I’m going to be blunt: Easter has always felt a bit cold and hollow to me.
The effects of the COVID-19 outbreak didn’t hit home for us high school seniors until it literally “hit home.”
A hollowed-out hole in an oak tree on the Missouri River. Lonely fur trading outposts. Military forts. An old sheepherder’s wagon.
Lisa Rossow met her future husband, Wayne, in a seemingly perfect way for a girl from western North Dakota: at a boot-scootin’-boogie country bar a
Agriculture is one industry that has accepted women as critical for the future. According to the U.S.
Each spring, Grandma Clara tended to her garden, planting and caring for perennials that surrounded her home.
The question posed to me and the other farmers and ranchers at the meeting was: “What is the greatest problem confronting your operation?” Our resp
Mor-Gran-Sou Electric Cooperative member Annette Broyles drives 80 miles roundtrip each workday, to get from her home in rural New Salem to her cla