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  • Minnesota nonprofit provides day of fun for families with children battling serious medical conditions

    Minnesota nonprofit provides day of fun for families with children battling serious medical conditions

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    Kids with life-threatening illnesses spend day at Urban Air Adventure Park


    Kids with life-threatening illnesses spend day at Urban Air Adventure Park

    00:40

    COON RAPIDS, Minn. — More than a hundred kids battling various medical conditions got to take a mental break and just have fun on Sunday thanks to HopeKids Minnesota.

    Those families packed Urban Air Adventure Park in Coon Rapids.

    The nonprofit provides fun activities for families who have a child with a life-threatening medical condition.

    MORE NEWS: Minneapolis residents on alert after late night gunfire strikes homes

    530p-sotvo-hopekids-at-wcco57ak-00-00-3826.jpg

    WCCO


    They say it gives kids and their families a much-needed break in the face of adversity.

    “Kids just have this anticipation for something and so it’s something they look forward to so they kind of forget everything they’re going through in the meantime and then they have these wonderful memories they can build off too,” said Brian Anderson, Executive Director of HopeKids Minnesota.

    HopeKids says they host around 500 events throughout the year.

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    WCCO Staff

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  • Sky trade with Lynx, acquire No. 7 pick in 2024 draft

    Sky trade with Lynx, acquire No. 7 pick in 2024 draft

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    (Photo credit: Kamil Krzaczynski-USA TODAY Sports)

    The Chicago Sky acquired the seventh overall pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft and center Nikolina Milic from the Minnesota Lynx on Sunday.

    The Lynx, in turn, received the eighth overall pick in the draft, forward Sika Kone, Chicago’s second-round selection in the 2025 draft and the rights to swap the Sky’s first-round pick in 2026.

    “We are excited to strengthen our draft position once again in a year with many top prospects,” Sky general manager Jeff Pagliocca said. “We thank Sika for her many contributions to the Chicago Sky and wish her success in her next role.”

    The Sky now own the third overall pick in the 2024 WNBA Draft (from the Phoenix Mercury) in addition to Nos. 7 and 13 (from the Dallas Wings via the Indiana Fever).

    “This trade in the WNBA Draft continues our focus on building a foundation for sustained success,” said Cheryl Reeve, Lynx head coach and president of basketball operations.

    Minnesota has two selections in the 2024 draft: No. 8 and No. 31 (third round) overall.

    Milic, who turned 30 on Friday, averaged 5.9 points and 2.4 rebounds in 39 games (three starts) last season for the Lynx.

    Kone, 21, contributed 3.6 points and 3.0 rebounds in 9.3 minutes in 20 games off the bench for the Sky.

    –Field Level Media

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  • Minnesota Lynx swap draft picks, players with Chicago Sky

    Minnesota Lynx swap draft picks, players with Chicago Sky

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    WCCO digital update: Morning of April 14, 2024


    WCCO digital update: Morning of April 14, 2024

    01:00

    MINNEAPOLIS — The Minnesota Lynx have swapped first-round picks and players with the Chicago Sky, just one day before the WNBA draft.

    The Lynx are sending the No. 7 pick and forward Nikolina Milić to the Sky in exchange for the No. 8 pick, the right to swap first-round picks next year, a 2025 second-round pick and forward Sika Koné.

    READ MORE: Minnesota Lynx legend Seimone Augustus headed to Hall of Fame

    Milić, 30, averaged 5.9 points and 2.7 rebounds in 12.3 minutes a game over two seasons with the Lynx. Twenty-one-year-old Koné averaged 3.6 points and 3.0 rebounds in 9.3 minutes a game last season in Chicago.

    “This trade in the WNBA Draft continues our focus on building a foundation for sustained success,” said head coach and President of Basketball Operations Cheryl Reeve.

    The WNBA draft starts at 6:30 p.m. Monday. The Lynx have the eighth and 31st overall picks.

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    Anthony Bettin

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  • Dodgers’ Mookie Betts looks to stay hot vs. Padres

    Dodgers’ Mookie Betts looks to stay hot vs. Padres

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    (Photo credit: Gary A. Vasquez-USA TODAY Sports)

    Mookie Betts is wearing out San Diego pitching in the early part of the season.

    Betts will look to inflict further damage on Sunday when the Los Angeles Dodgers host the Padres in the finale of a three-game series.

    Betts went 3-for-5 with two RBIs on Saturday night, when the Dodgers recorded a5-2 victory.

    In four games against San Diego this season, Betts is batting .500 (10-for-20) with two homers and 12 RBIs.

    He came to the plate twice with runners in scoring position on Saturday and delivered run-scoring singles both times.

    “I came up a couple times with guys on base,” Betts said afterward. “I came through today, but I know I have Shohei (Ohtani) behind me, and I know he’s always going to come through. It takes a whole team effort.”

    The Dodgers and Padres split the first two games of the series. San Diego recovered from a four-run deficit on Friday night to post an 8-7 win in 11 innings before the Dodgers evened the slate with a win following a rain delay of 2 hours and 15 minutes.

    Los Angeles received a stellar effort from right-hander Gavin Stone, who tossed 5 2/3 hitless innings before Kyle Higashioka recorded the first San Diego hit with a single to left. Stone gave up two runs and five hits over 6 2/3 innings before departing.

    Padres veteran infielder Xander Bogaerts was given the night off Saturday, and that led to 20-year-old Jackson Merrill stepping into the leadoff spot.

    Merrill went 1-for-4 with a strikeout in his first time atop the order.

    Padres manager Mike Shildt said there was no hesitation writing down Merrill’s name first on the lineup card.

    “We have confidence in Jackson, and he’s done a nice job and taking great at-bats,” Shildt said. “He’s been able to stay within himself, and he’s been able to really slow the game down, which is really impressive.”

    Merrill is batting .300 and has a .397 on-base percentage in 17 big league games.

    Padres right-hander Yu Darvish (0-1, 3.86 ERA) gets the call Sunday. He has struck out 20 in 18 2/3 innings over his first four starts.

    He faced the Dodgers in the season opener in Seoul, South Korea, on March 20 and wasn’t involved in the decision. Darvish gave up one unearned run, two hits and three walks and struck out three in 3 2/3 innings.

