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Vikings and Packers pay tribute to Damar Hamlin
From players wearing “Love for Damar” shirts to #3 being highlighted on football fields, tributes poured in for Damar Hamlin during Sunday’s NFL games.
MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota — From his hospital bed, Damar Hamlin watched his teammates win 35-23 over the New England Patriots on Sunday. Prior to the game, Hamlin tweeted “GameDay.. Nothing I Want More Than To Be Running Out That Tunnel With My Brothers. God Using Me In A Different Way Today. Tell Someone You Love Them Today!”
It’s been nearly a week since the Buffalo Bills safety collapsed on the field from cardiac arrest following a hit during Monday night’s game against the Cincinnati Bengals.
The 24-year-old is being treated at the University of Cincinnati Medical Center.
Saturday, Hamlin tweeted, “Putting love into the world comes back 3xs as much… thankful for everyone who has reached out and prayed. This will make me stronger on the road to recovery, keep praying for me!”
From players wearing “Love for Damar” shirts to #3 being highlighted on football fields, tributes poured in for Hamlin during Sunday’s NFL games.
During the Vikings and Bears game, players from both teams warmed up with shirts showing Hamlin love. The NFL gave players from all 32 teams “Love for Damar 3” shirts to wear during pregame warmups to show league-wide support for Hamlin.
Earlier in the week, Vikings defensive tackle Harrison Phillips — a former teammate of Hamlin’s — had dinner delivered to Hamlin’s family, the Bills training staff and the medical team working on the ICU floor. Phillips also opened a branch of his foundation, Harrison’s Playmakers, to raise money for a future event in Hamlin’s honor.
Vikings outside linebacker Patrick Jones II used to play football at the University of Pittsburgh with Hamlin. During the first quarter of Sunday’s game after Jones sacked the Bears’ quarterback, he pointed to tape on his wrist with the #3 on it.
Vikings wide receiver K.J. Osborn said after the game, “That’s my boy. I talked to him yesterday. I just told him I can’t want to see him in the offseason and I was just praying for him so hard, that organization, his family. That whole situation, obviously, was unfortunate but it brought the whole world together.”
Osborn went on to say, “Your next day’s not promised… we sacrifice so much for this game and God is real.”
Many football fields outlined the number 3 on the 30-yard lines for Hamlin, including at Lambeau Field for the Packers vs Lions game.
But out of all the tributes, the Bills found many ways to honor their teammate from flying a #3 flag onto the field to wearing #3 patches on their jerseys.
In the first play of the first game since Hamlin’s injury, Buffalo Bills running back Nyheim Hines returned the opening kickoff against the Patriots with a 96-yard touchdown.
“You can’t draw that one up, write that one up any better,” said Buffalo Bills quarterback Josh Allen. “It’s been three years and three months since the last kickoff return, so pretty cool.”
Hines later returned another kickoff 101 yards and made history as the first Bills player to have two kickoff return touchdowns in a single game.
Hamlin reacted to all of it in real time on Twitter. He also announced Sunday that he’s selling t-shirts with the message “Did we win?” on them — a reference to the first question he wrote to doctors after waking up in the hospital. Hamlin said proceeds will go to first responders and the UC Medical Center.
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Several Twin Cities metro area outdoor ice rinks to open this weekend
Parks officials say the colder weather this winter is a welcomed change after the unusually warm winter last year.
SAINT LOUIS PARK, Minn. — Several cities across the Twin Cities metro are planning to open their outdoor ice rinks this weekend.
Saint Louis Park and Edina both opened their rinks Friday afternoon. Minneapolis and Eden Prairie will officially open their outdoor rinks on Saturday, according to their city websites. The Saint Paul city website says a few outdoor rinks in the city will be open this weekend and a few others could be open in the coming days.
Larry Umphrey is the Park Superintendent in Saint Louis Park. He says the weather this winter has been great for making ice.
“We’ve really had Mother Nature cooperate this year, unlike past years,” Umphrey says. “I’ve been dealing with ice and outdoor ice for 25 years, since the late 90s, and last year was the toughest I’ve ever seen.”
During the unusually warm winter last year most municipalities only managed to keep their ice rinks open for a handful of days. This warm streak has motivated a lot of cities to take a long hard look at the costs and benefits of operating outdoor ice rinks.
“I think there is some analysis going on within the cities of what they’re going to do moving forward. I know here in Saint Louis Park that we believe these rinks are an important amenity,” Umphrey says.
The city of Saint Louis Park maintains 18 ice rinks within the city limits. In Minneapolis, the parks board recently decided to close a few ice rinks, partially due to climate concerns.
The decision to close those ice rinks was also motivated by budgetary concerns.
