Loons midfielder Dominik Fitz is off to another slow start

posted in: All news | 0

After joining Minnesota United late last summer, higher-priced signing Dominik Fitz barely played during the Loons’ final stretch of the regular season and in the club’s deeper run in the MLS Cup Playoffs. And the 2026 preseason is off to an even slow start for the Austrian attacking midfielder.

Fitz has been sidelined with an undisclosed “medical condition,” according to the club, and he will not participate in any of the three preseason games at the Coachella Valley Invitational. Instead of training with the first team in Indio, Calif., Fitz has remained in Minnesota to train with the club’s staff and with its developmental tournament, MNUFC2, according to head coach Cam Knowles on Tuesday.

“We are hopeful. It’s sounding good,” Knowles said. “It looks like he should be back in full training with us next week.”

That late-stage reintroduction to practice, however, will put Fitz’s involvement in MNUFC’s season opener in doubt. The Loons kickoff the new campaign Feb. 21 at Austin FC, with the home opener Feb. 28 vs. FC Cincinnati at Allianz Field.

Fitz joined MNUFC from Austria Wien in the Austrian Bundesliga in September for a guaranteed compensation of $853,000, per the MLS Players’ Association. But the attacker did not register a goal nor assist in seven total appearances with Minnesota in 2025.

Fitz did not ingratiate himself to former head coach Eric Ramsay, and Fitz did not play in any of the three first-round playoff matches against Seattle Sounders. He subbed on for seven minutes late in the 1-0 loss to San Diego FC in the Western Conference semifinals in November.

Right back?

The Loons have a glaring roster need at right back.

After Ramsay primarily used Bongi Hlongwane in that role last season, Knowles has returned the South African into attacking positions, leaving a void on the right side of defense.

In the 3-0 win over Sporting Kansas City last Saturday, the Loons moved center back Jefferson Diaz out wide to right back. “I thought he did well the other day,” Knowles said.

On Wednesday against D.C. United, Knowles said he planned to use center back/midfielder Carlos Harvey in that spot. Against Charlotte, the Loons will probably put backup right back DJ Taylor in that spot. Taylor subbed in for Diaz against Sporting last weekend.

“We are trying to see first of all what we got here and see if we need to make any changes in that or if we need to sort of change the system a little bit,” Knowles said.

Those three options can be serviceable, but won’t raise the club’s ceiling at the position over the long-term.

Briefly

Loons attacker Tomas Chancalay and defender Jefferson Diaz are currently away from the team sorting out their U.S. Green Cards. Their involvement vs. Charlotte is questionable. … MNUFC attackers James Rodriguez, Mauricio Gonzales and Marcus Caldeira are still pursuing work visas. … Ramsay remains winless in leading West Bromwich Albion after a 0-0 draw with Birmingham on Tuesday. Ramsay’s new side is 0-3-3 and sit only two points above the relegation zone in England’s second division. West Brom have managed only three goals and have a minus-9 goal differential.

Letters from a WWII soldier to his sweetheart offer an intimate picture of love during wartime

posted in: All news | 0

By TRAVIS LOLLER

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) — Highlights from a trove of more than 200 love letters that tell the story of a couple’s courtship and marriage during World War II are now on display digitally through the Nashville Public Library, offering an intimate picture of love during wartime.

In this digital scan of an undated photo provided by The Nashville Public Library, William Raymond Whittaker, left, and his wife Jane Dean Whittaker stand for a photo in Nashville, Tenn. (The Nashville Public Library via AP)

The letters by William Raymond Whittaker and Jane Dean were found in a Nashville home that had belonged to Jane and her siblings. They were donated in 2016 to the Metro Nashville Archives.

Whittaker, who went by Ray, was from New Rochelle, New York. He moved to the Tennessee capital to attend the historically Black Meharry Medical College, according to the library’s metropolitan archivist, Kelley Sirko. That’s where he met and dated Jane, another student at the college.

The pair lost touch when Ray left Nashville. In the summer of 1942 he was drafted into the Army. Stationed at Fort Huachuca in Arizona, he decided to reestablish contact with Jane, who was then working as a medical lab technician at Vanderbilt University.

A ‘pleasant and sad surprise’

The library doesn’t have Ray’s first letter to Jane, but it does have her reply. She greets him somewhat formally as “Dear Wm R.”

“It sure was a pleasant and sad surprise to hear from you,” she writes on July 30, 1942. “Pleasant because you will always hold a place in my heart and its nice to know you think of me once in a while. Sad because you are in the armed forces — maybe I shouldn’t say that but war is so uncertain, however I’m proud to know that you are doing your bit for your country.”