    Darvish, 37, is 4-5 with a 2.27 ERA in 12 career starts against Los Angeles. He faced the Dodgers twice in 2023 and went 1-0 with a 1.98 ERA.

    Freddie Freeman (9-for-32) has smacked three homers off Darvish. Betts is just 6-for-34 with one homer while Chris Taylor is hitless in 13 at-bats.

    In his last outing, Darvish gave up four runs and four hits in three innings in a no-decision against the Chicago Cubs.

    Left-hander James Paxton (2-0, 1.64 ERA) will be on the mound for the Dodgers on Sunday.

    Paxton recorded double-digit victories in three straight seasons from 2017-19 before his career was derailed by Tommy John surgery in April 2021. He returned to the mound last season when he went 7-5 with a 4.50 ERA in 19 starts for the Boston Red Sox and then signed a one-year contract with the Dodgers in the offseason.

    “It’s been great,” Paxton said of being with Los Angeles. “It’s definitely exceeding expectations. I didn’t know what to think. But even with all the star power you have on this team, there are no egos. Everybody is down to earth and here to play ball.”

    Paxton has allowed just seven hits over 11 innings while winning his first two outings for the Dodgers. He gave up two runs and three hits over six innings Monday while beating the Minnesota Twins in his most recent turn.

    Paxton, 35, is 2-1 with a 1.83 ERA in four career starts against the Padres. Bogaerts (7-for-26) has three homers against Paxton, and teammates Manny Machado (4-for-9) and Jurickson Profar (5-for-13) also have fared well against him.

    –Field Level Media

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  • After sweeping doubleheader, Twins eye series win vs. Tigers

    After sweeping doubleheader, Twins eye series win vs. Tigers

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    (Photo credit: Denny Medley-USA TODAY Sports)

    The Minnesota Twins had their best day of the young season Saturday. They’ll look to get a series victory when they face the Detroit Tigers again Sunday afternoon.

    The Twins, who were 4-7 entering the day, pulled off a doubleheader sweep. They won the opener 11-5 in 12 innings, then recorded a 4-1 victory in the nightcap. Detroit won the series opener Friday night 8-2.

    “We needed these two wins today,” said reliever Cole Sands, who closed out the Game 2 victory by retiring all seven batters he faced.

    “We had to do a lot of good, crisp baseball things today,” manager Rocco Baldelli said. “Our pitching led the way today. It couldn’t have worked out much better with what we were looking at and what we were facing. The guys all showed up.”

    The Twins won’t have their starting shortstop for a while. Carlos Correa suffered a right oblique strain during the series opener on Friday. He was placed on the 10-day injured list on Saturday.

    “What (stinks) the most is this is the first April in my career that I’ve felt good,” said Correa, who was hitting .306 with a homer and four RBIs at the time of the injury. “I feel like this is going to be my feel and my swing, this was going to be it for the whole year. And it happens, but at least it’s there. Hopefully, it’s nothing too long and I can get back in there soon.”

    Minnesota now has two of its top run producers on the shelf. The Twins lost third baseman Royce Lewis for an extended period due to a severe quad strain he suffered on Opening Day.

    Bailey Ober (0-1, 12.79 ERA) will start for Minnesota on Sunday. Ober bounced back from a disastrous season debut in which he gave up eight runs in 1 1/3 innings to Kansas City by holding the Los Angeles Dodgers to one run in five innings on Monday.

    He’s 1-2 with a 5.40 ERA in seven career starts against Detroit.

    Detroit starter Jack Flaherty (0-1, 5.25 ERA) held the Chicago White Sox to one run in six innings in his season debut. He got roughed up in his second start, allowing six runs in six innings to Oakland.

    He’s only faced Minnesota once in his career, holding the Twins to one run in 5 2/3 innings.

    Zach McKinstry made a crucial error at third base in the extra-inning loss on Saturday, allowing three runs to score. To preserve bullpen arms, manager A.J. Hinch used McKinstry as a reliever later in the inning and the position player gave up a three-run homer.

    Hinch didn’t think there was a carryover effect from Game 1 to Game 2.

    “That’s a bad sign, if one game carries into the other. I don’t think it did,” he said. “This team is too resilient.”

    Detroit left 10 runners on base in the first game and managed just four hits and one walk in the nightcap.

    “We’re more of a contact team than we’ve shown the last few games,” Hinch said. “We’ve got to get better pitches to hit and not miss them.”

    –Field Level Media

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  • After an inexplicable loss, Nuggets visit Grizzlies

    After an inexplicable loss, Nuggets visit Grizzlies

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    (Photo credit: Scott Wachter-USA TODAY Sports)

    The Denver Nuggets were supposed to spend Sunday afternoon putting the finishing touches on another top finish in the Western Conference.

    Instead, they’re lamenting an inexplicable loss that sent them to third place and possibly cost them the No. 1 seed.

    Denver (56-25) blew a 23-point lead atSan Antonio on Friday night and lost 121-120, dropping it into a tie with the Minnesota Timberwolves and Oklahoma City Thunder atop the Western Conference.

    The Nuggets controlled their fate until the collapse against the Spurs, so now Sunday’s game at the Memphis Grizzlies could mean several things for the reigning champions.

    They hold no tiebreakers over their Northwest Division rivals so they need help. A win over Memphis (27-54) and a loss by the Timberwolves and Thunder earn Denver the top seed again but that would mean Minnesota and Oklahoma City would need to lose their respective home games.

    “We controlled our own destiny and what we accomplished on Wednesday night, we just gave it right back,” Nuggets coach Michael Malone said, referring to the home win over the Timberwolves on Wednesday. “So, it’s easy to get up for Minnesota. I mean, our guys were locked in, they were focused, they were serious.

    “And I don’t think we had the same approach for (Friday’s) game, but you had a chance to get to the one seed and now, obviously, we’ll likely be the three seed at the end of the day.”

    Malone has to decide whether he should play his starters or rest them Sunday afternoon. With at least six days off between the end of the regular season and the start of the first round, fatigue won’t be a factor.

    Jamal Murray has played well in his four games since missing seven in a row with right knee inflammation, but Malone might opt to give him the day off.

