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May 1, 2006

Spring Is Here

Sarah Hasselquist
Posted May 1, 2006


If you went down to Chester Creek a month ago, you would have found the walking paths to be muddy and, for the most part, abandoned. But it is a different story now that Duluth has seen warm weather again.

A man and a young boy lay outstretched in the sun on a boulder next to the creek. A young couple runs down the hill with smiles on their faces. A woman and young boy carefully climb over exposed tree roots and rocks to avoid a mud puddle. Two college aged young men haul bikes up the path past the woman and young boy to go biking again on the more level ground.

Spring is here, turning the brown grass green, filling out the barren trees and pouring water into the creeks of Duluth, as well as bringing out the residents of Duluth and their families to explore Chester Creek.

Upstream and on trails where the rushing water of the creek is barely audible, Tony Dierckins is taking a walk on a Friday afternoon. Dierckins, who used to teach in the composition department at UMD, is out with his three dogs, Stella, Gilda, and Max. These dogs are full grown, waist-high masses of energy. Dierckins sports a blue long sleeved shirt, green-khaki cargo pants and an about three day old salt-and-pepper beard.

Dierckins yells to his dogs and leads them out of a part of the woods where the stench of an animal’s decaying carcass had attracted all three of them.

“They’re only fun until they’re disgusting,� Dierckins says about his dogs as he trudges out of the brush.

A life-long dog owner, Dierckins says he comes to Chester everyday, even in the winter.

“On days when there’s more time, we get in the car and go to Lester, Hartley, or the beach,� Dierckins says. “Sometimes even Bagley.�

Just down the trail, Scott Sveiven trots by in baggy gray shorts and a matching tank top with the tiny earbuds in his ears plugged into an iPod. Sveiven, a UMD biology student, is out for a run.

“I started this autumn and kept it up to November. Then it got kind of snowy and I moved inside to work out,� Sveiven says.

Further downstream, where the trail gets closer to the creek and the sound of rushing water raises to a dull roar, three students in elementary and middle school are crossing the creek. The oldest is a boy carrying a walking stick taller than himself with a black plastic woven cord wrapped around the top of the stick. The next in age and height is a girl; the top half of her walking stick is half covered in duct tape. The youngest and last to cross the creek is a boy, his stick undecorated. They all make it across without falling in, stepping on slick rocks precariously and holding their walking sticks out in front of them as the water rushes past. Reaching the shore, they plant their walking sticks on solid ground.

On a quieter section of the trail downstream of the crossing point of the young students, Daryl Beede and his wife, Sarah, step lightly around a mud puddle that spans the width of the walking path. Sarah, who has long black hair with touches of gray in it, pauses for a moment in their relaxed stroll along the trail to look at the scenery around them. Daryl, a tall middle-aged man with large, thick glasses, follows suit and watches the quietly but quickly flowing water just 15 feet away from him.

“I have Fridays, Saturdays, and Sundays off, so I can get out in the woods,� Daryl says with a glance at the creek, then his wife, and then woods around him.

Across a footbridge and down the creek from this couple, two freshmen at UMD, Jon McLaughlin and David Souther are not so much interested in the woods as the rock walls, the creek, and the trails.

Souther and McLaughlin are standing just next to the creek when Souther carefully packs his fishing pole into his backpack and follows McLaughlin up a rocky wall from the edge of the creek. When the reach the trail, they resume their hiking. Souther’s fishing pole is still poking out of the top of his backpack.

Souther says that he has never caught anything in Chester Creek.

“I just try,� he says with a chuckle. “No fish in this river.�

A couple hundred feet away, Lynn Larson stands next to her tripod below the Fourth Street bridge with her dog’s taut leash in one hand and her camera in the other.

Larson is getting ready for a freelance group photography trip to photograph Appalachian spring flowers. For now, she is taking pictures of Chester Creek, other hiking areas, and the lighthouses in Duluth.

Although she lives outside of Chicago, she drove up for the weekend to visit her son in Duluth as well as her dog. Bear, her dog, is a large yellow lab that is living with her son in Duluth while she is selling her house.

