Here are some interesting and important things to know for the coming week.
A Comedy Central game had Twitter users across the metro dreaming up their own funny band names.
St. David’s Center’s Center is working to raise $8.5 million in private sector support to leverage a request for $3.75 million in State bond funding.
Christian Ponder wasn't living in the Tonka Bay home at the time of the sale, according to media reports.
Steve Northrup and his wife will have more income in retirement than during their working years. Here’s how you can do it, too.
Children can become trapped in the chests when the lid closes automatically locking with no way of opening from the inside.
Former Hopkins High School Nordic skiing star Jakob Ellingson has been selected as one of seven promising athletes to get an inside look at the Sochi Olympics.
There weren’t many Twin Cities residents happy with a federal appeals court ruling that could allow broadband companies to favor some websites over others.
Presbyterian Church of the Apostles in Burnsville and youth from St. Luke Presbyterian in Minnetonka presented to the Presbytery of the Twin Cities Area.
A wave of 50 store openings could start within a year, according to news reports.
Your family will flip for these deliciously crispy bowls.
The state ranked sixth in the percentage of people getting flu shots, according to recent analysis.
Check out what’s new in 2014 on the free Patch app for iOS.
Get your house in order before the next big storm hits.
The city ranked high on a real estate brokerage analysis of 100 communities across the state.
The map below shows a snapshot across town of the change between 2000 and 2011 in the percentage of people whose incomes are $200,000 or more.
Love it or hate it, the Internet giant’s newest acquisition has people talking about thermostats like they never have before.
An overnight snow brought Twin Cities traffic to a crawl during the Tuesday morning commute.
Rep. Susan Allen says reparative or conversion therapy has been ‘discredited’ and should not be allowed for licensed practitioners.
E-Books have a lot going for them aside from saving trees and letting readers select their font size. And they can all be summed up in 3 words.