Latest news with #YamHaus
Yahoo
18-04-2025
- Entertainment
- Yahoo
Lowertown Sounds unveils enticing 2025 lineup
Free concerts are back in St. Paul this summer. Lowertown Sounds has unveiled its 2025 lineup, filled to the brim with beloved local performers, many of which are playing the series for the first time. The 2025 iteration will have nine free concerts in Mears Park on almost every Thursday from June 12 to Aug. 14. The lineup includes groups like Kiss the Tiger, Tina Schlieske, Yam Haus, Dr. Mambo's Combo, and the New Standards. In addition to the live music, which starts at 6 p.m. each week, Lowertown Sounds serves beer and wine and has a roster of food trucks that line up around the park during each concert. Here's the full lineup of performers for this summer's Lowertown Sounds: June 12: Flamin' Oh's with Faith Boblett and Lonesome Dan Kase June 19: The New Standards & Friends with Tina Schlieske June 26: Dr. Mambo's Combo with Purple Funk Metropolis July 10: Dan Rodriguez with Becky Kapell July 17: Annie and the Bang Bang with Maria and the Coins July 24: Turn Turn Turn with Molly Brandt July 31: Salsa del Soul with Alma Andina Aug. 7: Kiss the Tiger with Keep for Cheap Aug. 14: Yam Haus with The Thirsty River and Haley E Rydell


CBS News
18-02-2025
- General
- CBS News
Delta plane passenger details moments aircraft flips upside down while landing in Toronto
An investigation is underway to determine what caused a Delta plane to crash land in Toronto Monday afternoon after taking off from Minneapolis. Airport officials say all 80 people were on Flight 4819. The airport's fire chief, Todd Aitken, says at least 18 of those passengers are injured, but everyone is expected to survive. John Nelson, one of the passengers, captured the scene as he climbed out of the upside-down plane. He says there was a hard landing and the plane skidded on its side before flipping on its back. "There was like a big fireball outside the left side of the plane and when we got finished we were upside down, everybody else was there as well," Nelson said. Flight attendants and passengers helped others on board crawl out of the aircraft. "Airport emergency workers mounted a textbook response, reaching the site within minutes and quickly evacuating the passengers," Deborah Flint, president and CEO of Toronto Pearson International Airport said. Aitken said in a news conference Monday night the runway was dry and there were no crosswind conditions at the time of the crash. Yam Haus, a Minneapolis-based band, was at the airport in Toronto getting ready to board their plane home when they realized the plane that flipped was supposed to be theirs. "All of us were a little, you know, I would say, shocked and spooked," Lars Pruitt with Yam Haus said, "one plane of separation from a much different situation." Mixed feelings about flying Travelers at Minneapolis-St. Paul International Airport had mixed feelings about flying with Monday's crash being the latest in a string of recent incidents. "My hairs have been up on the back of my neck recently because of all the incidents," one traveler said. One man at MSP said he wasn't as concerned. "I'm not really worried about it. I think that was kind of a fluke day. I think the air industry in general is pretty good," he said. According to the International Air Transport Association, one in 1.26 million flights are involved in a flying incident. The National Safety Council said the lifetime odds of dying in a plane crash is "too small to calculate."