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Driver who died in crash near Medina identified | The Dickinson Press

Harlan Vining, 61, Jamestown, was pronounced dead at Jamestown Regional Medical Center. Written By: Kathy Steiner | × MEDINA, N.D. The North Dakota Highway Patrol has identified the man killed in a Sunday afternoon, Dec. 20, crash near Medina. Harlan Vining, 61, Jamestown, was pronounced dead at Jamestown Regional Medical Center. The accident occurred at 1:23 p.m. a mile east of Medina on Interstate 94. The patrol said Vining was driving a 2008 Chevrolet Silverado west on I-94 near mile marker 231. The pickup partially entered the median of I-94 as the trailer it was pulling began to fishtail. The driver overcorrected to the right and the Silverado entered the north ditch of I-94 traveling sideways, causing it to overturn. The driver, who was not wearing a seat belt, was ejected, the patrol said.

Jamestown Woman Delivers 800 Gift Baskets to Frontline Workers

JAMESTOWN, N.D. (NewsDakota.com) – A Jamestown woman surprised employees at frontline businesses and organizations with the delivery of a total of 800 gift baskets to frontline workers in the area. Tia Nordberg is an employee at the James River Correctional Center who is relatively new to Jamestown.  Not being from North Dakota has given her the opportunity and time to give back during the COVID-19 pandemic.  Nordberg partnered with Operation Gratitude, a nationwide nonprofit, to assemble and deliver the gift bags.  She delivered 800 baskets to employees with the fire department, law enforcement, and prison, including 350 baskets to the Jamestown Regional Medical Center.

Jamestown Correctional Center inmates find creative way to give gifts of comfort

KVRR Local News The inmates are crocheting hats, blankets and even hacky sacks. December 18, 2020   JAMESTOWN, N.D.- Inmates at James River Correctional Center are taking the time to help those in need. It all started with an unusual request made by an inmate more than a decade ago. “One resident asking me for some yarn,” says Chaplain Mark Hanes from the James River Correctional Center. The inmate was looking for a way to pass time. He took it upon himself to learn how to crochet, and soon after, other inmates followed suit. “Before long there were dozens of guys crocheting,” Hanes said.

Already struggling, the nation s rural hospitals face another challenge: for-profit owners

Already struggling, the nation s rural hospitals face another challenge: for-profit owners Gretchen Morgenson and Vicky Nguyen and Conor Ferguson and Merritt Enright © Provided by NBC News Debbie Crouch Cook knows the peril of having a loved one fall ill when the nearest hospital is over an hour away. A nurse and medical coder, Cook lives outside Jamestown, Tenn., a 3-square-mile town of 2,000 in the northeastern part of the state. Her mom, Lottie, lives nearby and during the summer of 2019, Cook checked in to find her disoriented and acting odd. She called 911 and when the paramedics arrived, Lottie couldn t smile, a sign of stroke.

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