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Featuring music, a short play, a visit from Santa Claus, and a variety of cookies and confections, Turner Public School held its Christmas program on Thursday, December 19. In addition, high school and junior high students organized a white elephant-style gift exchange that also took place. A musical written by John Jacobson and Walter Jack provided the central element for the program. The dramatic presentation Gnome for the Holidays highlights a cast of funny gnomes who come to Santa's rescue...
Recently at the North Harlem Hutterite Colony three second graders shared the story of Christ's birth. It's a tradition that's gone on since the time the colony was founded. Two old stars, played by Pierce Hofer (with the beard) and Taya Hofer told the Christmas story as they answered questions by new star, Neal Hofer. Per Colony minister Eli Hofer, the annual tradition of a Christmas program put on by the colony's children has been presented annually since 1965, just a few years after the...
Keen observers of happenings around Chinook likely noticed that for some time the bell was missing from the belfry of the United Methodist Church. The church sits just northeast of downtown Chinook and its steeple is a part of the downtown horizon looking east and north. I'm not exactly sure when the bell came loose from its base, but it was a few months ago. More recently those same keen viewers described above, and perhaps others, may have noticed a shiny, silvery bell is now in the place...
Smart technology is a term for devices and systems that can communicate and work with other technologies to perform tasks automatically or adapt to changing conditions. From smart thermostats and lighting that can optimize energy usage in homes to smart watches and medical devices with the ability to monitor and enhance personal health, artificial intelligence is revolutionizing how we live. Because such electronic devices perform some level of computing, they connect with other devices via the internet. While these devices create all sorts of...
Harlem Library Happy New Year from the Harlem Public Library! If you have completed the December Book Challenge, be sure to contact the library. The Book Challenge for January is to read a book set in the snow. Weekly programs will resume the week of January 6th. Storytime for children ages 0-5 and their parents/caregivers will be held on Tuesdays at 10 A.M. After School Squad for elementary students meets on Wednesdays at 4 P.M. Lego Club for all ages is held on Thursdays at 4 P.M. The Book Club members may pick up the new selection “The Five...
Happy New Year from the Harlem Public Library! If you have completed the December Book Challenge, please notify the library to be entered into a drawing to win a gift certificate from a local business. The Book Challenge for January is to read a book set in the snow. The weekly programs will begin the week of January 6th. Children ages 0-5 and their parents/caregivers are encouraged to attend Storytime on Tuesdays at 10 A.M. Elementary students are invited to After School Squad on Wednesdays at 4 P.M. Everyone is welcome to attend Lego Club on...
It was three Christmas seasons ago when the Milk River Churches celebrated their first joint worship. The churches' first combined worship was on Christmas Eve. The Milk River Churches fellowship was created partially to deal with the fact that the four churches were all losing ministers at about the same time. Theresa Danley, a Certified Lay Pastor, has been leading the group solo a year or so. The four churches that make up the Milk River group are United Methodist, First Presbyterian, and...
The ancient Babylonians are said to have been the first people to make New Year’s resolutions, some 4,000 years ago. They were also the first to hold recorded celebrations in honor of the new year—though for them the year began not in January but in mid-March, when the crops were planted. During a massive 12-day religious festival known as Akitu, the Babylonians crowned a new king or reaffirmed their loyalty to the reigning king. They also made promises to the gods to pay their debts and return any objects they had borrowed. These promises cou...
Civilizations around the world have been celebrating the start of each new year for at least four millennia. Today, most New Year’s festivities begin on December 31 (New Year’s Eve), the last day of the Gregorian calendar, and continue into the early hours of January 1 (New Year’s Day). Common traditions include attending parties, eating special New Year’s foods, making resolutions for the new year and watching fireworks displays. Ancient New Year’s Celebrations The earliest recorded festivities in honor of a new year’s arrival date back s...
The biggest night of the year was quickly approaching, and Adolph S. Ochs needed to find new entertainment for his New Year’s Eve party. For the previous three years, the New York Times publisher had set the skies above Manhattan ablaze with a midnight fireworks show launched from the roof of his newspaper’s 25-story headquarters. The pyrotechnics had been a hit with the 200,000 revelers who filled the junction around Broadway and 42nd Street—newly rechristened Times Square after its famous tenant—but the hot ash that rained down upon them co...