Women’s curling: U.S. quest for first Olympic medal finishes just short

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Team Peterson’s quest for the first U.S. women’s curling medal ended just short on Saturday as the Americans dropped the bronze medal game to Canada, 11-7, in Cortina D’Ampezza Italy.

A two-point hammer throw in the ninth by skip Tabitha Peterson kept U.S. hopes alive, but Canada put immediate pressure on the Americans in the 10th, curling through and around U.S. guards to put as many as five stones in the house.

Needing a perfect throw on her final shot — which she had done several times in these Milan Cortina Games — Peterson’s shot glanced off a blocker placed by Canada skip Rachel Homan and out of play.

It was a crushing end for Team Peterson, which had a successful round-robin, finishing 6-3 and advancing to the semifinals after beating Switzerland in their final pool play game.

The Swiss, however, won the rematch, and Team Canada — which lost to the U.S. for the first time in round-robin play — had the Americans chasing after the U.S. went up 3-2 in the fifth end.

Team Peterson, which finished sixth at the Beijing Games in 2022, advanced to the semifinals for the first time, and second time for a U.S. team since 2002. The Americans had to settle for fourth place, tying that team for Team USA’s best finish at the Olympics.

Canada took control with a three-point hammer throw to erase a 3-2 deficit to end the sixth end. Peterson, who was terrific in Cortina, threw a two-point hammer to tie the score 5-5 in the seventh.

But a terrific throw by third Tracy Fleury in the eighth knocked three U.S. stones cleanly out of the circle. Cory Thiesse knocked one out, but Homan used the final throw to put one back in the house for an 8-5 lead.

Again, Peterson made a perfect hammer throw to salvage two points in the ninth and make it 8-7 and give the U.S. a chance to win or send the game to an extra frame in the 10th. But Canada peeled off three U.S. guards and filled up the circle, putting the Americans on their back foot, and they never recovered.

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A kaleidoscope of oddball tomatoes to try as seed-starting season nears

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By JESSICA DAMIANO

Seed-starting time is right around the corner, and that means it’s time to think about tomatoes.

I can think of no better summer meal than a thick slice of a homegrown Oxheart between two slices of white bread, adorned only with salt, pepper and maybe a couple of basil leaves.

I’m also partial to Beefsteak, Porterhouse, Brandywine, Big Zac and Big Boy, all delicious — and all red, the way many of us have been conditioned to believe tomatoes should be. But there’s a whole kaleidoscope of tomatoes you can grow in your garden.

So this year, as you’re dog-earring catalog pages and dreaming of July, look past the usual suspects. One of these oddballs just might be the tomato you love the most.

Cherokee Purple

It was the first other-colored tomato I grew. I didn’t particularly find the heirloom’s grayish-brown skin or matching flesh appetizing, and my 8-foot-tall (2.5-meter-tall) indeterminate plant didn’t produce as prolifically as most other varieties I’d grown. But its sweet, earthy and somewhat smoky flavor and juicy consistency made for a delicious sandwich.

Black Krim

A Black Krim tomato is displayed in East Carbon, Utah on Nov. 6, 2025. (Dale Thurber/Delectation of Tomatoes via AP)

This old, indeterminate Crimean heirloom introduced to North American home gardeners in 1990 is slightly easier on the eyes. Its sweet, salty, tangy flavor intensifies when allowed to ripen fully on the vine, so resist the urge to harvest prematurely. And if its unusual reddish-gray color turns you off, take a bite and you’ll get over it.

Black Beauty

A Black Beauty tomato is displayed in East Carbon, Utah on Aug. 11, 2021. (Dale Thurber/Delectation of Tomatoes via AP)

A few steps up on the aesthetics trellis, Black Beauty lives up to its name. With skin the color of blackberries and deep red, meaty flesh, it’s considered the darkest tomato in the world and has the antioxidant content to prove it. Although it’s a hybrid variety, Black Beauty has been stabilized through selective breeding, so its seeds will grow true to type. And it makes an impressive Caprese salad.

