Gophers defense remains shorthanded vs. No. 2 Ohio State

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COLUMBUS, Ohio — The Gophers defense will remain shorthanded against heavy favorite and second-ranked Ohio State on Saturday.

Linebacker Maverick Baranowski is out, according to the U’s status report. The redshirt freshman sustained an apparent shoulder injury in the 49-30 loss to Purdue last week.

And for a second straight week, Cody Lindenberg is listed as questionable against the Buckeyes. He didn’t warm up nor play with that same designation against the Boilermakers last week.

On Saturday, there were early signs two hours before kickoff that Lindenberg was going to warm-up. Her had a black sleeve on his left leg.

Without Baranowski and Lindenberg last week, Minnesota was forced to turn to true freshman Matt Kingsbury. When Kingsbury struggled, the U turned to Tyler Stolsky and Ryan Selig as the Boilermakers put up over 600 total yards and 350 rushing yards.

Against the Buckeyes, Minnesota will also be without safety Aidan Gousby for a second straight game. The U’s other strong safeties, Darius Green and Coleman Bryson, struggled against Purdue last week.

The Gophers leading rusher, Darius Taylor, also remains out. With 591 yards in five total games, he hasn’t played since the Iowa win on Oct. 21.

Minnesota will run the ball with Jordan Nubin and Zach Evans. Both of those players were dinged up against Purdue, but are available at Ohio Stadium.

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Axelrod: Biden has ‘no better’ than a 50-50 shot at reelection

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Democratic strategist David Axelrod still doesn’t think the Biden camp should get too comfortable about the president’s reelection prospects.

“I think he has a 50-50 shot here, but no better than that, maybe a little worse,” Axelrod told New York Times columnist Maureen Dowd. “He thinks he can cheat nature here and it’s really risky. They’ve got a real problem if they’re counting on Trump to win it for them. I remember Hillary doing that, too.”

Axelrod recently suggested President Joe Biden should consider his reelection bid carefully, prompting ire from the president, who reportedly called the strategist a “prick.”

His unsolicited advice followed a New York Times/Sienna College poll that showed Biden trailing former president Donald Trump among voters in five key battleground states.

“I don’t care about them thinking I’m a prick — that’s fine,” Axelrod told Dowd. “I hope they don’t think the polls are wrong because they’re not.”

Despite disappointing poll results and approval ratings, and questions about the president’s age, Biden and his backers have pushed back against calls to stop at just one term in the White House and say they remain confident in his ability to win reelection.

St. Paul library book checked out more than 100 years ago finally returned

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A 1902 edition of “Famous Composers Vol. 2” by Nathan Haskell Dole last checked out in 1919 was recently returned to the St. Paul Public Library, according to a Facebook post by the library Friday, Nov. 17, 2023. (Courtesy of the St. Paul Public Library)

A library book about famous composers believed to have been checked out in 1919 was turned into the St. Paul Public Library this week.

The 1902 edition of “Famous Composers Vol. 2” by Nathan Haskell Dole was found by a person in Hennepin County who was sorting through their mother’s belongings, library officials said on their Facebook page.

St. Paul Mayor Melvin Carter said in a tongue-in-cheek post on X that the late fees would have been very hefty if the library sought them.

“At the 1919 rate of a penny per day, that would have been a $36k fine… but #SaintPaul is a #FineFreeLibrary system so no charge!” Carter tweeted.

Library officials did some sleuthing and believe that the book most likely also survived a fire that burned down most of the city’s library books in 1914, according to the post.

“John, (a web librarian at the St. Paul public library), examined the book — which bears the original Saint Paul Public Library stamp and back pocket card — and discovered several markings that may tell us more about this book’s journey,” the library wrote on its Facebook page:

When the book was further examined, the check-out slip in the back cover showed it was last checked out in 1919. The slip showed the book was checked out in 1914 when the city’s library was housed in Market Hall. At the time, the Central Library was still being built. When Market Hall burned down in 1915, two-thirds of the library’s collection was lost. The other one-third was checked out, leading library staff to believe that the book had been checked out to a patron during the blaze.

“If this book had been on the shelves, it probably would have burned,” the library wrote on its Facebook page. The book was most likely added back to the collection in 1916 before the new library building opened the following year.

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Ravens linebacker Tyus Bowser launches nonprofit to help disadvantaged youth in Baltimore City

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One night after the Ravens beat their division rival Cincinnati Bengals, autographed helmets and jerseys of many of the team’s top players were available in a raffle at the top floor of the Hyatt Regency in the Inner Harbor.

Those who gathered bought raffle tickets, looked out over the Inner Harbor and mingled with Ravens linebacker Tyus Bowser, who recently launched an eponymous nonprofit aimed to help disadvantaged youth in Baltimore City.

The Tyus Bowser Foundation expects to host an event for teachers in early 2024, but first, the nonprofit kicked off with an event to raise money. The foundation hopes to:

Renovate unused classrooms in Baltimore middle schools into spaces that promote science, technology, engineering, mathematics and art.
Fund school supplies for teachers, rather than teachers spending their money.
Offer professional advice to high school students.

Bowser waited until he’d established himself in the NFL and received a second contract, he said, before launching the nonprofit. He was inspired in part by former Ravens teammate Calais Campbell, who was named Walter Payton Man of the Year in 2019.

“Just being able to impact kids, impact this community, especially being here for the last six years, I definitely want to give back just how they’ve been giving me,” Bowser told the Baltimore Sun.

The Texas native, who has not played this season due to injury, is in his seventh year with the Ravens. He wanted to start the nonprofit in Baltimore because “this is home to me,” he said.

Bowser has spent time helping his cousin, a teacher in Houston, prepare her classroom for the school year and noticed how much of their own money teachers spend on school supplies.

“When I say beyond proud, it’s an understatement,” said Bryana Jackson, his cousin, who attended the launch Friday in Baltimore. “I would fly in a New York minute just to come up here and help him. The young man that he has become, I’m extremely proud.”

Attendees at Friday’s “friends and family” kickoff event bought raffle tickets to win autographed merchandise from many Ravens: Lamar Jackson, Odell Beckham Jr., Zay Flowers, Gus Edwards, Mark Andrews, Roquan Smith, Patrick Queen, Kyle Hamilton, Geno Stone and Justin Tucker.

A signed baseball from Orioles All-Star Austin Hays, who sponsored a $20,000 scholarship for students in need earlier last year, was also a prize.

Funds raised from Friday will go toward a “teacher scramble,” allowing teachers to shop for their classrooms.

“Teachers go above and beyond for those kids and I just want to be that help for them so they don’t have to go out of pocket,” Bowser said.

Drafted by Baltimore in 2017, the 28-year-old Bowser started all 17 Ravens games in 2021 and notched seven sacks. He’s been sidelined by a knee injury, however, and has not played this season.

He told The Sun Friday night it’s been “a process,” but that he’s starting to see progress and hopes to return soon.

“My mindset is always to come back this year,” Bowser said.

“I don’t want to ever let any games go. But I’m also looking out for myself, just making sure I’m at my best. Because when I get on the field I make sure that I pour my heart out for my team, because I always put the team first before me.”

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