“We named him Paddington Bear because he’s so yellow, but the kids all thought that was sissy, so he’s always been called Bear,� Larson says.

Bear continues sniffing everything in reach of his leash which is now tied to a tree. Larson tweaks the adjustments of her camera on the tripod, meticulously aiming the lens at the water of Chester Creek as it races over the rocks, past the trees, and plunges downward to flow beneath Fourth Street and eventually out to Lake Superior.

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April 19, 2006

The Return of the Guitarist: McLaughlin is back in the music scene

Sarah Hasselquist
Posted April 18, 2006


Billy McLaughlin stood alone in the center of the stage in the Rafters in blue jeans and a black shirt, holding his guitar. The room was dark except for the blue and red stage lights shining from behind on the guitarist. His hands were a blur of motion on his guitar, and the guitar sang. He swayed to the music he created, turned to the microphone and belted out the lyrics, “Not by power, not by might, but by spirit,� with prerecorded female vocal harmonies echoing him.

Such was the scene when McLaughlin performed at UMD earlier this month on Wednesday, April 5. He will be back in Duluth for a performance on Friday, April 21.

It looked so easy when McLaughlin performed at UMD on April 5, but because of a disorder called focal dystonia, playing guitar is more of a challenge for him than his performance lets on.

After becoming nationally renowned for his guitar playing, this disorder prevented him from performing for almost four years. His disability forced McLaughlin to start over by transitioning from playing right-handed to playing left-handed and by developing a different style that involves playing on the neck of the guitar.

“None of these notes that I play come very easy. It’s like, OK, if I’m going to play this, it’s going to be a note I really mean. There was a point not too long ago where I couldn’t even play this damn note,� McLaughlin said with a laugh in a phone interview a week after his performance at UMD.

Because of that special attention he gives to every note, McLaughlin said he is also writing better music now compared to the material he wrote before the disorder threatened to end his career.

Focal dystonia is a disorder that affects the movement of one particular place of the human body. It is often times linked with small and repetitive movements and results in involuntary muscle spasms and tensions.

“Basically if you’re a person who depends on a certain physical skill to make your living, focal dystonia will kick your ass because it takes away your ability to move freely,� as McLaughlin put it.

Justin Roth, a UMD graduate and a friend of McLaughlin’s since before the disorder began to take its toll, worked for McLaughlin and also played guitar. Roth said in an email that Billy’s music is as strong now as it ever was despite the effects of focal dystonia.

“It’s almost like evolution,� Roth added. “He has evolved his playing so the music he hears inside can survive. That to me only makes the music stronger.�

In order to make this comeback, McLaughlin had to be patient with himself while learning how to play guitar again, even when he did not feel he was good enough and cried while practicing.

“I didn’t want to have this problem, but once I had it I figured I kind of had to get to know it as well as I could if I was ever going to find a way around it,� he said. “That’s just a humble left-handed guitarist talking. I’m still learning from the whole experience. It’s still affecting me now.�

McLaughlin has no intentions of letting this disorder slow him down. He hopes to start a guitar department at a college designed to instruct students on what he calls “unorthodox� uses of the guitar.

“It’s just a piece of wood with a wire stretched over it - that’s all a guitar is,� he said “You can make some absolutely freakin’ incredible sounds on that.�

Other aspirations of his include touring nationally and playing with an orchestra. McLaughlin said that despite popular belief, the combination of a guitarist and an orchestra is no boring matter. He added that the steel-string guitar, which is the type he uses, is generally left out of any “legitimate orchestral setting.�

“Screw that,� McLaughlin continued. “You know what? I’m plugged into 6,000 watts of power when I play with an orchestra, and it’s the coolest thing ever. It works in such a beautiful way.�

In the nearer future, McLaughlin will be performing in Duluth at the Sacred Heart Music Center on April 21 at 8:00 p.m. Opening for him is Jeff Arundel, whose music McLaughlin compared to James Taylor’s. It will be a night of over an hour of acoustic guitar music by McLaughlin plus Arundel’s performance with general admission tickets going for $15 and students tickets $10 with a student ID.