Ananas Noire

Also known by its English translation of Black Pineapple, this tomato variety is the happiest-looking of the bunch. Almost tie-dyed in appearance, the green, red and yellow tricolored hybrid popped up naturally in 1990s Belgium when a pineapple tomato crossed with a black tomato growing nearby. Developed further and stabilized by the Belgian horticulturist Pascal Moreau, and made available to home gardeners in 2005, the indeterminate plants are heavy producers of sweet, juicy, citrusy fruits.

Yellow Pear

Three ripe Yellow Pear tomatoes appear on a vine in Charlottesville, Va., on Aug. 12, 2020. (Ian Atkins/Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello via AP)

This indeterminate heirloom plant produces an abundance of small, vibrant yellow, pear-shaped fruits. According to Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello, which collects and sells historic seeds, the indeterminate plant dates at least to the early 1600s. Early Americans are said to have preserved and pickled its fruit later on. We can still do that, of course, as well as eat them out of hand or use them in salads.

A display of harvested Yellow Pear tomatoes appear in Charlottesville, Va., on July 20, 2021. (Ian Atkins/Thomas Jefferson’s Monticello via AP)

Voyager

A voyager tomato grows on a vine on Long Island, N.Y. on Sept. 27, 2023. (Jessica Damiano via AP)

Voyager tomatoes are true weirdos. The heirloom variety is said to have gotten its name because its fruits are comprised of individual segments that can be pulled apart without disturbing the others, making for good travel snacks. They also reveal an interesting shape when sliced horizontally through the whole fruit. In my garden, Voyagers were quick to ripen. And in my kitchen, they were tangy — enjoyed with a drizzle of olive oil and sprinkle of salt and pepper.

A voyager tomato grows on a vine on Long Island, N.Y. on Sept. 27, 2023. (Jessica Damiano via AP)

Green Zebra

A sliced-open Green Zebra tomato is displayed in East Carbon, Utah on Sept. 29, 2021. (Dale Thurber/Delectation of Tomatoes via AP)

This green-and-yellow striped tomato variety has bright green interior flesh and a sweet, tangy flavor. Its cultivation spanned four decades, as Everett, Washington, plant breeder Tom Wagner worked to cross several heirloom varieties to create a tomato that would remain green when ripe. The indeterminate plants, made available in 1983, produce crack-resistant fruit with exceptional heat and drought tolerance.

Jessica Damiano writes weekly gardening columns for the AP and publishes the award-winning Weekly Dirt Newsletter. You can sign up here for weekly gardening tips and advice.

For more AP gardening stories, go to https://apnews.com/hub/gardening.

Communities fight ICE detention centers, but have few tools to stop them

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By Kevin Hardy, Stateline.org

Outrage erupted last month when Oklahoma City residents learned of plans to convert a vacant warehouse into an immigration processing facility.

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Making matters worse was the secrecy of the federal government: City leaders received no communication from U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement aside from a mandated disclosure related to historic preservation.

Planning a major development without city input is antithetical to the in-depth, sometimes arcane permitting, planning and zoning process in Oklahoma City. Mayor David Holt, a former Republican state senator, said those land use decisions are among the most crucial of any municipal government.

“For any entity to be able to open a detention center in our communities, potentially next to neighborhoods or schools, regardless of your views on immigration policy or enforcement, is very challenging, because that’s a very high-impact use, and that’s the kind of thing that we would expect to talk about,” he told Stateline.

Communities across the country are facing similar prospects as ICE undertakes a massive expansion fueled in large part by the record $45 billion approved for increased immigration detention by Congress last summer.

During President Donald Trump’s second term, ICE is holding a record number of detainees — more than 70,000 as of January — across its own facilities as well as in contracted local jails and private prisons. ICE documents from last week show plans for acquiring and renovating 16 processing sites that hold up to 1,500 people each and eight detention centers that hold up to 10,000 each, for a total capacity of 92,600 beds. The agency also has plans for some 150 new leases and office expansions across the country, Wired reported.

But ICE’s plans to convert industrial buildings — often warehouses — into new detention facilities have recently faced fierce opposition over humanitarian and economic concerns. From Utah to Texas to Georgia, local governments have sought to block these massive facilities. But with limited legal authority, city and state officials have turned to the court of public opinion to deter private developers and the federal government.