Umphrey says building and maintaining outdoor ice rinks requires more work than most people realize.
“We actually started getting these ice rinks ready 30 days ago,” Umphrey says. “We’ve had to flood these rinks hundreds of times. Our trucks hold about 900 gallons and we come out and flood basically one full truck every time we come through. So, there are hundreds of thousands of gallons of water down on these rinks.”
Weighing the costs and benefits of outdoor ice rinks can be challenging because the benefits can’t be measured in dollars and cents.
Every ice skater on the rink is a person who is having fun, experiencing the outdoors, and likely creating memories, and you can’t put a price on that.
“We’re the State of Hockey. The state of ice skating. We want people to be able to skate,” Umphrey says.
While several cities across the metro are opening their rinks this weekend the big question is how long they will stay open. Next week we could see several days with temps above freezing.
Umphrey says the rinks should be fine if the warm temps only stick around for a few days, but if the temperatures stay above freezing for longer than three or four days the ice will melt quickly and crews will have to work hard to keep the rinks open.
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Long-time beloved biologist retires from Science Museum
Oly is 82 years old and has been working at the museum for half of his life.
SAINT PAUL, Minn — At the biology laboratory at the Science Museum of Minnesota, Richard “Oly” Oehlenschlager carefully examines a specimen.
At 82, Oehlenschlager is retiring from his position as the museum’s Collection Manager of Biology, leaving behind a legacy that spans thousands of specimens and countless stories.
“This room is a mecca for biological specimens,” Oehlenschlager said, gesturing to the cabinets filled with meticulously preserved plants and animals.
“This particular fish is called the solder,” he explained, holding up a specimen who is.
Oehlenschlager’s work goes beyond mere preservation.
Dr. Catherine Early, the Barbara Brown Chair of Ornithology and Curator of Biology, speaks highly of her retiring colleague.
“He always seems like he’s in a good mood,” she said, adding, “I believe his mom was very tolerant of him doing taxidermy at the kitchen table.”
Oehlenschlager even has been known to cook some of the specimens that come in, particularly grouse.
“They’re far greater than pheasants, as far as my culinary taste buds show,” he chuckled.
Despite his retirement, Oehlenschlager plans to return as a volunteer.
“There’s a lot yet to do,” he admits, acknowledging that the work of preserving the natural world is never truly finished.
“One lifetime isn’t enough to really evaluate things properly, because each year is different, each day is different,” he said.
His legacy at the Science Museum of Minnesota is not just in the specimens he’s preserved, but in the knowledge he’s shared and the passion he’s inspired in others.
“It’s been harder to get respect because I’m a younger woman,” said Dr. Early. “He was so welcoming from the start, and he knows Minnesota so well.”
But keeping with his character, and acknowledgement that documenting natural history is never done, he said he will be volunteering once a week.
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Pilot program inside Stillwater prison puts emphasis on healing all from the trauma caused by crime
The program involves having incarcerated individuals mentor others and respond to crises
STILLWATER, Minn. — Behind the locked doors of Minnesota Correctional Facility Stillwater, change is happening.
“When we started this thing, we said we was going to make doing the right thing the cool thing to do,” Tito Campbell said. “Because we made the wrong thing the cool thing to do for so long, right?”
Campbell is the restorative justice specialist with the Minnesota Department of Corrections. The restorative justice program works to help change incarcerated individuals’ mindset, embracing that crime is something that affects all parties involved – the victim, the one who committed the crime, and the community.
That mindset is one that they discuss with a group of 16 mentors, who work inside the prison as fellow members of the incarcerated population. Those mentors then use those teachings to help mentor others, helping them approach conflict or their own day-to-day lives differently.
“Prison doesn’t just have to be prison, you know, prison can be a place where you can actually reinvent yourself,” Campbell said.
Earlier this year, KARE11 spoke with members of the restorative justice program as part of another story about the changes the DOC was making to the mail system. We spoke again to three of them.
“Our job as being mentors is to be able to identify that, to be trauma-informed, to be able to convey what a person may have went through,” Ramone Vercher said.
“We have to come to the table together, that’s how we change culture,” Rich Scheibe said.
Inmates say the program works since they can relate to those who are needing help – they share life experiences, and can use that to help.
“Having some type of insight and level of understanding about those things equips, gives you a better set of tools to be able to actually help somebody,” Lennell Martin said.
All three men say their past is a part of their story, but it doesn’t define them – and they’re working on helping others change their perspective as well.
“I’m able to identify with that persona and be able to help them identify what they’ve been through with traumas,” Vercher said. “It’s helpful.”
Campbell said there’s another group of mentors that will be added soon. He said the goal is to eventually add every facility in the DOC system, with mentors at every location.
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