Top related persons:
Top related locs:
Top related orgs:

Search resuls for: "princeton"


25 mentions found


When the Colorado Republican announced this past week that he would not seek reelection, he began with the type of criticism of Democratic policies that is standard fare for a hard-line conservative. Yet under political pressure in Colorado, Buck decided there was no way forward for him in Congress. Alone among Republicans, Buck said he was opposing Jordan because he had not clearly stated that Biden won the 2020 election. This past week, Trump called Buck a “weak and ineffective Super RINO,” or Republicans In Name Only. The next day, Buck testified about a legal effort in Colorado to ban Trump from the ballot under the Constitution’s “insurrection clause."
Persons: Ken Buck, Buck, , Donald Trump’s, Democrat Joe Biden, Biden, ” Buck, MAGA, , “ MAGA ”, Trump, Liz Cheney, Adam Kinzinger of, Kevin McCarthy, Ken, Chip Roy, I’ll, Marjorie Taylor Greene, Greene, CrossFit, ” Greene, Dick Cheney, Reagan, Cheney, Liz Cheney's, Ronald Reagan, Democratic Sen, Michael Bennet, “ I’ve, Joe Neguse, David Cicilline, Cicilline, Jim Jordan, McCarthy, Jordan, it’s Organizations: WASHINGTON, , Colorado Republican, Republican, Democrat, Trump, GOP, CNN, Capitol, Republicans, Caucus, Associated Press, Texas, University of Denver, Princeton University, University of Wyoming, Wyoming Rep, Democratic, Democrats, Colorado Democrat, Rhode Island, Apple, Meta, Google, Ohio, Committee's Locations: Colorado, Wyoming, Adam Kinzinger of Illinois, Washington, Denver, Georgia, Iran, Buck's
Kimberley Strassel is a member of the editorial board for The Wall Street Journal. She writes editorials, as well as the weekly Potomac Watch political column, from her base in Alaska. Ms. Strassel joined Dow Jones & Co. in 1994, working in the news department of The Wall Street Journal Europe in Brussels, and then in London. She moved to New York in 1999 and soon thereafter joined the Journal's editorial page, working as a features editor, and then as an editorial writer. An Oregon native, Ms. Strassel earned a bachelor's degree in Public Policy and International Affairs from Princeton University.
Persons: Kimberley Strassel, Strassel Organizations: Wall Street, Potomac Watch, Dow Jones & Co, The, Street, Fox, Sunday, Press, Policy, International Affairs, Princeton University Locations: Kimberley, Alaska, Brussels, London, New York, An Oregon
A 22-year-old New Jersey man was sentenced to two months in prison on Wednesday for taking part, as a Princeton University student, in the storming of the U.S. Capitol on Jan. 6, 2021, by a mob loyal to former President Donald J. Trump. The man, Larry F. Giberson Jr., pleaded guilty in July to civil disorder, a felony, after federal prosecutors charged him with that crime and several misdemeanors, according to court records. The misdemeanors were dismissed as part of Mr. Giberson’s plea agreement, court records show. He was also sentenced to six months of supervised release under home detention. Image Larry Giberson Credit... via FBIBefore being sentenced, Mr. Giberson, of Manahawkin, N.J., expressed remorse in court for what he called his “careless and thoughtless actions,” The Associated Press reported.
Persons: Donald J, Trump, Larry F, Giberson Jr, Giberson, Giberson’s, Larry Giberson Organizations: Princeton University, U.S, Capitol, FBI, Associated Press Locations: New Jersey, Manahawkin, N.J
Market analysts say an array of factors have combined to force up Treasury yields. As a result, higher Treasury rates may be needed to attract more buyers. That suggests that Treasury yields may stay unusually high even if the Fed keeps its own benchmark rate on hold. Many business and consumer loan rates might, in turn, also stay high, helping keep a lid on economic growth and inflation. Wall Street traders foresee a 98% probability that the Fed will leave interest rates unchanged Wednesday, according to the CME FedWatch Tool.
