Dairy is in, pickles are out: Our definitive rankings of the State Fair’s new foods for 2023

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Dairy is in, pickles are out: Our definitive rankings of the State Fair’s new foods for 2023 The sun is shining. The crowds are ready. The Minnesota State Fair is on. It’s time to go outside and eat.As usual, the Pioneer Press crew started bright and early on Thursday, the first day, to taste through all 34 official new foods. But this year, we’re not simply giving you a list of our thoughts — no, we’re ranking the best, the worst and everything on a stick in between. Some foods didn’t make the top 15 or the bottom 10, so those are your call.Family, friends and fairgoers offered their tastebuds and opinions for our rankings, too.Here’s what we tried and what we think. What was your favorite new food? Think we screwed up? Let us know at [email protected] BESTCounting down to our No. 1 favorite 2023 Minnesota State Fair new food.15. Cheese Curd Stuffed Pizza Pretzel ($9)Cheese Curd Stuffed Pizza Pretzel from Green Mill at the 2023 Minnesota State Fair. (Jess Fleming / Pioneer Press)What is it: Scratch-made jumbo pizza dough pretzel, hand-twisted...

St. Paul City Council apologizes for hiring process around Hmong city staffer to Black reparations commission

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

St. Paul City Council apologizes for hiring process around Hmong city staffer to Black reparations commission The St. Paul City Council issued a joint written apology on Thursday for the hiring process surrounding the sole staffer for its new Community Reparations Commission.The apology follows a public protest Tuesday outside St. Paul City Hall, where some 15-20 Black civic and elected leaders said the council had erred in offering the role of senior policy analyst to a Hmong woman rather than a Black descendant of American chattel slavery or a descendent of the city’s historically-Black Rondo neighborhood.The council’s apology, released by Director of Council Operations Brynn Hausz, noted the “council and its central staff would like to acknowledge and apologize for the pain caused in the course of this process.”It was still unclear on Thursday the circumstances surrounding the hiring process, including how many applicants were interviewed for the staff position and by whom.Nathaniel Khaliq, president emeritus of the St. Paul NAACP and an appointee on the commissio...

Judge to decide if Missouri can restrict gender-affirming care to minors

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Judge to decide if Missouri can restrict gender-affirming care to minors JEFFERSON CITY, Mo. - Missouri is just days away from a new law going into effect banning transgender minors from gender-affirming care, but a judge could halt the measure from going into place.It was the headline of the legislative session, restricting gender-affirming care for minors, and now it's set to go into effect Monday, but Attorney General Andrew Bailey and families of transgender children spent the week in court fighting over the new law. It's now up to the judge to decide how the court challenge plays out."We're going to defend it against the attack, and we anticipate winning on the merits of that case," Bailey said in an exclusive interview with our Missouri Chief Capitol Bureau Reporter Emily Manley. "Our role is to defend the statute enacted by the General Assembly. Activists on the other side of the political spectrum attack these laws and don't like that state legislatures are passing these laws."It was a priority for Republicans and the governor to prohibit doctors...

Kansas City, Missouri, says US investigating alleged racism at fire department

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Kansas City, Missouri, says US investigating alleged racism at fire department KANSAS CITY, Mo. (AP) — The Kansas City, Missouri, Fire Department is under a U.S. Department of Justice investigation for alleged racial discrimination, a Kansas City spokesperson confirmed to The Kansas City Star Thursday. Associated Press phone calls requesting comment from the federal agency were not immediately returned Thursday. Three Black firefighters told the newspaper that they were interviewed by the Department of Justice within the past year about racism and their treatment at the agency. A Black firefighter sued last week, claiming he was retaliated against for talking to the Justice Department, the newspaper reported.The federal investigation comes after The Kansas City Star reported on unwritten rules within the department that kept Black firefighters from preferred stations, hampered their ability to be promoted and often left them ostracized in majority-white stations.In one incident, a white fire cadet “joked” that his favorite knot was a noose and placed it around...

What Jerry Jeudy’s hamstring injury means for Broncos’ early season plans, roster going forward

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

What Jerry Jeudy’s hamstring injury means for Broncos’ early season plans, roster going forward Just before the Broncos broke minicamp for summer break in mid-June, Tim Patrick thought about a potential reunion tour and couldn’t help but smile.“It would be amazing, honestly,” the Denver wide receiver said. “I think we’ve got two or three games together. It’s something that we all want. That’s the whole point of asking KJ (Hamler) to live with us, to make sure this season there’s no excuses.”The “we” Patrick referred to: Himself and fellow Broncos wide receivers Hamler, Jerry Jeudy and Courtland Sutton. Patrick’s memory was spot on. The quartet all had been part of the organization since the 2020 draft, when the club used its first two picks on Jeudy and Hamler. They joined Sutton coming off a breakout 2019 season and Patrick working his way from undrafted free agent to special teams standout to reliable receiver.Since then, the Broncos have played 50 regular-season games. Those four receivers have never played a full one together. Half of Week 2 in 2020 before Sutton tore his ...