ON THE NET: http://www.billymclaughlin.com/ Billy McLaughlin’s Web site

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April 4, 2006

Kozy Bar's Fate in Question

Sarah Hasselquist
Posted April 4, 2006

The Duluth City Council voted 8-1 in favor of the resolution to transfer the liquor license of the Kozy Bar to Eric Ringsred at Tuesday night’s meeting. But there is a catch to the agreement: There will have to be a decrease in criminal activity by June for the bar to stay open.

Councilor Russ Stewart said that if the amount of crime has not decreased by June, then revocation of the liquor license should be considered.

Ringsred was concerned about the time he will have to operate the Kozy Bar and the ultimate upcoming judgment.

“I feel like a man on death row for two months,� he said after the resolution passed.

While the police department received around 400 phone calls in 2005 for service to the area around the Kozy Bar, some Councilors and citizens said at the meeting that it is not all the fault of that bar.

Ben Marsden, a self-declared life-long Duluthian, said to the Council that it was unfair to blame that bar in particular.

“The Kozy Bar is not that bad. It’s really not,� said Marsden. “You get past the door, and it’s like the American Legion or nap time at kindergarten.�

Councilor Tim Little said that he has been into the Kozy Bar more than once and that he has never seen a fight or argument break out inside of the bar while he was there.

The one vote against the approval of the transfer of the license was cast by Councilor Garry Krause. He presented several examples of “negative activities� that he has seen downtown around the Kozy Bar including prostitution.

Councilor Laurie Johnson said she thought that not transferring the license would not help control criminal activity around the Kozy.

“We’re just going to shift it to a different area,� Johnson said.

However, Krause suggested that crime could be lessened with the assistance of what he called “dispersement.� The idea behind his suggestion is that if places that might encourage criminal activity are spread out, then the amount of crime could be reduced.

Krause added that he was concerned for the overall success of the bar because it is located in an area with a seemingly higher occurrence of crime.

“If you plant a tree in the middle of a desert, it’ll die,� Krause said.

After the resolution passed, Ringsred told reporters that he had mixed feelings about the decision.

“I have a lot of other pans in the fire,� said Ringsred, “and I’m hoping I’m not taking on something I can’t handle.�

Of his plans to help reduce crime around the Kozy, he said solemnly, “I don’t know if it’ll be enough.�

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March 26, 2006

Big Cuts in Approved City Budget

Sarah Hasselquist
Posted March 26, 2006

The City Council unanimously passed the proposal for this year’s reduced budget at Thursday’s meeting.

The budget is seeing a major cut, going down from $2.4 million to $2.1 million, and the Ambulance Services, the City Attorney and the Parks and Recreation Department are taking the biggest hits.

“We had to cut,� said Mayor Smith, “because of shrinking revenues and the fact that a dollar just won’t buy what it used to.�

The Ambulance Services is seeing a cut of 80.5 percent, and the funding for this service is likely to be zero in next year’s budget, said the newly elected City Administrator Joan Bell. That does not mean that the city will be without an ambulance service. A private company will take over this service, said Bell in a phone interview.

“People can expect better and faster service for less cost in the long run [with the private ambulance company],� said Bell.

The Parks and Recreation Department’s cut is 13 percent. Some seniors citizens’ and children’s programs could be curtailed, but the council is looking for grants assistance to support most of the senior citizens’ programs. The city will also see a cut back in nature walks and pool lifeguard hours.

“We just can’t keep doing everything we’ve been doing,� said Major Smith. “It’s too bad.�

In other moves made by the Council:

• Joan Bell was appointed the City Administer in a unanimous vote. The position of the City Administrator is predicted to save money in that the Council has combined several services into this position.

• The appeal by the Flemishes to let their fence stand was denied in a 4-1 vote, as they built the fence two feet higher than the ordinance allows and without a proper building permit.

• Bruce Nii was denied a position on the Parks and Recreation Commission in a 3-2 vote. Bell was opposed to adding members to any commission at this time.

• The week of June 29 has been declared Safe Boating week by a vote by the Council of 5-0. The vote to discontinue the city-sponsored boating safety programs was 3-2.