Persons: Jerome Powell, Powell, ” Powell, , Goldman Sachs, reacceleration, , Alan Blinder, Blinder, ” Blinder Organizations: WASHINGTON, Federal, Fed, Treasury, Wall, Goldman, Princeton University, Associated Press, American Academy of Political, Social Science Locations: Wall, COVID, Washington
The Autoworkers’ Victories
  + stars: | 2023-10-31 | by ( David Leonhardt | More About David Leonhardt | ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +1 min
In the real world, similar workers often earn different wages. Their wages fall somewhere in Lester’s range of indeterminacy. Most workers don’t know exactly how valuable their contributions are and therefore what their true market wage should be. Company executives typically don’t know either, but the executives do have more information — about how much money different workers make and how productive each is. For most workers, by contrast, quitting over a pay dispute can create financial hardship.
Persons: Richard Lester, Lester Organizations: United Auto Workers, Detroit’s, Company, Employers Locations: Princeton
Our life stories converged when we were colleagues and friends for 10 years on the faculty of Princeton University. Notwithstanding our different backgrounds, we are both alarmed by the climate on campuses and the polarizing and dehumanizing language visible throughout society. Faculty and students on some campuses across the country have reported feeling unsafe in light of verbal and physical attacks. The polarizing talk in media, political and campus circles create an environment lacking in sophistication and nuance. There is no better place for these discussions than a university campus.
Persons: What’s, , — shouldn’t, we’ve Organizations: Princeton University, Faculty, Palestinian Authority, West Bank, Terrorism, Republicans, Universities Locations: Israel, Palestine, Oslo, Gaza
The Crab Nebula is a well-studied supernova remnant located 6,500 light-years away in the Taurus constellation. The Crab Nebula has been studied by other space observatories like the Hubble Space Telescope. Hubble's Crab Nebula — Hubble's Crab Nebula NASA/ESA/J. Loll Webb's Crab Nebula — Webb's Crab Nebula NASA/ESA/CSA/STScI/Tea TemimCapturing aspects of the ever-expanding Crab NebulaHubble captured the celestial object using an optical wavelength in 2005 (above left), while Webb’s latest infrared image (above right) revealed more of its structural details and inner workings. Yellow-white and green filaments, made of dust grains, appear in the Webb image for the first time.
Persons: James Webb, , Hester, Hubble, Webb Organizations: CNN, Telescope, Hubble, Princeton University, NASA, ESA, CSA, Webb Locations: China, Japan, New Jersey
To the Editor:Re “Speaker Injects Fervent Faith Into His Policy” (front page, Oct. 29):I am pleased to know that our new speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, takes his Christian faith seriously. Ginger LennonPrinceton, N.J.To the Editor:Speaker Mike Johnson declares that he derives his worldview from the Bible. Thomas M. GinnWinston-Salem, N.C.To the Editor:Re “Welcome, Speaker Johnson, to the Worst Job in Politics,” by Benjamin Domenech (Opinion guest essay, nytimes.com, Oct. 27):The new House speaker, Mike Johnson, faces a critical challenge in our country’s history and the history of his party. So, good luck, Mr. Speaker. After reading Mr. Bouie’s column about the new speaker of the House, Mike Johnson, I could only think, what have we come to?
Persons: Mike Johnson, Sheldon W, Bennett Quincy, Ginger Lennon Princeton, Paul Krugman, Johnson, Bill Eiffert San, Donald J, Trump, narcissist, Thomas M, Ginn Winston, Benjamin Domenech, Let’s, Willie Dickerson Snohomish, Jamelle Bouie, Mr, Donald Trump, Harvey Glassman Boynton Organizations: Electoral College, Republican Locations: Mass, United States, N.J, Bill Eiffert San Diego, Salem, N.C, America, Wash, Harvey Glassman Boynton Beach, Fla
NASA's James Webb Telescope has captured never-before-seen details of the Crab Nebula. AdvertisementAdvertisementNASA's James Webb Space Telescope has captured new views of a stunning nebula, revealing never-before-seen details. It's the heart of the Crab Nebula, called the Crab Pulsar. The Crab Nebula as shown by the Hubble Space Telescope in optical light (left) and the James Webb Space Telescope in infrared light (right). The Crab Nebula photographed by NASA's James Webb Space Telescope.
