[Minnesota's news on your schedule]
MPR News Update PM edition

Good afternoon! A longtime cliche of movies, dog biting of mail carriers -- or at least dog chasing -- is no laughing matter for the post office. Dog attacks on postal workers rose last year to 6,755, up 206 from the previous year and the highest in three decades, as internet shopping booms. Medical expenses and workers' compensation cost the Postal Service millions of dollars each year. | Forecast
 

Trump says Assad may have to step down after chemical attack

President Donald Trump is suggesting that Syrian President Bashar Assad may have to leave power after this week's chemical weapons attack. | Syria's Assad faces mounting pressure after chemical attack

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Don Rickles, king of insult comedy, dies at 90

Don Rickles, the big-mouthed, bald-headed "Mr. Warmth" whose verbal assaults endeared him to audiences and peers and made him the acknowledged grandmaster of insult comedy, died Thursday.

Dustin Johnson withdraws from Masters with back injury

The world's No. 1-ranked golfer, Dustin Johnson, has withdrawn from the Masters after injuring his lower back in a fall at the home he was renting for the week.

Spies, armed militia and suspended civil rights in WWI Minnesota

In 1917, the state created the Commission on Public Safety, an all-powerful body that reported only to itself. The members suspended civil rights, set up an armed militia and created a network of spies. | How should World War I be taught in American schools?


 
 

Senate pulls 'nuclear' trigger to ease Gorsuch confirmation

Majority Leader Mitch McConnell set a new precedent in the Senate to advance Supreme Court nominations with a simple majority. The GOP change ended a Democratic filibuster of Neil Gorsuch.

Senate asks for more time in pollinator-ditches discussion

The Minnesota Senate has voted to temporary delay the need for farmers to get permits to mow state-owned ditches along their land.

House leaving town with GOP health care bill in shambles

Flanked by around two dozen Republican lawmakers, House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., announced a revision to the GOP bill. The amendment Ryan announced Thursday does not resolve disputes that have already split Republicans.

Is neuroscience rediscovering the soul?

The transcendence of human into information is either almost here, a step in evolution - or an impossibility, a mad dream of people who can't accept the inevitability of death, says Marcelo Gleiser.

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