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How Anoka became the ‘Halloween Capital of the World’

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Other anecdotes about the era include dismantled wagons, a carriage appearing on the roof of a school and a “cow pie” left on the porch of a Champlin banker who had a certain specialty for foreclosing properties.

The cow invasion of 1919 sent community members scrambling for solutions. A civic leader named George Green is credited with the idea of throwing a celebration to distract troublemakers.

By that time, according to Morton, only a couple other communities in the U.S. had done something similar – Newark, N.J., in 1907 and Fort Worth, Texas, in 1916 among them. But it was far from a common practice.

Anoka went big for its first celebration – a parade, a bonfire, contests and then candy handed out afterward. The Anoka County Union described it as a “very novel party” with “nowhere near the usual amount of Hallowe’en depredations.”

“The city was resplendent in myriad lights, store windows were beautifully decorated and the merchants vied with another in putting on contests of various kinds,” the newspaper reported.

George Green, who owned a theater on Anoka’s Main Street, is credited with pitching the idea of throwing a civic Halloween celebration to distract kids from pulling pranks. (Anoka County Historical Society)

Although some pranks and vandalism continued after 1920, Anoka’s Halloween party quickly grew and overshadowed the occasional mishap.



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Police arrest pro-Palestine protesters at University of Minnesota

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Nearly a dozen University of Minnesota students were arrested Monday night after trying to occupy Morrill Hall, which holds the Twin Cities campus’ administrative offices, to push the U to divest from companies with ties to Israel.

Several hundred pro-Palestine protestors gathered at the Minneapolis building as Students for a Democratic Society tied up patio furniture into giant barricades, covering the building’s large front windows.

The administration has “failed to divest from genocide,” said Ryan Mattson, a sophomore, adding that the U has also passed policies restricting their First Amendment rights to protest. “We will stay here until the university meets our demands or makes us leave.”

Shortly after, university police and Hennepin County Sheriff’s Office deputies entered and arrested protesters, citing property damage. At least 11 students were arrested.

It was the first time students have broken into and attempted to occupy the building after organizing encampments last school year to call on the U to divest from companies with ties to Israel.

Pro-Palestine protesters block Morrill Hall at the University of Minnesota on Monday. (Erin Adler)

The students said they chose Morrill Hall because of its history with student activism. In 1969, 70 Black students occupied the building in a peaceful 24-hour protest of institutional racism.

Before the arrests, students covered windows and staircases with mailers and green tarps. Students said they escorted administrators out of the building earlier so it didn’t appear any administrators were in the building when they blocked the entrances.

Complaints of antisemitism and Islamophobia have risen at the U and other college campuses since Oct. 7, 2023, when Hamas launched a surprise attack on Israel that killed an estimated 1,200 people and resulted in hundreds being taken hostage. Israel responded by invading the Gaza Strip, where the Palestinian death toll has surpassed 40,000, according to statistics released by the United Nations.



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STEP Academy leaders resign as charter school faces financial collapse

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The situation didn’t reach crisis levels, however, until the costs of the school’s 2022 expansion into Burnsville wiped out STEP’s financial reserves. Its fund balance, the most critical indicator of a charter school’s financial health, fell from $2.7 million in 2022 to $54,461 in 2023, state records show. This year, the school is operating at a deficit of nearly $800,000.

In response to Ibrahim’s allegations, IQS said in a statement that its repeated interventions were aimed at ensuring the school operates within state guidelines and lives up to the promises made in its contract with the nonprofit.

“It is unfortunate that Dr. Ibrahim has made unfounded claims of racial bias,” IQS Board Chair Steve Kelley said in a statement. “He is wrong. IQS and its leadership team have acted professionally and impartially.”



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40-year term for ‘unprovoked’ shooting that killed new high school grad at Brooklyn Park party

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A Bayport man received a 40-year term Monday for shooting and killing a new high school graduate at a party in Brooklyn Park last year.

Daniel Martez Walker, 32, was sentenced in Hennepin County District Court after jurors convicted him last month of second-degree intentional murder and being a felon in possession of a gun in connection with the death of Reese Crenshaw, 19, of Roseville, on June 2, 2023.

“This was a callous act of unprovoked violence,” a post-sentencing statement from County Attorney Mary Moriarty read.

With credit for time in jail since his arrest, Walker is expected to serve nearly 26 years in prison and the balance on supervised release.

According to Minnesota court records, Walker has a lengthy criminal history that includes five convictions for burglary, and one each for robbery, weapons possession and disorderly conduct.

According to the charges:

Crenshaw was freestyle rapping at a card table with Walker and others. Walker stood up without provocation and shot Crenshaw with a handgun. Walker fled the scene, and two witnesses took Crenshaw to the hospital. Another witness said Crenshaw was “just sitting there, not even talking,” before he was shot, the charges read.



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