Persons: NASA's James Webb, , James Webb, JWST, Temim, Hubble, Hester Organizations: NASA's James Webb Telescope, Service, Telescope, NASA, ESA, CSA, Princeton University, Hubble, James Webb Space, Arizona State University, NASA's James Webb Space Telescope
Two experts explain how long it could take until fusion power plants are possible. Fusion plants could theoretically produce almost 4 million times as much energy as burning coal or oil — with none of the carbon emissions. It's what Andrew Christlieb, who is part of a US Department of Energy fusion project at Michigan State University, calls "step zero." The US Department of Energy's Fusion Energy Sciences program has a $763 million budget for 2023, which could grow to over $1 billion next year. Achieving commercial fusion power in two decades won't be quick enough to address many countries' goals of adapting clean energy and limiting global warming by 2035.
Persons: It's, Andrew Christlieb, Christlieb, Michael Livingston, PPPL, Jean, Paul Pelissier, it's, Jason Laurea, Lawrence, Jonathan Menard, Menard, Bill Gates, Sam Altman Organizations: Service, Ignition, NIF, US Department of Energy, Michigan State University, Royal Society, Reactor, REUTERS, European Union, Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Princeton Plasma Physics, US Department of Energy's Fusion Energy Sciences, Fusion Industry Association, Tech Locations: PPPL, Saint, Durance , Southern France, US, China, Russia, Lawrence Livermore, Princeton
Anthony Vidler, an architectural historian who, beginning in the 1960s, reshaped his field by setting aside dry chronologies of styles and movements for an interdisciplinary approach borrowing from psychoanalysis, French literary theory and cultural studies, died on Oct. 19 at his home in Manhattan. His wife, the literary critic Emily Apter, said the cause was B-cell non-Hodgkin’s lymphoma. Mr. Vidler, who was born in Britain during World War II, was part of a generation of European and Latin American architectural historians who arrived in the United States in the 1960s and ’70s, bringing with them new, theory-driven viewpoints about architecture as a realm of ideas and not just design. Sometimes cast as architecture’s version of the British Invasion, scholars like Mr. Vidler, Kenneth Frampton and Alan Colquhoun settled in New York City and in architectural programs at a small number of institutions, above all Princeton University, where Mr. Vidler taught for almost 20 years and remained affiliated for decades. He also served as dean of the architecture schools at Cornell, from 1997 to 1998, and Cooper Union, from 2001 to 2013.
Persons: Anthony Vidler, Emily Apter, Vidler, Kenneth Frampton, Alan Colquhoun Organizations: Princeton University, Cornell, Cooper Union Locations: Manhattan, Britain, United States, British, New York City
Biden’s Supplemental War Games
  + stars: | 2023-10-27 | by ( Kimberley A. Strassel | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Kimberley Strassel is a member of the editorial board for The Wall Street Journal. She writes editorials, as well as the weekly Potomac Watch political column, from her base in Alaska. Ms. Strassel joined Dow Jones & Co. in 1994, working in the news department of The Wall Street Journal Europe in Brussels, and then in London. She moved to New York in 1999 and soon thereafter joined the Journal's editorial page, working as a features editor, and then as an editorial writer. An Oregon native, Ms. Strassel earned a bachelor's degree in Public Policy and International Affairs from Princeton University.
Persons: Kimberley Strassel, Strassel Organizations: Wall Street, Potomac Watch, Dow Jones & Co, The, Street, Fox, Sunday, Press, Policy, International Affairs, Princeton University Locations: Kimberley, Alaska, Brussels, London, New York, An Oregon
AdvertisementAdvertisementThis has been a bit of a secret, but when I applied to Yale, I chose to apply as an African American-studies major on a whim. Regardless, part of me thinks I got in because I'm Black and chose the smaller major of African American studies. I'm now working extra hard to prove I belong at Yale. The fact that I didn't get into Princeton made me think my Yale acceptance wasn't guaranteed. I could have edged out a more qualified candidate who was not a person of color because I'm Black.
Persons: , Du Bois, Black, I'm, advisedly, would've, I've, Henry Louis Gates Jr, Cornel, Gates, we're Organizations: Yale, Service, Harvard, Princeton, Yale Political Union, American Student Association, Black Yale, Cultural Center Locations: American, East Coast
And a lawyer for the woman who turned in the evidence says he’s asked the FBI to look into the matter. When Hollander asked the DA’s office to return the green plastic bin and the items therein, she got a mysterious response. Early this year, Hollander sued the DA’s office, seeking answers about the missing items. “You can tell that no one ever, ever even looked at this evidence,” Hollander said. After the green plastic bin turned up again, he requested an appointment with the FBI regarding Brown’s death and the conduct of the DA’s office.