    Memphis is finishing a tough season in which it dropped from the No. 2 seed in last year’s playoffs to out of the postseason this year. Injuries have derailed the Grizzlies, who have lost four in a row (three of those at home).

    Star guard Ja Morant was suspended for the first 25 games this season, returned for nine and then was ruled out for the rest of the season after undergoing surgery on his right shoulder.

    His absence has hurt the young team but it has given others an opportunity to show what they can do at this level.

    Scotty Pippen Jr. did that Friday night when he scored a career-high 28 points in a loss to the Los Angeles Lakers.

    “The emphasis going into the game was to play hard,” Pippen said. “We knew they were playing for something, and they probably thought we were playing for nothing. But a lot of guys here are playing for opportunities. That’s our motivation.”

    The Grizzlies gave a motivated Lakers team all it could handle, and that could be the case Sunday. Denver has won the first three games between the teams this season, including a four-point victory Oct. 27 in Memphis.

    -Field Level Media

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  • Twin Cities business gives away car washes for a cause

    Twin Cities business gives away car washes for a cause

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    A local business is giving away car washes for a good cause


    A local business is giving away car washes for a good cause

    02:09

    MAPLE GROVE, Minn. — Crew Carwash locations in the Twin Cities are giving away their best wash for free Saturday – all for a good cause. 
     
    With a donation to Gillette Children’s, customers can score “The Ultimate” wash from locations in Maple Grove, West St. Paul, Wayzata and St. Cloud Saturday until 9 p.m.

    “Today is all about giving back to the communities that we serve,” said Billy Schaming, Crew Carwash President. “Our founder back in 1948 founded the company on a simple philosophy — we’re in the people business — we just happen to wash cars.”

    The money will go to support the 28,000 kids Gillette Childrens serves each year.

    MORE: Thousands expected to mourn death of Mary Johnson-Roy, Minneapolis woman who forgave her son’s killer

    “We have folks that sometimes come through the door for care and can’t afford the care,” said Stephen Bariteau of Gillette Childrens. “Events like this help come in and surround those families and those kids who need the help.”

    “It’s clear Gillette has really impacted so many people in the community. It really has a broad reach,” Schaming said. “We’re certainly happy when our business succeeds, but the ultimate level of happiness is when you’re making ultimate people happy.”

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    Adam Duxter

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  • Health care summit draws scores of American Indian youth to learn about medical careers

    Health care summit draws scores of American Indian youth to learn about medical careers

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    Scores of American Indian youth donned lab coats embroidered with their names and tribal affiliations Saturday before touring Hennepin Healthcare in downtown Minneapolis to learn about careers in medicine.

    At least 114 young people from ages 12 to 18 attended the American Indian Youth with Stethoscopes Summit, nearly twice as many as attended the program’s launch in 2023. Some learned how to draw blood using faux arms, while other delivered babies through practice with a model. Most visited with students and professionals in health care, learning about challenges in the field and collecting tips for success.

    Organizers said 23 tribes from Minnesota and Wisconsin were represented. Such inclusion is crucial to Dr. Thomas Wyatt, Hennepin Healthcare’s senior medical director and a member of the Shawnee and Quapaw tribes. Wyatt said many of the young people had never seen an American Indian like him in the medical profession. They are not alone.

    “There’s between five and six million doctors in the U.S., and 4,000 of them are indigenous,” said Wyatt.

    The American Medical Association estimates that fewer than 1% of the physician workforce are American Indians or Alaska Natives.

    “Because we’re so underrepresented in this health care space, formalizing mentoring and showing these youth that they could use us as mentors, and talking about the importance of having a mentor, is really important,” Wyatt said. “I think that is what this programming also offers to American Indian youth.”

    Aida Strom, Hennepin Healthcare’s health equity community engagement program manager and a member of the Sisseton-Wahpeton Dakota Nation, said such disparities result in worse health outcomes for American Indians.

    Strom said Hennepin Healthcare serves the most Indigenous hospital patients in Minnesota, but more work could be done.

    The young attendees Saturday were impressed by the support offered by Strom and other event organizers. Elijah Denashahart, 15, and Richard Perez, 17, both members of the Leech Lake Band of Ojibwe, said they enjoyed learning how to deliver babies and perform medical techniques. Perez said he will consider becoming a surgeon.

    Thirteen-year-old Michael Gates, a member of the Cherokee tribe who attended last year, said the summit offers a chance to learn about medicine in an exciting way.

    “This is really an experience that everyone should try at least once or twice,” he said. “It’s just fun to do.”

    “Building trust after hundreds of years of oppression — that’s a big feat, and we’re up for it,” Strom said, adding that financial support is vital. “These kids get a peek behind the curtain and are like, ‘This is what I want to do.’ Now we’ve got to be ready to support them to do that.”

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    Kyeland Jackson

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  • Police: Victim, ‘person of interest’ dead after possible assault in Chanhassen

    Police: Victim, ‘person of interest’ dead after possible assault in Chanhassen

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    Two people were dead after an apparent assault Friday in Chanhassen, authorities said.

    A 33-year-old St. Paul man was found on a garage floor in the 8100 block of Audubon Road after a 911 report of an “unknown medical” incident shortly before 4 p.m., the Carver County Sheriff’s Office said. The man was declared dead at the scene.

    “The evidence suggests a violent assault occurred,” Sheriff Jason Kamerud said in a news release.

    He said an individual identified as a “person of interest” in the assault was later found dead at a home in Minneapolis.

    “This appears to be an isolated incident, and there is no evidence to suggest further danger to the public,” Kamerud said.

    An autopsy on the man found dead in Chanhassen was scheduled. His parents had called 911.

    Officials have not yet released either person’s name and said multiple agencies were investigating.

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    Star Tribune staff

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  • Man dies after north Minneapolis shooting

    Man dies after north Minneapolis shooting

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    Minneapolis police on Saturday were investigating the fatal shooting of man Friday night on the city’s North Side.

    Police were alerted to the shooting by 911 callers and ShotSpotter about 8:55 p.m. near the 3600 block of Penn Avenue N. on the border of the Cleveland and Folwell neighborhoods. When officers arrived, they found a crowd and the wounded man lying on the ground.