Jane then goes on to list — perhaps as a hint? — a string of mutual acquaintances who have gotten married recently, noting those who have had children or are rumored to be having children. She signs off, “Write, wire or call me real soon — Lovingly Jane.”

A story told in letters

“You can’t help but smile when you read through these letters,” Sirko said. “You really can’t. And this was just such an intimate look at two regular people during a really complicated time in our history.”

Sirko said Nashville archivists have not been able to locate any living relatives of Ray and Jane, so most of what they know about them is from the letters. The couple did not have any children, according to an obituary for Ray, who died in Nashville in 1989.

The donation also included a few photographs and Ray’s patch from the historically Black fraternity Alpha Phi Alpha.

Beyond a love story, the collection gives “this in-the-moment perspective of … what it’s like just navigating certain racial issues, certain gender issues, their work, the life of a soldier, all of these things,” Sirko said. That’s why the archivists wanted to make it more accessible to the public.

Pictures of William Raymond Whittaker and his wife, Jane Dean Whittaker, are on top of letters the two of them wrote to each other while he was serving in the military, photographed Monday, Feb. 9, 2026, in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Kristin M. Hall)

Love and doubts

Just two months after the first letters, the romance has heated up. Ray has been assigned to Fort McClellan in Alabama, where he will help organize the reactivated — and segregated — 92nd Infantry Division, which went on to see combat in Europe.

In an undated letter from September 1942, he tells Jane, “I have something very important to tell you when I do see you and you will be surprise to know as to what it is.

“I might even ask you to marry me. One never knows.”

He teases her by saying that if he goes to officer training school, he will be able to “draw down a fat juicey salary” — about $280 a month if he is married and $175 if single.

“Really I can’t leave my excess amount of money to the government and must have someone to help me spend it,” he writes.

At first Jane is skeptical. “What makes you think you still love me?” she asks on Sept. 23. “Is it that you are lonesome and a long way from home. I’m sure I want you to love me but not under those conditions.”

A Sept. 24 letter from Ray is more serious. “Events are changing so rapidly these days that one can’t really plan for the future. But I am going to make a decisive decision in matters of most importances,” he writes.

Ray says that he had thought he and Jane could not be together because they lived so far apart. He says he dated other women but “I didn’t find the companionship and love that I so dearly wanted to find. All I ran into was trouble and more trouble.”

A letter from a soldier assigned to the 92nd Infantry Division, an all-Black military unit during World War II, to his wife in Nashville is seen Monday, Feb. 9, 2026 in Nashville, Tenn. (AP Photo/Kristin M. Hall)

A ‘darling husband’

Soon Ray wins her over, and they are married on Nov. 7 in Birmingham.

Related Articles


US Energy Secretary Chris Wright visits Venezuela to assess oil industry overhaul


Six months after explosion, Pennsylvania mill town sees hope but a history of disappointment


Alex Murdaugh continues to insist he didn’t kill wife and son as he gets another day in court


Several ICE agents were arrested in recent months, showing risk of misconduct


US stocks wobble after feeling both the upside and downside of a strong jobs report

In a letter from Nov. 9, Jane addresses Ray as “my darling husband.” She is rapturous about the marriage but sad that the couple has to remain apart for now. She has already returned to her job and family in Nashville while he has returned to the Army base.

“It’s a wonderful thing to have such and sweet and lovely husband. Darling you’ll never know how much I love you. The only regret is that we didn’t marry years ago… As it is now things are so uncertain and we are not together but such a few happy hours. But maybe this old war will soon be over and we can be together for always.”

She concludes, “Darling be sweet and write to me soon. I want a letter from my husband. Remember I’ll always love you. Always — from Your Wife”

New revelations from Epstein files take a toll across Europe

posted in: All news | 0

By The Associated Press

GENEVA (AP) — The fallout from the Jeffrey Epstein saga is rippling through Europe.

Related Articles


Gisèle Pelicot publicly recounts harrowing discovery of her husband’s rape crimes


Study finds climate change set the stage for devastating wildfires in Argentina and Chile


US Energy Secretary Chris Wright visits Venezuela to assess oil industry overhaul


Russia says it will stick to New START’s nuclear arms limits as long as the US does


Today in History: February 11, Margaret Thatcher elected to Britain’s opposition party

Politicians, diplomats, officials and royals have seen reputations tarnished, investigations launched and jobs lost after a trove of more than 3 million pages of Epstein-related documents released by the U.S. Justice Department revealed their ties to the American financier and convicted sex offender who died behind bars in 2019.

