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Stinky plant at Gustavus blooms on the Fourth of July

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ST. PETER, MINN. — The stench of rotting flesh mingled with Fourth of July smells like hotdogs on the grill and freshly mown grass on Independence Day in this college town.

The corpse flower burst into full bloom on the night of the Fourth, according to professors and staff at the Gustavus Adolphus College.

The flower, known as Gemini, follows a pattern in which the stinky plants at Gustavus keep opening up on American holidays, said Brian O’Brien, professor emeritus in chemistry at the college.

“They tend to do that, oddly enough,” O’Brien said.

The first corpse flower in Minnesota opened up at the college on Mother’s Day in 2007. Another opened up on Halloween night in 2013. Gemini’s genetic twin opened on Father’s Day this year.

And this year on the Fourth of July, Gemini’s flower spread upward and outward in vibrant hues of red and orange like a firework. “Like a burst in the sky,” O’Brien said.

The rare and endangered corpse doesn’t bloom on a schedule and only opens up for a few hours, often spending years or, at times, more than a decade gathering strength for its next appearance.

On Friday morning, the flower smelled like warm, rotting meat. Over the coming hours, the flower will start smelling like fecal matter, decaying fish and sauerkraut, O’Brien said.

Gemini is the third corpse flower bloom in Minnesota this year. The first was at the Como Park Zoo and Conservatory in May.

The biology department has set up a livestream for curious Minnesotans to watch the corpse plant, which will most likely start losing its luster by Friday afternoon before going back into dormancy.

Corpse flowers smell like rotting flesh to attract flies, beetles and other insects that can help spread pollen.

The flowers at Gustavus, like many corpse flowers across America, arrived as a batch of seeds from Indonesia in the 1990s as part of efforts to preserve the endangered species.

The flower that bloomed Thursday night is the genetic twin of the plant that bloomed at the college in June. The two plants used to be in one pot, even blooming together at one point, but their destinies have diverged over time.

“I think it’s a little bit worse than the other one,” O’Brien said of Thursday’s bloom, “in terms of smelling like rotting meat.”



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How a group of Russian and Ukrainian immigrants bonded around a Minnesota campfire

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NEW LONDON, Minn. — Viktoriia Panova knows fellow Ukrainian refugees who refuse to talk to Russians and speak their language since the invasion in February 2022 that destroyed their nation and exiled millions of citizens.

She understands their anger; Panova was a teenager when Russian-backed militants waged a war for control of her hometown of Donetsk in eastern Ukraine in 2014. Panova moved to Kyiv, then left Ukraine two years ago, after Russia illegally annexed Donetsk. Now living in Minneapolis, she has long accepted that she will never get back all that she lost from Russia’s aggression. She just wants to connect with anyone from the region – Russian and Ukrainian alike – trying to reconstruct their lives in the United States amid the aftermath.

So Panova, 28, was among a handful of Ukrainians who joined a group of antiwar Russians recently to go camping in Sibley State Park here, grilling marinated chicken and pork, fishing in the lake and sharing stories around the campfire. The party displayed Ukrainian and Russian opposition flags and listened to songs from both nations.

As clashes intensified in Donetsk and Russian President Vladimir Putin made nuclear threats, Panova and others tried to find solace and a community in the woods of western Minnesota. They enjoyed popular Russian dishes — mimosa, a layered salad of fish, eggs and cheese, and olivier, a dish of meat, potatoes and pickles — and Panova confided in a few Russians about how the war had divided her own family.

Her father is Russian but supports Ukraine in the war, while her mother is Ukrainian and supports Russia — a disagreement that prompted them to separate.

“She has propaganda in her head,” Panova told the Russian campers. They had all suffered so much from this war, she added. “How can my mother like Putin? … He basically ruined our country.”

Though Russian soldiers are paid well, Panova and a Russian immigrant who came here for college agreed that they didn’t understand how people could kill each other even for money. Panova said she had talked to both Russian and Ukrainian fighters years ago in Donetsk “who are not there mentally because they experienced so much.”

She asked several Russians about being considered a threat in their homeland because of their political views. One Russian newcomer living in St. Paul, Svetlana, said she was. She had worked for the Moscow government and officials threatened to check employees’ phones for antiwar materials. Opposed to the invasion, Svetlana and her husband and children left to cross the Mexican border and seek asylum and are among more than 59,000 Russians in the U.S. with pending immigration cases.



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North Star Promise helps boost enrollment at Minnesota universities

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The program covers whatever costs aren’t met by a student’s other scholarships and aid. Students must pay for room and board and books.

Paul Shepherd, associate vice chancellor for student affairs and enrollment at Minnesota State, said about 12,990 students received North Star Promise funding as part of their financial aid package; about 12,000 of those students are enrolled in classes now.

Shepherd stopped short of saying the system’s 7% enrollment increase could be attributed to the program. But he said it “certainly stands to reason” that it had an impact. Other initiatives, such as the Minnesota State tuition freeze and workforce development scholarships may have also helped, he said.

Students at community and technical colleges averaged awards of $1,500; those at universities saw about $1,600 each. Shepherd said it’s great that eligibility can be determined from FAFSA data because extra paperwork can be a barrier for students.

Nate Peterson, director of the Office of Student Finance at the University of Minnesota-Twin Cities, called North Star Promise a “safety net” that will help with recruiting and retaining students. As of Sept. 25, about 2,900 students on the Twin Cities campuses got North Star Promise scholarships. That aid totaled $6.2 million, or about $2,250 per student, he said.

Mike Dean, executive director of the nonprofit North Star Prosperity, said the program is a win for students, families and employers at a time when people are questioning the value of higher education. Anecdotally, he said, he’s heard the program has encouraged many adults with some college to sign up for classes again.



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A strike on a mosque kills 19 as Israel bombards northern Gaza and southern Beirut

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”Pray for us,” he wrote on Facebook.

Hassan Hamd, a freelance TV journalist whose footage had aired on Al Jazeera and other networks, was killed in artillery shelling on his home in Jabaliya. Anas al-Sharif, an Al Jazeera reporter in northern Gaza, confirmed his death.

The military says it has expanded the so-called humanitarian zone in southern Gaza, urging people to head there. Hundreds of thousands of people have already sought refuge in sprawling tent camps there with little in the way of food, water or toilets. Israel has carried out strikes in the humanitarian zone against what it says are militants hiding among civilians.

Nearly 42,000 Palestinians have been killed in Gaza since the start of the war, according to the Gaza Health Ministry. It does not say how many were fighters, but says a little more than half were women and children.

Hamas-led militants killed some 1,200 people in the Oct. 7 attack and took another 250 hostage. They are still holding around 100 captives, a third of whom are believed to be dead.

Israel bombards southern Beirut



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