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Dave Rollenhagen doesn’t work the typical 9-5 grind. Grinding, however, is exactly the type of work he does. Rollenhagen is the miller at the Mill at Anselma in Chester Springs.
“I’ve always enjoyed building things; it keeps me out of trouble,” laughs large-scale model builder Jerry Albert.
Targets of all types know Bill Kohler has good aim.
During the first few weeks of the coronavirus pandemic this spring, avid quilter Kelly Meanix was feeling creatively unmoored, unable to harness her imaginative impulses into one focused pursuit.
Warren Goodling has spent a lifetime in basketball. Among other accomplishments, he compiled a 452-205 record over 25 years as Hempfield High School’s head coach.
Fred Reiss has been an Army medic, an elementary teacher, and a school principal and continues to be an intrepid world traveler, an avid bicyclist, and an enthusiastic collector.
It took the story of a burning river in Ohio to really make the American public sit up and take notice.
How do you explain why 51,000 men were killed, wounded, captured, or missing in just three days of fighting in America’s bloodiest battle?
Don Shuler knows how to put a smile on people’s faces.
Read it. Love it. Pass it on. A premise that can change a child’s world.
“Embrace your age! Nobody wants to talk about how old they are, but I love talking about it,” laughs Soni Dimond on a recent phone conversation discussing her life, her passions, and her whirlwind career.
For caregivers of people with memory issues, keeping their loved one in a safe space — whether it’s their home or a care facility — is vital to the person’s well-being. But the reality is that 6 in 10 people with dementia will wander away from that safe space at least once.
The expression “gone fishing” has taken on a whole new meaning for Dale and Gail Stump.
The hum and roar of motorcycles sounded throughout town as riders gathered recently at the American Legion Post 455.
Half a century ago, in an atmosphere redolent of cow manure and marijuana smoke, 500,000 young people came together on the hillside of a farm in New York state.
“We are at any given time a sum of our past experiences. I like to tell my students to gather up their pebbles of knowledge and eventually it turns into a hill, and that hill will continue to grow into a mountain,” says fitness educator Joy Riley.
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