Persons: CNN — James Brown, Brown, he’s, Jacque Hollander, Paul Howard, Hollander, Howard, Fani Willis, William Chris Clark, , James Brown, Michael Iasparro, ” Hollander, Michael Sprinkel, Iasparro, ” Iasparro, ” Jacque Hollander, Carson, Melissa Golden, Siobhan Johnson, Daryl, Frank Copsidas, Brown “, , Sandy Monroe, Marvin Crawford, Brown’s, Deanna, Andre White, Jacque Hollander’s Organizations: CNN, Attorney’s, FBI, Georgia, Records, Hinshaw, Barnes Circus, Public, “ Department of Locations: Fulton County, Atlanta, Rockford , Illinois, Culbertson, Princeton , Minnesota, ” Chicago
Patience Haggin — Reporter at The Wall Street Journal
  + stars: | 2023-10-23 | by ( Patience Haggin | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: 1 min
Patience HagginPatience Haggin is a reporter covering digital advertising and broadband in The Wall Street Journal's media bureau in New York. She writes frequently on privacy, political advertising and competition. She was part of a team that won the Gerald Loeb Award for Beat Reporting for the investigative series "Amazon's Abuses" in 2021. Patience previously covered venture capital and startups in the Journal's San Francisco bureau. She began her career at the legal affairs newspaper The Recorder in San Francisco.
Persons: Patience Haggin Patience Haggin, Gerald Loeb, Patience Organizations: Princeton University Locations: New York, San Francisco
Opinion | Israel’s Moral and Political Dilemmas
  + stars: | 2023-10-23 | by ( ) www.nytimes.com   time to read: +4 min
But nowhere does he mention the deep visceral hatred of Hamas and associated groups toward Israel. It was always apparent that not long after the Oct. 7 massacre Israel would lose the public relations war. Israel does not deliberately target civilians. No serious defender of Israel’s response to the Oct. 7 massacres argues that the lives of Israeli children are worth more than those of Gazan children. Hamas would be considered “heroes” in the eyes of most of the world and its leadership would have attained political legitimacy.
Persons: Thomas L, Friedman, Friedman’s, , Alan Metz, Nicholas Kristof, Mr, Kristof, Israel, Kristof’s, Yishai Schwartz, Re, Bret Stephens, Marc Bloom Princeton Organizations: Winer Tel, West Bank, Hamas, Re “ Hamas Bears Locations: Israel, Winer Tel Aviv, Gaza, Hill, N.C, Bina Westrich Teaneck, N.J, Frankfurt
My son thought he had to apply to more than 10 colleges because everyone he knew was doing it. But he liked only three schools, so I encouraged him to apply to just those three. People were horrified he wasn't applying to more, but he got into his dream school anyway. AdvertisementAdvertisementOne afternoon in the spring of 2022, my son Ben, a junior in high school, and I got back in the car after touring yet another college. When I asked him why he would apply if he didn't want to attend, Ben told me everyone he knew was applying to 12 to 15 schools.
Persons: , Ben, overachievers, couldn't, He'd, who'd, he'd, they'd Organizations: Service, Princeton
Mr. Biden’s polling numbers have been mired in dangerous territory since he oversaw the chaotic American military withdrawal from Afghanistan. “There is a need, but do we really need that significant amount?”She said she did not watch Mr. Biden’s Oval Office address on Thursday. About 20.3 million people watched Mr. Biden’s speech across 10 television networks, according to preliminary data from Nielsen. When Mr. Trump spoke about immigration from the Oval Office in January 2019, about 40 million people tuned in. Most immediately, Mr. Biden faces the challenge of what he can do to secure the release of Americans being held hostage in the Gaza Strip.
