Published May 04, 2007 04:54 pm - At least two dogs have been shot during the last few months and another is missing in South Bend Township.
Our View -- Shooting dogs is cowardly
The Free Press
Thumbs down
To the person or people who apparently want to take matters into their own hands by cleaning up the neighborhood of wandering dogs.
At least two dogs have been shot during the last few months and another is missing in South Bend Township. Residents suspect someone has decided to take the law into their own hands rather than reporting their complaints about the dogs to the proper authorities.
If that’s the case, it’s a cowardly way of fixing a problem.
No one is disputing that dogs not properly tied up or kept in a kennel can be a real nuisance. Responsible dog owners do not let their dogs run free when the law saws they can’t. But obviously shooting dogs to stop them is cruel, inhumane and illegal.
Whoever is aware of the suspect or suspects in this case should contact law enforcment authorities so the matter can be dealt with before more animals are shot, or worse yet, people are hurt.
Thumbs up
To those who organized the project at Lake Crystal Wellcome Memorial High School that returned old memories to past graduates of the schools that now make up LCWM.
The bright idea was to present some historic memorabilia in the display cases near the new school’s main entrance. Banners and colors representing the old teams — the Wildcats, the Lakers, the Raiders and the Gardeners — were draped above the main doors.
As students, parents and other members of the communities that once stood on their own but now share in the LCWM educational experience saw the memorabilia, they were reminded that out of that old cloth is fashioned the new.
Hard feelings still remain from school closings and consolidations that have brought about small-town changes not always welcomed, but the old souvenirs were a smart reminder that the past, if gone, is not forgotten. And now, it’s time to unite with new memories in a new building.
Thumbs up
To Alltel for committing to upgrade and expand the call service center at the Midwest Wireless office in Mankato.
When Alltel purchased the highly successful, home-grown Midwest Wireless last year, there were understandably concerns about job cuts. Alltel earlier announced that about 150 of the 600 total jobs would be cut by this fall — a smaller cut than many had feared.
This week, Alltel announced it has chosen Mankato to be a technical call-in service center where customers can get help for their data services, such as text messaging and Web features.