An Arab paramedic who treated Israelis injured by Hamas militants is remembered as a hero
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
When Hamas unleashed its attack on thousands of Jews attending a music festival in southern Israel earlier this month, an Israeli Arab paramedic insisted on staying at the scene to try to save lives.In the end, he gave his own.Awad Darawshe was 23, single, handsome — but he wasn’t at the Tribe of Nova festival to dance. He worked for Yossi Ambulances and was among a team of paramedics assigned to work the festival in a tent on the site’s periphery. He was killed when Hamas militants slipped undetected into Israel from the Gaza Strip and butchered their way through the festival crowd and into nearby villages, settlements and kibbutzim.Shortly after dawn on Oct. 7, rockets pierced the skies. Grenades went off. Gunfire ricocheted everywhere. Injured, bleeding revelers raced to the paramedics’ station. But the chaos quickly escalated. As the scope of the Hamas attack became clear, the station’s leader ordered the paramedics to evacuate.Darawshe refused to leave. He was shot to death whi...Pot shops lucky to be in business amid competition, advertising rules and THC limits
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
TORONTO — Sean Kady spent most of his 20s toting around a teal tackle box that once belonged to his roommate’s grandfather. Occasionally, people would spot the box and ask to borrow a wrench, but it didn’t contain tools or bait.Instead, the box was home to a cannabis supply Kady covertly sold to a steady stream of customers. Kady has since gone legit, having opened Toronto pot shop Cosmic Charlies with his brother in 2021. But the money was so good in his tackle box days, he sometimes wonders if he had the right idea even though he was on the wrong side of the law.“I have made the joke that we’ll just relinquish our licence and I’ll start selling the weed that I could get again, and I’ll make a lot more money,” Kady said.“I would never do it, but I’ve threatened to do it for fun.”Kady can be forgiven for wistfully recalling his past. Pot shop owners have had a rough five years.Since Canada legalized recreational cannabis on...Review: Parody, melody and blasphemy come together in ‘Dicks: The Musical’
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
If you like your “Parent Trap” riffs with heaping helpings of horny humor, insane musical numbers and a soupcon of monsters in diapers, then “Dicks: The Musical” may be your jam, especially if blasphemy is your bliss.To be clear, this film version of an off-Broadway musical comedy (the name of which this family newspaper will publish as “F—ing Identical Twins”) could turn into an actual parent trap if families confused it for kid-friendly fare. Your first clue this isn’t the Disney version is the opening title card, which proclaims the thing was “bravely written by two homosexuals,” helpfully adding that it’s the first thing ever written by homosexuals. Then Bowen Yang shows up as disco-fied God (“He/Him,” He asserts), and we’re off.Co-playwrights and stars Josh Sharp and Aaron Jackson reprise their stage roles as alpha-male douchebags Craig and Trevor, respectively, businessmen in an “American Psych...Minnesota Mystery Night celebrates successful first year
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
“We’re booked into the middle of 2025, bringing the best of our crime and mystery writers,” Rob Junghans says, describing Minnesota Mystery Night. “This event has found its pulse.”Marcie Rendon (Courtesy of Minnesota Mystery Night)A group of volunteers has a right to be proud of co-founding this monthly reading series for crime/mystery fans, hosted by Junghans, which celebrates its first anniversary Monday, Oct. 16, at Axel’s Restaurant in Mendota. Guest presenters are Marcie Rendon, author of the award-winning Cash Blackbear series, in conversation with Patrick Scully, dancer, choreographer, and art entrepreneur whose performing career spans more than 45 years across venues in the U.S., South America and Europe, and founder of Patrick’s Cabaret, Minneapolis art incubator for local performers.Junghans, who writes thrillers as Rob Jung, says Minnesota Mystery Night grew out of the Bookstube at the Bierstube series in Hastings that ended a 15-...Skywatch: The great autumn galactic happening
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
Now that we’re well into early autumn and the bright light of the harvest moon is long gone, it’s a fabulous time to make a date to get out in the dark skies of the countryside, that is, if you’re not already living out there. I guarantee this will be a treat you’ll remember for a long time, whether by yourself or with family or friends. Bring blankets, binoculars, star charts, snacks, and beverages, and be prepared to sleep in the following day. Even better, turn this into an overnight campout if you don’t mind braving the October chill! It will be a great show. The clear autumn skies are more transparent because the air has much less humidity.For the heck of it, when you settle under the autumn evening heavens, attempt to estimate how many stars you can see with your naked eye. Traditional astronomy textbooks say you can see about 3,000 stars in the dark countryside with the naked eye, but I’m sure there’s much more. Don’t even try t...Francis Wilkinson: Hamas’ terror also holds a warning for the U.S.
