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St. Paul Winter Carnival taps Frogtown artist for new button designs

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As a child living in St. Paul’s Frogtown neighborhood, Kao Lee Thao looked at the St. Paul Winter Carnival as a thrilling series of events filled with colorful images and stories.

As a professional artist, Thao has worked to channel that childhood wonder into the design of the 2024 Winter Carnival buttons.

“The Winter Carnival is a fond memory from my childhood and designing the buttons resurrected the whimsical wonder from those youthful days,” Thao said. “The design was a chance to infuse the carnival with the threads of my cultural identity and the magic of shared traditions.”

At St. Paul’s Union Depot on Saturday, officials unveiled the four buttons Thao created for this year’s festival. Button sales are the biggest fundraiser for the Winter Carnival and St. Paul Festival and Heritage Foundation, its parent organization. The 2024 festival is the 138th and takes place Jan. 25 to Feb. 3.

Buttons went on sale immediately following the unveiling. The price: $5 for one button and $19 for a set of four. Buttons may be purchased at Cub Foods, Spire Credit Union, local retailers or online at wintercarnival.com.

Carnival officials said they try to choose a new button artist every year. Last year, they tapped Geno Okok, a Nigeria-born artist who officials said was the first person of color to design its buttons in what was then a 137-year history. Local illustrator Kevin Cannon designed the 2022 buttons.

In Thao, they chose an artist whose family visited Winter Carnival events every year, even after they moved from St. Paul to Savage. She said the memories of the carnival’s ice sculptures, fireworks shows and parades left a magical mark on her heart.

The vibrant colors she chose are meant to heighten the sense of wonder and whimsy she felt attending those carnival events years ago, she said.

For years, Thao studied to be a psychiatrist. Then, she said, she “literally had a dream where I was an artist.” She followed that passion to pick up a paintbrush and is now a partner in Folklore Studio, a 3-D animation company that creates animations for television and film.

In addition to the 2024 Winter Carnival buttons, Thao’s work includes public art projects such as the Springboard for the Arts fiberglass installation, the Minneapolis Park and Recreation Board’s Parks for All mural at Boom Island and the mural at Mississippi Creative Arts.

She is currently working with the United Family Medicine on a history wall in St. Paul.



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Trump denigrates Detroit while appealing for votes in a suburb of Michigan’s largest city

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NOVI, Mich. — Donald Trump further denigrated Detroit while appealing for votes Saturday in a suburb of the largest city in swing state Michigan.

”I think Detroit and some of our areas makes us a developing nation,” the former president told supporters in Novi. He said people want him to say Detroit is ”great,” but he thinks it ”needs help.”

The Republican nominee for the White House had told an economic group in Detroit earlier this month that the ”whole country will end up being like Detroit” if Democrat Kamala Harris wins the presidency. That comment drew harsh criticism from Democrats who praised the city for its recent drop in crime and growing population.

Trump’s stop in Novi, after an event Friday night in Traverse City, is a sign of Michigan’s importance in the tight race. Harris is scheduled for a rally in Kalamazoo later Saturday with former first lady Michelle Obama on the first day that early in-person voting becomes available across Michigan. More than 1.4 million ballots have already been submitted, representing 20% of registered voters. Trump won the state in 2016, but Democrat Joe Biden carried it four years later.

Michigan is home to major car companies and the nation’s largest concentration of members of the United Auto Workers. It also has a significant Arab American population, and many have been frustrated by the Biden administration’s support for Israel’s offensive in Gaza after the attack by Hamas against Israel on Oct. 7, 2023.

During his rally, Trump spotlighted local Muslim and Arab American leaders who joined him on stage. These voters ”could turn the election one way or the other,” Trump said, adding that he was banking on ”overwhelming support” from those voters in Michigan.

“When President Trump was president, it was peace,” said one of those leaders, Mayor Bill Bazzi of Dearborn Heights. ”We didn’t have any issues. There was no wars.”

While Trump is trying to capitalize on the community’s frustration with the Democratic administration, he has a history of policies hostile to this group, including a travel ban targeting Muslim countries while in office and a pledge to expand it to include refugees from Gaza if he wins on Nov. 5.



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‘Take our lives seriously,’ Michelle Obama pleads as she rallies for Kamala Harris in Michigan

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”We are looking at a health care crisis in America that is affecting people of every background and gender,” Harris told reporters before visiting the doctor’s office.

Meanwhile, President Joe Biden went to a union hall in Pittsburgh to promote Harris’ support for organized labor, telling the audience to ”follow your gut” and ”do what’s right.”

Harris appeared with Beyoncé on Friday in Houston, and she campaigned with former President Barack Obama and Bruce Springsteen on Thursday in Atlanta.

It’s a level of celebrity clout that surpasses anything that Donald Trump, the Republican nominee, has been able to marshal this year. But there’s no guarantee that will help Harris in the close race for the White House. In 2016, Hillary Clinton lost to Trump despite firing up her crowds with musical performances and Democratic allies.

Trump brushed off Harris’ attempt to harness star power for her campaign.

”Kamala is at a dance party with Beyoncé,” the former president said Friday in Traverse City, Michigan. Trump, the Republican nominee for president, is scheduled to hold a rally in Novi, a suburb of Detroit, on Saturday before a later event in State College, Pennsylvania.



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North Minneapolis Halloween party for kids brings families together

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Tired of hearing about north Minneapolis kids having to go trick-or-treating in the suburbs, business owner KB Brown started throwing a costume bash at the Capri Theater with the goal of bringing together families and the organizations that care for them.

Now in its fourth year, that Halloween party has become a stone soup of community organizations cooking out, roller skating and giving away tote bags of candy to tiny superheroes and princesses.

Elected officials, including state Rep. Esther Agbaje, DFL-Minneapolis, and Hennepin County Commissioner Jeff Lunde, dropped in on the festivities Saturday to get out the vote in the final stretch of door-knocking season. KMOJ’s Q Bear DJed the party.

KB Brown and his grandson Zakari, 3. Brown founded Project Refocus, a nonprofit dealing with youth mentorship, security along the West Broadway business corridor and opioid response in the surrounding neighborhoods. (Susan Du/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

Farji Shaheer of Innovative SOULutions provided a bounce house and inflatable basketball hoops. A violence intervention professional who offers community training on treating traumatic bleeding, Shaheer recently purchased land in Bemidji to redevelop into a retreat center for gun violence survivors.

He in turn invited Santella Williams and Dominque Howard to bring Pull and Pay, a former Metro Mobility bus retrofitted as a mobile arcade full of vintage games such as “NBA Jam” and “Big Buck Hunter.” The bus was a pandemic epiphany for Williams and fiancé Howard when they suddenly found themselves with four kids and nowhere to take them after COVID-19 shut everything down. Pull and Pay now shows up to community events throughout the North Side.

Pull and Pay owner Dominique Howard showed kids, squeezed elbow to elbow, how to play “Big Buck Hunter” inside his homebuilt mobile arcade. (Susan Du/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

“This is the first time I’ve been able to come through, but we figured we’d stop by check it out. It’s so perfect, and such a beautiful day,” said Shannon Tekle, a Northside Economic Opportunity Network board member attending with her two-year daughter, both of them dressed as monarch butterflies.

“North Side, we’re a big family,” said Brown, proudly toting his grandson Zakari (a 3-year-old Chucky with candy-smeared cheeks) on one arm. “Everybody here is from the community.”



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