MPR News UpdateAM edition

Good morning!  Rainy and cool today, with highs in the 50s. We like to think it's just Mother Nature crying along with the rest of us after "Avengers: Endgame" and the Battle of WInterfell on "Game of Thrones" this weekend. Speaking of the Avengers, here are all the ways it broke box office records this weekend. It was huge. Like, really, really huge. | What's on MPR News? | Forecast

Noor trial: Prosecution, defense set for closing arguments Monday
Prosecutors are expected to paint Noor as a reckless cop in shooting 911 caller Justine Ruszczyk. The defense will focus on Noor's contention he feared an ambush and that he and his partner were startled by a sound before he shot. | Full coverage
Authorities look at synagogue shooting suspect's social media posts

Authorities said the suspect, who had no previous contact with law enforcement, may face a hate crime charge in addition to homicide charges when he's arraigned later this week. He was being held without bail, and it was unclear if he had an attorney.

St. Paul community mourns 'heartbreaking' changes to Catholic grade school

Declining enrollment is forcing the century-old Saint Mark's Catholic School to shutter kindergarten through eighth grade, leaving only preschool. Seventeen staff and faculty members will lose their jobs.

If Mueller report was 'tip of the iceberg,' what more is lurking unseen?

How else might foreign powers be trying to interfere with American politics beyond the ways detailed in the special counsel's investigation report?

'Brady Bunch' episode fuels campaigns against vaccines and Marcia's miffed

As the number of measles cases nationwide rises to levels not seen since before the virus was declared eliminated in 2000, some people who oppose vaccines cite an odd cultural reference as evidence the concern about measles is overblown: a 1969 episode of "The Brady Bunch." | Measles shots aren't just for kids: Many adults could use a booster, too

Keeping money secrets from each other: Financial infidelity on the rise

As many as 41 percent of American adults deceive their partners by hiding secret debts or accounts. Therapists say it's increasingly common, and it's both the loss of trust and resources that hurt.

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