MPR News Update
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Good morning and happy Monday. Here’s what you need to know to start your day. 

A calm fall day. Twin Cities highs near 40 with nighttime lows in the lower 20s. It’ll be windy. Statewide, mostly cloudies with highs up north near 30 and near 40 in the south. At night, lows in the mid teens to lower 20s.  More on Updraft. | Forecast

Maybe there's hope for Amy Klobuchar’s campaign. The Minnesota senator has been a long-shot, but she and supporters say they have new momentum in polling and fundraising. MPR News’ Mark Zdechlik reports from Des Moines: “Observers say Klobuchar still has a long way to climb to reach the top tier of 2020 Democratic candidates — but she's well-positioned to capitalize if any of the front-runners trip up.”

Bernie Sanders, a presidential frontrunner, visited Minneapolis. Sanders is well ahead of Klobuchar in the polls, and he stopped at the U of M for a rally Sunday night where he showcased his endorsement from Democratic Rep. Ilhan Omar. Clasping Omar’s hand as he took the stage, Sanders devoted a slice of his 55-minute remarks to a defense of Omar, whom he argued has been vilified by Trump and others because she is a refugee and a Muslim.

Who pays for schools? Largely, you do. And we have a guide to all the referendums that’ll guide exactly how much taxpayers pay and what they get out of their public schools. 

Curious about an aspect of life in Minnesota? Pitch your question and we’ll answer the best ones in our “Ask a ‘sotan” feature.

Cody Nelson, MPR News

Krispy Kreme orders student to halt doughnut resale service
Deanna Weniger | Pioneer Press
An enterprising Minnesota college student who drove to Iowa every weekend to buy hundreds of Krispy Kreme doughnuts that he then sold to his own customers in the Twin Cities area has been warned by the confectionary giant to stop.
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Diagnostic gaps: Skin comes in many shades and so do rashes
Deena Prichep | NPR
Google "rash" online, and you'll mostly turn up photos of inflamed bumps on white skin. That's not so helpful for people of color, says a mom who's pushing for a more realistic diversity of images.
What's on the radio today

9 a.m. — MPR News with Kerri Miller

Millennials and Gen Z say: OK Boomers. You broke America. Now you say you can fix it? What happens if a Baby Boomer president is tasked with fixing what the Baby Boom broke?

10 a.m. — 1A with Joshua Johnson 

We're a year out from the election. Polling suggests many have given up on a political system that's bent badly out of shape. And a significant number say they'd be ok with leader who doesn't have to bother with Congress or elections. How do we renew America's faith in its democratic process? Is it too late to win some people back?

11 a.m. — MPR News with Angela Davis

Lead contamination coming from Water Gremlin is bringing new attention to the dangers of lead poisoning. On Monday host Angela Davis will get an update on Water Gremlin and then she’ll talk with someone from the Minnesota Department of Health about what to look for and how to prevent it.

For the rest of this hour, we're going to focus on slavery and its legacy here in Minnesota. MPR News’ Tim Nelson sat down with the authors of two recent books that look at racial inequality and the legacy of slavery in Minnesota.

Noon — MPR News Presents

A new MPR News and APM Reports documentary by host/producer Max Nesterak and editor Catherine Winter: "Uprooted: The 1950's Plan to Erase Indian Country."

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