    He was taken to a hospital, where he died, according to a police news release.

    Homicide investigators were trying to determine what led to the shooting.

    No one had been arrested as of Saturday afternoon, and the victim’s identity was not yet released. Police asked anyone with information to contact CrimeStoppers at 1-800-222-TIPS (8477) or www.CrimeStoppersMN.org.

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    Star Tribune staff

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  • The end of the line for Minneapolis’ longest-serving bus driver, and the start of a new adventure

    The end of the line for Minneapolis’ longest-serving bus driver, and the start of a new adventure

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    For 47 years, Melanie Benson got her neighbors where they needed to go.

    She was their bus driver and it was a joy, she said. It was an honor. It was an adventure.

    But now Metro Transit’s longest-serving driver is ready for a new adventure. About a week ago, on her 69th birthday, Benson retired from the job she loved.

    “This was the only thing I ever wanted to do,” said Benson, sitting at her retirement party, surrounded by balloons, flowers and friends, including many of her longtime passengers.

    She found her vocation at a bus stop, on a soggy, miserable day, when she was still a student at Macalester College. She still remembers the rush of relief she felt when she saw one of the old red MTC buses crest the hill, promising shelter from the icy rain and a safe ride home.

    “I thought, ‘Wouldn’t it be nice to be that to other people?’” she said.

    A few years later, she was the one behind the wheel of the bus. She remembers her first blizzard, white-knuckling the route to Apple Valley in a near-whiteout. She glanced in the rear-view mirror to check whether her passengers were as nervous as she was.

    “I was so scared,” she said. “But I looked in the back of the bus, and all these people were trusting me. They were doing crossword puzzles and reading books and talking to each other. Well, I thought, if they trust me, I trust me.”

    That trust grew as Benson settled into the route she would drive for more than half of her career — the 23, the same line she sometimes rode as a college student. Back and forth along 38th Street, from the Uptown transit center to the Minnesota Veterans Home, or across the river to Highland Park in St. Paul.

    She carried generations along that route. She watched young mothers heave toddlers up the big steps to the bus, then watched the little ones grow, ride the bus to school and leave for college. Every year, on her work anniversary, she decorated the bus and threw a rolling party, so everyone could enjoy her job as much as she did.

    “It was like driving the neighborhood,” she said. “You’re out. You’re among people. You’re driving a very big vehicle, so it makes you feel strong. You’re right there, up high, and you can see everything. It’s just a wonderful feeling.”

    Now that she has time, she plans to write a book about her years behind the wheel.

    On her last day, the neighborhood came to see her off. Regulars like Barb Kaufman, whose service dog, Puzzle, had been the star of the 23 route.

    At the end of the line, Benson would sometimes park and walk with Kaufman and Puzzle to a grassy area at the Veterans Home to play ball.

    “We would have something called the Puzzle Run,” she said, as Kaufman joined her at the retirement party. “If there was someone on the bus who didn’t seem to be going anywhere, we’d say ‘Come on, come with us.’ We’d go out there and stand and talk and throw toys.”

    Puzzle, a guide dog and very good girl, died last year after happy years of service and many bus rides. Kaufman came to the party to share a big hug and a few memories with Puzzle’s favorite bus driver.

    From now on, Benson will be a passenger on the bus. She wonders if she’ll have more company this spring, if Lyft and Uber carry through on their threat to leave Minneapolis rather than pay their drivers better.

    If new commuters do hop on a bus, Benson hopes they’ll enjoy the ride as much as she has over the years. She hopes they’ll get to meet a few neighbors and watch the city roll by from up high, as somebody else navigates weather and traffic and construction.

    “I’ve driven a lot of routes over the years,” she said. “Each one of them was interesting.”

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    Jennifer Brooks

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  • Man dies in hospital after north Minneapolis shooting

    Man dies in hospital after north Minneapolis shooting

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    WCCO Digital Headlines: Morning of April 13, 2024


    WCCO Digital Headlines: Morning of April 13, 2024

    01:34

    MINNEAPOLIS — A man died on Friday evening after he was shot in north Minneapolis.

    Minneapolis police say they were called to the area of the 3600 block of Penn Avenue North shortly before 9 p.m. 

    There was a crowd gathered at the scene. Police found a man in his 20s lying on the ground with a gunshot wound. He was taken to the hospital, where he later died.

    The case is under investigation. No one has been arrested.

    MORE NEWS: Woman dies after knife attack in downtown Duluth, police say

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    WCCO Staff

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  • 102 cats removed from home in Crosby due to neglect, unsafe conditions

    102 cats removed from home in Crosby due to neglect, unsafe conditions

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    Animal Humane Society looking for foster volunteers


    Animal Humane Society looking for foster volunteers

    02:25

    CROSBY, Minn. — More than 100 cats were removed from a home in Crosby this week due to unsafe conditions, and now the humane society in the area is hoping they’ll be adopted and find their forever home.

    Law enforcement conducted a search of a home on Thursday after reports of animal cruelty and neglect. They found 102 cats, which were taken to the Tri-County Humane Society in St. Cloud.

    Staff members worked to vaccinate and treat the 94 cats that were taken to the shelter. The humane society said about a dozen staff members worked for hours to set them up in clean environments with food and water.

    MORE NEWS: Minnesota’s Largest Candy Store looks to become world’s largest

    One of the cats happened to be microchipped, and when staff members contacted the owner, the owner said the cat had gone missing seven years before. They were reunited on Thursday evening.

    The humane society is asking that anyone with a missing cat from the area email in a photo of their cat, along with contact information so they can hopefully reunite cats with their owners.

    cats-rescued-credit-tri-county-humane-society.jpg

    Tri-County Humane Society


    Every cage and kennel in the shelter is full, the humane society said, and they’ll need extra staffing. They’re asking the community to help donate funds, kibble, and cat litter.

    The cats will be available for adoption starting Wednesday.

    Note: The above video first aired on March 17, 2024.

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    WCCO Staff

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  • Sharks seek rare winning streak in matchup with Wild

    Sharks seek rare winning streak in matchup with Wild

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    (Photo credit: Robert Edwards-USA TODAY Sports)

    The San Jose Sharks will go for back-to-back wins for the first time since January when they face off against the visiting Minnesota Wild on Saturday night.