Holt, who is the president of the U.S. Conference of Mayors, a nonpartisan organization representing the more than 1,400 leaders of cities with populations of 30,000 or more, said cities have little legal recourse over the ICE facilities.

“We all have a clear, unified position that really crosses party lines,” he said, “and then we also have a clear understanding of how limited our options are.”

Local leaders often cite the U.S. Constitution’s supremacy clause, which says federal laws supersede conflicting state laws. That leaves cities with limited influence over projects that could take industrial space off tax rolls, cause new strains on city services and raise serious humanitarian concerns given the Trump administration’s aggressive immigration enforcement, including the high-profile killings of two Americans in Minnesota.

Facing bipartisan opposition, the out-of-state owner of the Oklahoma City warehouse ultimately decided to end talks of selling or leasing its warehouse to the federal government.

Similar public pressure has proved effective in reversing plans in several other cities: In late January, a Canadian firm said it would not proceed with a planned sale of a Virginia warehouse after it faced calls for a boycott from Canadian politicians and businesses. In Mississippi, U.S. Sen. Roger Wicker announced the federal government would“look elsewhere” after he spoke with Department of Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem, who oversees ICE. Wicker, a Republican who said he supports immigration enforcement, echoed local economic concerns of a project planned in Byhalia.

Some officials have welcomed the new facilities: Missouri Republican U.S. Rep. Mark Alford has lobbied to land a detention and processing center in his district. And last week, a Maryland county approved a resolution expressing its “full support” for ICE, which is considering purchasing a warehouse there, despite local protests. But most communities have fought them.

Neither DHS nor ICE responded to Stateline’s questions.

Holt said the discussion resembles other local development concerns where NIMBY — short for Not in My Backyard — is a common description of opponents.

“There are plenty of people who are very law-and-order and supporters of law enforcement who don’t want a jail next to their house,” he said. “That’s why it’s got such broad opposition: NIMBYism is the most powerful force sometimes in American politics and nobody wants a detention center next to their home, their business or their school.”

A political and legal fight

After learning that ICE planned to take over a vacant warehouse within its city limits, the Kansas City Council in January swiftly approved a five-year ban on nonmunicipal detention facilities.

Kansas City Council member Andrea Bough, who is also a private development attorney, said the move was both political and legal: The city wanted to send a clear signal opposing ICE facilities, but it also wants to exert its local authority over planning and zoning.

She acknowledged the legal hurdle posed by the supremacy clause, but said there was enough ambiguity over the city’s ability to regulate land use that it may take the issue to the courts.

“Some would say local building codes and zoning regulations do not apply to the federal government,” she said. “That’s something I think we would probably in this situation be willing to fight until we had clear guidance on that.”

Following weeks of pressure, the Kansas City firm that owns the 920,000-square-foot warehouse announced Thursday it was no longer “actively engaged with the U.S. Government or any other prospective purchaser,” the Kansas City Star reported.

Jackson County, which includes portions of Kansas City and the potential detention facility, is considering a similar ban. And across the state line, the Unified Government of Wyandotte County and Kansas City, Kansas, is considering a similar two-year moratorium.

But there are clear limitations on cities’ ability to stop federal projects, said Nestor Davidson, a professor who teaches land use and local government law at Harvard University’s Graduate School of Design.

“The federal government can assert immunity from certain state and local laws, including zoning, but it’s complicated, and there are nuances,” he said.

Still, Davidson said some case law has shown cities may have stronger legal footing for zoning rules that are broad and not directly targeted at specific federal government projects.

“I expect to see litigation,” he said. “I think you’re going to see these conversations play out as land use fights often do: both in a legal venue and in a political venue.”

Governments pressured to act

Kansas City’s moratorium has sparked interest among local activists who have pressured elected officials in other cities across the country to act. But many local officials are adamant that federal law ties their hands.

In a legal opinion provided to the Orlando City Council in Florida, City Attorney Mayanne Downs rejected “suggestions of actions we can supposedly take,” including moratoriums or using zoning ordinances to block ICE detention centers.

“However well motivated these suggestions are, the law is very clear: ICE, as an agency of our federal government, ICE is immune from any local regulation that interferes in any way with its federal mandate,” Downs wrote to the mayor and city commissioners.

