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Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive receives record donations topping $44,000
Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive receives record donations topping $44,000

Yahoo

time28-03-2025

  • Business
  • Yahoo

Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive receives record donations topping $44,000

OSHKOSH – The community played its part. This year's Family Radio Network's 91.9FM Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive proved to be a record-setting one after collecting more than 145 donation boxes with more than $44,000 worth of hygiene and cleaning supplies. Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive Oshkosh Coordinator John Nieman confirmed the numbers, saying they easily bested last year's total donations of $40,287. 'The success of this year's drive is a testament to the passion and generosity of local businesses, volunteers and the entire Oshkosh community,' Nieman said. 'We are grateful for the unwavering support of our participants, and we're thrilled to see more businesses getting involved this year, many of them running their own internal donation campaigns and raising awareness for the need that exists in our community.' Read more: Workforce across northeast Wisconsin will be impacted by immigration policies. Here's how. Eight community organizations — ADVOCAP, Bella Medical Clinic, COTS Oshkosh, Father Carr's, Oshkosh Area Community Pantry, Read Elementary School, The Salvation Army and Tiny House Village — benefited from this year's drive. Donated items included cleaning supplies, personal care products, paper goods and other essential hygiene items. Read more: UW-Oshkosh invites public to forums with finalists for chancellor post April 7-10 'We are incredibly proud of what we have accomplished together, and we can't wait to continue serving our community in the years ahead,' Nieman said. The Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive supports more than 130 crisis programs across 22 Wisconsin communities. For more about the Oshkosh campaign, contact John Nieman at 920-279-9873 or jnieman@ Contact Justin Marville at jmarville@ and follow him on X (formerly Twitter) at @justinmarville. This article originally appeared on Oshkosh Northwestern: Help for the Homeless Hygiene Drive collects record amount