    San Jose (19-51-9, 47 points) is coming off a 3-1 win at the Seattle Kraken on Thursday night. Luke Kunin, Kyle Burroughs and Fabian Zetterlund each scored for the Sharks, and Devin Cooley stopped 49 of 50 shots to secure the victory.

    Meanwhile, Minnesota (37-33-9, 83 points) hopes to bounce back on short rest after losing 7-2 against the host Vegas Golden Knights on Friday night. The Wild gave up three goals in the first period, one goal in the second, and three tallies in the third.

    It has been a trying season for San Jose, which has endured the fourth-most losses in regulation time in franchise history. But the Sharks hope to provide a bright spot as they go for two straight wins for the first time since Jan. 20-23, when they won three in a row.

    Cooley could give them a good opportunity if he earns another start in net.

    The 26-year-old rookie from Los Gatos, Calif., has shined in the first four starts of his NHL career. He is 2-1-1 with a 2.99 goals-against average and a .918 save percentage.

    After his 49-save performance on Thursday, Cooley said he tried to keep his mindset simple.

    “I try not to think about the future too much,” he said. “I tried to just really stay in the present. I saw a few shots early on, and that helps you get into the flow of things. So once I made the first couple of saves, I was like, ‘Hey, I feel good.’”

    San Jose could turn to veteran goaltender Mackenzie Blackwood if it opts to rest Cooley. Blackwood is 10-24-4 with a 3.38 GAA and a .900 save percentage for the season.

    In three career games against Minnesota, Blackwood is 0-2-1 with a 2.94 GAA and a .906 save percentage. He is in his first season with the Sharks after spending five seasons with the New Jersey Devils.

    The Wild likely will counter with Filip Gustavsson at goalie.

    Gustavsson, 25, is 19-18-4 with a 3.11 GAA and an .898 save percentage this season. He has gone 0-2-1 in his last three starts and is seeking his first win since March 28 against the Sharks, when he stopped 26 of 27 shots.

    In four career games against San Jose, Gustavsson is 2-1-1 with a 2.47 GAA and a .903 save percentage.

    Minnesota’s other option in net is 39-year-old Marc-Andre Fleury, but he is unlikely to start on short rest after facing the Golden Knights on Friday, when he gave up seven goals on 30 shots.

    Like San Jose, Minnesota has been eliminated from playoff contention.

    Wild defenseman Jonas Brodin said he and his teammates could not hang their heads during the final few games of the regular season.

    “Just keep grinding, keep working hard and play good the rest of this season here,” Brodin said. “Just play hard and don’t quit.”

    –Field Level Media

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  • With shortage of investigators, majority of Minneapolis arsons go unsolved

    With shortage of investigators, majority of Minneapolis arsons go unsolved

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    Carmen Arett’s house on 17th Avenue S. in Minneapolis caught fire last summer while she was sleeping.

    By the time Arett woke up, flames were licking up the side of the house and poking through the roof. She heard a loud bang, and then the wall was engulfed. She and her roommate, mother and dog all got out, but her house of 26 years was destroyed, along with the house next door. It had been a dry summer, and the inferno spread “fast and furious,” Arett said.

    Officials deemed the fire an arson. But 10 months later, the case remains unsolved, with no suspects, no arrests — and not much hope for Arett, who has since moved out of town, frustrated after her boarded-up house was repeatedly broken into and her remaining belongings vandalized.

    Her case is not unique; in recent years, the vast majority of arsons have gone unsolved in Minneapolis.

    A Star Tribune review of Minneapolis police data found that in 2022, 104 fires were deemed arson, leading to five arrests and four suspects charged. In 2023 there were 134 arsons, 10 arrests and three suspects charged. One reason: For months during that period, the Minneapolis Police Department did not have an arson investigator.

    Staffing is a big part of why most arsons go unsolved, said Brian Feintech, spokesperson for the city’s Office of Community Safety. The Minneapolis Fire Department has four investigators who determine whether suspicious fires can be called arsons. The cases are then sent to the police department, which has just one investigator to find who might be responsible.

    The current MPD arson investigator was hired last spring after an eight- or nine-month period when the position sat vacant, said Feintech. “A lot of things are like that. Either nobody wants that job, or there are certain qualifications you have to have,” he said. “For a good portion of 2022 and early 2023, there was no MPD arson investigator.”

    The Minneapolis Police Department has seen a significant decline in staffing overall in recent years. Last month, the MPD had 560 sworn staff with 21 on long-term leave — down 40% compared to 2020.

    The few charges that have come of recent arson investigations were mostly for crimes caught on tape — such as a 2022 case where a 24-year-old woman was caught on surveillance cameras carrying a gas can into the building where a man she knew was staying. Other arrests happened in cases with readily apparent suspects, including two 2022 incidents involving men who set their ex-partners’ vehicles on fire.

    In the spring of 2022, a 28-year-old arsonist terrorized people across the Howe neighborhood when he set a garage on fire, entered a woman’s home, poured gas on the floor of a populated bus and started a fire in an ambulance. Late last year, a 33-year-old man was charged with first-degree murder for deliberately setting fire to the tent of a double-amputee living near Target Field, killing him.

    Neighborhood impact

    City Council Member Jason Chavez, who represents south-central Minneapolis neighborhoods including Powderhorn Park, Phillips and Corcoran, said he sometimes hears constituents speculating about why houses are burned down — and whether homeless people are at fault, or if it was a hate crime or personal attack.

    In 2022, there was a three-house conflagration on the 2800 block of 14th Avenue S., and while there were rumors that someone associated with a nearby encampment targeted those homes, the fire department classified the fires as “undetermined.” When cases like that aren’t resolved, it creates tension and stress in neighborhoods, Chavez said.

    “We need to be, one, making sure that we as a city are providing enough support for investigators to do their job,” he said. “The other part is where these [arsons] are happening the most, I would start there in doing proactive prevention. … There’s a lot of poverty in these areas, and we need to make sure that we can figure out how we can support these residents.”

    Data from the city shows that a few neighborhoods, including one in Chavez’ ward, have dealt with an outsized share of deliberately set fires. Last year, the East Phillips neighborhood led the city with eight arsons. In 2022, the Hawthorne neighborhood in Minneapolis’ Near North area had the highest number, also with eight.

