YME COUNTY COURT RECORDS

Minnesota State Patrol - Marshall Munoz Ontiveros, Erick, Hanley Falls; Offense date 2/20/20 Drugs 5th Degree - Possess Schedule 1,2,3,4 - Not Small Amount Marijuana (Gross Misdemeanor); Amended Plea 11/23/2020 Guilty; Amended Disposition 10/26/2021 Dismissed, Conditions Met or Expired; Court Decision 11/23/2020 Continued; Probation - Adult (Supervised probation, 1 Yr), Local Confinement (2 Days Credit for time served: 2 Days); $300 Fine. Granite Falls Police Department Odegard, Lance Martin, Hazel Run; Offense date 8/19/21 Receiving Stolen Property (Felony); Plea 11/17/2021 Guilty; Disposition 11/17/2021 Convicted; Court Decision 12/27/2021 Sentenced; Commit to Commissioner of Corrections - Adult (MN Correctional Facility - St.

Fundraising efforts underway to save unique home of Milan artist

Karen Jenson began painting when she was just 20 years old - a venture that would lead to a career as a professional artist and teacher. Jenson and her husband purchased a home in Milan in the early 1960s, and Jenson spent years designing every nook and cranny of the home with her Scandinavian-inspired artwork amidst her 50-year career of painting and teaching art around the United States and Canada. The work was done with the help of two identical twin brothers Jenson met early on in her homeownership. The contractors/artists, Arvid and Aron Swenson helped to complete the home, called the Trestuen Gallery. The word Trestuen is Swedish for “Tree Room”. “When she bought the house, it was just a typical little small-town house,” says Milan Village Arts School board member Ron Porep. “When she met the twins, Arvid and Aron Swenson, they built a whole new section on the house. They actually cut down these big conifers in the garden and they used those as the beams. The whole concept of the house is built around nature.”

River Ramblings

On the day before Christmas Eve, during all the anticipation and the hubbub leading up to the biggest holiday of the year, there was a brief six-minute, day brightener of a story on Minnesota Public Radio. That uplifting story had roots out here that reach back over 150 years, to a time when Norwegian immigrant farmers were settling the far reaches of northwestern Renville County and continues to this day.

Minnesota Starwatch January 2022

In January Venus emerges from its short trip between Earth and the sun to become a “morning star.” It begins a rapid climb over the southeastern horizon in mid-month, making its way toward much dimmer Mars. Try looking just before the sky starts to lighten on the 29th. Venus will be to the upper left of a thin waning moon and Mars will be between them, but closer to the moon.

Wood Lake resident inspired to bring metro art scene to the prairie

Miles Taylor never anticipated that he would be moving back to his hometown of Wood Lake before reaching retirement age, but the COVID-19 pandemic changed his plans. Miles and his wife Jessie were building careers centered around the arts in the Twin Cities when the pandemic began. Having learned how to DJ in Los Angeles more than 15 years ago, Miles moved to the Twin Cities after college and worked over the next eight years DJ’ing burlesque shows, bars, and events while also working on visual art. “I worked with a lot of different galleries presenting my art, but also curating shows. Eventually, I built up to four residencies a month, which paid all of the bills. I was making a name for myself and working with high profile producers in the cities,” Miles says. “I had finally started my own picture painting shop and gallery in the Northeast side in January of 2020. Everything was going pretty good and I was making the most money I think I’ve made in my life.” But then, the COVID-19 pandemic shut down the state, and Miles and Jessie, being independent contractors and small business owners were left with all business halted for months. At the same time, the couple found out their landlord had decided to sell the home they were renting. Miles's family had been using his grandmother’s former home on their family farm as an Airbnb, but because COVID had halted that as well, the couple made the decision to move temporarily into the home.

Looking back at the stories of 2021

From new businesses opening, to retirements, to the return of events after a year of COVID-19 shutdowns, here is a look at the headlines that dominated the front page of the Advocate Tribune in 2021. January -The YES House worked on improvements, purchasing new windows to install replicating the historic upper-level windows.