Gibraltar airport key to Spain-Britain deal, says Spanish foreign minister 

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Gibraltar airport key to Spain-Britain deal, says Spanish foreign minister  Joint use of Gibraltar’s airport has to be included in any agreement between Spain and Britain over the future of the territory, Spain’s foreign minister said.In an interview published Sunday in El País, Foreign Minister José Manuel Albares made clear that the airport wouldn’t be left out of the deal, asking “what sense would it make to leave out an element as beneficial to the population as the airport?” The negotiations over the future of Gibraltar have dragged on post-Brexit, with a temporary agreement in place for the British Overseas Territory that sees Spain allow workers and tourists free border passage. Negotiations continue this week, following talks between Albares and U.K. Foreign Secretary David Cameron on the sidelines of a NATO meeting. “To me, it seems like progress that flights can come from Spanish airports and other European countries, promoting tourism and relations. The airport has to be in the agreement, of course,” said Albares. He said that Spa...

Buonopane stars in debut, Archbishop Williams outlasts Bishop Feehan

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Buonopane stars in debut, Archbishop Williams outlasts Bishop Feehan CANTON – Phenom goalie Evelyn Lacey left big skates to fill on the Archbishop Williams girls hockey team when she transferred after last year.In the Bishops’ season opener Saturday night, though, junior Bella Buonopane laced them up for a perfect fit.By stopping all 16 shots she faced in a frantic third period, in which No. 5 Archbishop Williams (1-0) needed to kill three separate penalties, Buonopane (32 saves) paired with a gritty defense and two first-period goals to stave off No. 6 Bishop Feehan for a 2-1 Catholic Central League win in her first career varsity start.One of those saves looked like the puck snuck in for the game-tying goal in the closing minutes, but officials ruled the play over before it crossed the line, and the Bishops eventually held on despite an onslaught of pressure.“It was kind of stressful because last year we had Evelyn Lacey and she was a beast,” Buonopane said. “But I know I can play, I’ve been playing for a few years. So I feel like I just played wit...

Indigenous services minister to table First Nations water bill as early as Monday

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Indigenous services minister to table First Nations water bill as early as Monday OTTAWA — Indigenous Services Minister Patty Hajdu is expected to table much-anticipated legislation to improve water quality in First Nations communities as early as Monday.The bill comes more than a year after Canada repealed previous legislation on safe drinking water for First Nations, and two years after a Federal Court ruling approved a massive $8-billion settlement related to drinking water advisories.Hajdu said in an interview with The Canadian Press this fall that the coming legislation is the closest the federal government has come to co-developing law with First Nations. But some First Nations chiefs are disputing that assertion.Hajdu’s office is not providing more information about what’s in the bill before it is tabled. In June 2022, the federal Liberals did away with the existing Safe Drinking Water for First Nations Act, which had been introduced by the previous Conservative government in 2013.The government at the time said the bill aimed to support the de...

‘People are confused’: Survey suggests Canadians need education on Charter rights

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

‘People are confused’: Survey suggests Canadians need education on Charter rights OTTAWA — While one-third of Canadians say they have read the Charter of Rights and Freedoms, many fail to distinguish between its text and that of the U.S. Declaration of Independence, a new survey suggests. There is also significant division when it comes to whether Canadians agree with the opening line of the Charter, which sets the tone for the rest of the document. “They feel they know it better than they actually do,” said Jack Jedwab, president of the Association for Canadian Studies, which commissioned the poll along with the Metropolis Institute.“We need more Charter education, if you’d like. Or more Charter literacy.” The results are based off of a web survey of 1,502 Canadians in September by the Leger polling firm. Online surveys cannot be assigned a margin of error because they are not considered truly random samples. Jedwab’s association released the findings to coincide with the 75th anniversary of the United Nations adopting the Uni...

Skywatch: Jump out of bed for the Geminids

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Skywatch: Jump out of bed for the Geminids Stargazing will be worth losing sleep over this week as you bundle up to enjoy the annual Geminid meteor shower, one of the best of the year. It reaches its peak very late this coming Wednesday night into Thursday morning, Dec. 13 and 14.Meteor showers occur when the Earth runs into a debris trail of dust and small pebbles as it orbits around the sun. Most debris trails are left behind by passing comets that wander into our part of the solar system. The Geminids are unusual because the debris trail was left behind by a messy asteroid dubbed by astronomers as 3200 Phaethon. This asteroid was discovered in 1983 and may have a diameter of around three and a half miles. 3200 Phaethon is a real cosmic litterbug! That’s unusual for an asteroid. It has a highly elliptical orbit that swings it by our part of the solar system every year and a half. Each time it passes by, the debris trail is richly refreshed.All meteor showers are best seen from midnight to morning twilight, especially about...

