Twin Cities Book Festival comes to Fairgrounds on Saturday
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
The Minnesota State Fairgrounds is going to be the happening place from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 14, when thousands of readers, publishers, literary organizations, book dealers, authors and illustrators enjoy the 23rd annual Twin Cities Book Festival presented by Minneapolis-based Rain Taxi Review of Books. The festival, the longest-running annual gathering for the Twin Cities book community, is free and there is plenty of free parking around the Fairground’s Progress and Fine Arts centers where the festival will be held.David Corn (Courtesy of Rain Taxi Review of Books)On stages and in event rooms there will be presentations by authors/illustrators of children’s, young adult and adult books, poetry and graphic lit, as well as a Minnesota Author Showcase with 30 writers who have published new books, including Kate DiCamillo introducing “The Puppets of Spelhorst.” An all-day book fair will feature nearly 140 exhibitors and used books/records will be f...Skywatch: A Saturday solar eclipse
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
Next Saturday, Oct. 8, it’s solar eclipse time around here, the best one since Aug. 21, 2017. Unfortunately, it won’t be a total eclipse this coming Saturday but a halfway decent partial eclipse.This Saturday’s eclipse will be a midday affair that begins at 10:29 a.m. as the silhouetted moon contacts the upper right side of the sun’s disk. It peaks at 11:48 a.m. when the moon will cover 57% of the sun. The show’s over at 1:10 p.m. as the moon moves beyond the lower left side of the solar disk.(Mike Lynch)As with any eclipse, you never want to stare at the sun. It’s not good for your eyes, and you could easily do permanent damage in a very short time. Viewing the sun with binoculars or a telescope for less than a second can cause permanent eye damage or blindness! You can also purchase special safe eclipse glasses that let you safely take in the show, but never wear them while looking through binoculars or a telescope!There are several places you can buy eclipse glasses online,...Review: ‘Saw X’ cuts away most of the fat from a tired series, returning it to its gory glory
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
Decent health care and a modicum of compassion: Isn’t that what any trap-devising torture master wants? So it seems in “Saw X,” a movie that has more fun not being a “Saw” sequel before becoming a better-than-passable one. As we dive in, gaunt John “Jigsaw” Kramer (Tobin Bell, his voice freshly regraveled) winces through his brain cancer scans.“That was a long one,” he tells the technician. (Boo-hoo.) Unfortunately, Kramer’s case is terminal. And as he smirks through the bromides of his support group and gets his last will and testament in order, you can almost believe — barring one eyeball-sucking dream sequence — that Bell has stumbled into a different franchise altogether. (Call it “Sob.”)This somber cello-scored intro becomes a passage, then an entire first act, and it’s impossible not to smile at how veteran “Saw” editor-turned-director Kevin Greutert commits to the long game. As it happen...Literary calendar for week of Oct. 8
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
C.M. ALONGI: Introduces her debut science fiction novel, “Citadel.” 7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 12, SubText Books, 6 W. Fifth St., St. Paul.WILLIAM KENT KRUEGER: Bestselling Minnesota author of the Cork O’Connor mystery series introduces his new stand-alone novel, “The River We Remember.” 7 p.m. Tuesday, Oct. 10, SubText Books, 6 W. Fifth St., St. Paul.T KIRA MADDEN: Author of the memoir “Long Live the Tribe of Fatherless Girls,” finalist for the National Book Critics Circle award for best first book and finalist for the LAMBDA Literary Award for lesbian memoir, discusses her work in the University of Minnesota English Department’s Visiting Writers series. Free. 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 11, University of Minnesota Pillsbury Hall, 310 Pillsbury Drive S.E., Mpls.McGHEE/WOHNOUTKA: Author Alison McGhee and illustrator Mike Wohnoutka, winners of numerous awards for children’s and children’s picture books, discuss how writers and illustr...William O’Brien State Park gets major boost from longtime farmer Myron Lindgren
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
When it came time to sell the family farm in Scandia, Myron Lindgren had two choices: cash out and sell to a developer, or sell the land — at a much lower price — for inclusion in William O’Brien State Park.Lindgren, 82, said the decision to have the land go to the state park in northern Washington County was an easy call. That’s what his late parents, Maynard and Helen Lindgren, would have wanted to see happen, he said.“Mom and Dad worked hard on that farm,” said Lindgren, who now lives at the Seven Hills Senior Living Center in St. Paul. “I know they would have wanted to see it left alone rather than have houses all over it.”Maynard Lindgren bought 120 acres of farmland in 1927, five years before he married Helen Johnson at Elim Lutheran Church in Scandia. The couple later purchased an additional 140 acres to add to the farm.Myron Lindgren in his apartment in St. Paul on Thursday. Lindgren, 82, said he sold the family farm for parkland to honor his late parents, Maynard and Helen ...Tyler Cowen: Too much misinformation? The issue is demand, not supply
