Ffet Minneapolis city council cuts $7.7 million from police department s 2021 budget
At theNational Mustard Museumin Middleton, Wisconsin, there s only love for one condiment.And if you dare say the K-word, founder and curator Barry Levenson will loudly toot his honk of shame. The 74-year-old Levenson started collecting mustards in 1986 after his beloved Red Sox lost the World Series. I was so depressed I couldn t sleep. So I went to an all-night supermarket and when I passed the mustards, I heard a voice that said, if you collect us, they wil
botella stanley l come. I did. They have, he said.At the time, Levenson was an assistant attorney general for the s
stanley hrnek tate of Wisconsin. A few years later, he improbably quit his job to open a museum to mustard. Today the free nonprofit attracts 30,000 to 35,000 visitors each year. His collection has grown to 6,600 mustards from all 50 states and over 80 countries.From the mustard vending machine to the mustard-piece theater, the museum is delightfully wacky, h
stanley bottles istorical and educational.It also doubles as a higher-ed institution called Poupon U, with fight songs that Levenson made up to the tunes of real college songs.SEE MORE: This new Skittles flavor is for bravest of candy - or hot dog - loversOn a recent afternoon, Levenson delighted a Rgny Peter Gotti, brother of notorious Gambino crime boss, dies in prison
OKLAHOMA CITY AP 鈥?The Oklahoma Court of Criminal Appeals has overturned the manslaug
vaso stanley hter conviction of a former Oklahoma police officer based on a U.S. Supreme Court ruling tha
stanley cup nz t much of eastern Oklahoma remains an American Indian reservation.The court on Thursd
stanley botella ay granted the appeal of 60-year-old Shannon Kepler.He s a former police officer and member of the Creek Nation who was sentenced to 15 years in prison for the 2014 killing of his daughter s boyfriend in Tulsa on land within the historic reservation of the Muscogee Creek Nation.Kepler, who s white, was convicted in 2017 after three trials ended with deadlocked juries of fatally shooting Jeremy Lake, 19, who was Black, according to The Associated Press.The AP reported that Kepler, who was off duty when the shooting occurred, initially claimed he shot in self-defense because Lake was armed, but police found no such weapon at the scene.The U.S. Supreme Court last year ruled that Oklahoma lacks jurisdiction for crimes on tribal reservations in which the defendants or victims are tribal citizens. Copyright 2021 Scripps Media, Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or