    The fire that destroyed Arett’s house also burned the house of her neighbor, Schuyler Sellars. He worried his house had been intentionally set on fire because, as the vice president of the East Phillips neighborhood association at the time, he had been somewhat outspoken about the area’s perennial problems with homelessness, addiction, break-ins and people defecating in the nearby community garden.

    Arett doesn’t think that’s the case; she’s pretty sure the fire started at her house. Neither neighbor got a resolution, and no one was ever held accountable.

    After the fire, Sellars was forced to bounce between living in hotels, an Airbnb and a camper parked behind the ruins of his house.

    Arett said she filed several police reports about the squatters in her burned-out home but didn’t get much of a response and eventually gave up.

    “After a while, you get to being quiet when you don’t have any other resources to complain,” she said. “We just keep on hoping something gets better, but until the powers that be want to put things in place to help, I don’t see it getting much better.”

    Star Tribune data reporter Jeff Hargarten and staff writer Liz Sawyer contributed to this story.

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    Susan Du

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  • Local Theater Icon: Bradley Greenwald – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

    Local Theater Icon: Bradley Greenwald – Minneapolis Riverfront News – Minneapolis Riverfront Neighborhoods.

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    Article by Becky Fillinger, photos provided

    From a Theater Latté Da production of OLIVER!  Photo credit Heidi Bohnenkamp

    One of the Twin Cities favorite performers is Bradley Greenwald. We wanted to know more about his start in the performing arts – and what’s on the horizon this year. If you haven’t had the pleasure of watching Greenwald on stage (unlikely, but even if you have), do yourself a favor and get tickets for the upcoming reimagining of Puccini’s comic opera Gianni Schicchi at Theater Latté Da. Greenwald wrote the libretto, and directs and stars in the production. He never disappoints whether on stage or teaching acting and singing to high school students.   

    Bradley Greenwald, Photo credit Devon CoxQ:  Anyone who has seen you on stage has a favorite Bradley Greenwald performance. For me, it was your portrayal of the Emcee in Frank Theater’s 2011 Cabaret on the Centennial Showboat. You were exuberant, playful, mysterious, a bit sinister, bawdy and in our faces! Alan Cumming would have been impressed. Can you describe your routine or preparation process before a performance?

    A:  I like rehearsing much better than performing because there’s so much freedom in the discovery process. Most people are probably not aware that what they see on stage – the choices performers have locked in for their characters that may seem so natural and obvious to the audience – only comes after a tedious process of finding the right choice for the right moment. And that involves rehearsing a lot of wrong choices. Rehearsing is exploration. And I could keep exploring a piece forever.

    Q:  Let’s now ask you – what’s your most memorable Bradley Greenwald performance and why?

    A:  I am never able to answer that question easily because there are so many, and they’re never because of my performance – they’re memorable because of a deep connection between the audience and those of us on stage. I do have a short list of moments that will live forever with me: the end of Leonard Cohen’s “Halleluia” in Rumblings, and the very first run of Carmina Burana, both with Minnesota Dance Theatre; Theâtre de la Jeune Lune’s The Magic Flute – ​the most joyful union of theater and audience I’ve ever experienced; singing Peter Mayer’s “My Soul” with pianist Sonja Thompson and the sigh from the audience as snow started to fall on stage behind us at the end of every performance of The Longest Night at Open Eye Theater.

    Bradley, accompanied by Sonja Thompson, in The Longest Night. Photo credit Star Tribune

    Q:  How did you first discover your passion for performing?

    A:  Completely by accident. My major at the University of Minnesota was German, and I planned on being a high school German teacher. But I got interested in classical music and started taking voice lessons. During that time, I spent a summer as a fellow with a Bach Festival in New York. There was a closing concert, and I had been asked to perform the aria “Ich habe genug” with a small chamber ensemble, a piece of music I was much too young and inexperienced to take on. It was too mature for me technically, and emotionally, and I actually pulled out of it after a couple rehearsals. But the vocal coach talked me back into it. He sat me down, listened to my reasons for not wanting to do it and he agreed that it really was too much for a young singer to tackle, but I had told my colleagues I would do it and should honor that commitment. And really, who’s ever ready for anything? So, I did, and I don’t remember performing it at the concert at all – it was suddenly over, and I was there on stage with these fantastic instrumentalists who had played their hearts into an aria sung by a man on his death bed, and the audience was hushed by this profoundly beautiful music and didn’t clap for a good ten seconds after it was over. And I thought: this is what I want to do. I went back to Minneapolis unsure about what I wanted in life – and a few days later Minnesota Opera called and asked me to do their national tour of Madama Butterfly. I quit school, did that, and 35 years later I’m still at it.

    Q:  Where and in what roles will we see you perform in 2024? Are there upcoming projects or performances that you’re excited about?

    JOHNNY SKEEKY; or, The Remedy for Everything runs May 29 – July 7 at Theater Latté Da.A:  The next production I’m in will be Johnny Skeeky; or The Remedy for Everything at Theater Latté Da, running end of May into July. Steven Epp, formerly of Jeune Lune, and I were commissioned to write a piece around the one act Puccini comic opera Gianni Schicchi, in the style of collaboration we had during all the opera projects at Jeune Lune. It’s part play, part opera. Steve and I wrote the script and libretto, and we’re directing it, and we’re in it. And we’re very excited about it. And grateful to Latté Da – we were commissioned one week before The Lockdown in 2020, and working on it that summer in Steve’s backyard at opposite ends of his long picnic table was what kept us sane. Relatively.

    Q:  How do you continue to grow and evolve in your skills and artistry? 

    A:  Because I chose a life in the performing arts and have no practical skills, I had to stay employed – and I learned early on that I needed to be as versatile as possible to keep working. I’ve done everything from an Elvis impersonation to fake tap-dancing. Artists have been underpaid since, well, forever, and at 57, I’m still never guaranteed work, or entitled to keep drawing a paycheck from anywhere. And I’ll never be able to afford retirement. I just keep looking for work one month at a time. So, I’ve learned to do many things over the years out of necessity. And I’m constantly adding to my tool kit. I’ve recently added writing and directing to my grab bag. Because of that, I have a deep respect for every genre, discipline and performance style under the sun. Because I’ve probably had to learn how to do it myself. If I have grown at all as an artist, it’s because I am a jack-of-all-trades, definitely master-of-none.

