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Walz is to attend the University of Michigan football game before final prep for Tuesday’s debate

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BELLEVILLE, Mich. — Democratic vice presidential candidate Tim Walz is set to make his final major campaign appearance before the coming week’s debate at a football game between the University of Michigan and the University of Minnesota in Ann Arbor, Michigan, on Saturday.

Walz, the governor of Minnesota, planned to meet young voters on the college campus before the game’s afternoon kickoff. Walz has leaned into his background as a football coach and teacher while campaigning for Vice President Kamala Harris’ presidential bid, making multiple recent visits to university campuses to engage with students.

The visit comes before the debate Tuesday between Walz and Donald Trump’s running mate, Republican Sen. JD Vance of Ohio. After Saturday’s game, Walz will travel to northern Michigan for final debate prep before the faceoff, according to a source familiar with his plans who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss private preparations.

Transportation Secretary Pete Buttigieg has been playing the role of Vance in Walz’s debate prep sessions, which so far have taken place at a downtown Minneapolis hotel, according to another person who also spoke on condition of anonymity.

Michigan is one of the key battleground states in November’s presidential election. While Harris has made multiple visits to Detroit since launching her campaign in July, Walz has focused his efforts on other areas of the state, including a recent trip to Grand Rapids, Michigan’s second-largest city.

Walz has continued to engage with young voters on the campaign trail, including a recent visit to Michigan State University. In 2022, Michigan saw the highest youth voter turnout rate nationwide as Democrats made historic gains in the state. Energizing similar voters could be crucial for Harris’ this year.

AP writers Will Weissert in Washington and Meg Kinnard in South Carolina contributed to this report.



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5 people killed in a 4-vehicle chain reaction crash on central Utah highway

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PRICE, Utah — Four people from Minnesota and a Utah man were killed in a four-vehicle chain reaction crash in central Utah, the Utah Highway Patrol said.

The driver of an SUV who was pulling onto U.S. Highway 6 near Price on Thursday afternoon overshot the acceleration lane and pulled into the path of a semitractor pulling double trailers, the patrol said.

The driver of the semi tried to swerve to avoid hitting the SUV, lost control and crossed the median. The semi struck a Nissan Rogue in the opposite lanes, pushing it off the road and into a rock embankment. The semi and the Nissan also struck an all-terrain vehicle that was traveling on the shoulder of the highway.

All four people in the Nissan were killed, along with the person on the ATV, the patrol said. The semitractor and its trailers ended up on their side.

The victims in the Nissan were Sang Her, 56, and Lee Thao, 38, both from Brooklyn Center, and Bee Moua, 26, and Mai Lor, 25, both from St. Paul, the patrol said Friday. The driver of ATV was 35-year-old Gustavo Mendoza of Helper, Utah.

The driver of the SUV that had been pulling onto the highway suffered minor injuries.



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South Minneapolis’ Whittier neighborhood leads city in gun violence

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Those who are targeted often don’t bother filing a formal police report, he said, because of the perception no one will ever be held accountable. Victims are given a case number and frequently receive no follow-up from authorities.

“What will they do about it?” Dakane said. “It’s a waste of time.”

O’Hara acknowledged that understaffing remains a chronic issue at MPD, but urged residents to report such crimes so they can better track the problem. The department launched a “South Side React” team earlier this year to proactively address rising crime, he said, and has seen some success with its new robbery protocol, which redeploys resources and pauses all other service calls to thwart robbery sprees in a specific area.

Police officials sought to expand ShotSpotter, the city’s acoustic gunshot detection system, this summer to broader swaths of south Minneapolis experiencing surges in gun violence, but were forced to roll back the coverage plan over concerns by members of the City Council’s progressive wing, who have expressed skepticism about its ability to curb gun violence. The more limited expansion does not stretch into south Whittier, O’Hara noted, or the nearby hot spot of 19th and Nicollet, where police have seen much spillover.

“I don’t feel safe in my own frickin’ neighborhood,” said Chris Sonnesyn, 59, a longtime Whittier resident who was assaulted in July. When Sonnesyn, an independent contractor, discovered that a homeless man had broken into a client’s apartment and caused $500 in damage, he offered the man a job rather than calling police.

To Sonnesyn’s surprise, the man showed up for work the next day and spent several hours mowing lawns. But as Sonnesyn went to the garage to grab him a soda, the man pulled a rope from his backpack and attempted to strangle Sonnesyn.



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Minnesota’s measles outbreak was bad but could’ve been worse

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The current situation is similar to Minnesota’s 2017 outbreak of 75 cases, which also occurred mostly among Somali immigrants, who have been fearful that the measles vaccine increases risks of childhood autism, despite substantial research to the contrary.

Yet it has presented different challenges than the 2017 outbreak that centered on day care facilities and toddlers, or even this year’s outbreak in Chicago that emerged in a temporary shelter for migrants. Those weren’t discovered until locally infected people had already passed measles on to more people, who had passed it on to more people.

“That’s when its like, ‘uh oh, there’s a lot of people that got exposed that we don’t know about,’” Griffith said. “With [the 2024 outbreak], we’ve been able to stay on top of things a little bit more quickly.”

This year’s Minnesota outbreak started in May with three related children who were infected during travels to a country where measles is common. Health officials identified close contacts at risk who hadn’t been vaccinated and asked them to stay away from others, but the virus slipped through. People carrying the virus can be infectious for four days before rashes emerge, said Erica Bagstad, an infectious disease epidemiology supervisor for Hennepin County Public Health, which has worked closely with people exposed to measles during their stay-at-home periods.

“So you might have a little runny nose and a tiny cough and you wouldn’t think twice about going out in public” and unknowingly spreading measles, she said.

Two measles cases emerged in late June, followed by three in July among children from different metro counties who had no apparent links.



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