March 10, 2003 - As part of the series “A Lesson on Learning: Behind No Child Left Behind,” MPR reporter Tim Pugmire reports on the battle over federal and local control over education in K-12 schools.
March 11, 2003 - Republican House Speaker Steve Sviggum says he'll expedite an ethics hearing on Republican Arlon Lindner. House DFLers filed a complaint today against the Corcoran Republican for allegedly making inappropriate comments about homosexuals and African Americans. They say Lindner's comments have harmed the reputation of the Minnesota House. Sviggum says the Republican caucus also denounces the comments but says he's not sure if the comments rise to an ethics violation. Minnesota Public Radio's Tom Scheck reports...
March 11, 2003 - Governor Tim Pawlenty hit the road Monday to promote his plan to solve the state's $4.2 billion dollar budget deficit. At a public forum in Bemidji, the governor focused on economic development. Pawlenty presented his plan to create tax-free zones to attract businesses and create jobs. Mainstreet Radio's Tom Robertson reports... {
March 11, 2003 -
March 11, 2003 - As part of the series “A Lesson on Learning: Behind No Child Left Behind,” MPR reporter Dan Olson reports on push for higher qualification reqirements for teachers. The reality for schools and teachers is more complicated.
March 12, 2003 -
March 12, 2003 - Minneapolis writer Alison McGhee describes her new novel as, "very sad". Her novel is titled, "Was it Beautiful?" It's the story of William T. Jones, a man struggling with the suicide of his son, his divorce, and the loss of his job. McGhee based the new book on the biblical story of Job, the man who lost everything as God tested his faith. Allison McGhee told Minnesota Public Radio's Euan Kerr that she set the story in the Adirondacks, at the turn of the 20th century. She grew up there, and wanted to set the story among the characters who lived back in the woods.
March 12, 2003 - As part of the series “A Lesson on Learning: Behind No Child Left Behind,” MPR reporter Tim Pugmire reports on the debate over effectiveness of added testing for students.
March 12, 2003 - A rebroadcast of Talking Volumes event with author Robert Alexander, known locally as R.D. Zimmerman, talking with Katherine Lanpher about his novel The Kitchen Boy: A Novel of the Last Tsar. The book is based on historical research and suggests what might have happened before and after the assassination of Russia's ruling Romanov family in Siberia in 1918.
March 13, 2003 -