December 2022

Orman B. Fixsen Jr.

 Orman B. Fixsen Jr., 79, of Winfred, S.D., passed away Wednesday, December 28, 2022 at St. John Lutheran Home in Springfield. Funeral Services will be held at 1 p.m. Friday,…

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Rabbit grapplers dominate Tigers

The Wabasso wrestling team rolled to a 60-20 win over Springfield in a recent dual meet held in Springfield. The Rabbits picked up forfeit wins from Landryk Tietz (106), Zach Skoblik (120), William Flowers (138) and Katelynn Crotinger (Hwt) and falls from Kaysen Harms (113), Ashton Wiedemann (126), Gavin Marotzke (145), Adryen Tietz (152), Mason Kampsen (160) and Chase Irlbeck (182).

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Cardinal girls nab first victory

It was a big night for the Redwood Valley girls basketball team as they held off GFW 59-56 in a non-conference girls basketball team held in Redwood Falls. It was the first win of the season for the Cards (1-4) who will look to build on the victory heading into the New Year.

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Short-handed Cards fall to Eagles

A short-handed Redwood Valley boys basketball team fell 87-68 to host New Ulm Tuesday night in a Big South Conference match-up. The Cardinals (4-2) fell behind 45-28 at the half and couldn’t recover as they dropped their second straight following a four-game win streak to open the season.

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The Year in Review: 2022

Just what was 2022? Like many years that came before it, 2022 was also a year. But 2022 was different in that it was new. Many experts say 2022 was the newest year thus far. The years that came before 2022 – and this goes for all of the years – were old. They came and went. But 2022 seems to really be hanging around, here and now. It’s almost like 2022 is happening right-this-second. Whereas, other, older years seem to be a thing of the past. On the other hand, 2022 seems really au courant.

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Letter to the Editor

To the editor: Is everyone in Minnesota all happy and excited over the outcome of the latest election? One would have thought that after the past couple of years of riots, looting's, property destruction, shootings, car jacking's, among other crimes, misuse of emergency powers that closed most small businesses and churches (many permanently), high fuel prices and so much more mayhem, the voting public would have decided to make a few changes. Unfortunately, not one change in the Governor, Attorney General, Secretary of State and State Auditor offices.

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