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Guns, wolves cause split between Walz and popular deer hunting group

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Fri, May 26, 2023 04:49 PM

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Plus: What happens to the plastic bags we recycle at grocery stores? ? ? If you're having trouble

Plus: What happens to the plastic bags we recycle at grocery stores? ͏ ͏ If you're having trouble viewing this email, you may [see it online](. [Star Tribune]( Talkers TOP STORIES - Guns, wolves cause split between Walz and popular deer hunting group: State officials are in search of a replacement partner for the 2023 Governor's Deer Opener now that the state's largest deer hunting organization has jilted Gov. Tim Walz over his gun-control politics and efforts at the Capitol to ban wolf hunting. [Read more.]( - Judge to rule if Edina man convicted of Wisconsin sex assaults should be civilly committed: It's a unique case considering the crimes occurred years ago in a different state, but also because Alec Ross Cook is a free man after serving a three-year prison sentence in Wisconsin. Prosecutors in Minnesota want him committed for longer, while Cook's attorney William Lubov said they are "scared as hell" about the thought of him possibly being locked up again for an indeterminate time. [Read more.]( - DFL lawmakers criticize Walz for vetoing rideshare bill: The bill would have required drivers to be paid $1.45 a mile and 34 cents per minute. Walz announced his veto hours after Uber said it would pull out of all Minnesota markets except the Twin Cities metro area if the bill was signed. [Read more.]( - Supreme Court ruling eliminates protections from vast areas of wetlands: The effect could be blunted for Minnesota's 10 million acres of wetlands because of state conservation laws. But the effects of lost wetlands elsewhere could be felt here in the impact on migratory birds and water quality. [Read more.]( - Three years on, Minneapolis remembers George Floyd: Visitors still come to 38th and Chicago in Minneapolis to learn about the movement for racial justice. A series of gatherings on Thursday marked three years since Floyd was murdered in the custody of Minneapolis police officers. [Read more.]( WATCH THIS Dust devil whips up chaos on busy South Carolina beach: Hopefully these vacationers brought extra towels with them. [See the video.]( *** Talk to us! Send feedback on this newsletter, questions, story tips, ideas or anything else to [talkers@startribune.com](. *** TRENDING What happens to the plastic bags we recycle at grocery stores? Our modern lives are flooded with plastic film, which cannot be put in curbside recycling bins. [Read more.]( SPORTS BLINK Like it or not, next U president will be caretaker of athletics: Athletics are not the most important thing on campus, but they will play an outsized role in the next president's success, writes Chip Scoggins. [Read more.]( *** Did someone forward this newsletter to you? You can [sign up for Talkers here](. *** WORTH A CLICK U.S. to give away free lighthouses as GPS makes them unnecessary: "Ten lighthouses that for generations have stood like sentinels along America's shorelines protecting mariners from peril and guiding them to safety are being given away at no cost or sold at auction by the federal government. The aim of the program run by the General Services Administration is to preserve the properties, most of which are more than a century old," the Guardian 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: The St. Paul City Council approved a plan to create a separate, raised bike trail on which city street this week? Good luck! FROM THE ARCHIVES May 26, 2018: RBCU credit union employee Pierre Merlin planted flags at Fort Snelling National Cemetery in Bloomington. Merlin, who is French, served as a U.N. peacekeeper during the conflict in Lebanon and still has shrapnel in his foot. RBCU raised nearly $150,000 for Memorial Day flags for veterans' graves. (Photo: David Joles/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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