Obituary: For Forest Lake ag educator Bob Marzolf, teaching was a calling

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Obituary: For Forest Lake ag educator Bob Marzolf, teaching was a calling Bob Marzolf was an evangelist for agricultural education.Everything a person needs to survive – food, clothing, medicine, shelter – is connected to agriculture, Marzolf told students at Forest Lake Area High School.Bob Marzolf, a longtime agriculture education teacher at Forest Lake Area High School, died Dec. 2, 2023, at his house in Le Sueur, Minn. He was 75. (Courtesy of Jim Marzolf)“He felt strongly about that,” said Mike Miron, a former student who is now the career and tech education/work-based learning coordinator at Forest Lake Area High School. “Agriculture is a core building block of our society – of feeding and clothing and providing for the world. Whether or not it was going to be their career, students needed to be aware of these things.”Marzolf, who taught agriculture education at Forest Lake for 27 years, died in his sleep on Dec. 2 at his house in Le Sueur. He was 75.Marzolf, who also served as the school’s FFA adviser, loved his job so much that he encouraged others...

Eagan residents push back against proposed Johnson Bros. Liquors distribution center at former BCBS site

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Eagan residents push back against proposed Johnson Bros. Liquors distribution center at former BCBS site Johnson Brothers Liquor Co., the third-largest wine distributor in the nation, is eyeing the former Blue Cross Blue Shield site in Eagan for a new warehouse distribution facility, but nearby homeowners have some concerns.Mary Garry, who lives near Blackhawk Lake about a mile from the proposed site, said some 30 Eagan residents attended a meeting Wednesday night to voice their concerns and sign a petition against the potential rezoning of the site, which will be considered by the city council Tuesday.The submitted concept plan hinges on rezoning the 55-acre former Blue Cross Blue Shield campus at 3535 Blue Cross Road from “major office” to “industrial development.” Blue Cross Blue Shield vacated the property over the summer, attributing the change to the company’s shift to a hybrid work model.Johnson Bros., which was established in Minnesota in the 1950s, says it has outgrown its distribution facility at 1999 Shepard Road, near Crosby Farm Park in St. Pa...

Catalytic converter thefts in St. Paul down 95% since pandemic peak, according to police data

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Catalytic converter thefts in St. Paul down 95% since pandemic peak, according to police data The buzz of a battery-powered saw biting into an automobile’s exhaust pipe became all too familiar to St. Paulites during the COVID-19 pandemic, as catalytic converter thefts surged to unprecedented levels.But that unwelcome sound is much less common lately, officials say.Reports of stolen catalytic converters in the city have plummeted 95% since peaking in March 2022, according to St. Paul police data.Statistics collected by the Minnesota Department of Public Safety tell a similar story. Reports of auto parts theft statewide have fallen 87% in the same period.What accounts for this dramatic drop?Last fall, authorities broke up a nationwide catalytic converter theft ring, which allegedly included four Minnesota men accused of selling thousands of the devices — cut from area vehicles — to buyers across the country.State lawmakers and local officials also have imposed new restrictions on the sale and transportation of detached catalytic converters, making it a crime ...

A St. Paul church opened six tiny homes for those experiencing homelessness. Officials are praying the effort goes statewide.

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

A St. Paul church opened six tiny homes for those experiencing homelessness. Officials are praying the effort goes statewide. Outgoing, chatty and distractable, Allen Xiong, 29, found a semblance of belonging in St. Paul-area homeless encampments, only to grow tired of seeing his friends and neighbors cleared out every few weeks during the pandemic. Without a similar sense of community, he doubts that whatever housing solutions they were offered stuck.“We just end up right back where we started,” he said. “Nothing’s solved.”Resident Allen Xiong sits on the steps of his micro-home at Mosaic Christian Community’s “Sacred Settlement” at the Wheelock Parkway church in St. Paul on Nov, 29. (John Autey / Pioneer Press)David Doren, 54, was equally tired of living out of his rickety recreational vehicle at leased campsites in Lake Elmo, which required him to relocate every 13 days. He previously spent more than a year living in tents in the woods near St. Paul’s Schmidt Brewery off West Seventh Street.“It was hell,” said Doren, who is known around t...

Maureen Dowd: Sam Altman, sugarcoating the Apocalapse

Published Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:55:25 GMT

Maureen Dowd: Sam Altman, sugarcoating the Apocalapse My favorite “Twilight Zone” episode is the one where aliens land and, in a sign of their peaceful intentions, give world leaders a book. Government cryptographers work to translate the alien language. They decipher the title — “To Serve Man” — and that’s reassuring, so interplanetary shuttles are set up.But as the cryptographers proceed, they realize — too late — that it’s a cookbook.That, dear reader, is the story of OpenAI.It was founded in 2015 as a nonprofit to serve man, to keep an eye on galloping artificial intelligence technology and ensure there were guardrails and kill switches — because when AI hits puberty, it will be like aliens landing.When I interviewed them at their makeshift San Francisco headquarters back in 2016, the OpenAI founders — Sam Altman, Elon Musk, Ilya Sutskever and Greg Brockman — presented themselves as our Praetorian guard against the future threat of runaway, evil AI, against bad actors and bad bots and all the lords of the cloud who had Mary Shelley...