My flight from Putin
My flight from Putin

Boston Globe

time16-03-2025

  • Politics
  • Boston Globe

My flight from Putin

Advertisement When Russia invaded Ukraine in 2022, Kostyuchenko was among the few Russian independent journalists reporting from the front lines. But after learning of a plot to assassinate her, Dmitry Muratov, her editor and the 2021 Nobel Peace Prize winner, urged her to flee. She escaped to Germany, where Russian journalist Elena Kostyuchenko Brett Phelps for The Boston Globe These days she is a Nieman fellow at Harvard. But she continues to write, as she has throughout her exile. Her recent book, 'I Love Russia: Reporting from the Lost Country,' was named a Best Book of the Year by The New Yorker and Time in 2023. Kostyuchenko, 37, sat down with me to discuss her reporting in Russia, life in exile, and thoughts on President Donald Trump's allegiance with the Russian president, Vladimir Putin. This interview has been edited and condensed. Q: How did you get into journalism? I joined Novaya Grazeta , Russia's largest independent newspaper , as an intern when I was 16, and I became a staff writer after turning 18. Since then, I was working there until the newspaper was shut down on the 34th day of Russia's invasion in 2022, after Russian authorities revoked our media license. I worked in the Group of Reporters, a team like a special force within the paper—whenever something extreme happened—war, terrorist attacks, epidemics, natural disasters, mass killings—we were sent in first. Advertisement Between these assignments, I focused on so-called invisible people—LGBTQ communities in southern Russia, Indigenous groups in the north, and women trapped in prostitution. I preferred reporting outside Moscow, traveling as far and as often as possible. Russia is deeply underrepresented in the media because of Putin's centralized grip on power. Even living there, we often had no idea what was happening in other regions. To truly report, you had to be on the ground, walking, seeing, and talking to people. I got into journalism after reading the reporting of Anna Politkovskaya, known for her coverage on the Chechen war. She was the reason I joined journalism in the first place, and I truly admired her work. But she was murdered soon after I joined the paper. Q. There were six black-and-white portraits of your murdered colleagues pinned to the newsroom at Novaya Gazeta . Tell us about them. Four of them were murdered while I was working for Novaya Gazeta. I think about them all. The most striking death for me was the murder of Anna Politkovskaya. I couldn't imagine her being killed but they did. On 7 October, 2006, Saturday, I was sent to her apartment building, where she was shot in the elevator. I saw them drag her covered body out. Natalia Stemirova took over Anna Politkovskaya's work, but she was murdered too. Then Elena Milashina stepped into their shoes and kept reporting. She is still in Russia today. At Novaya Gazeta, we believe in a simple strategy: There must always be people willing to step into the shoes of their murdered colleagues. The point is to make killing journalists meaningless because for every one they kill, five more will take their place, working on the same stories. Our strategy seems to be working. Elena is still alive. Advertisement Q: In your memoir, you describe how your mother was influenced by Russian propaganda and challenged you while you were reporting in Ukraine. My mom, like many of her generation, has been deeply affected by Russian propaganda. When I arrived in Ukraine on the first day of the full-scale invasion, she called me, trying to tell me what I was seeing and hearing, as if I couldn't trust my own eyes. I told her, 'Mom, I'm here. I talk to people. I see things.' But she insisted that state TV journalists knew better. That same day, I had just come from the Mykolaiv morgue, where bodies were piling up. Among them were two sisters, one 17, the other just three years old. Then my mom called again, repeating the Kremlin's version of events. I couldn't take it. I sent her the photos I had taken at the morgue. She responded with some calm, detached message about civilian casualties. At that moment, I thought, 'I don't want to talk to you anymore.' But then I realized if I cut her off, she'd just keep listening to TV. Could Putin get my mom? No. But propaganda could. Many Russians lost family over this war, cutting ties with parents, siblings, even spouses. I decided not to give up on her, and maybe she decided the same. We kept talking, and at some point, we really started to listen to each other. I have to admit it wasn't easy. But then one day, she called me and said, 'I don't think this war is just. I don't understand its purpose. I want it to end.' Advertisement She is still in Russia. I miss her tremendously and I know she's proud of me. The last time we met was over winter break. She gave me a little pendant that was crafted to resemble my mom's eyes. I don't know when I will see her again. Q: You went to Ukraine on Feb 24, 2022, and you haven't been back to Russia since. I wasn't forced into exile. I was on a business trip to Ukraine, like I had done all my life. I packed my bulletproof vest, helmet, one pair of trousers, underwear, sweaters, and T-shirts. I left for Ukraine thinking I'd be back in a week or two. But I never came back home since then. I received an I crossed the Ukrainian-Polish border and moved to Germany. I was furious that I wasn't able to document war crimes in Mariupol. Muratov [her editor at the time] asked me not to go back to Russia right away for a while, explaining that I might be killed there and it would look like an attack towards nationalists. We both thought that my absence was temporary. But a few months later, I felt severely ill on a train to Munich. My sweat smelled like rotten fruits and my brain couldn't process the maps when I tried to call an Uber. I thought it might be COVID. I know the Russian regime had poisoned journalists before on Russian soil but I didn't think they would do something against journalists abroad. Those who were poisoned abroad are former Russian security agents, but I am not. I know it sounds super naive now. But at the time, I didn't believe it, my wife didn't believe it until doctors told us that poisoning is the only theory left after two months of examination. Advertisement What hurts me the most is that I never had a chance to choose. I would never choose to leave Russia. More than anything, I want to go back to Russia, to live and write there. I want my life back. I want to do what I did for 17 years. I'm quite a boring person, you know? But I'm pretty sure I wouldn't even be able to leave the airport if I go back. So it's pointless. I don't know when I will be able to go back home. Q: Do you experience a sense of loss, or do you feel relief that you're away from your country? So far it's hard for me to even admit the loss because once you admit it, you start to truly feel it. You say, 'Okay, I lost something. It hurts.' Before coming here, I was kind of delusional. I couldn't even admit that I had lost my country. I admitted it in the subtitle of my book, but I couldn't start to feel it. Of course, I really enjoy my peaceful time here. I don't miss a policeman beating me up or spitting on me or something like that. I'm taking a course called " Loss" at Harvard. Every class focuses on a specific type of loss: losing a person, a beloved pet, or experiencing exile. What this class amazes me the most is that students are so open to their feelings, about what they see and what they cry about. Q: How are your former colleagues at Novaya Gazeta coping with the increasingly restrictive media landscape in Russia? Many journalists who fled Russia established Novaya Gazeta Europe, while those who stayed are running what we call the remains of Novaya Gazeta. They can't even call themselves journalists anymore, just 'researchers.' Our chief editor at the time Dmitry Muratov stepped down after being labeled a 'foreign agent.' He did not want his status to cast a shadow over what was left of the paper. My younger sister chose to stay and continues working in the investigative department. I'm very proud of her. The work is incredibly difficult now. I recently asked her what her next story would be. She said, 'We don't have the luxury to plan anymore.' Every day, she leaves home not knowing if she will return. If she wakes up to an alarm clock instead of police pounding on her door, she has the luxury of one more day. Then, and only then, can she think about what to do next. It's even worse than how I used to work. Q: In 2013, Russia introduced its first 'gay propaganda' ban, which broadly defined to mean any positive or neutral depiction or discussion of non-heterosexual relations. While protesting for LGBTQ rights in Russia with your girlfriend at the time, you were attacked, arrested, and even sent to the hospital. The situation is way worse than before the war. In December 2022, [In November 2023], our Supreme Court declared the so-called The worst situation is for transgender people. [In July 2023], Trump's promise to end the war in Ukraine has put the invasion back in the spotlight. What are your thoughts on the recent US-Russia talks about ending the war? Many people think Trump is too friendly with Putin. What do you think? A lot here scares me. It's like I'm watching reruns of a show I've already seen. Right now, I feel like I'm in Russia in 2012 or something. The rise of antiabortion and anti-trans laws [in the U.S.] reminds me of what happened in Russia. Russia has set a global trend, and I am devastated to see the United States following this rightward shift. Fascism sucks. It always leads to war. And if you allow your highest politician to say fascist things out loud, at first, it's shocking. But then, it turns into an ideology, or a culture. And then the war comes. I wonder how many Americans realize that. About Putin and Trump, well, if they weren't both so antigay, they probably would have found true love in each other. Ukrainians should be the ones to decide when they want peace and what and how this peace would look like. For me, it looks like two very big powers are about to make a decision about a small country which was attacked. I don't think it's moral. Q: How do you maintain your love for your country, as reflected in the title of your book? This love is hard. It hurts a lot, but I don't want to reject it. I do believe that love is the strongest power in the universe, which can comfort death sometimes. I love my country. This feeling in exile is painful. I feel it all the time. I cannot forget about it. It kind of defines my life for better and for worse. I wrote an entire book to express a simple idea: stay vigilant. You can lose your country, and when it happens, nothing you do ever feels like enough. Our civil duty is to stop it from falling into darkness.