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March 7, 2006

UMD students, faculty and staff meet MBC's donation goal once again

Sarah Hasselquist
Posted March 7, 2006.

Two UMD students relaxed in plastic chairs inside the large van, eyeing each other up and comparing their times. Ben Turner: 5:17.00. Dan Blascyk: 5:14.00.

“The reigning champ – and he’s still wearing pink!� said Turner with a smile, gesturing to Blascyk’s stunningly hot pink, 2-inch wide, elastic armband wrapped around his left elbow.

Turner and Blascyk are two of the 26 donors who visited the Memorial Blood Centers bloodmobile parked outside of the UMD Medical School Tuesday, Feb. 21, to give blood.

The two nurses in the bloodmobile had a busy day with donors coming in from 8 a.m. until 3:30 p.m. The goal for the day was 23 donors, making the blood drive successful with a turnout of 26. But that is not so unusual; one of the nurses in the bloodmobile, Jill Faidley, said that it is usually not difficult to make the goal when the MBC bloodmobile comes to UMD.

“It’s been a long day,� Faidley said with a smile and only four more donors left. Nodding to the next donor, she said, "He will be our goal; when he gives, we'll have made it."

It takes dedicated donors like Dr. Janet Fitzakerley to make blood drives successful. Several years ago, she had donated blood regularly about four times each year.

“Just the right thing to do,� Fitzakerley said of donating blood while she rested in the front of the van. She, too, sported an elastic armband; it was her second time donating within the previous four months. “I have no reason not to. And what does it take, 30 or 45 minutes?� she said with a nonchalant shrug and a shake of her head.

But such a seemingly small act can be life-changing. According to the MBC Web site, one donation – that is, about one pint of blood – is enough to save three lives, and three gallons of blood is used every minute in the U.S.

“It’s always a need for blood,� said Inger Lauritsen, who worked at the MBC registration desk for the blood drive. “We’re constantly needing it.� Lauritsen was responsible for managing appointments, for fitting in walk-in donors and for completing about half of the paperwork for each donor.

The blood mobile from MBC comes to UMD once about every 56 days, which is the amount of time a person needs between donations. The first-time donor and “reigning champ� will probably donate the next time the blood mobile comes to UMD. He even went so far as to say that the experience was “fun�.

“It wasn’t any big deal. Didn’t hurt a bit, and I got free food!� Blascyk said as he pointed to the pretzels, chips, and cereal bars in small, blue Tupperware bins next to him.

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On the Net: MBC site: http://www.memorialbloodcenters.org/

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February 12, 2006

Grüß dich!

Welcome to my blog!

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Remember - If the world didn't suck, we'd all fall off.

Disabled student speaks on dating situations

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Sarah Hasselquist
Posted Feb 13, 2006

A UMD student spoke yesterday on the issues of dating from a physically disabled person’s viewpoint at a monthly Access for All meeting.

“I think there are a lot of misconceptions about people with disabilities and sexuality and whether or not they can be sexually active,� Galynn White said. “That’s probably the only thing that really gets to me.�

White has a hereditary genetic defect called osteogenesis imperfecta, or brittle bone disease, which causes her bones to break easily and heal quickly. Her arms and legs seem warped today because many of her bones broke and healed crookedly while she was still in the womb. But it is not the disease’s effects so much as some people’s opinions on dating disabled people that bother her.

White said that the media does not help with the “unacknowledged stigmatizations� that many people have about dating and disabled people.

“It’s something you notice, like, in movies for example,� White said.

She said that in the media, romantic roles are rarely played by disabled people, which does not help the perceptions some have of dating a disabled person.

“It’s something that has not been acknowledged as a problem in our society right now,� she said.

White said she felt she had lived a normal childhood with her two siblings despite her disease. When she went into adolescence, she her peers were not open minded about dating a disabled person.

“That is the one thing that was the hardest in my adolescence to get over,� she said. “I don’t mean to complain, because I’m not trying to do that. But I wish that people were more open-minded about dating.�

White also said she would like to help more people to understand that “just because you’re disabled, that doesn’t mean you’re untouchable.�

“That’s something I’d like to help out with if I could get involved in the disabled community,� White said.

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