Hank Robinson, executive director of Aksarben Full Value Agriculture, shared some sobering projections about the state’s ag economy during the Aurora Development Corporation’s annual meeting Oct. 21.
Hank Robinson, executive director of Aksarben Full Value Agriculture, shared some sobering projections about the state’s ag economy during the Aurora Development Corporation’s annual meeting Oct. 21.
Avery Miller makes a quick escape from the Wolff Building as a clown (Brenden Zucco) chases after her Sunday night. Over 480 people visited the Hamilton County Haunted Fairgrounds during the opening weekend with many braving the maze twice or three times.
Jessica Clark owns Roam & Ivy Flowers, a flower-farming business that she operates on her family’s farm west of Aurora. Clark originally worked as a part-time massage therapist for approximately 20 years in Denver, Colo., and later in her hometown.
Throughout her lifetime, Hamilton County Treasurer Jody Griffith has progressed through three careers, starting with stay-at-home wife and mother, then moving to banking at two local institutions and finally the last nine years as treasurer.
Curiosity led Dr. Lane Handke to try the pay phone outside the Pierce Telephone Co. in Pierce. He asked Jeff Kesting, the phone company’s plant manager, why it wasn’t working. Kesting fixed the problem and encouraged Handke to try again. The pay phone is one of only 81 still in operation in Nebraska.
Katie Muilenburg (center) is a postdoctoral fellow at the National Cancer Institute Center for Cancer Research in Bethesda, focusing on liver cancer research. Pictured with Muilenburg from left are her brother Nathan, father Jeff and mother Cyndi.
The Specialty Ag Formulations facility at Mission Critical as it looked while under construction last year.
Mike Herman served as farm manager at Grain Place Foods near Marquette for more than 30 years, beginning in 1985. He is pictured here in 2015 with a photo that was appropriately labeled: “Outstanding in his field.”
When his body started to tell him he could no longer keep up the long hours and physical demands of farming, Mike Herman shifted gears. For the last seven years, he has served as a driver for Ryde Transit.