Eagan|News|
Dog Tricks, Cupcakes and Pottery; Pick Up a New Skill Through Community Ed
School District 196 has a bevy of classes coming up this spring for local residents.

There is no greater honor for me than to be entrusted to tell someone else's story.
That's how I've always approached my work as a journalist, whether I'm writing a feature on a World War 2 vet, talking to students at the local high school or reporting on a neighborhood crime.
I got my start in news writing during high school, when I wrote a weekly student column for my hometown newspaper. I majored in English and Environmental Studies at St. Olaf College, became an editor for the college newspaper and started freelance writing on the side.
My freelance work led me to the Northfield News, where I reported on crime, city government, education, business and the arts—and even managed to sneak in a sports article every so often. In my five years as a reporter, I have won four awards from the Minnesota Newspaper Association for my reporting, including "Best New Journalist of the Year" in 2008.
Over the three years, I served as the editor for Inver Grove Heights Patch before becoming the editor of Eagan Patch.
Although I love writing, expect to see me out shooting video and photos in Eagan on a regular basis.
I've found that journalism is similar to anthropology: As a journalist, you're asked to go out into a community and learn the stories of that city and its residents. I can't think of anything more fulfilling than that.
School District 196 has a bevy of classes coming up this spring for local residents.

Know someone who deserves a little recognition? Nominate them to be profiled as part of Eagan Patch's Community Spotlight series.
Catch up on the headlines each Sunday with Eagan Patch's "Week in Review".
Dakota Electric members are invited to ask questions, hear director reports and see election results at the meeting.
Eagan and Eastview squared off in the section championship on Thursday night in St. Paul. Unable to get past the Lightning's defensive line, Eagan lost 4-1.
Dakota Electric members are invited to ask questions, hear director reports and see election results at the meeting.
Virgin, a former basketball and soccer coach at Eagan High School, was charged with six counts of theft by swindle last year.
Students had a chance to rub elbows with roughly 80 professionals in science, technology, engineering and math-related careers at Eagan High School on Tuesday.
The Bakken Museum will introduce children to a microscopic world during a class scheduled for March 11.
Dakota County Sheriff's Office officials dove into Crystal Lake in Burnsville last Saturday as part of the South Metro Polar Plunge.
Diana Fowls and Keri Johannes felt they had to do something about an unsightly park entrance. So they started a garden.
A recent change implemented by the U.S. Department of State means the county can no longer process passports in the same building as birth and death records.
Keep track of the police calls in Rosemount with Patch's weekly police blotter.
A recent change implemented by the U.S. Department of State means the county can no longer process passports in the same building as birth and death records.
A recent change implemented by the U.S. Department of State means the county can no longer process passports in the same building as birth and death records.
District 51 Sen. Jim Carlson (DFL) has backed a proposal that would define groups that distribute model legislation to lawmakers as lobbyists.
Each week, Patch features several recently sold homes in Eagan.
Stream announced the purchase of LBM Holdings Limited on Tuesday. The deal was worth nearly $44 million, according to the Star Tribune.
District 51 Sen. Jim Carlson (DFL) has backed a proposal that would define groups that distribute model legislation to lawmakers as lobbyists.
Keep track of local politics with Patch's weekly southeast metro legislative review.