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Minnesota set to clamp down on greenhouse gases

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startribune.com

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Fri, Sep 16, 2022 05:36 PM

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Plus: Why you should leave your garden messy in the fall ? ? If you're having trouble viewing this

Plus: Why you should leave your garden messy in the fall ͏ ͏ If you're having trouble viewing this email, you may [see it online](. [Star Tribune]( Talkers TOP STORIES - Minnesota set to clamp down on greenhouse gases: Under a new official climate plan released Friday, changes across the state would affect everything from how Minnesotans farm and use forests to how families move through the world as the state stumbles toward a low-carbon future. [Read more.]( - Its habitat decimated, this charismatic Minnesota bird is dancing on the edge of oblivion: Minnesota's prairie chickens were once so abundant their flocks cast shadows on the ground. But like so many other species, they're dying out. Attempts to reintroduce the birds have failed. The only hope now is to keep existing populations safe and expand their protected habitat. [Read more.]( - Edina Theatre returns with nearly $2 million in improvements mixed with the familiar: The movie house reopens Sept. 30 with a bar, better flow in the lobby, reclining seats and bigger screens. [Read more.]( - Veteran judge named special master in Trump documents search: A federal judge on Thursday appointed a veteran New York jurist to serve as an independent arbiter in the criminal investigation into the presence of classified documents at former President Donald Trump's Florida home, and refused to permit the Justice Department to resume its use of the highly sensitive records seized in an FBI search last month. [Read more.]( - Woman credits seat belt and "angel of the road" for saving her life after crash near Forest Lake: Angie Kupczak told her story of survival during a news conference to announce next week's seat belt enforcement campaign. [Read more.]( WATCH THIS Canadian inventor really put his grizzly-proof protective suit through the ringer: Documentary footage from the 1990s recently resurfaced of [inventor Troy James Hurtubise testing his anti-grizzly suit]( to make sure it would hold up if a bear attacked him with wooden clubs, a battering ram or a small wrecking-ball contraption. *** Talk to us! Send feedback on this newsletter, questions, story tips, ideas or anything else to [talkers@startribune.com](. *** TRENDING Why you should leave your garden messy in the fall: What's a green-leaning gardener to do in the fall? As little as possible. [Read more.]( SPORTS BLINK What happens when you combine two football programs used to losing? Perfection. After struggling for years, St. Paul schools Harding and Humboldt formed a co-op that is now 3-0 after routing Minneapolis Roosevelt 53-0. [Read more.]( *** Did someone forward this newsletter to you? You can [sign up for Talkers here](. *** WORTH A CLICK Nine-year-old finds three-foot-long earthworm in his backyard: Barnaby Domigan of Christchurch, N.Z.., tells Radio New Zealand he tried to convince his dad to keep the worm, but "he wasn't really into the idea." [Read more.]( TALKERS TRIVIA Want to win a $15 gift card of your choice? It's Friday, so that means it's time for another trivia question. The correct answer to this question can be found in a story that appeared in Talkers this week. We can't prevent you from simply Googling the answer, so Googling is encouraged! E-mail your answer to talkers@startribune.com by Sunday at 11:59 p.m. A winner will be selected at random from the correct responses. That lucky reader will receive a $15 card of their choice from one of several retailers — Best Buy, Target, Holiday or Menards — as well as a shout-out in Monday's newsletter. Here is this week's question: Which former University of Minnesota women's basketball star and current WNBA player was hired as the Gophers new director of quality control? Good luck! FROM THE ARCHIVES Sept. 16, 2016: T.C. Bear joined a group of young volunteers from the Most Holy Redeemer School in Montgomery as they packed food for the nonprofit Feed My Starving Children during an event at Target Field in Minneapolis. More than 2,000 volunteers at packed an estimated 500,000 meals in one day for hungry children around the world. (Photo: Leila Navidi/Star Tribune) Connect with Star Tribune [facebook]([twitter]([pinterest]([instagram]( [Manage email preferences]( • [Subscribe to Star Tribune]( • [Privacy Policy]( • [Unsubscribe]( This email was sent by: StarTribune, 650 3rd Ave S, Suite #1300, Minneapolis, MN, 55488 © 2022 StarTribune. All rights reserved. We value your opinion! [Give us your feedback.](

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