Persons: , , ” Julian E, it’s, Biden’s, Israel —, Samantha Moskowitz, Ukraine “, Moskowitz, Biden, Donald J, Trump, Nielsen, Stanley B, Greenberg, Clinton’s, Israel, George W, Bush, Mr, Elizabeth Warren of Massachusetts, Antony J, Blinken, Zelizer, Charles R, Jr, Ronald Reagan, ” Paul Begala, Begala, ” Mr, Black, ” John Koblin, Sharon Dunten Organizations: Princeton University, Georgia Gwinnett College, Biden’s, Nielsen, Israel, Fox, Quinnipiac University, Iraq, Democratic, Hamas, Mr, Republicans Locations: Afghanistan, Israel, Ukraine, Atlanta, Biden’s State, Iran, Russia, United States, Vietnam, Iraq, Gaza, New York, Norcross , Ga
The House GOP’s Mercenary Caucus
  + stars: | 2023-10-20 | by ( Kimberley A. Strassel | ) www.wsj.com   time to read: +1 min
Kimberley Strassel is a member of the editorial board for The Wall Street Journal. She writes editorials, as well as the weekly Potomac Watch political column, from her base in Alaska. Ms. Strassel joined Dow Jones & Co. in 1994, working in the news department of The Wall Street Journal Europe in Brussels, and then in London. She moved to New York in 1999 and soon thereafter joined the Journal's editorial page, working as a features editor, and then as an editorial writer. An Oregon native, Ms. Strassel earned a bachelor's degree in Public Policy and International Affairs from Princeton University.
Persons: Kimberley Strassel, Strassel Organizations: Wall Street, Potomac Watch, Dow Jones & Co, The, Street, Fox, Sunday, Press, Policy, International Affairs, Princeton University Locations: Kimberley, Alaska, Brussels, London, New York, An Oregon
College jocks actually become more successful and wealthy than their nerdy peers, a new study finds. Turns out, sporty students earn 3.4% more in their lifetimes and bring home $220,000 more in wages. download the app Email address Sign up By clicking “Sign Up”, you accept our Terms of Service and Privacy Policy . The study found that college athletes earned 3.4% more over their careers than non-athletic students and are likely to bring home $220,000 more in cumulative wages, the report said. College athletes were even more likely to be endorsed for management, leadership, and strategic planning skills on LinkedIn, per the study.
Persons: , NBER, , They're, Walter Robb, Brian Moynihan, Meg Whitman, Andy Jassy, Jassy, There's, there's Organizations: National Bureau of Economic Research, Ivy League, Service, College, LinkedIn, Stanford University's, Bank of America, Brown University, Hewlett, Packard, Princeton University
chatbot ChatGPT last year, the San Francisco start-up OpenAI added digital guardrails meant to prevent its system from doing things like generating hate speech and disinformation. Now a paper from researchers at Princeton, Virginia Tech, Stanford and IBM says those guardrails aren’t as sturdy as A.I. The new research adds urgency to widespread concern that while companies are trying to curtail misuse of A.I., they are overlooking ways it can still generate harmful material. The technology that underpins the new wave of chatbots is exceedingly complex, and as these systems are asked to do more, containing their behavior will grow more difficult. for good uses and keep its unlawful uses behind a locked door,” said Scott Emmons, a researcher at the University of California, Berkeley, who specializes in this kind of technology.
Persons: chatbot ChatGPT, Bard, , Scott Emmons Organizations: Princeton, Virginia Tech, Stanford, IBM, Companies, University of California Locations: San Francisco, Berkeley
Opinion: Jim Jordan’s pressure campaign backfired
  + stars: | 2023-10-19 | by ( Julian Zelizer | ) edition.cnn.com   time to read: +6 min
Over the past few days, Jordan tried to pressure fellow Republicans into voting for him. He mounted an intense campaign over the weekend to whip up the vote and undermine support for Louisiana Republican Steve Scalise. Arkansas Republican Steve Womack decried the “attack, attack, attack” methods that Jordan has been using. Within the GOP, Jordan has not been a figure who is well loved. At a potential turning point moment for the party, Jordan doesn’t have many chits he can call in to round up the votes.
