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Winter Carnival moves Grande Day Parade to Grand Avenue for 2025

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The St. Paul Winter Carnival’s King Boreas Grande Day Parade is moving from downtown St. Paul to Grand Avenue.

A partnership between the mid-winter fete’s producer, the St. Paul Festival and Heritage Foundation, and the Grand Avenue Business Association (GABA) is behind the move of the signature daytime parade in 2025, Winter Carnival officials said Tuesday.

“The Winter Carnival has always been about celebrating St. Paul,” said Lisa Jacobson, president and CEO of the St. Paul Festival and Heritage Foundation. “By relocating the Grande Day Parade to Grand Avenue, we reach more people in the community who want to be involved in the ‘Coolest Celebration on Earth.’”

Previously held in downtown St. Paul, the parade featuring floats, marching bands and hundreds of units will make its way down Grand Avenue from Dale Street to Lexington Avenue at 2 p.m. Jan. 25.

“We are so excited to be partnering with the St. Paul Winter Carnival and bringing the beloved Grande Day Parade to Grand Avenue,” said Chris Jensen, president of GABA, which also puts on summer’s Grand Old Day event. “We can’t wait for January 25th to get here as we know the businesses on Grand Ave and the entire community will enjoy celebrating the treasured tradition of Winter Carnival’s Grande Day Parade.”

Todd Russell, who will soon open a new dining establishment on Grand Avenue called Russell’s, hopes the parade will help revitalize the historic street that has seen several high-profile closures, including Pottery Barn, Tavern on Grand and Salut Bar Americain, in the past year. But other businesses have opened on the street during the same time.

“We hope it will inspire people to rediscover Grand Avenue and fall back in love with all it has to offer,” Russell said.



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Wagon rolls over at Wisconsin apple orchard injuring about 25 children and adults

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LAFAYETTE, Wis. — About 25 children and adults were injured Wednesday when a wagon carrying them overturned at a western Wisconsin apple orchard.

The children, parents and chaperones were on a field trip to the orchard in Lafayette when one of two wagons being pulled by a tractor turned sideways and rolled over, Chippewa County Sheriff Travis Hakes told reporters. Hakes said the tractor was traveling at a low speed when the wagon rolled over while going downhill.

Three people suffered critical injuries, while injuries to five others were considered serious. Authorities didn’t say how many of the injured were children.

The elementary school-age children attend a school in Eau Claire. Lafayette is northeast of Eau Claire.



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U of M inaugurates new president Rebecca Cunningham with ceremony, protest

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After about five minutes and several warnings that students participating in the protest would be suspended,, the protesters exited Northrop and Cunningham continued her speech. They later gathered outside on the mall afterwards to shout, “Cunningham, you will see, Palestine will be free.”

Cunningham recounted the story of Norman Borlaug, the U alumnus and agronomist whose research in wheat saved millions from starvation, and said she would prioritize keeping a college education affordable for students.

Cunningham actually took over presidential duties on July 1, replacing Interim President Jeff Ettinger. She oversees a budget of more than $4 billion to run the university’s five campuses, which enrolled more than 68,000 students and employed 27,000 people during the last academic year.

She was chosen for the job last winter over two other candidates: Laura Bloomberg, president of Cleveland State University and former dean of the U’s Humphrey School of Public Affairs, and James Holloway, provost and executive vice president for academic affairs at the University of New Mexico. She is the U’s second woman president, following Joan Gabel who held the office from 2019 to 2023.

Cunningham will be paid more than $1 million per year — about $975,000 in base pay and an additional $120,000 in retirement contributions. The compensation puts her in the top quarter of Big Ten university presidents.



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Minneapolis police sergeant accused of stalking and harassing co-worker

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Sgt. Gordon Blackey, once a security guard to Minneapolis Mayor Jacob Frey, allegedly admitted to tracking the woman’s movements in her vehicle, according to a criminal complaint.



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