Apart from the former Prince Andrew, none of them face claims of sexual wrongdoing. They have been toppled for maintaining friendly relationships with Epstein after he became a convicted sex offender.

Some experts note the reckoning in Europe’s parliamentary democracies has been swifter and more severe — for now — than in the United States, where Epstein built his empire and hobnobbed with many American elites.

Here’s a look at some of those in the Old World caught up in the new furor.

U.K. royal family

The former Prince Andrew, one of King Charles III’s two brothers, is one of the most prominent names linked to the Epstein underworld involving the recruitment of underage girls for sex.

He has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing, but the scandalous headlines forced the king last year to strip Andrew of his royal titles, including that of prince. He is now known as Andrew Mountbatten-Windsor.

The recent document dump exposed the depth of ties between Mountbatten-Windsor and Epstein, revealing more unsavory details that have jolted the royal family, including an allegation that the former prince sent trade reports to Epstein in 2010.

Mountbatten-Windsor has been forced to move out of the royal estate that he occupied for more than two decades. Buckingham Palace says that the king is ready to support police in the event of an inquiry into whether Mountbatten-Windsor gave confidential information to Epstein.

British Ambassador to the United States, Peter Mandelson speaks during the rededication ceremony of the George Washington Statue in the National Gallery in London, Wednesday, June 18, 2025. (AP Photo/Kirsty Wigglesworth)

British politics

The U.K. government has been shaken by new revelations about Peter Mandelson, a longtime Labour party stalwart who Prime Minister Keir Starmer brought out of the political wilderness as U.K. ambassador in Washington.

Mandelson was stripped of that plum post in September, after Epstein emails showed that they had had closer ties than the ambassador had initially acknowledged.

While Starmer himself isn’t implicated in the files, his position has come under threat over appointing Mandelson. He has faced calls from his opponents and from within his own Labour party to resign — which he has so far refused.

Mandelson is now facing a criminal investigation, after the new files suggested that he may have shared market-sensitive information with Epstein a decade and a half ago.

FILE -Norway’s Crown Prince Haakon, Crown Princess Mette-Marit and Princess Ingrid Alexandra applaud during the Nobel Peace Prize award ceremony, in Oslo, Norway, Dec. 10, 2025. (Ole Berg-Rusten/NTB Scanpix, Pool via AP), File)

Norway’s crown princess

The new documents showed, among other things, that Norwegian Crown Princess Mette-Marit, the 52-year-old wife of Crown Prince Haakon, borrowed an Epstein-owned property in Palm Beach, Florida, for several days in 2013.

And in an email exchange between Epstein and Mette-Marit in 2012, he noted how he was in Paris “on my wife hunt,” but “i prefer Scandinavians.”

She replied that the French capital was “good for adultery,” but “Scandis” were “better wife material.”

Mette-Marit apologized this month for “the situation I have put the royal family in,” and said: “Some of the content of the messages between Epstein and me does not represent the person I want to be.”

FILE -Council of Europe Secretary-General Thorbjorn Jagland speaks at the Russian International Affairs Council in Moscow on March 23, 2012. (AP Photo/Mikhail Metzel, File)

Norway ex-prime minister

On Wednesday, the Council of Europe said that it was honoring a request from Norwegian authorities to waive the immunity from legal processes that its former secretary-general and ex-Prime Minister Thorbjørn Jagland, had enjoyed.

The council, a human rights body based in Strasbourg, France, said that such immunity aims “to safeguard the independent exercise of official functions,” and wasn’t intended for “personal benefit.”

Based on revelations in the Epstein files, Norwegian authorities opened an investigation into “aggravated corruption” involving Jagland, who is also a former chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee.

Emails indicate that Jagland made plans to visit Epstein’s island with his family in 2014.

FILE – Norway’s Ambassador to the United Nations Mona Juul address a U.N. Security Council meeting on the Russian invasion of Ukraine, Friday Feb. 25, 2022 at U.N. headquarters. (AP Photo/John Minchillo, File)

Norwegian former ambassador

Mona Juul, Norway’s ex-ambassador to Jordan, who was involved in Israeli-Palestinian peace efforts in the 1990s, resigned over the weekend, after reports said that Epstein left $10 million to Juul’s children in a will drawn up shortly before he died.

Foreign Minister Espen Barth Eide said that a ministry investigation into her knowledge of and contact with Epstein will continue, and Juul will continue discussions with Norwegian officials to clarify the situation.