ICE is reportedly considering a new $100 million processing center in southeast Orlando.

The county commission in Orange County, which includes Orlando, discussed the issue last week after receiving similar legal advice. County Commissioner Nicole Wilson said the board is even more constrained because of a recent Florida law limiting certain local governments’ ability to regulate development through 2027.

After being advised against passing a moratorium, the board agreed with Wilson’s follow-up suggestion to draft a resolution expressing its opposition. That will be considered at a future meeting.

“It doesn’t sound like it has the teeth that a moratorium would have, but it essentially gives an awareness that we’ve established a position in opposition to this type of facility in Orange County,” Wilson told Stateline.

An attorney by trade, Wilson said the case law regarding federal projects largely centers on disputes about post offices, which she said is not an appropriate comparison to the massive detention centers currently contemplated.

“A post office has the same water consumption and sewage as probably a lot of other uses,” she said. “If you take a warehouse that was designed for 25,000 widgets and put 15,000 humans in it, you’ve got a very different set of local needs and services that are being used and being taxed and being burdened.”

Working with the feds

Communities have often opposed various other federal projects, such as federal courthouses. But the federal government generally takes the time to listen to local concerns and communicate building plans with communities, said Jason Klumb, a former regional administrator with the U.S. General Services Administration, which manages the federal government’s real estate.

“Generally, GSA has had kind of a good neighbor approach, understanding that they have requirements for federal facilities, and some of those facilities may not always be popular,” said Klumb, an Obama appointee.

But the federal government has not been shy about exerting its constitutional authority.

For example, late last month, GSA announced it would build a new $239 million federal courthouse in downtown Chattanooga, Tennessee, despite bipartisan lobbying from city and federal officials for a different site.

“The feds get what the feds want, ultimately,” Klumb said.

In a statement, a GSA spokesperson declined to clarify the agency’s current role in acquiring ICE detention facilities. The statement said the agency was “following all lease procurement procedures in accordance with all applicable laws and regulations.”

Communities have largely been left out of the administration’s immigration decision-making process.

“Most of the information we have received on this facility has been through news leaks and the government has not reached out to us yet,” said Paul Micali, the town manager of Merrimack, New Hampshire.

Through an open records request, the ACLU of New Hampshire confirmed that ICE was planning to convert a 43-acre warehouse property in the town of about 28,200.

The federal plans were obtained from the state’s historic preservation office, which came under fire for not informing Republican Gov. Kelly Ayotte of ICE’s proposal. That agency’s top official resigned last week after pressure from Ayotte.

Ayotte’s office did not respond to a request for comment. On Thursday, her office released documents detailing how the federal government’s$158 million plan to retrofit the property would create hundreds of long-term jobs for the region.

Testifying before Congress Thursday, an ICE official said the feds will not cancel the project over local concerns.

Micali said the vacant warehouse currently provides about $529,000 in annual property taxes — a substantial sum given the town’s property tax base of about $20 million.

In a letter to Noem, the Town Council said converting the property to a tax-free federal facility would result in higher local taxes for residents. Merrimack is also concerned about potential demands for water, fire and other city services, Micali said, but can’t even begin to assess needs without more details from the feds.

He’s speaking with lawyers about what options, if any, the town may have to assert local zoning power.

“We’re looking at every possibility,” he said.

Stateline reporter Kevin Hardy can be reached at khardy@stateline.org.

©2026 States Newsroom. Visit at stateline.org. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency, LLC.

Made in St. Paul: Community-made solidarity posters, at Morgan Hiscocks’ Lunalux letterpress studio

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Sure, lots of people have laser printers hooked up to their computers. But vanishingly few have the equipment and technical know-how for traditional letterpress printing, in which individual letters on wood or metal ‘type’ blocks are arranged into words, inked up and physically pressed onto paper.

At her St. Paul studio Lunalux, though, Morgan Hiscocks does.

So as federal immigration enforcement activity — and the violence of agents’ tactics — ramped up in the Twin Cities earlier this year, Hiscocks said, she quickly realized the role she could play. She began regularly inviting community members into the studio to typeset posters, which she helped print in larger quantities to distribute in exchange for donations to mutual aid efforts.