Woman, 31, killed in collision during snowy conditions
Woman, 31, killed in collision during snowy conditions

Yahoo

time08-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Woman, 31, killed in collision during snowy conditions

A woman was killed in a two-vehicle collision in snowy conditions on Wednesday. The Benton County Sheriff's Office says the crash happened around 3:50 p.m. on Ronneby Road Southeast, with a Buick Enclave and a Chevy Cobalt colliding. The driver of the Chevy, 31-year-old Amanda Nieman of Milaca, had to be extricated from her vehicle, with lifesaving measures started when she was pulled clear. Unfortunately, she died at the scene. The driver of the Buick, a 43-year-old Sauk Rapids woman and her 8-year-old passenger were taken to St. Cloud Hospital with non-life-threatening injuries. "The roadway surface at the scene of the accident was covered in snow and ice due to the open terrain and gusting winds drifting snow across the roadway," the sheriff's office said, adding that it appears Nieman's vehicle lost traction and began sliding before being broadsided by the Buick. Neither driver was impaired at the time, police say. Note: The details provided in this story are based on law enforcement's latest version of events, and may be subject to change.

Milaca woman dies in Benton County crash after reportedly losing control on icy road
Milaca woman dies in Benton County crash after reportedly losing control on icy road

Yahoo

time07-03-2025

  • Automotive
  • Yahoo

Milaca woman dies in Benton County crash after reportedly losing control on icy road

After being trapped in her car, Amanda Nieman, 31, was pronounced dead at the scene of a Benton County traffic accident. The Benton County Sheriff's Office responded to the crash shortly before 4 p.m. on March 5. Two vehicles collided on Ronneby Road Southeast, half a mile south of Duelm Road Southeast, which is roughly halfway between St. Cloud and Princeton. A 2016 Buick Enclave driven by Margaret Henry, 43, of Sauk Rapids, and a 2008 Chevrolet Cobalt driven by Nieman, of Milaca, collided, according to the Benton County Sheriff's Office. Traffic death trend: The rising toll of roadway distractions across Minnesota Nieman was pronounced dead at the scene while Henry and her 8-year-old passenger were sent to St. Cloud Hospital for non-life-threatening injuries, according to a release. Authorities performed life-saving measures after retrieving Nieman from her car, but they were unable to revive her. Investigators believe Nieman's vehicle lost control when it met with snow and ice, according to the release. Authorities believe the car driving northbound turned sideways across the road's southbound lane and hit Henry's vehicle. This article originally appeared on St. Cloud Times: Benton County crash claims life of 31-year-old Milaca woman

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