French ex-culture minister

Jack Lang, 86, stepped down as head of the Arab World Institute in Paris over alleged past financial links to Epstein that prompted a tax investigation.

Lang was summoned to appear Sunday at the French Foreign Ministry, which oversees the institute, but submitted his resignation.

The former culture minister under President Francois Mitterrand is the highest-profile figure in France impacted by the U.S. Justice Department’s release of files on Jan. 30.

Slovakia ex-foreign minister

Prime Minister Robert Fico’s national security adviser, Miroslav Lajčák, resigned over past communications with Epstein — including text messages in which they discussed “gorgeous” girls.

“When I’m reading the messages today, I feel like an idiot,” Lajčák told Slovak public radio.

Lajčák, a former foreign minister and former president of the U.N. General Assembly, has denied any wrongdoing. He said that he considered Epstein a valuable contact who was accepted by the rich and powerful in the U.S.

“Those messages are nothing more than stupid male egos in action,” Lajčák said. “Nothing more than words ever came of it.”

Board vacancy, superintendent search: Forest Lake School Board, deadlocked 3-3, faces major issues

posted in: All news | 0

It’s been 3½ months since Luke Hagglund resigned from the Forest Lake Area School Board, leaving it deadlocked 3-3.

Despite multiple attempts to appoint a new member, the remaining six board members have not been able to come to consensus.

How long can the school board go without appointing a seventh member?

According to state statute, any vacancy on the board “must be filled by board appointment at a regular or special meeting,” but the statute does not provide a timetable regarding when that appointment must be made. Hagglund’s term is set to expire at the end of this year.

“Generally speaking, if there’s less than two years left in the term, then an appointment can be made until the end of that term,” said Terry Morrow, general counsel for the Minnesota School Boards Association. “If there’s more than two years left in the term, then there has to be a special election for that position.”

At the board’s last meeting, on Jan. 22, the board again failed to reach a majority on three candidates — Andi Courneya, Princesa VanBuren Hansen and Paul Pease — who had each applied to fill the vacant school board seat.

School Board Chairman Curt Rebelein said he doesn’t know when or how the issue will be resolved.

“I wish I could answer that question because the state statute says we must appoint somebody,” he said. “But the state statute does not give us a timetable for a ‘must appoint.’”

Previous efforts

When Hagglund resigned on Oct. 23, Rebelein planned for the board to vote on a resolution appointing Forest Lake resident Scot Doboszenski to fill the remainder of Hagglund’s term. Hagglund told the Pioneer Press that he planned to vote on Doboszenski’s appointment himself. An attorney for Education Minnesota, however, sent a letter to Rebelein stating that the vote would be illegal. Doboszenski was not appointed.

The board voted to go out for applications for the vacant seat, and 11 people applied before the Nov. 20 deadline. The board interviewed seven candidates on Dec. 3, and five finalists were named.

But board members were unable to reach consensus during a nearly eight-hour meeting the following night. The lack of a majority vote in favor of any of the candidates meant that all of the agenda items that followed were not resolved either.

The roadblock resulted from a “special order” resolution, crafted by Rebelein, that effectively required the vacancy to be resolved before any other business could be conducted.

That meant bills were not paid, the levy was not certified, and the audit was not accepted.

The next week, the board conducted its unresolved business and agreed to proceed with three finalists: Courneya, Hansen and Pease. Board members also decided to delay the appointment until January, but neither of the three finalists received a majority vote on Jan. 22.

“Where that leaves us, I really don’t know,” Rebelein said. “I do know we still have an obligation, per statute, to appoint somebody, but without a timetable in the statute, I don’t know if there’s an increased legal risk for not doing it.”

‘Start all over’

The board is deadlocked 3-3 with Rebelein and board members Tessa Antonsen and Mark Kasel, all endorsed by the Minnesota Parents Alliance, forming one voting bloc. The MPA is a conservative group formed in 2022 to push back against K-12 initiatives that promote racial equity and support for LGBTQ students.

Board members Jill Christenson, Julie Corcoran and Gail Theisen form the other voting bloc.

Christenson said last week that she doesn’t know how the appointment of a new school board member will be resolved. “There is just a total breakdown in trust,” she said, citing the Dec. 4 meeting, which lasted until Christenson, Corcoran and Theisen finally left, breaking quorum, at 2 a.m.

“On a board, you have to be collaborative. You have to work together, you have to compromise. You have to at least have some basic levels of trust and decency and respect,” Christenson said. “But with that meeting that went until 2 in the morning, all that is gone.”

