Published July 15, 2006 01:08 am -
Our View—Summerfest adds to city’s attractions
The Free Press
Thumbs up:
To the organizers of the Summerfest event who have the go-ahead from the city to stage the first-time festival in Old Town Mankato.
The Aug. 26 festival is one of several new events in the past couple of years that is making Mankato a bigger attraction. Solstice, National Brew Fest and the Nature Valley Grand Prix bike race are among the recent events that have been added to the roster of must-do activities in town. Old Town’s Summerfest, three weeks after the well-established RibFest, is just another reason to stay in town if you live here and come to town if you don’t.
While it’s great to see a new event surface, the City Council needs to think through what its role is in supporting all of these events. Some council members at last week’s meeting made it clear they weren’t comfortable being asked to pay for unbudgeted items. The Summerfest organizers weren’t sure if the city contribution would need to be $2,000 or $10,000 in in-kind services.
If Mankato continues to draw outdoor festivals, the city should hash out more specific guidelines on what it is willing to do to help and for how much.
Thumbs down:
To the intertwined problems of substandard officiating, overly physical play and theatrical flopping that marred the just-completed soccer World Cup.
Aficionados of “the beautiful game” have to be appalled that the lasting image of this edition of the world’s biggest sporting event will be France’s Zinedine Zidane ending his illustrious career with an egregious head-butt during extra time of Sunday’s final against Italy. It was — to put it in terms Americans will grasp — the equivalent of Brett Favre going into retirement by getting ejected from the Super Bowl during overtime.
That was one play. But virtually all of the 62 games in the tournament were marred by flagrant fouls, players pretending to be fouled and overworked referees who couldn’t tell the difference.
Much of FIFA’s handling of the event — most notably its refusal to let television run the show — is commendable. But the world soccer organization needs to get a handle on the officiating.
Thumbs up:
To North Mankato Fun Days parade watchers who donated to ECHO Food Shelf. Pile It On organizers were able to collect 2,320 pounds of non-perishable items and $2,040. Volunteers walked the parade route and collected the donations.
It was good to see so many prepared spectators drop their donations into the shopping carts and buckets. Summer donations for food shelves tend to dwindle, so the timing for the big collection is perfect.