Skip to main content

It’s ‘Missoula Week!’

It’s become known around St. Joseph Community School as “Missoula Week,” and that means students in grades K-8 at the New Hampton private school are busy, really busy.“They’re probably sleeping pretty well at night,” St.

New Hampton’s Shopko store to close

It wasn’t wholly unexpected — after all, Shopko has been teetering for months — but the news that the Wisconsin-based company will close all its stores this spring still was a blow to New Hampton.“It hurts, I’m going to be honest about that,” New

Spring thaw makes a mess

Spring arrived last week and is sticking around this week, too.That’s the good news.The bad news?

Ready to make a big splash!

Chase Sudol stood outside S&T Collision on Tuesday morning, looked at the sun shining and looked ahead a couple of months.“Days like this,” he said, “they get us really excited for the splash pad.

City considers request to up garbage rates

A public hearing is set for the next Nashua City Council meeting regarding the garbage rates.Jendro Sanitation is asking the city to approve a 1.9 percent increase in garbage rates plus a $1.51 per household per month increase.

Speech students earn All-State trips

Two out of three isn’t bad, not bad at all.After a week of waiting to hear the news, Nashua-Plainfield seniors Tanner Striegel and Drew Moine learned this past Saturday that they had been nominated for the All-State Speech Festival that will be he

Board of Supervisors approves economic development requests

After meeting with Fredericksburg Economic Development officials in recent weeks, the Chickasaw County Board of Supervisors approved resolutions last week giving incentives to two businesses there for job creation and retention.In both cases, new

MC happy to talk but not dance for 3D event

Kevin Frey believes the folks who will attend this Saturday’s “Dancing with the Stars” event should count themselves as fortunate.“Put it this way, I’m not only glad I’m the MC,” the Trinity Lutheran Church pastor said, “but the people who are att

New Hampton senior finds his calling in music

What began at a two-day Wartburg event turned into a passion that would change the course of his life and career path.

The Last Dance

Emma Schwickerath made it through her fifth Dance Showcase Saturday night but not without a few — OK, maybe a lot — tears.“It’s always hard for me, especially because I know this is the last time the seniors will dance with us,” the New Hampton da

Ruth Miller misses the days when people ‘neighbored,’ a more active Main Street

Ruth Miller, 101, is happy to be where she is at this point in life.

Farmers will head into 2019 on the right foot

Ask Terry Basol about what kind of year the ISU Extension agronomist believes area farmers deserve and he has a quick answer.“The guys have earned a nice, normal year,” he said.

Put it this way: All-State wait was definitely worth it

They waited. They waited some more.

Retired teacher finds the perfect job

While teaching about the My Plate dietary guidelines, Linda Burgart once had students taste food samples before revealing what each was.At the end of the session, Burgart, who teaches the Ag in the Classroom program for Chickasaw County Farm Burea

Students find rewards in giving gift of blood

The first time is always the scariest.Before your mind jumps into the gutter, this story is about giving blood.Every two seconds, someone in the United States needs blood, according to the American Red Cross website, which goes on to say blood is

New Hampton speech students bring home 12 state Division I ratings

As far as New Hampton speech coach Jason Speltz is concerned, any team that finished with 12 Division I ratings at the state individual contest has something going for it.The fact that New Hampton did that in a year like this, when the weather wre

Subscribe to News