September 3, 1999 - Bison burgers, Buff dogs…bison's becoming the 'other' red meat for health conscious Americans. Mainstreet Radio's Marisa Helms reports that cattle ranchers across Minnesota are starting to raise the nearly once extinct animal in increasing numbers. Some of these new bison ranchers try to mimic the natural prairie setting, grazing their herds on native grasses.
September 3, 1999 - The Minnesota Attorney General's office is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to consider a case involving the Minnesota Twins, anti-trust laws, and whether professional baseball illegally coerces communities into building publicly-funded baseball stadiums.
September 6, 1999 - MPR’s Eric Jansen reports on trip from the BWCA, after the severe storm on the Fourth of July that downed millions of trees over more than 300,000 acres. Despite the devastation, the Boundary Waters Canoe Area Wilderness is already showing signs of recovery.
September 7, 1999 - MPR’s Bill Wareham reviews the Mill City Music Festival, which for the first time, had an “all local” line-up. Wareham discusses perfomance highlights, including Prince, Sugar, Jack McDuff, and Slim Dunlap.
September 9, 1999 - MPR’s Michael Choo reports on a new Hmong-language radio program that premiered on WMIN Radio Rey in St. Paul. The variety show features Hmong music and news from both Laos and the Twin Cities region. Backers of the show say the estimated 75-thousand Hmong living in the metro area represent an under-served market with significant economic potential.
September 9, 1999 - Jesse Ventura has very publicly kept lobbyists at arms length since becoming Governor, but he'll make an exception this evening. Ventura doesn't meet with lobbyists or accept their money, but he says he's not selling out by attending a fundraiser - which gets underway shortly at the Lexington in St. Paul - as a favor to his former campaign chair. The president of the watchdog group Common Cause Minnesota calls it the worst of politics-as-usual.
September 10, 1999 - Governor Ventura used his weekly radio show to criticize the media for focusing on his personal life.
September 13, 1999 - Sports commentator Howard Sinker describes the experience of watching/listening to Minnesota Twins pitcher Eric Milton throw a no-hitter on September 11th, 1999 against the Anaheim Angels.
September 13, 1999 - The debate over whether Governor Ventura's money-making activities violate state conflict of interest laws shows no sign of ending. One legislator plans to introduce a bill holding elected officials to the same standards as state employees, and the Minneapolis city attorney is considering an activist's complaint over Ventura's return to the wrestling ring last month. An internal memo written by a state ethics officer concluded if Ventura were a typical state employee, he would be violating the law.
September 15, 1999 - 1937 was a year of turmoil across the world, as the seeds of World War II began germinating. Yet the rampant nationalism which pushed Hitler, Franco and Mussolini atop the political forefront in Europe, was in evidence in other parts of the world. In the Caribbean, on the island shared by the Dominican Republic and Haiti, the Dominican leader General Trujillo ordered the massacre of Haitian immigrants. Thousands of Haitians fled across the border back to Haiti, but many died under the hail of bullets, stones and machete blows. Novelist Edwidge Danticat, who was born in Haiti, says she has been haunted by the story of the massacre. She set her latest book "The Farming of Bones" in the midst of the turmoil in part because so few people, including many Haitians, know about what happened.