Minnesota
Dubai chocolate has made its way to Columbia Heights Minnesota

From TikTok to Minnesota’s Twin Cities, the buzz around this chocolate is just too sweet to ignore and Columbia Heights is the epicenter of all the craze.
Inside, The Golden Nuts, the air is filled with the aroma of coffee and roasted nuts, shelves lined with a selection of sweets but amid the array-one item stands out.
“It’s Dubai Chocolate,” smiled AJ Asmar. A rich milk chocolate bar filled with pistachio butter and katafi dough. A pack of two bars will cost you about $10.
Co-Owners, AJ Asmar and Mahmoud Rammouni opened the shop last year with hopes of bringing something new to the state.
“This is considered one of the first Middle Eastern bakery in Minnesota,” Rammouni said.
Their rendition of the viral Dubai chocolate has people lining up—eager to get their hands on the luxurious chocolate bar. But, Asmar said they didn’t want to stop there, rolling out the Dubai Strawberry Cup, inspired by the popular bar.
“We want to give people the Dubai chocolate experience here locally,” Asmar said.
As the craze continues to grow, Asmar and Rammouni hope to continue to bring people together to get a tase of luxury while staying on top of the latest viral phenomenon

Minnesota
Minnesota Twins debuts new

Watch CBS News
Be the first to know
Get browser notifications for breaking news, live events, and exclusive reporting.
Minnesota
Minnesota students use radio to call for help after bus driver has medical emergency

Authorities in central Minnesota say students aboard a school bus used the bus radio to call for help on Tuesday afternoon after the driver had a medical emergency.
It happened just after 3 p.m. in Crow Wing County. The sheriff’s office said students on the bus noticed the 74-year-old driver wasn’t following their usual route.
“One of the 30 children on board assisted by using the bus radio to request assistance,” the sheriff’s office said in a statement. “The driver then stopped and let the children exit the bus in a rural area” near County Road 45, a few miles south of Brainerd.
The Brainerd Dispatch reported that the man then continued driving the empty bus, leaving the children alongside the road. Authorities located the children, unharmed, about 10 minutes later. The newspaper reported that the bus and the driver were found a couple miles away.
The driver was taken to a hospital with what the sheriff’s office said was a serious medical condition.
The children were released to their parents at the scene or transported home on other buses.
MPR News helps you turn down the noise and build shared understanding. Turn up your support for this public resource and keep trusted journalism accessible to all.
Minnesota
Minnesota school district sued by students, parents over book ban policy

Two lawsuits were filed Monday against St. Francis Area School District over its book banning policy.
The ACLU of Minnesota and Lockridge Grindal Nauen PLLP filed one of the two lawsuits on behalf of two parents of children in the school district to end the “illegal banning of books from the district’s school libraries and classrooms.”
The lawsuit is in response to the district’s recent policy change that removed librarians and teachers from the book approval process and replaced them with a website called “Book Looks,” founded by Moms for Liberty, a group that has been at the forefront of the conservative movement targeting books that reference race and sexuality.
The website rates books on a scale of zero to five, with zero being “for everyone” and five being “aberrant.” St. Francis banned books with a rating of three and above, according to the ACLU. If a book is already in the library and has a rating of three or above and is challenged, policy dictates that the book must be removed.
Since the policy change, the lawsuit claims at least 46 books were removed or are in the process of being removed from St. Francis schools.
Education Minnesota-St. Francis also filed a separate lawsuit over the book ban on behalf of eight students in the district whose parents are teachers.
That lawsuit claims the district’s policy is “antithetical to the values of public education and encouraging discourse.”
Both lawsuits allege the policy violates the Minnesota Constitution and state law, saying school districts cannot discriminate against viewpoints expressed in books and that it violates the right to free speech and to receive information, as well as the right to a uniform and adequate education.
“The Book Looks rating system that is now binding upon the school district discriminates extensively based on viewpoint, particularly with regard to topics of gender, race, and religion,” the lawsuit said.
The teachers’ union says the Holocaust memoir “Night” by Elie Wiesel is set to be removed after a recent complaint.
On Sunday, Book Looks announced it was ceasing operations and taking all reports down from its website.
“Our charge was always to help inform parents and it would appear that mission has been largely accomplished. We pray that publishers will take up the torch and be more transparent regarding explicit content in their books so that there will be no need for a BookLooks.org in the future,” an announcement posted to the website says.
St. Francis Area Schools says its legal team is reviewing documents from both lawsuits and determining next steps.
About 4,100 students attend the school district.
-
News1 week ago
Trump Administration Ends Tracking of Kidnapped Ukrainian Children in Russia
-
News1 week ago
Vance to Lead G.O.P. Fund-Raising, an Apparent First for a Vice President
-
Business1 week ago
Egg Prices Have Dropped, Though You May Not Have Noticed
-
Technology1 week ago
Dude Perfect and Mark Rober may be the next YouTubers to get big streaming deals
-
World1 week ago
Commission warns Alphabet and Apple they're breaking EU digital rules
-
News1 week ago
Trump’s Ending of Hunter Biden’s Security Detail Raises Questions About Who Gets Protection
-
Technology1 week ago
CFPB workers are reinstated after a court order, but many still can’t work
-
News1 week ago
U.S. to Withdraw From Group Investigating Responsibility for Ukraine Invasion