A couple volunteers at the Animal Allies shelter every Sunday. They are not only helping the animals, but they are also being rewarded themselves.
All in Lake Voice News
A couple volunteers at the Animal Allies shelter every Sunday. They are not only helping the animals, but they are also being rewarded themselves.
25-year-old Bryon Maslow from Isanti explains how he came to be a truck driver.
MollyJo McCormick has spent the last few years attending mission trips through a program called Mexican Caravan Ministries. She helped build houses, paint, and loved getting to know new people. She plans to continue on these mission trips and one day lead them for her church.
Troy McDonald’s four-year-old daughter, Emma, has spina bifida. The McDonald family is now leading a charge to build a playground in Proctor that is safe for children with disabilities.
Anthony Ross’ woodworking passion is confined to a small area while he attends college.
Duluth veteran Joe McDonell struggles to become accustomed to his life back home after serving his country in Afghanistan.
Former Two Harbors High School student Taylor Saxon looks back on her decision to drop out after the ninth grade and get her GED.
Stephanie Wegmann works with the United States Department of State Foreign Service to further her education and help those that are less fortunate.
You could say that Lane Ellis lives two lives, one in the virtual world and the other in nature.
Police officers in Minneapolis and group home workers in Duluth are trained specifically in dealing with people in mental health crises.
Local artists use natural materials and recycled items at the 3rd annual Treasures of the green goods arts and crafts fair.
A press release for the Tweed Museum of Art's annual student exhibition.
This is part one of a three part series profiling three UMD students who all went to Iraq together in 2005 and all came to UMD together right after. Two of them are being redeployed in May and the third is staying behind, due to PTSD. This is Sergeant Benjamin Hatton’s story of his last eight years in the United States Army.
Duluth student, Tara Mortenson, received one hundred dollars from a fellow peer for project “Pay it Forward.” She is now on a “Pay it Forward” journey along with local radio station 97.3 who developed the “Drive Through Difference” project.