With great sadness, we received information of the passing of Masza Rosenroth, an Auschwitz Survivor.
Masza was born on 12 August 1924 in Konstantynów, Poland, to Mordechai and Malka. During the German occupation, her family was transferred to the Litzmannstadt ghetto. From there, in August 1944, Masza was deported to Auschwitz.
After a few days, she was transferred to work in a munitions factory in Bad Kudowa, a subcamp of Gross-Rosen. She was liberated there.
In 1949, Masza emigrated to the United States and settled in Buffalo, N.Y. She found a job as a dressmaker.
More about her: https://t.co/gdVCYaSaaC
DeRUSHA: Was it appropriate to have a moment of silence for Derek Chauvin?
SCHWARZE: I was greeting people at the other end of the building. I wasn't even there
DeRUSHA: Do you think it was appropriate?
SCHWARZE: I'm not gonna comment
DeRUSHA: It's a moment of silence. You didn't have to witness it
SCHWARZE: I'll stay on message. I'm not gonna talk about it
#OnThisDay June 2 1838: After being evicted from Fort Snelling by the US Army, French-Canadian bootlegger Pierre "Pig's Eye" Parrant moves downstream to Fountain Cave, establishing the first saloon and permanent settlement that eventually becomes the city of St Paul, Minnesota.
Oklahoma’s first baseman Dayton Tockey fouled a pitch off his nuts and the camera panned to Georgia Tech’s first baseman who was laughing.
A few innings later, Tockey got the last laugh by hitting a walk-off TANK in extra innings to send his team to the Super Regionals 😳🔥
Honoring the man convicted of murdering George Floyd the week of the anniversary is frankly shocking. Chauvin was convicted by a jury of his peers and was affirmed through every appeal. It shows cruelty to the Floyd family and disrespect to our courts and all Minnesotans. No one is above the law.
What was the @mngop thinking in having a moment of silence for Derek Chauvin at their convention?
We asked @KendallQuallsMN today if he liked the idea and Qualls struggled to give us a direct answer.