Minneapolis council member's brother stabbed, critically wounded
The alleged stabber was shot in the same encounter.
The alleged stabber was shot in the same encounter.
The U.N. Security Council has unanimously approved a resolution stressing that Afghanistan's new Taliban rulers need to establish an inclusive government with "the full, equal and meaningful participation of women and upholding human rights."
Vaccinated people with COVID-19 are taking up more hospital beds, but new data from the Allina Health and HealthPartners hospital systems show that they aren't as likely to require intensive care or ventilators.
The federal government is spending $2.1 billion to improve infection control procedures in health care settings, aimed at preventing the transmission of diseases inside hospitals, dialysis centers and other facilities.
A 240-foot tower had the prominence that the Grain Belt Beer sign has today.
Stricter discharge limits have never been tested under low river conditions.
Lt. Gov. Mandela Barnes paid no income tax in 2018 and was on BadgerCare while he was unemployed and running for lieutenant governor.
A new report shows the world is on a "catastrophic pathway" toward a hotter future unless governments make more ambitious pledges to cut greenhouse gas emissions, the head of the United Nations said Friday.
It maintains a similar tone but is more ambitious than the original.
With dry bars, recovery workouts and a thriving support community, Minnesotans are taking a new approach to sobriety.
The city is facing historic questions on the future of policing, rental pricing and power in city hall.
It's been more than 35 years since Lou Holtz left Minnesota for Notre Dame. But our instinct is still to believe that any decent coach could leave at any moment.
Early voting got underway in Minneapolis on Friday morning, a day after the Minnesota Supreme ruled that the votes will be counted on a ballot question over whether the city should replace its police department with a new Department of Public Safety.
There's new life at the Fort McCoy military base in western Wisconsin where more than 12,000 Afghan refugees are staying.
More than 300 workers responding to restore power