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
We become depraved by degrees.Germans did not become Jew killers in a day. It took years of conditioning, via propaganda, and then steady practice, via party and state brutality, to shed their humanity and become a nation of functional sociopaths.The Hamas terrorists who murdered babies in their cribs last week weren’t stamped with pathological hatred at birth. It was an acquired habit, the result of a process of moral dulling and rage sharpening. No doubt some foes of Hamas will now rejoice at the sight of Palestinian babies blown to smithereens in retaliation. It’s not a terribly long distance from eye for an eye to baby for a baby.If you look around American politics, you can see the early stages — and in select cases not so early — of the kind of moral, social and intellectual deterioration that first imagines, and later gleefully invites, atrocity.At New York magazine, Eric Levitz has an excellent survey of moral idiocy on the left. The terrorist attack ...How a member of a hiring panel landed — and quickly lost — a job on the St. Paul City Council’s reparations commission
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
The first in-person meeting of the new St. Paul Recovery Act Reparations Commission opened like an office party. The Aug. 17 meet-and-greet was led by St. Paul City Council member Russel Balenger, who introduced a young City Hall employee as the future face of the council’s predominantly-Black commission. To the surprise of several of those assembled, their sole new staffer was Asian.Within less than a week, a Hmong woman who had been offered the only paid staff position on the council’s newest commission found herself facing a street protest led by the very people she was hired to represent.On the heels of unexpected pushback from several of the city’s most longstanding Black leaders, Jenny Lor declined or resigned the position the next day, even before it officially started, with questions swirling around how Lor — who had served on a hiring panel for the position — got the job and who else had applied.“It didn’t really have anything to do with her pe...Nina Axelson’s Grid Catalyst helps launch new eco-firms like Carba and GetGreen in Minnesota
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
Imagine an app on your phone that challenges you to buy used clothing, or sets a goal of reducing your carbon footprint by walking to work a couple of times this week, or going meatless for the day.When GetGreen, a Seattle startup, went fishing for an established partner to help the environmentally-conscious mobile app make its debut, Nina Axelson got busy playing professional matchmaker. Axelson, a Minneapolis-based clean-energy advocate, introduced GetGreen to organizations large and small, including Ecolibrium3, a Duluth, Minn., nonprofit that jumped at the chance to work with the Duluth mayor’s office and roll out GetGreen citywide as part of the city’s climate action plan.In Burnsville, another startup company known as Carba is building a biomass facility with the intent of removing carbon from up to 15,000 tons annually of ash trees and other waste wood. With Axelson’s help, Carba founders hope to team with investors who will help them pioneer new ways of red...Stillwater native is helping bring modern health care to Central African Republic
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
Thirteen percent of children in the Central African Republic die before they turn 5, and one out of every 100 women died during childbirth.Stillwater native Ted Hooley is working to change all that.Hooley is founder, president and CEO of Senitizo, a nonprofit organization that provides healthcare services at a clinic in the Central African Republic, one of the poorest countries in the world.Senitizo, which focuses on primary care and community health, with an emphasis on maternal and child care, serves a population of more than 50,000 people “who previously didn’t have access to any health services,” Hooley said.The health indicators in the Central African Republic are “some of the worst in the world,” according to Hooley. “It’s hard for people to really grasp how horrible it is. Understandably, people just don’t want to think that that type of situation exists in the world. These people have been marginalized, basically, since French colonial times. They’ve never ...Literary calendar for week of Oct. 15
Published Fri, 22 Nov 2024 09:06:39 GMT
DANIEL HORNSBY: Minnesotan presents his novel “Sucker” in conversation with Emma Torzs. 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 19, Magers & Quinn, 3038 Hennepin Ave. S., Mpls.KLECKO AND FITZGERALD: Just in time for Halloween, baker/poet and audience-rouser host Danny Klecko leads a discussion of “A Short Trip Home,” F. Scott Fitzgerald’s only short story with a supernatural theme. Published in 1927 in the Saturday Evening Post, it’s about young people partying during vacation from their elite East Coast colleges. In St. Paul, Eddie tries to save Ellen, who is under the spell of a sinister man. In conversation with Clarence White, of East Side Freedom Library, and Erica Christ, bartender at the Black Forest Inn. This is the fourth in Klecko’s Fitzgerald Story series in partnership with St. Paul Public Library. Free. 6:30 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 19, SubText Books, 6 W. Fifth St., St. Paul.LITERATURE LOVERS’ NIGHT OUT: Featuring Jean Kwok (“The Left...Latest news
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