    Q:  You’re also a faculty member at McPhail Center for Music where you are the Prelude Coordinator. Could you tell us about the program?

    A:  Anna Hashizume and I were brought on in the fall of 2021 to head Prelude – the singing and acting class for high school students. After our first couple years, we realized connection was a struggle for these kids in the age of devices and especially after COVID – that in some cases, they weren’t even aware what connection was, much less how to make it happen. So, we have focused the program on how a young performer connects with other performers and with the audience. Once we made the rule that when singing a duet, the student had to look the other student in the eye, or into the eyes of anyone in the room listening as an audience, the transformation was unbelievable: their voices suddenly opened up and bloomed, they were committed to the material and to each other, and they were singing and acting with incredible abandon and creativity. And it ultimately makes them receptive to the singing and acting skills that Anna and I, and our inspired theater colleague Jon Ferguson, are wanting to teach them. It’s just been beautiful to witness.

    Q:  We’re so lucky to have you in the local creative community! How may we follow your news?

    A:  I don’t have a web page, but I am on Facebook and I publicly post everything I’m up to there, if anybody wants to come to a show. (Interviewer comment – of course we want to come!)

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    Becky Fillinger

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  • NHL roundup: Knights beat Wild, clinch playoff berth

    NHL roundup: Knights beat Wild, clinch playoff berth

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    (Photo credit: Stephen R. Sylvanie-USA TODAY Sports)

    The defending Stanley Cup champion Vegas Golden Knights built an early lead and went on to a 7-2 victory over the Minnesota Wild in Las Vegas on Friday, clinching the final Western Conference playoff berth in the process.

    Jack Eichel, Nicolas Roy and Pavel Dorofeyev each had a goal and an assistand Chandler Stephenson tied his career high with four assists for Vegas, which snapped a three-game losing streak.

    Jonathan Marchessault, Tomas Hertl, William Karlsson and Keegan Kolesar scored one goal apiece, Noah Hanifin added two assists and Logan Thompson finished with 25 saves for the Golden Knights. Vegas also moved within one point of the third-place Los Angeles Kings in the Pacific Division.

    Marat Khusnutdinov scored his first NHL goal and Ryan Hartman also scored for Minnesota. Marc-Andre Fleury finished with 23 saves for the Wild, who lost for the fourth time in their past five games.

    Flames 6, Ducks 3

    Nazem Kadri collected one goal and two assists in his 900th career game and Andrei Kuzmenko posted his second career hat trick as visiting Calgary claimed a victory over Anaheim.

    Andrew Mangiapane and Connor Zary also scored for the Flames, who have won two of three games. Dustin Wolf, the two-time AHL top goaltender, made 19 saves, while Jonathan Huberdeau, MacKenzie Weegar and Martin Pospisil all collected two assists.

    Frank Vatrano, Olen Zellweger and Sam Colangelo — in his NHL debut — scored for the Ducks. Anaheim goalie John Gibson stopped 21 shots.

    Hurricanes 5, Blues 2

    Seth Jarvis and Jaccob Slavin each had a goal and an assist as Carolina helped to eliminate St. Louis from the chase for the final wild-card spot in the West.

    Jake Guentzel scored a pair of empty-net goals for the Hurricanes, who have won four straight and pulled to within a point of the New York Rangers for the Metropolitan Division lead. Frederik Andersen made 29 saves.

    Zack Bolduc and Jordan Kyrou scored, and Jordan Binnington made 37 saves for the Blues, who were eliminated when the Vegas Golden Knights defeated the Minnesota Wild later Friday.

    Predators 5, Blackhawks 1

    Filip Forsberg scored his 10th career hat trick en route to setting the franchise single-season goal-scoring record as visiting Nashville cruised past Chicago.

    Forsberg scored his 44th, 45th and 46th goals to move into sole possession of the franchise single-season scoring mark previously set by Matt Duchene (43) in 2021-22. Kiefer Sherwood and Jason Zucker also scored for Nashville, Luke Evangelista added two assists and Kevin Lankinen made 25 saves.

    Philipp Kurashev scored for the Blackhawks, who took their third straight loss. Arvid Soderblom finished with 35 saves.

    Coyotes 3, Oilers 2 (OT)

    Matias Maccelli scored the overtime winner and added an assist as Arizona improved to 9-5-0 over its last 14 games by edging host Edmonton.

    Maccelli took a Michael Kesselring pass and beat Calvin Pickard glove side for his 15th of the season at 1:35 of the extra period. Josh Doan and Logan Cooley scored the other Arizona goals, and Karel Vejmelka made 38 saves on a day when Coyotes management arrived in Edmonton to address rumors of the team’s relocation to Salt Lake City.

    Adam Henrique and Darnell Nurse scored for the Oilers, who still secured home ice in the first round of the playoffs with the single point. Evander Kane had two assists, and Pickard stopped 25 shots.

    –Field Level Media

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  • ADA bathrooms come to Bloomington parks thanks to a mom’s persistence

    ADA bathrooms come to Bloomington parks thanks to a mom’s persistence

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    BLOOMINGTON, Minn. — Sometimes it only takes one person’s persistence to make a change.

    That’s the case in Bloomington, where the city’s parks are switching out non-ADA-accessible portable restrooms in favor of ones that are more accessible.

    The change is the outcome of nearly a year of dedication for one Twin Cities mom. 

    “I think it’s important to remember that as a community member, you are in a position of power, always,” said Dani Indovino Cawley of Bloomington. “I really, truly believe that people want to make their communities a better place – sometimes it just takes a little bit of pushing.”

    Indovino Cawley said she first noticed the need for accessible bathrooms at city parks when planning an event last summer.

    “When I got here to do the walkthrough, I noticed it was a non-accessible porta potty,” she said. “I was surprised, and it made me a little sad. I had a friend who went to an event at a park here. Her daughter is in a power wheelchair. She lives in Richfield, and came to this event, and they had to leave early.”

