Minneapolis, MN
Looking for a book to devour? Minneapolis writer's (and Obama fave) “Sharks in the Time of Saviors” is the One Book statewide book club choice.
Barack Obama said it was one of his favorites of 2020. The Minnesota Book Awards called it the best novel in 2021. And Friends of the Saint Paul Library think everyone should read “Sharks in the Time of Saviors” now.
Minneapolis writer Kawai Strong Washburn’s novel has been chosen for the Friends’ One Book / One Minnesota program, basically a book club to which everyone in the state is invited.
Through Sept. 22, readers can access “Sharks” at their local libraries, where the e-book and audiobook are free. Hard copies will also be available at libraries across the state as will reading guides and other materials. “Sharks” is about a boy who falls off a boat and whose family is transformed when he is rescued by sharks.
One Book culminates with one big discussion, on Zoom, at 7 p.m. Aug. 21. Washburn will take part in the Zoom call, as will thousands of Minnesotans. If you want to be one of them, register for the free event at thefriends.org.
Minneapolis, MN
Frey finds money to spare North Commons Park from budget cut
“Do you know of any other unspent ARPA funding that will not be used for its allocated purposes?” he asked Discenza.
Discenza responded that the city didn’t yet know how much ARPA money was left unspent.
Frey wrote in his email to Chughtai and Koski that the other department cuts will remain.
The council initially proposed using contingency funds for Agate but didn’t have the 10 votes required to use those funds, which are intended for emergencies like natural disasters. City policy requires 1% of the operating budget to be set aside as an emergency fund.
Koski has pointed out that the city ended each of the last six years with an average $22 million in unspent funds. That money goes back into the general fund, where city financial policies require reserves equal to at least 17% of the overall budget. The city usually shoots for about 25%, which helps boost its bond ratings.
Minneapolis, MN
10-year-old girl injured in Minneapolis hit-and-run
A 10-year-old girl is expected to be OK after a hit-and-run crash on Wednesday in Minneapolis.
Officers responded to a hit-and-run at the intersection of Lowry Avenue North and Sheridan Avenue North just before 6 p.m.
Minneapolis police say that a 10-year-old girl was running across the road when she was hit by a grey SUV that didn’t stop.
The girl was brought to Hennepin Healthcare with non-life-threatening injuries.
No arrests have been made.
Minneapolis, MN
No prison for man whose Lake Street crash injured colorful counterculture figure who later died
Case suffered numerous injuries from the crash, among them: trauma to his brain, a shattered spleen and numerous broken bones.
Burns explained in his verdict filing that Nieves was not charged with criminal vehicular homicide because “it is unclear from the record as to whether the victim died as a result of this accident or other issues. The court notes that [Nieves] is charged with criminal vehicular operation as a result of the injuries sustained by the victim, not based on his death.”
As a hippie, he fully embraced a drugs, sex and rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle. His counterculture adventures and misadventures ranged from getting kicked out of the Army, painting water towers across the Midwest, riding a motorcycle across Europe, living in Copenhagen and driving across the country with a collection of old brass beds to sell in San Francisco.
After he sobered up, he achieved a degree of respectability. His passion for going to concerts with a camera, talking his way backstage and hanging with the likes of the Rolling Stones and the Grateful Dead resulted in a book he co-authored and published in 2019: “When the Stones Came to Town: Rock ‘N’ Roll Photos from the 1970s.”
According to his online obituary, Case “never stopped collecting — vinyl records, vintage toys, metal signs, rock posters, you name it. Also collected were friends. Everywhere he went, Fred’s jovial nature, infectious sense of humor, and boundless font of fascinating stories drew people to him.”
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