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Veteran lost his legs after IED blast, but not spirit

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CLEVELAND, MINN. – Avid hunter. Trap-shooting mentor. Son. Dedicated father and husband. Loyal friend. Southern Minnesota enthusiast.

Jack Zimmerman embraces all those personas. Yet he’s inevitably best known for another role: U.S. combat veteran.

As a member of the 101st Airborne Division, Zimmerman served Operation Enduring Freedom in Kandahar province, Afghanistan, for nine months during 2010 and 2011 — until he stepped on an improvised explosive device, or IED, in the midst of a battle, and his world changed forever.

“I was 21 and a half years old when I becaa me double amputee,” said Zimmerman, 35, “and in the hospital I learned that with a good attitude I could overcome everything and with a bad attitude, I couldn’t overcome anything.”

In the intervening years, Zimmerman has worked through many physical and psychological obstacles en route to creating a rewarding life that’s altogether different from what he envisioned as a teen.

“I’ve referred to him as a hometown hero,” said fellow Cleveland resident Cheri Rohlfing.

“What hits me the most about Jack is he had this horrible thing happen to him but he came back and made the best out of it.”

Blue Earth County’s Veterans Service officer and Marine Corps veteran Mike McLaughlin praises Zimmerman for his efforts to encourage, mentor and support other veterans of every stripe.



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Man arrested in 50-year-old cold case murder of Minneapolis woman

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When Minneapolis’ Mary Schlais was found stabbed to death in rural Wisconsin snowbank in February of 1974, investigators had no idea who killed her, and the case went unsolved for decades.

But on Thursday, the Dunn County Sherrif’s Office in Wisconsin announced it made an arrest in the cold case and traveled to Owatonna to arrest a suspect, 84-year-old Jon Miller. The identification was made possible in part due to the sheriff’s office’s collaboration with a team of genetic genealogists at Ramapo College in New Jersey.

The 84-year-old was charged with first-degree murder on Thursday in Dunn County Circuit Court.

Dunn County Sheriff Kevin Bygd said he was glad to be able to deliver the news to Schlais’ family that a suspect was arrested and charged.

“To finally put a bow on it and have someone in custody for it, who is still alive after 50 years, it’s exciting,” he said Friday.

Schlais was 25 at the time of her death and was attempting to hitchhike from Minneapolis to Chicago for an art show. Schlais was picked up by Miller somewhere in the Twin Cities area, Bygd said, before the woman was allegedly stabbed and killed. He was a Pine City resident at the time, the sheriff noted.

An eye-witness at the time said they saw someone throw Schlais’ body out of the car before driving away.

A hat was left along with the victim’s body at the scene, Bygd said, which allowed investigators to analyze the DNA of the hairs and skin cells found inside it. At the time there was no sufficient technology to process that DNA, but in the subsequent decades it became possible.



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How Minnesota House Republicans ended the DFL’s trifecta

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Minnesota House Republicans raised more money than ever before, targeted their spending on a narrower list of races and made a concerted effort to get conservatives to vote early.

It paid off. Republicans put an end to the DFL’s trifecta control of government this week by bringing the state House to a rare 67-67 tie. Pending as many as two recounts in House races that Democrats narrowly led, neither party will hold a majority in the chamber for the first time since 1979.

It’s not exactly the control Republicans had hoped for, but a tied House will provide a check on the agenda of Democrats who still hold the state Senate and governor’s office. The parties must reach a power-sharing agreement to determine how the House will run.

“Our goal over the last two years has been to bring balance back into St. Paul … We have accomplished that goal,” House Minority Leader Lisa Demuth, R-Cold Spring, said at a news conference Wednesday.

Republicans across the country benefited from favorable tailwinds as President-elect Donald Trump resoundingly defeated Democrat Kamala Harris. But that wasn’t the whole story in Minnesota, where Republicans retained six state House seats in districts that were won by Harris.

“That sends a huge message that it was a Minnesota choice, it wasn’t even a national choice,” Demuth said in an interview Thursday.

Heading into this election, Minnesota Republicans had argued that Democrats overreached with too many spending increases and policy changes over the past two years. On the campaign trail, they emphasized that Democrats spent most of a historic state budget surplus and raised some taxes at a time when people were struggling with high prices.

State House Republicans successfully defended every one of their seats in Tuesday’s general election for the first time in a decade, blocking the DFL from flipping a single district. They swept every state House seat on the long-Democratic Iron Range, flipping a holdout district they hadn’t won since 1928. They also gained a Winona seat they hadn’t held since 1984, and flipped a seat in St. Peter.



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The Depot in Hopkins reopens

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The Depot in Hopkins reopened this week, bringing a trailside snack shop, youth hangout space and events venue back to Excelsior Boulevard.

“It was emotional,” said Roxie Wolfe, rental and events manager for the Hopkins Center for the Arts, which is managing the building. “There was a lot of reminiscing and then happiness about the fact it reopened.”

The building operated for about 25 years as a coffee house, host for open mic nights and youth gathering space before officials last year shut it down amid financial challenges. It got a sprucing up before reopening, including fresh coats of paint.

Nick Bishop, Hopkins’ finance director, said the first phase of the remodeling project cost about $50,000, money the city covered using American Rescue Plan grants and the city’s capital improvement fund. He said Hopkins continues to work with other partners — including the city of Minnetonka, Hopkins School District and Three Rivers Park District — to contribute to the shop’s operations.

“I’m glad that people gave us the patience and trusted that we could bring this back and also keep the youth focus,” Bishop said. “It’s the most important part and it’s the whole reason we do it.”

The brick building, an old railroad stop, sits near Highway 169, along the intersection of multiple bike paths, including the Cedar Lake and Minnesota River Bluffs LRT regional trails.

The Depot, a popular spot for youth and a trailhead stopping place, reopened this week in Hopkins, Minn. (Glen Stubbe/The Minnesota Star Tribune)

The shop menu is a little different. Instead of leaning into lattes, they’re now focused on drip coffee, tea and hot chocolate. They also offer healthier snacks, such as trail mixes. They don’t take cash, only cards. Restrooms are open to the public, and the whole building is dog friendly.

The shop will be open from 7 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesdays through Sundays. The space will once again serve as a meeting place for the city’s youth advisory board and can also be rented during additional hours for birthday parties, meetings, lectures and other events.



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