Nordstrom’s results reflect cautious consumer spending, echoing department store sector blues

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Nordstrom’s results reflect cautious consumer spending, echoing department store sector blues By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO (AP Retail Writer)NEW YORK (AP) — Nordstrom on Thursday reported that its sales and profits fell in its fiscal second quarter, joining itsdepartment store peers coping with shoppers’ cautious spending.But its results still topped Wall Street expectations. The Seattle-based upscale department store reaffirmed its financial annual outlook that calls for a sales decline for the year.After initially rising, its stock was down about 2% in after-markets trading Thursday.Nordstrom’s sales were affected by the timing of the company’s anniversary sale, with one week falling into the third quarter this year compared to one day in 2022. Moreover, last year’s results included a full quarter of sales from its Canadian operations, which the company wound down in June of this year.Nordstrom reported net income of $137 million, or 84 cents per share, for the quarter ended July 29. That compares with $126 million, or 77 cents per share, in the...

US sues SpaceX for alleged hiring discrimination against refugees and others

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

US sues SpaceX for alleged hiring discrimination against refugees and others WASHINGTON (AP) — The U.S. Department of Justice on Thursday sued SpaceX, the rocket company founded and run by Elon Musk, for alleged hiring discrimination against refugees and people seeking or already granted asylum. The complaint, filed in an administrative court within the department, asserts that SpaceX wrongly claimed that federal export control laws barred it from hiring anyone but U.S. citizens and permanent residents. As a result, it discouraged refugees and asylum seekers and grantees from applying for jobs at the company, according to the complaint.Export controls typically aim to protect U.S. national security and to further national trade objectives. They bar the shipment of specific technologies, weapons, information and software to specific non-U.S. nations and also limit the sharing or release of such items and information to “U.S. persons.” But the Justice Department noted that the term includes not only U.S. citizens, but also permanent U.S. resi...

Heatwave set to scorch SoCal just one week after Tropical Storm Hilary drenches the region 

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Heatwave set to scorch SoCal just one week after Tropical Storm Hilary drenches the region  Nearly a week after some parts of Southern California received nearly a foot of rain due to Tropical Storm Hilary, significant heat is expected to settle in and blanket the area beginning this weekend. According to the National Weather Service, inland areas – including most valley, interior mountain and desert communities – will experience the hottest temperatures, with highs forecast to reach up to 109 degrees. Low temperatures will hover in the 70s, NWS said, with foothill communities expected to be slightly warmer at night with lows in the mid-80s. Coastal areas will see highs near 100 and lows in the mid-60s to lower 70s. The brunt of the heatwave will settle in on Sunday and begin to scorch the area on Monday, according to KTLA 5 meteorologist Kaj Goldberg. “We are going to see a significant change in the weather pattern as we head from Sunday into Monday,” Goldberg said. “A huge area of high pressure is making its way through the center of the country right now, but ...

El Niño, climate change conspired to cook up Hilary's mess, scientists say

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

El Niño, climate change conspired to cook up Hilary's mess, scientists say A natural El Nino, human-caused climate change, a stubborn heat dome over the nation’s midsection and other factors cooked up Tropical Storm Hilary’s record-breaking slosh into California and Nevada, scientists figure.Cooked up is the key phrase, since hot water and hot air were crucial in rapidly growing Hilary and then steering the storm on an unusual path that dumped 10 months of rain in a single weekend in normally bone-dry places. Nearly a foot of rain fell in parts of Southern California's mountains, while cities smashed summertime records.“It was a combination of sort of a perfect situation of everything coming together in a way that made the storm possible,” said University of Albany atmospheric scientist Kristen Corbosiero, an expert on Pacific hurricanes. Photos: Tropical Storm Hilary batters Southern California It’s never easy to attribute a single event to climate change, especially so quickly and with El Nino being a prominent factor, said former National Oceanic and ...

Wendy's adds three new items to menus nationwide

Published Mon, 25 Nov 2024 10:14:50 GMT

Wendy's adds three new items to menus nationwide Wendy’s Made to Crave menu lineup is getting a revamp with the addition of three new menu items.The fast-food chain introduced queso fries, a loaded nacho cheeseburger and a chicken sandwich to its menus nationwide Wednesday. McDonald’s fans can get this popular menu item at Wendy’s The loaded cheeseburger is topped with melty cheese, roasted poblano queso, spicy corn and tortilla strips, all sitting upon one of Wendy’s signature square patty. The patty is then drizzled with spicy chipotle sauce, accompanied by lettuce and tomatoes, all sandwiched between a jalapeño cheddar bun.Customers can swap out the beef patty for a chicken one as well.The new Loaded Nacho Cheeseburger pays homage to two American tailgating classics – cheeseburgers and nachos – and will have fans leaving the other guys behind and making the transfer to Wendy's this season." Lindsay Radkoski, U.S. chief marketing officer for The Wendy's Company, said in a statement. Wendy’s to test AI chatbot at drive-thru T...