Summer concert series
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By MELANIE PILTINGSRUD
Copy Editor
Sunday, June 25 kicks off the first of the Summer Burst Concert Series with the much requested doo-wop, rockabilly, and rock band, The Whitesidewalls, who will take you back to the golden age of rock-n-roll.
The band will play from 3:30 p.m. - 5 p.m., but bring your lawn chair or blanket and head to the New Richland City Park early, because this band draws a crowd. A food truck will be available from 11 a.m. until after the concert, and, of course, the playground equipment is available for the kids, so what more could you ask for in a relaxing afternoon? Bring your family and have a good time.
The Summer Burst Concert Series is made possible through a grant from the Prairie Lakes Regional Arts Council and sponsored by the City of New RIchland. As part of the grant, the New Richland Care Center is treated to a taste of the music of each concert earlier in the afternoon. In the case of The Whitesidewalls, one member of the band will perform a solo concert at the care center prior to the presentation at the park.
Kathy (Flor) Hinkley retires
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Kathy (Flor) Hinkley will retire on June 23rd after 42 years with the New Richland Care Center. She invites everyone to a public Open House retirement party on Friday, June 23rd at the New Richland City Hall from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m.
By BARB FINSETH
Staff Writer
Kathy (Flor) Hinkley will be retiring from the New Richland Care Center on June 23rd after 42 years serving and caring for residents there. There will be a public Open House retirement party at the New Richland City Hall on Friday, June 23 from 4:30 to 6:30 p.m, to celebrate Kathy's many contributions to the Care Center over these years.
Kathy's career at the Care Center began on November 3, 1980 as a certified nursing assistant working with residents full-time on the evening shift for over five years.
Weegman retires after six years
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By JONAH STAFFORD
Staff Writer
Lise Weegman, NRHEG Secondary’s business teacher for the past six years, did not have an easy time deciding to submit her retirement this spring. One of the greatest joys of being a teacher, she observes, is the opportunity to introduce students to concepts and practices “that they knew very little about, and possibly had never even thought of before.”
Teaching students varying from middle schoolers to seniors and covering subject matter from basic communication and interaction to an introduction to the business world with such classes as Computers, Business, Hospitality and Tourism, Money Management, and Fundamentals of Accounting, Weegman has provided hundreds of students with a broadened understanding and built rich interpersonal relationships.
Smith thanks NR Clinic staff
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By Sarah Stultz
Albert Lea Tribune
New Richland resident Karren Smith didn’t know anything was wrong at first.
The retired grandmother had been to her son’s house in the morning on March 27 to help detail his food truck.
Though she started having what she described as a heaviness in her chest that morning, she thought it was just heartburn.
But when the feeling didn’t go away after she took her grandson back to her house and fed him lunch, she decided to take a few aspirin.
“I thought, ‘This is not right,’” Smith said. “I started feeling a little tingling in my left arm and in my jaw.”
‘Here to see another day’
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Nancy Jane’s Bakery owner survives heart attack
By DEB BENTLY
Staff Writer
For Nancy Jane Klecker, it was the stuff of nightmares. “His eyes rolled back in his head and he sort of fell back. I leaped out of my chair and ran out into the hallway screaming.
“The doctors say I probably saved his life by reacting so quickly.”
Fortunately, “the hallway” was in a hospital where Harry, 57, and Nancy Jane’s husband of 31 years, had just learned that there was dangerous blockage in a number of blood vessels connected to his heart, and that he should be scheduled for open heart surgery in the near future.
The news was a complete surprise to him. “I never had any symptoms that seemed dangerous,” he observes. “I had some shortness of breath now and then, but that was all.”
The Kleckers own Nancy Jane’s Bakery in New Richland and are its only employees. From the time the blockages were discovered on March 30 and the surgery was scheduled, their business had to be closed–a sudden turn of events that took area residents by surprise. The shop remained closed through April and halfway through May, opening again when the two felt ready to handle their rigorous work schedule again.