Christenson blames Rebelein for the Dec. 4 marathon meeting and subsequent breakdown in trust.

“Actions have repercussions,” she said. “I frankly don’t know how this will be resolved. He’s the chair. The buck stops with him. He needs to figure this out.”

Related Articles


San Francisco public schoolteachers strike over wages and health benefits


In Minnesota, sending a child to school is an act of faith for immigrant families


Man wielding butcher knife at Cottage Grove Elementary charged


Kindergarten readiness varies widely by income, new data shows. Cities are stepping in to help


‘These kids are invisible’: Child abuse deaths spur clash over homeschool regulation

Superintendent Steve Massey, who announced in October that he plans to resign June 30, said he expects the board to initiate another round of applicants and “start all over again.”

“Because the statute states that they must fill the vacancy, they don’t simply declare, ‘Well, we gave it a try, and that’s as good as we can do, so we’re just going to live with the six-member board,” he said.

Massey, who has worked for the district for the past 27 years, said this is the first time he can remember a board vacancy not being filled within a few weeks of the vacancy. “In the past,” he said, “the board was able to establish a process to fill the vacancy and then proceed with filling the vacancy in a timely fashion.”

Some progress

The board has reached resolution in a few areas lately.

A disagreement over legal representation meant that two law firms used by the district for decades were excluded from a list originally proposed for legal services in 2026.

On Jan. 22, the board approved the hiring of four individual attorneys from those two firms to help handle cases related to special education: Alex Ivan of Kennedy & Graven, and Laura Tubbs Booth, Adam Frudden and Joseph Langel of Ratwik, Roszak and Maloney.

On Thursday, the board will vote on whether to hire the following attorneys and firms to provide school district legal counsel: Margaret Skelton of Ratwik, Roszak & Malony; Peter Martin and Greg Madsen of Kennedy & Graven; Beck Law Group, and Pemberton Law.

A debate over whether the Forest Lake Times or the Pioneer Press would be the district’s official newspaper of record also was resolved Jan. 22 when the board voted to approve the designation of both. The Pioneer Press will be the official school newspaper for “legal notifications concerning bids, employment matters, and anything deemed urgent by administration,” district officials said. The Forest Lake Times will be the official district newspaper for “all other matters necessitating notice.”

The board plans to undergo the Minnesota School Boards Association’s School Board Self-Evaluation, which assesses a board’s conduct and ethics, vision, structure, accountability and advocacy and communication.

“Bills are getting paid,” Rebelein said. “Routine action items are being handled. We’re still working through policies.”

Rebelein is hoping the board can move forward with another important job, making committee assignments, even if they’re still deadlocked 3-3.

“I hope that that gets settled at (Thursday’s) board meeting. I’m going to bring a proposal back to the board,” he said. “Now that I know we won’t be appointing somebody, maybe we can work through that, perhaps with some amendments and some horse trading there, to get committees assigned.”

Superintendent search

One major issue on the table is the board’s search for a new superintendent. Applications were due Dec. 3.

On Thursday night, the board will hear presentations from three search firms vying to be hired to lead the search. The firms being considered are the Minnesota School Board Association, Ray & Associates and School Exec Connect.

The board has no choice but to come to resolution regarding the hiring of a superintendent, Rebelein said.

“That one is very clear in statute that we must have a superintendent before the school year can start,” he said. “There is no wiggle room on that one, and I strongly suspect that lawsuits will be filed on Day 1 if we haven’t done that work.”

Still, he said, he has major concerns about whether that will happen.

Related Articles


Former Hudson strength and conditioning coach pleads guilty to sexually assaulting student athlete in Woodbury


‘This isn’t just about flowers’: Stillwater nonprofit shares bouquets, compassion with widows on Valentine’s Day


Man wielding butcher knife at Cottage Grove Elementary charged


Obituary: Gordie Bailey, 90, loved plants, hated buckthorn


Fare For All, an affordable pop-up grocery store, ending service to metro

“Being how we split on who we can appoint as a board member, I don’t know how we’re going to come to a consensus on who we hire as a superintendent,” he said. “But, at the end of the day, all six of us want what’s best for the schools and what’s best for the district. I still honestly believe that.”

Christenson said she is worried about who would want the superintendent position given the board’s dysfunction. She said she has the same concerns about people interested in filling the board vacancy.

“I mean, literally, who wants to apply to be on the board?” she said. “Frankly, I think that is sort of (their) point. I mean, if you just make this ugly, if it’s difficult, if it’s time consuming, if it’s frustrating, you’re really only going to get people on the very edges who want to do it.”