Morning Report pets featured in July: 19 cats, 7 dogs, 1 rabbit.

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In our Morning Report newsletter in August, we featured 19 cats, seven dogs and one rabbit. We also remembered four pets who have passed away.

“Thanks for sharing all of the pet pictures!” a contributor wrote. “They’re my favorite part of the St. Paul Pioneer Press Morning Report.”

If you want to read more, here are the pets we featured in the newsletter in June.

Friday, July 26

“This is sweet Lolly,” Peggy writes. “She’s our neighbor but loves running over to our house and when she stays with us she settles right in to watch for squirrels and hang out on the patio.”

Lolly

Thursday, July 25

“This is our gang: Miss Nilla, Skitbit, and BC (boy cat) — shown here waiting for their supper,” write Kathie and Marc of Linwood, Minn. “All three were found lost/abandoned outside as kittens — provided to us by the Cat Distribution System. Miss Nilla and BC are about 15 and Skitbit is nine.They tolerate each other; sometimes you may catch a couple of them actually sleeping next to each other but they pretty much do their own thing. Over the last 48 years, we have always had at least one cat (usually more) but BC is the first boy cat we ever had; it just happened that way.”

Miss Nilla, Skitbit and BC (Boy Cat).

Wednesday, July 24

“Here is Archie,” Angela writes. “He adopted us 11 years ago. He’s spunky and always instigating a wrestling match with his brother, Link. He is quite a mama’s boy!”

As for Link, who is pictured in the background …

“He lives to show his big belly,” Angela tells us. “He hates exercise but loves to walk in the backyard.”

Archie and Link

Tuesday, July 23

“Meet Oreo, our 12-year-old Yorkie-poo,” writes Stephanie of Minneapolis. “Whenever we go on vacation, we look for a toy for Oreo related to our destination. Usually the toy gets an unimpressed sniff and then it goes into the toy box where it is ignored. On our winter trip to Texas this year, we brought home Juanita the Javelina and finally it seems we brought her a good souvenir. She sleeps behind me while I work and I often find her and Juanita spooning, going head to head and even holding paws. Love seeing the cute dogs and cats in my email each weekday. Thanks!”

Juanita and Oreo.

Monday, July 22 (Memorial)

“Bismarck, our rescue cat, was 16 when he left us this summer,” writes Mary of St. Anthony Park. “He was independent, feisty and demanding. His favorite perch was in the bay window so that he could survey his domain properly. He loved the Man of the House and nobody else. The rest of us were staff. But we all loved him.”

Bismarck

Friday, July 19

“Chloe is all set for the yearly pontoon boat parade,” write Oren and Carol. “She is wearing her favorite party dress and Hawaiian lei. Party on Chloe!!”

Chloe

Thursday, July 18

“Painted in Photoshop,” wrote Jean in an email. “This is years before AI!”

We asked Jean more about her muse.

“Bentley,” a Photoshop “painting” by Jean Moore.

“This sweet cat’s name was Bentley, a rescue cat I adopted about 15 years ago,” she replied. “I took (TOO) many pictures of my cats through the years and decided to ‘paint’ this one.”

Beautiful!

Here are photos of her current cats, a brother and sister who answer mostly to “Kittens”!

Jean calls this photo, “Guarding the Peaches”:

“Guarding the Peaches” by Jean Moore.

This one, our favorite, is “Guarding the Cookbooks”:

“Guarding the Cookbooks” by Jean Moore.

Wednesday, July 17

“A friend of mine referred me to your email/column that you do in the Pioneer Press,” Justin writes. “So, Meet Ajax (AKA Chubbs)! He is a 13-year-old sassy Pug/Pitbull mix who knows that he is too cool for his own good. I mean, look at him! He never misses his dinner time and makes sure his dads never miss it either.

Ajax

“I adopted him when he was two and has been living the life since then. I’ve never met a dog with such personality and character as Ajax, but I wouldn’t have it any other way. He loves to bathe in the sun and take long naps. He is the goodest boy!”

Tuesday, July 16

“My dad says I’m three today and I’m very happy with my life,” wrote Emmy (with a little help from John) in an email to the Morning Report on Wednesday, July 3. “Still, sometimes I look out the window and wonder what it would be like to be a bird.”

Happy Birthday, Emmy!

Monday, July 15 (Memorial)

Oliver

“We said goodbye to our grandcat, Oliver, in June,” wrote Deb of Onalaska, Wis. “He was a 12-year-old Cornish Rex who had some serious health issues before he crossed the Rainbow Bridge. He is missed by his human family, as well as Sparkle the poodle and Lumi the Cornish Rex.”