Persons: Julian Zelizer, Jim Jordan’s, speakership, Jordan, Louisiana Republican Steve Scalise, Arkansas Republican Steve Womack, ” Womack, Donald Trump, Trump, MAGA, shutdowns, , John Boehner, Newt Gingrich, Patrick McHenry –, hasn’t, don’t, Jordan doesn’t Organizations: CNN, Princeton University, New York Times, America, Twitter, Louisiana Republican, Arkansas Republican, Republican, Trump, Tea Party, Fox News, GOP, Ohio State University Locations: Arkansas, legislating, New York
Progressive activist and independent presidential candidate Cornel West received a maximum campaign donation from Republican megadonor Harlan Crow, West's latest fundraising report shows. Crow made the $3,300 donation in August, weeks before West abandoned his bid for the Green Party nomination to run as an independent. Almost 15% of registered voters said they would vote for a third party or independent candidate when given the explicit choice in an NBC News poll last month. By comparison, less than 2% of voters in 2020 cast a ballot for a candidate other than Biden or Trump. Federal election filings show real estate developer Crow gave to Republican presidential candidate Chris Christie in the last quarter, as well as to GOP members of the Senate and House.
Persons: Cornel West, Harlan Crow, Crow, West, , , Joe Biden, Biden, Donald Trump, Crow’s, Clarence Thomas, Thomas, Chris Christie, Nikki Haley, Ron DeSantis Organizations: Republican, Green Party, Princeton University, NBC, Biden, Trump, Supreme, House Locations: Texas, Dallas
Princeton University earned the top spot on both The Wall Street Journal's and U.S. News and World Report's rankings for 2024. The University of Oxford in the United Kingdom was named the best university in the world for the eighth year in a row, according to Times Higher Education's ranking of over 1,900 universities worldwide. Oxford, the world's second-oldest university, continues to be a global leader in academic research and instruction nine centuries after its conception. Times Higher Education uses metrics across five areas — teaching, research environment, research quality, industry innovations and international outlook — to rank universities around the world. Though the U.S. doesn't hold the top spot, the next three best-ranked universities are American — but the two highest-ranked ones aren't Ivy League schools.
Persons: United Kingdom Stanford University —, Berkeley — Organizations: Ivy League, U.S, Princeton University, U.S . News, University of Oxford, Oxford, university, Higher Education, doesn't, aren't Ivy League, Stanford University and Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Harvard, Princeton, Oxford University, The University of Oxford —, United Kingdom Stanford University, United Kingdom Stanford University — Stanford, United States Massachusetts Institute of Technology, United States Harvard University — Cambridge, United States University of Cambridge —, United Kingdom Princeton University — Princeton, United States California Institute of Technology, United States Imperial College London —, United Kingdom University of California, United States Yale University — New, United States ETH Zurich —, Switzerland Tsinghua University — Beijing, University of Chicago, United States Peking University — Beijing, China Johns Hopkins University — Baltimore, United States University of Pennsylvania, United States Columbia University —, United States University of California, Los Angeles —, United States National University of Singapore — Singapore Cornell University — Ithaca, United States Times Higher Education, CNBC, Global Locations: U.S, United Kingdom, The University of Oxford — Oxford, California, United, United States Massachusetts Institute of Technology — Boston, United States Harvard University — Cambridge , Massachusetts, United States University of Cambridge — Cambridge, United Kingdom Princeton University — Princeton , New Jersey, United States California Institute of Technology — Pasadena , California, United States Imperial College London — London, Berkeley, Berkeley — Berkeley , California, United States Yale University — New Haven , Connecticut, United States, United States ETH Zurich — Zurich, Switzerland, China, University of Chicago — Chicago, Philadelphia, York, Los Angeles, Los Angeles — Los Angeles, New York
MINNEAPOLIS (AP) —Drug task force officers suspected a Minnesota couple of selling methamphetamine when they raided their house in an operation that left five officers and one resident wounded last week, according to a search warrant released Wednesday. Gunfire broke out last Thursday when Sherburne County Drug Task Force officers attempted to execute the search warrant at the home of Karl Thomas Holmberg, 64. A second warrant released showed that police also looked for flammable and electrical materials and fire damage after the raid after seeing black smoke inside the residence as Holmberg exited, look back, then went back inside. He wrote that he got an informant or informants to buy meth from the couple twice earlier this year. Interviewed by police at the hospital, he said he didn’t think the officers serving the search warrant “had a right to be there and told them to leave,” according to the complaint.
Persons: Karl Thomas Holmberg, Holmberg, . Holmberg, , Ron Thomas, Austin Turner, Turner, Organizations: Task Force, Princeton —, BCA Locations: MINNEAPOLIS, Minnesota, Sherburne, Glendorado Township, Princeton, Minneapolis, Benton, Benton County, Sherburne County
Total: 25