    It wasn’t long until Indovino Cawley decided to email an elected official.

    “I asked, like, do you know that the porta-potties aren’t accessible,” said Indovino Cawley. “That you don’t have an accessible bathroom here? I think they were as surprised as I was.”

    MORE NEWS: Thousands expected to mourn death of Mary Johnson-Roy, Minneapolis woman who forgave her son’s killer

    Indovino Cawley says for those with mobility or sensory issues, accessible bathrooms can make a world of difference.

    The city has since responded, adding the ADA-accessible bathrooms to nearly every park and playlot.

    “It wasn’t something I had thought of, but as soon as it was given to me, I thought, wow, what a great opportunity to make our parks more inviting,” said PJ Skusa, the city’s Park Maintenance Supervisor. “It’s been great, people have been really happy that we’re doing this – I think it’s just a step in the right direction for Bloomington in general.”

    “Often, when you’re the person that notices, other people have noticed it,” said Indovino Cawley. “Taking the moment to speak up and be a voice for something that’s so important, it’s just one of the best things you can do.”

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    Adam Duxter

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  • Thousands expected to mourn death of Mary Johnson-Roy, Minneapolis woman who forgave her son’s killer

    Thousands expected to mourn death of Mary Johnson-Roy, Minneapolis woman who forgave her son’s killer

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    MINNEAPOLIS — On Saturday, thousands are expected to mourn the loss of a pillar in the Minneapolis community.

    In 1993, when he was 16 years old, Oshea Israel shot and killed Mary Johnson-Roy’s only son Laramiun Lamont Byrd at a house party in the Twin Cities. For 12 years, Johnson-Roy lived with pain and resentment until she went to visit Israel inside Stillwater prison.

    “Even though I was a Christian woman I was full of hatred,” Johnson-Roy recalled. “I wanted the worse for him and the worse was going to prison for the rest of his life. I saw him as an animal and he should be caged.”

    But when she went to visit him, her life changed yet again.

    “God changed my heart,” she told WCCO in 2011. “I mean, he delivered and set me free the day Oshea and I met in 2005.”

    RELATED: Love thy neighbor: Son’s killer moves next door

    Together, Johnson-Roy and Israel traveled across the country telling their story of reconciliation to anyone who would listen. They spoke in front of community groups, told their story on national television, even speaking with heads of state. Johnson-Roy also started a group called “From Death to Life” to help mothers who lost their children to gun violence.

    Johnson-Roy died on March 27 at the age of 71. Her legacy lives on through Israel and her granddaughter, Rosalynda, a woman who never met her father.

    6p-pkg-mary-johnson-rem-wcco571m-00-00-0519.jpg
    Oshea Israel (left) and Mary Johnson-Roy (right).

    WCCO


    “It happened five months after I was born, so I’m the one who is supposed to carry it on and keep on going,” said Rosalynda Boykin-Byrd. “People do deserve a second chance. You can’t always beat down somebody because of a wrong that they did. There is good in people.”

    Boykin-Byrd still has questions for the man who took her father’s life. But she is willing to work with him to continue to spread her mother’s message of love.

    MORE NEWS: Sister of missing Minnesota woman Maddi Kingsbury says her pleas for help on TikTok generated more tips

    “The fact that she is no longer here now, here we are,” said Israel. “So the work that she put forth ‘From Death to Life’, is like really still going. It didn’t die with her. It’s in good hands.”

    Johnson-Roy’s celebration of life will be held on Saturday at 11 a.m. at Shiloh International Ministries in Minneapolis.

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    Reg Chapman

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  • Campus group accuses University of Minnesota of directing censorship against Palestinians

    Campus group accuses University of Minnesota of directing censorship against Palestinians

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    A pro-Palestinian campus organization rallied Friday outside Magrath Library at the University of Minnesota to protest removal last November of an exhibit called “The Beauty of Veils and Head Coverings in Palestine and Around the World,” featuring books from the library’s collection.

    FLAGS JP, a group of 153 U faculty members, librarians, students and alumni calling for the university to divest from Israel, issued an open letter last week that termed the exhibit’s removal an act of censorship. According to the letter, library supervisors took it down shortly after it was curated by undergraduate student worker Alyssa Gahr and then sent an email to all student workers indicating the word “Palestine” violated the library’s policy of “maintaining neutrality” on political issues.

    The exhibit was later put back on display under the title “The Beauty of Veils and Head Coverings Around the World.” The Star Tribune reviewed emails from Magrath supervisors, who stated that the only issue with the exhibit “was the pointed mentioning of Palestine amidst global unrest related to Palestine.”

    Dean of Libraries Lisa German downplayed the school’s concerns with referencing Palestine. According to her statement, staff members advised Gahr “to broaden the concept to include people from other countries and ethnicities in order to have a larger and more inclusive display.”

    Gahr said she filed a bias report following the incident, and that she was summoned to a meeting where library supervisors labeled the original exhibit as “anti-Semitic.” She said she ultimately resigned rather than sign a performance evaluation.

    “Digging through the collection with a specific region in mind is something that I and other student workers have done dozens of times,” Gahr said. “The library’s reaction to the mention of Palestine in the veiling and hijab display took me by surprise. Precedent led me to believe that all libraries celebrated representation of marginalized groups. I was confident that this type of representation was not only tolerated by higher ups, but encouraged. So why erase Palestine?”

    About 40 students and staff joined Gahr in protest on Friday, including Imogen Page, a graduate student and member of Jewish Voice for Peace Twin Cities.

    “Some people are going to tell you … that it’s anti-Semitic to criticize the mass murder and starvation of Palestinians, or even put up a display that includes the word ‘Palestine’ in our campus library,” Page said. “Jewish communities know the danger of this type of censorship and political repression. We know better than to stand by well academic institutions purge voices in opposition to genocide.”

    Esther Liu, a graduate student and member of FLAGS JP, said the group believes the U’s actions have eroded academic freedom.

    “FLAGS JP is asking the University to explain why it does not see the erasure of Muslim and Palestinian visibility, and the experiences of students who identify as Muslim, Arab, or Palestinian, as having a discriminatory effect,” Liu said.

    Staff writer Liz Navratil contributed to this story.

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    Susan Du

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