Digitization made possible by the State of Minnesota Legacy Amendment’s Arts and Cultural Heritage Fund, approved by voters in 2008.
August 18, 2000 - The U-S Olympic trials for gymnastics are being held this weekend at the Fleet Center in Boston, Massachusetts. Minnesota native John Roethlisberger is hoping to make the Olympic team for the third time. MPR Sports Commentator and Star Tribune writer Jay Weiner is covering the trials and he joins us now from Boston.
August 18, 2000 - An effort to control the zebra mussel population has killed at least 75,000 fish along the Mississippi River. Earlier this week, N-S-P used a pesticide chemical to clear the mussels from piping in their Prairie Island plant near Red Wing. The chemical seeped out into the plant's discharge canal, where shiners, sunfish and channel catfish became infected. Marilyn Danks is a biologist with the Department of Natural Resources. I asked her what such a massive fish kill would look like:
August 18, 2000 -
August 18, 2000 -
August 21, 2000 - A plant genetics conference in Minneapolis this week has drawn protesters who oppose the use of genetically modified foods. The conference, sponsored by the Cambridge Healthtech Institute at the Marriott downtown, addresses uses of genetics in crop production. But neither the Minneapolis police department nor the protesters are looking to repeat the confrontations that occurred at an animal genetics conference in July. Those face-offs resulted in arrests for demonstrators and criticism of police tactics. Minneapolis Public Radio's Amy Radil reports.
August 21, 2000 -
August 21, 2000 - According to the North Dakota State Data Center, workers in Minnesota are more likely to moonlight than the average American. One in ten Minnesotans have a second job, compared to one in 16 nationwide. Jay Mousa is Director of Research at the Minnesota Department of Economic Security. He says that even though the idea of a second job brings to mind a desperation for money, it isn't only the poorest workers who want those extra wages:
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August 21, 2000 - Northwest Airlines is offering condolences to the family and colleagues of a Northwest airline pilot who died last night en route from Los Angeles to the Twin Cities. Thomas Christianson died of an apparent heart attack. Back-up pilots landed the plane without incident. As airline traffic has increased, so has the number of in-flight medical emergencies. Federal Aviation Administration figures indicate that more than 100 people die on airplanes each year. The agency is considering a proposal to require airplanes to be equiped with Automated External Defibrilators or A-E-D's, which deliver a shock to heart attack victims to help restore normal heart activity. Joan Sullivan Garrett is President of Medaire Inc, a Phoenix-based company that offers in-flight medical advice to commercial airlines. She says the major comercial airlines aren't waiting for the F-A-A to require the upgrade:
August 21, 2000 - Canadian grain farmers may grow the same varieties of wheat and barley as their US neighbors, but the countries market their crop in different ways. Canada's grain growers are required to sell their crop through a government-sponsored Wheat Board - a system that agriculture officials in North Dakota have been considering. While North Dakota contemplates a voluntary version of Canada's Wheat Board, farmers across the boarder are itching for its abolishment. Minnesota Public Radio's Erin Galbally has this Mainstreet report. {Art Anse still has a few neighbors along his packed dirt road miles from the nearest town - farms in southern Manitoba are becoming increasingly rare. In 1936 half of Canada's population made their living off of the land. Today, that number has dwindled to fewer than 3%. Surrounded by fields of wheat, beans and yellow canola, Anse wonders how much longer his neighbors will stay on the farm. He argues the problem is the Canadian Wheat Board, a government agency started during World War II which he believes has lost its purpose. Swatting misquotes away, Anse says the board stifles innovation forcing more and more farmers to leave their fields behind.