Friday, July 12

“Good morning,” John writes.”I never thought I would be sending this kind of email to the media. Here are some picks of our recently adopted kittens, James Madison and Abraham Lincoln. We kept the names the rescue organization gave them. They love laying in the sun, snuggling in their kitty bed, exploring the nooks and crannies of their new house, and sleeping in the she-she’s swinging chair. They also love getting the zoomies and incessant playing instead of bedtime. While the aren’t our beloved Dachshund, Winston, they have quickly stolen our hearts. When I proposed to my wife, the one stipulation was that she could get kittens. Well, here we are, and it must be true love because I was not a cat person beforehand.”

James Madison and Abraham Lincoln

Thursday, July 11

“I wanted to share with you a photo of our cat, Sasha,” Allyson writes. “She’s 9 years young and her favorite places to hang out are at home and in the car. Sasha is a curious soul who likes to explore her surroundings providing her two humans are close by — then she’s game for any adventure!”

Sasha

Wednesday, July 10

“Previously, you featured Eurwyn and Freyja, both who have since passed, as well as my ‘grande dame’ Calico, Genbu,” writes Allison of Moorhead, Minn. “While no pet is ever replaced, the Cat Distribution Society of the Universe decided to place these two with me after I lost Eurwyn and Freyja in quick succession.

Isis and Halldor

“Continuing the alphabet of cats*: Halldór, the silver, 4-year-old part-Maine Coon, was acquired in January 2023. He is goofy and extremely dog-like.

Halldór

“Isis, the tiny ginger, is also four and the peacekeeper in the house.  A former barn cat found with six (!) fat kittens near Grand Forks, N.D., last October, she joined us in November 2023 once her kittens were weaned and homed.

Isis

“As you can see, these two get along swimmingly (Genbu is thrilled to have Isis distracting Halldór)!”

Halldor and Isis

In her asterisk, Allison explains the alphabet of cats:

“My first cats, once I was on my own after college, were Ångstrom and Bunsen,” she writes. “Then came Clarice, followed by Dumas, then Eurwyn and Freyja. Throughout these first six, I only had two at a time, but somehow ended up with an orphaned 5-week-old kitten, Genbu as a third.”

Tuesday, July 9

“There’s nothing better than cuddling with Raven and Maeve and seeing them calm,” Peggy writes. “But when it’s dinner time the excited jumping begins!”

Maeve

Monday, July 8 (Memorial)

“Our friend’s son’s bunny, named ‘Curdis’ (’cause his coloring looked like a cheese curd!) died suddenly last week,” Joyce wrote on June 21. “How he loved to eat carrots … ”

Curdis

Wednesday, July 3

“This is Nixie, celebrating her Adoption Day on June 11,” Jeanne writes. “I wasn’t able to find a card for that. Nixie seems fine with a birthday card as she nestles in her well-padded box. We got her from Feline Rescue because I wanted a Halloween cat. She’s a BIG fan of looking out of windows, maybe because she was in a cage and couldn’t easily get to a window.

Nixie

“She’s an older cat now and sleeps a lot when she’s not watching squirrels, birds, dogs and people. What a good life.

“She has an interesting way to let me know that she wants to cuddle on my lap: She stands sideways, reaches out with her left leg to snag my shirt and gently plops over. It’s so cute. I wonder how she learned to do that.

“Thanks for sharing all of the pet pictures! They’re my favorite part of the St. Paul Pioneer Press Morning Report.”

Tuesday, July 2

“While ‘Up Nord’ visiting my cousin in February, we got to see her beautiful cat, Chunky,” Joyce writes. “Here he is, just waiting to play some more!”

Chunky

Monday, July 1

“Once again, we are coming up on 7/2, Fritz Mondale’s Gotcha Day, ” Eileen writes. “This will be his third.

“We were a dog short in our family after Ruby passed at 15-1/2 in 2020. We finally found Fritz at Clark County Humane Society in Neillsville, Wis.

Fritz Mondale

“He had been given to two little 8- and 10-year-old Amish boys who had until his first birthday to turn him into a working farm dog. But the poor pup was kicked in the head by a cow, leaving him with a Harry Potter scar over his right eye, and a fear of cows.

“On his first birthday he was taken to the pound, because who needs a working dog terrified of farm animals?”

Fortunately, Eileen and her family live in the suburbs. Not many — any? — cows there, but …

“We live in Roseville, and one morning went out to walk about 5:45 a.m., ” she writes. “Walked out the gate and there, about 15 feet from us, was a deer. Fritz suddenly leaned against me and froze. To him, it was a big, funny-looking cow. He’s also afraid of the grunty pig toy because of the farm animal sounds it makes.

