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Congratulations Sheryl Gravatt, the March 2020 Millie E. Olson Award Recipient!
Read moreThe American Legion Post #10 of Lake Andes is holding a meeting on March 16th at 6:00 p.m., in the Lake Andes Community Center.
Read moreDo you know the background to how the City library is operated? The City of Lake Andes is the governing body under which the library operates. A budget for supplies, books, computers, in-service for employees, upkeep of the building, maintenance of the building, and salaries, is provided by tax dollars collected for the City. The library has a Board of Directors made up of five members of the City of Lake Andes, the Library Director, and a City Council person. This board meets quarterly at the library. The board members are kept abreast of the activities at the library, they approve all hires and are a critical part of the funding for summer activities through fundraising completed by board members. All library board meetings are open to the public. Meetings are held on the 2nd Tuesday of the months of March, June, September and December.
Read moreMarch is Music in our Schools Month, and because of this there are many opportunities in school to get involved in the arts. The South Dakota Music Educators Association hosts a 4-6 Festival Choir each year to allow students to perform with others outside of their school, and receive an opportunity to perform music they would not usually perform. A select group of Andes Central 4th-6th grade students performed in this choir festival in Mitchell on March 2nd. Mila Hopkins, Adara Hopkins, Tyson Cournoyer, Luke Dangel, Lexi Schoenfelder, and Sutton Stluka were chosen, and performed five songs at Mitchell’s Performing Arts Center. The group did an excellentjob representing Andes Central and should be very proud of their involvement in music. Courtesy Photo
Read moreIt’s hard enough getting old, what with all of the creeping ailments—diabetes, COPD, dementia, heart disease—that come along with age. Now add a novel coronavirus to the mix. There are more than 91,000 COVID-19 cases and 3,100 deaths as of writing, but the virus doesn’t hit all demographics equally hard—and seniors are the most vulnerable.
Read moreMamie Shields Pyle was walking by a polling place on Election Day in Huron — a place where women were not welcome in the early 1900s — when she overheard a conversation that changed not only her life, but the course of South Dakota history. A man was holding up a ballot and showing a group of workers (some of whom were illiterate) how to vote. “He was threatening their jobs if they didn’t vote the right way,” says Rachel Farrell, executive director of Huron’s Dakotaland Museum. “Mamie got upset and that’s really what got her started in the suffrage movement.”
Read moreAs insurance companies push doctors to save money by switching their patients to generic drugs, complaints about those generics appear to be on the upswing. That’s the observation of journalist Katherine Eban, who has written a book, “Bottle of Lies,” that tells a very dark tale about the generic drug industry and the safety of generic drugs Americans are increasingly taking.
Read moreThe Wagner Area Health & Wellness Consortium (WAHWC) held the 4th annual February Fitness Challenge. The challenge was divided into two categories; a four-person team and a business challenge. Participants gained points by doing different intensities of physical activity in 20-minute increments.
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