If you were to walk into Cathy Niklason’s house, in her living room, you would see a candle-making station that spills over into her kitchen and a spare bedroom.
With pucks flying, parents watching eagerly from the sidelines and first-time skaters repeatedly falling, Saturday’s annual Try Hockey for Free event was a success.
When Adam Rothenberger set out to give his students real-world business experience this year, he decided to take his lesson plans to the local business community.
When Pam Hoffman was at her annual mammogram, or Pam-ogram as she affectionately calls it, a few years ago, she was chatting with the technician about the new add-on to her house.
When Debbie (Oleson) Kribell was tasked with selecting a town anywhere in the world in 1971 for a pen pal writing assignment, the fourth-grade girl, whose family had just moved to Bison, N.D., chose Cape Porpoise, Maine.
On Edna Brown’s first day as a high school English teacher in Chester in 1942, one of her students talked back to her. The student was 6-feet tall, and Brown barely stood 5-feet tall.