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
With the U.S. presidential election a little more than a year away, candidates and voters are bracing themselves for an “explosion” of AI-generated misinformation. Adding to the fear is that many research programs intended to study and counter misinformation, facing accusations of bias, are shutting down.Given all this, I have a prediction: AI-generated misinformation will not be a major problem in the 2024 campaign. But that’s only because so many other forms of misinformation are already so rife.Speaking in economic terms, the problem with misinformation is demand, not supply. Consider, for example, the view that the 2020 election was stolen from former President Donald Trump. To explain what happened in simple terms, there was a demand for this misinformation, namely from some aggrieved Trump supporters, and there was also a supply, most prominently from Trump himself. Supply met demand, the issue was focal and visceral, and the misinformation has continued to t...Bethel student’s documentary contrasts two families’ attempts to cross the southern border
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
A new documentary produced by a Bethel University student brings attention to immigration issues through the perspectives of two different families.The documentary, titled “Border of Dreams” (“Frontera de Sueños” in Spanish), brings to focus the issue of U.S.-Mexico immigration by juxtaposing the lives of a Guatemalan family who tried to cross the border and failed and a Mexican family who successfully crossed the border and now live in the United States.Documentary editor and videographer Hana Ko shows children photos on her camera in the highlands of Guatemala. (Courtesy of “Border of Dreams”)The producer of the film, Soraya Keiser, is a print journalist by trade and managing editor at the Clarion, Bethel’s student news publication. Keiser originally went to Guatemala as part of Bethel’s Textura program for magazine production. The story she wrote there about the Guatemalan family is what eventually became the documentary.After the c...Ask Amy: New neighbors endanger their children
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
Dear Amy: I have serious concerns about new neighbors, who moved in about a year ago. They have two young daughters.I suspect the mother is an alcoholic. Her actions are putting the girls in danger.On several occasions I and other neighbors have seen her drive erratically down our street, once with a little girl on her lap holding the steering wheel.Another time she had left the house and was chugging a bottle of wine outside. She was yelling about how she was free because the girls were alone inside: “Hooray, I’m free…!”The latest issue was most frightening.I was walking my dog and one of the little girls was naked and standing in the street.She was crying, saying that she could not find her mommy.I took her to her house and searched the home for the mother.The house was filthy and looked like it had been ransacked. There were no bed sheets on the beds and the kitchen was trashed.I was scared that something had happened.I ended up finding the mother curled in a bedroom corner with ...Bridge: Oct. 8, 2023
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
A reader asks for an explanation of “fourth-suit” auctions, which often appear in my columns.Today’s auction went easily. North’s jump to three diamonds was forcing, as per his partnership agreement, and South had an easy 3NT bid. North may have considered acting again.Now say North had held A54,J,AQ8742,1042. He can’t jump to three diamonds, forcing — his hand isn’t strong enough to commit to game — but he wants to invite game. So North needs a way to invite and to force.Many players use a bid of the “fourth suit” to force. North would bid two hearts at his second turn, saying nothing about hearts but asking South to make a further descriptive bid. South would bid 2NT next, and North could then bid three diamonds, forcing.North-South might even reach six diamonds, a fair contract. But suppose South plays at 3NT, and West leads the deuce of hearts: jack, queen, ace. South has eight top tricks, and since he will be safe if d...The U.S. Government Is Preparing for a Fentanyl WMD Attack
Published Mon, 16 Dec 2024 18:44:42 GMT
Last year, the White House publicly shot down a controversial proposal from Republican lawmakers to designate fentanyl as a weapon of mass destruction, or WMD. Though President Joe Biden declined to issue the executive order granting the WMD designation, which would have come with extraordinary powers to combat the scourge, federal agencies — including the Department of Defense, the FBI, and the Department of Homeland Security — had already begun preparing for a fentanyl WMD attack as far back as 2018.Government documents obtained by The Intercept reveal that national security agencies have for years been advancing the narrative that the drug could pose a WMD threat, going so far as conducting military exercises in preparation for an attack by a fentanyl weapon.The push to declare fentanyl a WMD — and the security state approaching the drug that way even absent the declaration — has been a boon to federal agencies’ budgets. It’s not clear, however, that reimagining th...Latest news
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