Como Zoo’s 25-year-old zebra, Ulysses, has died, officials said

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Como Zoo officials said Monday they were saddened to report that Ulysses, a 25-year-old plains zebra, had died overnight.

The zebra also known as “Uly” was born on April 13, 2000 at the Cleveland Metroparks Zoo and came to Como Zoo in January 2002. Zoo officials said during his 23 years at the zoo he “became one of the most familiar and recognizable residents at Como. If you’ve visited in the last 20 years, chances are you’ve met Ulysses. He roamed between both African Hoofstock habitats and made friends with whatever species he was living with at the time, including giraffe, tortoise and ostrich. Keepers often joked that he was the ‘surrogate weird uncle’ to many giraffe calves through the years.”

He weighed around 550 pounds, enjoyed carrots and yam, and loved to nap in the sunshine. He sired 10 offspring during his lifetime, continuing his legacy beyond Como. Uly was the second oldest male plains zebra in the Association of Zoos and Aquariums population, according to Como Zoo.

Zoo officials said they are waiting to learn if there is more information about the cause of his death but that right now the focus remains on supporting one another and the animals at the zoo.

“Ulysses was part of Como for more than two decades, and his calm nature and steady presence made him a favorite among visitors and staff alike. He will be greatly missed,” zoo officials posted on the zoo website.

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Veterans Day 2025: Twin Cities events, free meals and more

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North St. Paul and White Bear Lake are among the communities hosting Veterans Day commemorations Tuesday.

The North St. Paul Veterans Park, located at 2480 Margaret St. in North St. Paul, is hosting its annual Veterans Day Commemoration at 11:00 a.m.

Attendees are encouraged to gather at 10:45 a.m. The event includes the Veterans Park Committee, American Legion Post 39 Flag Detail and the VFW Post 1350 Rifle Detail, the North St. Paul High School 11th Avenue Singers and more.

Post 39 also is serving a free chipped beef on toast lunch for veterans from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at 2678 Seventh Ave. E. in North St. Paul.

White Bear Lake VFW Post 1782 is celebrating Veterans Day beginning with a morning ceremony at Veterans Memorial Park followed by a lunch at the VFW next door and a luminary event later in the day.

The 10:30 a.m. ceremony kicks off at the park located at 4520 Highway 61 in White Bear Lake followed by lunch at the post (near the park) and a 4 p.m. luminary event at the Veterans Memorial Park.

VFW Post 1782 is also holding an event at 7 p.m. Friday: a slide show and book signing on PTSD and suicide prevention by the co-founders of the nonprofit Veterans Empowered Inc. at Boatworks Commons,4495 Lake Street South in White Bear Lake.

Other area events:

Minneapolis: Veterans for Peace Twin Cities (Chapter 27) will commemorate Armistice Day at Victory Memorial at 45th Avenue North and Victory Memorial Drive in Robbinsdale. The event will include poetry and song by Strong Buffalo with Scottie Clifford & Wemby June. A walk to the Memorial begins at 9:30 a.m. from Dowling Avenue and Victory Memorial Drive and bells will be rung at 11 a.m. to remember all victims of war.

Mankato: The official state Veterans Day event by the Minnesota Department of Veterans Affairs will be held at the Mankato Armory and Minnesota National Guard on Tuesday beginning at 10 a.m. It can be viewed live at vimeo.com/event/5494772.

Spring Park: A Veterans Day Finale to a two-month fundraising campaign to honor the “courage, sacrifice and resilience” of Minnesota military personnel will be held at Back Channel Brewing Co. in Spring Park on Lake Minnetonka. Operation Resilience 2025 began 9/11 and ends 11/11. The campaign “invites Minnesotans to stand with those who have served by helping remove barriers to mental health care for veterans, service members and their spouses.” Funds raised will support free trauma therapy. The campaign ends with live music, raffle prizes and more. Doors open at 5 p.m. Donate or learn more at veteranresilienceproject.org.

Appreciation for veterans

If you served — or are serving — in the armed forces, Leo’s Grill & Malt Shop in downtown Stillwater will serve you a free meal on Veterans Day. Meals will be available between 11 a.m. and 8 p.m.

The restaurant is planning to serve more than 250 veterans this year, said Cory Buettner, the restaurant’s owner. No proof of service is necessary, and veterans may choose from the entire menu, Buettner said.

This is the 18th year that Buettner has offered the meals to veterans. Leo’s is named for Buettner’s father, who served in the Army during World War II. Buettner’s son, Leo Blue Buettner, served in the U.S. Marine Corps.

Other free Veterans Day meals and offers:

American Legion Post 39 in North St. Paul is offering veterans free chipped beef on toast lunch with a fruit cup from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.
Great Clips salons are honoring veterans and active military service members by offering free haircuts.
The Museum of Illusions at the Mall of America is offering free admission to U.S. veterans and active military service members from Tuesday, Nov. 11 through Tuesday, Nov. 17.  For more information visit moimallofamerica.com.
Starbucks is offering veterans, military service members and military spouses a free 12 ounce brewed hot or iced coffee.
Hy-Vee stores will offer a free buffet-style breakfast to veterans and active-duty military members from 6 to 10 a.m. and 15 percent off groceries at Hy-Vee, Fast and Fresh and Dollar Fresh Market locations.
Participating Chili’s Grill & Bar locations are providing free meals to all veterans & active military members.
Participating White Castle locations will offer a free combo meal or breakfast combo meal to veterans and active-duty service members.
Dunkin Donuts will be giving away a free donut to veterans and active-duty military members.

