolation • Choteau 86, Rocky Boy 59
championship Challenge at Havre tonight • Malta vs. Rocky Boy,
6:30
State B Boys at Great Falls, March 12-14
Thursday • Columbus vs. Bigfork • Choteau vs. St. Labre • Huntley
Project vs. Malta
or Rocky Boy • Missoula Loyola vs. Big
Timber
State B Girls at Great Falls, March 12-14
Thursday • Forsyth vs. Plains • Malta vs. Columbus • Manhattan vs.
Choteau • Bigfork vs. Colstrip
It is time to start organizing Cuisine For the
Cure 4. his annual undraiser or the Northeast Montana Relay For Lie
is scheduled or hursday, April 23rd at the Glasgow Elks Club.
his event has area cooks preparing oods rom various
parts o the world and then share them at a night o un all in the
name o raising money or cancer research and support programs.
I you are interested in sharing your cooking talents or have
questions about this event, then please call Rod at 263-8757 (ater
3 p.m.) or Phyllis at 406-939-0754.
4th Annual Cuisine for the Cure
In search of cooks
Thursday • Fairview vs. Broadview- Lavina
• Manhattan Christian vs. Highwood
• Northern Cheyenne vs. Arlee
UP APPLICATION AT COTTONWOOD
BUZZ
JOB OPENING: A part- time pos it ion at Glasgow Veterinary
Cli nic
for kennel help and janitorial duties is available.
INTERESTED
INDIVIDUALS MAY PICK UP AN APPLICATION AT GLASGOW
VETERINARY CLINIC.
preferably certified. Various shifts available including some
nights
and weekends. Opportunities for full and part time . APPLY AT
THE
COTTONWOOD INN
OPENINGS AVAILABLE AT MIRROR IMAGE: Established Salon,
full or part-time esthetician, or nail tech. Openings available for
all
positions. CALL 228-2330 ASK FOR KRISTI
BUZZ
FOR SALE: 2012 Yamaha 1700 Roadstar. 4,800 miles, lots of
extras,
excellent shape. $9,800. 406-230-2805
Delivery not included. CALL KEVIN 406-224-0770
BUZZ
STORE FRONT SPACE AVAILABLE FOR LEASE, 228-2800
Tonight: Mostly clear, with a low around 30. West northwest
wind 5 to 8 mph.
Tuesday: Sunny, with a high near 57. Calm wind
becoming south southwest 5 to 7 mph in the afternoon.
Tuesday Night: Mostly clear, with a low around 31. East
southeast wind around 7 mph.
Wednesday: Partly sunny, with a high near 63. East southeast
wind 5 to 7 mph.
Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy, with a low around 35.
Southeast wind 3 to 5 mph.
Thursday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 60. West wind
5 to 11 mph.
Friday: Mostly sunny, with a high near 56.
Saturday: Sunny, with a high near 62.
Sunday: Partly sunny, with a high near 62.
Pinochle Marathon Continues February winners or the women’s
pinochle marathon are: 1st, Norma Lee and Deanna Nelson, 6925
points 2nd, Donna Combs and Sheri Daggett, 6610 points 3rd,
Arlene Knaff and Helen McIntyre, 5870 points
Tings will be dry and quite warm or this time o year over
the next several days... ENJOY!
A distraught senior citizen phoned her doctor’s office. “Is
it true,” she wanted to know, “that the medication you prescribed
has to be taken or the rest o my lie?” “Yes, I’m araid so,”
the doctor told her. Tere was a moment o silence beore the
senior lady replied, “I’m wondering, then, just how serious is my
condition because this prescription is marked ‘NO REFILLS’.”
Sounds like ObummerCare
Fort Peck Fine Arts Council is proud to announce its 7th
Annual rip o the Month winners or March. First Prize WINNER:
Pam Lee o Glasgow, round-trip airare or two rom Billings, our
nights’ accommodations in Charleston, South Carolina. Second
Prize WINNER: Fred Hammond o Saco, $200 cash. And don’t
orget, another Fort Peck Fine Arts Council event is coming up
quickly as the the Chinese Auction will be held on Saturday, March
21st at the Cottonwood Inn. ickets are available at the Teatre
office located next to Western Drug or KLZ/KLAN Studios.
Trip of the Month winners
Letter to the Buzz Hats off to the Glasgow Scotty Boys
Basketb all eam, Coaches, Cheerleaders, Pep Band, Advisors and
Fans. Your SPORSMANSHIP at the Divisional ournament in Shelby was
OUSANDING.
A PROUD SCOY FAN, RAH! RAH! RAH!
One day it’s warm and sunny, the next day cold and snowy.
Welcome to that time on the calendar between winter and
spring, though spring really doesn’t seem to hit us some years till
May. In the animal kingdom, several species ignore the
calendar and do their thing now to ensure the uture o their kind.
Te great horned owl is hooting about now, looking or the
right mate. Tat hoot-hoot-hoot you heard last
night or just beore dawn is the mating ritual o the great horned
owl. Afer mating, the owls will continue to hoot, not so much to
proclaim their love and affection but to stake out a territory and
warn other owls away. Another bird that mates and lays eggs
in winter is the bald eagle. By the end o February, many bald
eagles in this state are sitting on eggs. Why would eagles
and owls mate and lay eggs now? Because it takes so long to raise
their young; they will be teaching their young to hunt in the
summer when prey is abundant and easier to catch. Underwater
now is a time o survival, except
Montana Tales & Trails Love in the Time of Cold
By Bruce Auchly or the ling, sometimes called burbot. Tis
slimy denizen o the deep is in the middle o its mating season right
now. Most spawning probably occurs in February and into March in
water one to 10 eet deep. According to Fishes o Montana, by
Dr. C.J.D. Brown: “Males and emales collect in masses or ‘balls’
and eggs and sperm are released in these balls as the fish move in
and out.” Whew. Not only do burbot spawn in winter,
the species seems to come alive in the winter. Burbot are a avorite
winter are that many anglers have difficulty finding in the summer,
when the fish is not as active. Ten it seeks out deep holes where
it stays put, munching on other fish and fish eggs. Back on
land, some mammals have given birth already, like bears and
wolverines. Near the end o January and into February, throughout
Montana hundreds o pregnant grizzlies and black bears gave birth in
their winter dens. Each litter averages two cubs, born tiny,
blind and helpless. A grizzly weighs about one pound at birth;
black bears a hal a pound. Te cubs nurse on rich milk that is 20 to
40