ROCK SPRINGS - Not one but three cakes greet Gov. Dave Freudenthal at the Halliburton facility in Rock Springs. It's Thursday, the second day of a two-day campaign jaunt in mid-October, and Freudenthal already has seen at least one cake at an official lunch with city and county officials.
Bus drivers kick, step, clap and shout in unison during a spirited morning aerobics class at Metro Transit's South Base. Downtown paper-shufflers have their meetings...
After 20 years working in the advertising business in Alaska, New Mexico and Texas, Enid native Carol J. Angel, formerly Carol Underwood, has returned to Oklahoma to open Owner/ Builder Network in Edmond. She and Larry Oesterman have opened their new offices at 124 N. Bryant, Suite C1.
For the second time in two years, Mainers will vote on an initiative that aims to rein in government spending and cut taxes, but which opponents say will slash government services and do nothing to help the state's lagging economy.
Eleven Town Council candidates chewed over many of the issues facing Block Island at the Candidate's Night sponsored by the Block Island Residents Association on Sunday, Oct. 8. The three-hour discussion ranged from indecent public behavior to envisioning the future to - yet again - managing the isl
FCMAT’s recent findings that Oakland’s schools are still not being run well after three years of state control, should require an immediate takeover of Oakland’s schools by our voters and taxpayers.
A crab fishing program started in 2005 -- ostensibly to stop overfishing and ensure fishermen's safety -- has given fishing rights to corporations, put individual fishermen out of work, and risked the marine ecosystem.
Opening day is what it's all about. Short kids running through the kiddie section seeking Dr. Seuss, middle-sized kids tucked in a corner with Mark Twain and tall kids slouched in overstuffed chairs eyeing Shakespeare.
REDLANDS -- He looks out his office window and sees an elderly woman in a wheelchair. Carefully pushing the chair is her husband of 67 years. The couple had lived together at Plymouth Village, he said, until she needed full-time care.
ANCHORAGE, Alaska -- In the Arctic village of Ambler, residents are paying 7.25 a gallon for home heating oil as the days darken and the chill of winter seeps into the dozens of homes, most poorly insulated, along the Kobuk River.