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In post-Roe America, these Minnesotans are getting people to their abortion appointments

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Plus: The 5 best things our food writers ate this week ? ? If you're having trouble viewing this e

Plus: The 5 best things our food writers ate this week ͏ ͏ If you're having trouble viewing this email, you may [see it online](. [Star Tribune]( Talkers TOP STORIES - In post-Roe America, these Minnesotans are getting people to their abortion appointments: They're part of a movement to support those navigating the new abortion landscape. [Read more.]( - Minneapolis first major U.S. city to allow all Muslim prayer calls: A change to the city's noise ordinance ensures that the call to prayer, or adhan, can be broadcast from speakers year-round, five times a day. [Read more.]( - Billing records helped ID suspect in military docs leak: Billing records of an Internet social media platform and interviews with another user helped the FBI identify a Massachusetts Air National Guardsman as a suspect in the leak of highly classified military documents, according to court records unsealed Friday. The new details came as Jack Teixeira, 21, appeared in court to face charges under the Espionage Act of unauthorized removal and retention of classified and national defense information. [Read more.]( - Justice Thomas didn't report real-estate sale to wealthy donor: Conservative mega-donor Harlan Crow purchased three properties belonging to Supreme Court Justice Clarence Thomas and his family, in a transaction worth more than $100,000 that Thomas never reported, according to the non-profit investigative journalism organization ProPublica. The 2014 real estate deal shines a new light on Thomas's decades old relationship with Crow, a real estate magnate and longtime financier for conservative causes. [Read more.]( - How did Tonka trucks get their start in Minnesota? Tonka's models became must-have toys in the 1950s and 1960s, propelling the Minnesota-based company to global success by the 1970s. [Read more.]( WATCH THIS Great white shark leaps from water to steal fisherman's catch : Anglers aboard a chartered fishing boat in Cape Cod Bay got a big surprise when a great white shark leapt out of the water to snag their catch during a fishing trip last summer. [See the video.]( *** Talk to us! Send feedback on this newsletter, questions, story tips, ideas or anything else to [talkers@startribune.com](. *** TRENDING The 5 best things our food writers ate this week: From a shrimp po' boy to a meatless burger, here's a rundown of the greatest hits from their dining diaries over the past seven days. [Read more.]( SPORTS BLINK Twins call up Louie Varland to start in place of Kenta Maeda on Friday at Yankee Stadium: Varland is on his way to New York, called up from the Class AAA Saints. Maeda will not go on the injured list, manager Rocco Baldelli said, but is simply being skipped after reporting some "general fatigue." [Read more.]( *** Did someone forward this newsletter to you? You can [sign up for Talkers here](. *** WORTH A CLICK Police say $200,000 in dimes stolen from Philadelphia truck in bizarre coin heist: "According to the U.S. Mint website, a dime weighs 2.268 grams. So if 2 million dimes were stolen, that equals about 10,000 pounds or five tons of weight," CBS News Philadelphia reports. [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. 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: A large sinkhole opened up this week at an intersection in which Minneapolis neighborhood? Good luck! FROM THE ARCHIVES April 14, 2016: Rod Adams, an economic justice organizer with Neighborhoods Organizing for Change, protested over a megaphone during a fast food workers' strike organized by Centro De Trabajadores Unidos En La Lucha (CTUL) in south Minneapolis on Thursday. (Photo: Aaron Lavinsky/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 © 2023 StarTribune. All rights reserved. We value your opinion! [Give us your feedback.](

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