Posters printed at St. Paul letterpress studio Lunalux hang on the walls of the studio in the Midway Triangle Building, in the Creative Enterprise Zone, on Feb. 12, 2026. In recent months, owner Morgan Hiscocks has invited community members to create protest posters in the studio. (Jared Kaufman / Pioneer Press)

So far, Hiscocks said, the poster project has resulted in more than $3,000 in contributions to grocery funds, rent relief and other direct-support fundraisers. Designs are posted on the studio’s Instagram page, @lunalux.mn.

“The historical context of all this type is to print whatever needed to be printed — news, ideas, protest posters, warnings, announcements — in multiples,” Hiscocks said. “Loud, important messages. I don’t know how to write those things, but I know how to help those things find their way to a page.”

The original Lunalux was founded in 1993 as a storefront letterpress card and stationery shop in Loring Park, in Minneapolis. The shop’s final owner, Jenni Undis, closed the business in 2016 — but Hiscocks, who’d started as an intern in 2009 and quickly became Undis’s right-hand woman, worked with Undis to save three printing presses and an extensive collection of hard-to-find large wood type in storage until she could find a new home.

After two years of searching, in 2018, Hiscocks found a nook for rent, tucked deep inside the Midway Triangle Building. As a nostalgic nod to the history of the presses, although she’s running a personal workshop and not a client-facing business, Hiscocks kept the Lunalux name for her studio.

“I’m hanging on for dear life to this because I am so passionate about letterpress printing, the history of it, keeping things in practice,” she said. “The more that people are walking away from it, the more that these things sit stagnant, and then they literally get scrapped.”

For Hiscocks, keeping the history of analog printing alive is also the motivation behind the Minnesota Newspaper Museum, a working print shop that she, Undis and a team of volunteers run at the Minnesota State Fair every summer. Many younger fairgoers have never considered how printing worked before computers, she said, nor have the college students she’s teaching this semester at the College of Saint Benedict and Saint John’s University.

Vintage wood type blocks spelling out “ICE DROOLS” are set up to be transferred to a printing press at St. Paul letterpress studio Lunalux on Feb. 12, 2026. (Jared Kaufman / Pioneer Press)

“Their jaw’s just on the floor; it’s awesome,” she said. “Other people’s wonderment with this process is something that I’ve grown to love. … I just have this hope in the back of my mind that somehow people return to this method of printing, that this does become necessary again.”

Lunalux is not and will never be Hiscocks’ full-time job, she said, nor really even a paying job at all. That’s not to say it’s quick — letterpress printing is an “insanely time-intensive practice,” she said — but there’s just not enough money in it anymore. Nowadays in the Twin Cities, there are maybe a handful of people who make sustainable livings as independent letterpress printers, a more dire state of affairs than even 10 years ago, she said.

“As much as I’ve tried to make this my way of living, it has shown me so many times that it’s not possible, and those experiences broke my freaking heart,” she said. “It will never be a financially secure thing, so that is no longer the goal.”

Protest posters lie on a table at St. Paul letterpress studio Lunalux on Feb. 12, 2026. Printer Morgan Hiscocks has been distributing community-made posters in exchange for donations to fundraisers supporting those impacted by Immigrations and Customs Enforcement activity in the Twin Cities. (Jared Kaufman / Pioneer Press)

Instead, for Hiscocks, the fact that the process is so slow and methodical and meditative and anachronistic is itself the point; the fact that, after hours spent setting type, the only payoff is seeing the inky paper roll off the press. The Lunalux studio has no windows. Yes, there’s a clock, but often Hiscocks will gauge how much time has passed by how many movies on VHS tape she’s played on the small TV.

On a recent Thursday, she was spending one “Jurassic Park” worth of time organizing stacks of “Unchecked Force is Un-American” and “All My Friends Are Antifascists” posters. Christmas decor stays up year-round, she explained, “for morale.” Her dog, Delta Dawn, snoozed nearby.

“The process is the most romantic part, the most enjoyable part — that your hands get filthy,” she said. “It’s just filling my cup. Not with money, damn it, but it is very fulfilling.”

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