Kristyn Allen shares her experiences staying at Ronald McDonald House in Milwaukee while her newborn twins were in critical care at Children's Wisconsin.
More and more, teachers are using their own money to buy necessary supplies for their classroom and students. There’s a local non-profit helping ease the burden.
Recently, three-year-old Jameson Wortner and two-year-old Mya Maye from Peshtigo were diagnosed with cancer. Upon hearing this, Shelley Ellis decided to pay it forward and give back to those who gave to her when her daughter was battling cancer.
On Friday afternoon, the Door Community Child Development Center held a groundbreaking for its new 18,500-square-foot sustainable facility off Gordon Road in Sturgeon Bay.
CP has expanded far beyond its original mission, now serving infants to senior adults with cerebral palsy, head injuries, strokes, Down Syndrome and other challenges.
With the help of his parent's dentist practice and the New Community Shelter, Nolan Van Miller was able to give those less fortunate free dental care and create confidence in themselves.
It was a unique social experiment during the Civil Rights movement, exchanging students from Kaukauna High School and predominantly-Black Rufus King High School in Milwaukee. Now it's the subject of an award-winning documentary.
”In October of ‘16 I was diagnosed with breast cancer. In 2018 I was diagnosed with skin cancer. Now I’m diagnosed with stomach cancer,” Sergeant Jennifer Clement with the Grand Chute Police Department said.
Business owners are also thinking of ways to help the families, especially since one of the teenagers’ family is a part of the bar and restaurant industry.