“Don’t worry, Fritz, your doggie and kitty siblings will protect you!”

Fritz Mondale and friend.

Hope you have a great Gotcha Day, Fritz!

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Today in History: August 12, Charlottesville car attack

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Today is Monday, Aug. 12, the 225th day of 2024. There are 141 days left in the year.

Today in history:

On Aug. 12, 2017, a driver sped into a crowd of people peacefully protesting a white nationalist rally in the Virginia college town of Charlottesville, killing 32-year-old Heather Heyer and injuring more than a dozen others. (The attacker, James Alex Fields, was sentenced to life in prison on 29 federal hate crime charges, and life plus 419 years on state charges.)

Also on this date:

In 1867, President Andrew Johnson sparked a move to impeach him as he defied Congress by suspending Secretary of War Edwin M. Stanton, with whom he had clashed over Reconstruction policies. (Johnson was acquitted by the Senate.)

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Today in History: August 9, U.S. bombs Nagasaki

In 1898, fighting in the Spanish-American War came to an end.

In 1909, the Indianapolis Motor Speedway, home to the Indianapolis 500, first opened.

In 1944, during World War II, Joseph P. Kennedy Jr., eldest son of Joseph and Rose Fitzgerald Kennedy, was killed with his co-pilot when their explosives-laden Navy plane blew up over England.

In 1953, the Soviet Union conducted a secret test of its first hydrogen bomb.

In 1960, the first balloon communications satellite — the Echo 1 — was launched by the United States from Cape Canaveral.

In 1981, IBM introduced its first personal computer, the model 5150, at a press conference in New York.

In 1985, the world’s worst single-aircraft disaster occurred as a crippled Japan Airlines Boeing 747 on a domestic flight crashed into a mountain, killing 520 people. Four passengers survived.

In 1990, fossil collector Sue Hendrickson found one of the largest and best preserved Tyrannosaurus Rex skeletons ever discovered; nicknamed “Sue” after Hendrickson, the skeleton is now on display at Chicago’s Field Museum.

In 1994, in baseball’s eighth work stoppage since 1972, players went on strike rather than allow team owners to limit their salaries.

In 2000, the Russian nuclear submarine Kursk and its 118-man crew were lost during naval exercises in the Barents Sea.

In 2013, James “Whitey” Bulger, the feared Boston mob boss who became one of the nation’s most-wanted fugitives, was convicted in a string of 11 killings and dozens of other gangland crimes, many of them committed while he was said to be an FBI informant. (Bulger was sentenced to life; he was fatally beaten at a West Virginia prison in 2018, hours after being transferred from a facility in Florida.)

In 2022, Salman Rushdie, the author whose writing led to death threats from Iran in the 1980s, was attacked and stabbed in the neck by a man who rushed the stage as he was about to give a lecture in western New York.

Today’s Birthdays:

Investor and philanthropist George Soros is 94.
Actor George Hamilton is 85.
Singer-musician Mark Knopfler (Dire Straits) is 75.
Singer Kid Creole (Kid Creole and the Coconuts) is 74.
Film director Chen Kaige is 72.
Jazz guitarist Pat Metheny is 70.
Actor Bruce Greenwood is 68.
Basketball Hall of Famer Lynette Woodard is 65.
Rapper Sir Mix-A-Lot is 61.
Actor Peter Krause (KROW’-zuh) is 59.
Tennis Hall of Famer Pete Sampras is 53.
Actor-comedian Michael Ian Black is 53.
Actor Yvette Nicole Brown is 53.
Actor Casey Affleck is 49.
Boxer Tyson Fury is 36.
Actor Lakeith Stanfield is 33.
NBA All-Star Khris Middleton is 33.
Actor Cara Delevingne (DEHL’-eh-veen) is 32.
Tennis player Stefanos Tsitsipas is 26.

MacLeod makes his Saints debut, but St. Paul loses 6-5 to Columbus

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The last time Christian MacLeod was in the Twin Cities, he was nothing more than a tourist making the drive up from Cedar Rapids, Iowa, with his fiancé during last year’s All-Star break.

He enjoyed the sites, and couldn’t help but dream about making it his permanent baseball home. Sunday afternoon at CHS Field it became more of a reality for the left-handed starter, who made his Triple-A debut with the Saints in a 6-5 loss to the Columbus Clippers.

The 6-foot-4, 227-pound MacLeod, a fifth-round pick by the Twins in the 2021 draft out of Mississippi State, began the season at Class-A Cedar Rapids before being promoted to Double-A Wichita in July.