Veterans Day began as Armistice Day to celebrate the agreement between the Allied nations and Germany to cease all fighting during World War I that took effect at 11 a.m. on Nov. 11, 1918. The U.S. marked its first Armistice Day under President Woodrow Wilson in 1919. Congress made Nov. 11 an official federal holiday in 1938.

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Trump pardons man who took brief detour as he ran up and down Wyoming’s Grand Teton in record time

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By MEAD GRUVER, Associated Press

FORT COLLINS, Colo. (AP) — President Donald Trump on Monday pardoned a trail runner who briefly took a prohibited trail on his way to a record time up and down the tallest peak in the Teton Range of western Wyoming.

The pardon for Michelino Sunseri, unlike recent pardons of Trump allies, appeared apolitical.

Sunseri, 33, ran up and down Grand Teton, the 13,775-foot centerpiece of the iconic Teton Range, in 2 hours, 50 minutes, 50 seconds in 2024.

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It was an epic feat: The run covered 13.3 miles, gaining 7,000 feet in elevation, then back down again in western Wyoming’s Grand Teton National Park.

But on the way down, Sunseri left a switchback to avoid casual hikers. Going off-trail in a national park is considered a no-no because it can cause erosion, especially when a shortcut over time becomes a popular way to go.

Sunseri, who was open about taking the two-minute detour, got a misdemeanor conviction from a judge in September.

Before the pardon, prosecutors agreed to seek dismissal if Sunseri completed 60 hours of community service and a course on wilderness stewardship, according to Sunseri’s attorneys.

The judge expressed concern about that change, however, and set another hearing in the case. The pardon now renders any deal moot.

Democrats and Republicans alike have expressed concern about “overcriminalization” of minor offenses in national parks, said Sunseri’s attorney, Ed Bushnell.

“I do believe, had Democrats been in power, we would’ve been seeing a similar result,” Bushnell said of the pardon. “It’s a good result.”

Sunseri was “very pleased” to get the pardon, Bushnell said.

The White House declined to comment on the pardon on the record.

Government shutdown will have lasting effects on National Guard, advocates say

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By KONSTANTIN TOROPIN, Associated Press

WASHINGTON (AP) — As the government shutdown stretches on, military advocates are warning of long-lasting effects to National Guard troops and their readiness, while the military services are grappling with an inability to fully discharge active duty service members.

“The shutdown has been uniquely hard on the 433,000 Army and Air National Guardsmen,” Francis McGinn, president of the National Guard Association, told reporters Monday.

The Trump administration has made a public effort of blunting the impact on active duty service members by moving money around to ensure they have received two paychecks since the shutdown began on Oct. 1. But McGinn said more than 30,000 technicians — full-time civilian government employees who also serve in uniform — have not been paid since the end of September.

These technicians, National Guard members who typically carry out training for their units or maintain equipment, “are critical to our day-to-day operations and generating readiness,” McGinn said.

Adding to the pressures, the Trump administration has sent National Guard troops to patrol the streets of several major U.S. cities, including more than 2,300 deployed to Washington, D.C.

The “damage” also goes beyond paychecks and into more than a month of canceled school, training and maintenance opportunities that troops will struggle to make up when the government reopens, said John Hashem, executive director of Reserve Organization of America, an advocacy group for Guard and Reserve troops.

“It’s not just, ‘We’ll pick it up next month,’ it’s that we are in turmoil now — I just can’t throw you back into school if I had to take you out of it. I just can’t get you ready for the next exercise because now, probably, the exercise has been changed entirely,” Hashem said.

McGinn added that “there’s just thousands and thousands of hours” of vehicle and aircraft maintenance that National Guard troops are going to have to catch up on.

Hashem and McGinn said they also worry about the impact the shutdown will have on morale and retention. McGinn said the technicians especially feel “completely demoralized” and “betrayed by the government.”

At the same time, the military is facing a growing number of active duty troops who need to be discharged but no one to generate the formal documents needed to certify the end of their service.

The Air Force is “legally prohibited from obligating the government for costs associated with some voluntary and administrative separations happening in November,” a spokesperson said in a statement.

A Navy official confirmed that a form with details about a person’s service, including length, job specialties and awards earned, can’t be finalized and final pay can’t be released.

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The form is crucial in the process because it signifies the formal end of service and attests to the kind of discharge a service member received — a key factor in determining eligibility for benefits like the GI Bill or Department of Veterans Affairs disability pay.

Both the Navy and Air Force said they were allowing affected service members to opt in to a temporary extension of their service to wait out the shutdown and ensure they don’t experience gaps in pay or benefits.

An Army official said “soldiers in their separation window within 45 days will be affected by the lapse in appropriations and the government shutdown” but wouldn’t confirm whether the service was offering voluntary or involuntary extensions.

The officials from the three branches spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to speak publicly. The Marine Corps did not respond to questions on effects from the shutdown, citing the government closure.

Burt Field, head of the Air & Space Forces Association, called for legislation to prevent future shutdowns from affecting military pay. After the government reopens, Congress should “pass a bill that doesn’t allow this to happen again for our military service members, civilians and Americans,” he told reporters Monday.