The 24-year-old Alabama native pitched five innings on Sunday, allowing five runs — four earned — on six hits. He walked one and struck out five.

“I think it went all right,” MacLeod said. “I made a few mistakes that I wish I could have back, but overall I just wanted to go out and compete and give us a chance to win. Again, a few pitches, a few plays I would like to have back but that’s all a part of it.

“Getting my feet wet was really important, and take it into next week.”

MacLeod’s dad, Kevin, was a 10th round draft pick by the Oakland A’s in 1987 as a left-handed pitcher and reached as high as Double-A. When the younger MacLeod found out on Thursday that he would be going up and starting the game on Sunday, he was excited to share the news with his dad.

“He was super pumped,” MacLeod said. “He was joking with me that he made it to Double-A, so he was like, ‘You beat me.’ But yeah, he’s been a big part of my career. I owe a lot to him.”

MacLeod’s fastball was around 89 miles per hour on Sunday. He said it ’s been “down a tick” of late, with it usually topping out at 92. Regardless, he relies on off-speed pitches to keep hitters off balance.

“My dad was a low-90s lefty, too,” MacLeod said. “He had the big curveball like I do.”

MacLeod missed the 2022 season after undergoing Tommy John surgery. He was injured after reporting to early camp in Fort Myers in January. It was a jolt to his system as he prepared for his first pro season. He bounced back with a 5-2 record in 16 starts last season and was a combined 3-3 in 12 starts this season before his start on Sunday.

MacLeod (0-1) gave up a two-run home run in the first inning but came back to strike out the side in the second.

The Clippers scored three runs in the fourth. Following a one-out single, MacLeod fielded a softly hit ball in front of the plate but threw wildly to first, putting runners on second and third. MacLeod retired the next batter before surrendering a two-run double.

The Clippers pushed another run across on a bunt single.

The Saints tied the game in their half of the first on second baseman Edouard Julien’s two-run home run, which extended his on-base streak to 36 games.

A two-run homer by Anthony Prato in the fifth cut the Saints’ deficit to 5-4. The Clippers added a run in the seventh on a solo home run off Ronny Henriquez.

The Saints pulled to within 6-5 in the eight inning on a solo home run by Chris Williams. Williams’ homer was the 44th of his Saints career, a franchise record.

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Cleveland leaves town with split, same 3½-game division lead over Twins

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After starting their biggest series of the season with a doubleheader sweep of first-place Cleveland, and with a chance to win three of four after Saturday’s loss against the American League Central division leaders, the Twins wound up right where they started the weekend — 3 1/2 games back — following Sunday’s 5-3 loss.

The Twins loaded the bases with none out against Cleveland closer Emmanuel Clase in the ninth on Sunday, but Willi Castro struck out swinging and Trevor Larnach grounded into a double play to end the game.

Guardians All-Stars Jose Ramirez and David Fry hit solo home runs, and Cleveland broke the game open with a four-run sixth inning that included three consecutive two-out, run-scoring hits in front of 30,084 at Target Field.

The victory allowed Cleveland to leave town with a road split and the same 3 1/2-game lead over second-place Minnesota it held when the series started. The Twins might not have lost ground, but they needed to more wins, especially with Kansas City breathing down their necks for the third and final AL wild card spot.

The Royals, off Sunday after a two-game interleague series against St. Louis, is now a half-game behind the Twins with the teams set to start a three-game series Monday at Target Field. First pitch is set for 6:40 p.m.

Byron Buxton supplied all the Twins’ offense, giving them a 1-0 lead with a solo home run off Tanner Bibee (10-4) in the second inning and pulling them within 5-3 with a two-run shot off Nick Sandlin in the eighth.

Bibee allowed six hits but didn’t walk a batter and struck out five in 5 2/3 innings. Clase earned his 35th save.

Twins rookie David Festa, making his sixth major league start, had a short leash. After he gave up a game-tying home run to Ramirez, he was pulled with the bases loaded and one out in the fourth of a 1-1 run game. Jorge Alcala came in and retired the next two batters to keep the game tied, but the bullpen ran into problems in the sixth.

Left-hander Caleb Thielbar gave up a one-out, go-ahead homer to Fry, then walked two before striking out Bo Naylor. Twins manager Rocco Baldelli brought in Cole Sands, but the reliable right-hander was greeted with a broken-bat, RBI single by Brayan Rocchio before giving up an RBI single to leadoff hitter Steven Kwan and an RBI double to Will Brennan to make it 5-1.

Thielbar (2-3) was charged with three earned runs on a hit and two walks while getting just two outs.

The Twins blew through five pitchers, but Randy Dobnak finished the game with three scoreless innings for Minnesota.

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