January 15, 1997 - As part of a series on poverty, MPR’s Stephen Smith reports on low-income housing.
January 16, 1997 - MPR’s John Rabe calls various students (MPR employees' kids) at home to see if they are reading, per Governor Carlson’s guidance, who ordered kids to read books today and report back on their reading in school tomorrow.
January 16, 1997 - Midday features live coverage of Governor Arne Carlson's State of the State address. He speaks in the Minnesota House Chamber well over an hour. Highlights of speech include a state disaster fund, property tax reform, crime control, welfare reform, arts funding, and Twins stadium.
January 16, 1997 - If you think you have it bad in winter, Greg Rhode has a tale for you. Storms literally buried his home. Rhode says that he lives at the end of a cul-de-sac, on the other side of a wide beet field -- conditions that seem to dump snow right on their house.
January 16, 1997 - ((NO INTRO -- USE KLB's pkg as intro)) This is Martin Kaste. State legislators' reaction to the Governor's State of the State address was, on the whole, polite. There were a few instances of crude jokes and notes being passed among the DFL's backbenchers during the speech itself, but their leaders were more diplomatic. House Speaker Phil Carruthers praised what he called the Governor's "bipartisan spirit": ((In many ways his agenda is the same as ours.... similar agenda... welfare reform ... I think there's a termendous numbe of areas where there's going to be a lot of bipartisan cooperation. 0:22)) But the DFL leadership's conciliatory
January 16, 1997 - Governor Arne Carlson delivered his annual "state of the state address" to a joint convention of the legislature. As Minnesota Public Radio's Karen-Louise Boothe reports, the Governor made his first DIRECT pitch for funding a new baseball stadium and hammered familiar themes of his administration's policies: The annual State of the State Address is a Governor's time to take center stage and be his or her persuasive BEST. THIS year, the governor had reason to sound fairly upbeat. The state is enjoying a projected surplus of 1.4-BILLION dollars, unemployment is low and job creation is ahead of the national average. Another factor leading to the Governor's optimism is the promise by state lawmakers to work harder than ever to be bi-partisan and civil when it comes to doing the state's business.
January 16, 1997 - One estimate places the number of homeless teenagers in Minneapolis at well over 1500. There's room for several dozen at emergency shelters, while many others find a temporary place to stay with friends or relatives. Others live in cars or vacant buildings before they move on. Youth advocates say homeless teens need permanent housing before they can begin getting their lives back together. A refurbished apartment building opened in Minneapolis recently with 30 units of permanent housing for homeless young people. Minnesota Public Radio's Dan Olson reports. Stereotypes of homeless teenagers melt away on meeting 'Amy'. Wearing a new flannel shirt and blue jeans, the self confident sixteen year old could just as easily be class president instead of a teenager who's been on the move for two years.
January 17, 1997 - On this Voices of the Heartland segment, Duluth poet Barton Sutter provides a commentary on the late Minneapolis poet John Engman in a reading of “Citizen of the Milky Way: Eulogy to John Engman.”
January 18, 1997 - Cakes, wizards and stiltwalkers are appearing at the Science Museum of Minnesota today. The Museum marks it's 90th Birthday...and to celebrate the Museum is throwing a party and offering FREE admission today. Over 800-thousand people visit the museum annually---and it's also the number one destination for school field trips. The Museum's Director of Marketing and Communication--Jane Eastwood--says many things have changed over the past 90 years...but the focus has remained the same.
January 20, 1997 - Ambassador Andrew Young says his friend Martin Luther King, Jr. "did everything he could to be an ordinary person but became a man of destiny." Young worked with King in the Southern Christian Leadership Conference and was on the motel balcony next to him when a sniper killed King. Young spoke today in Minneapolis at the 7th annual Martin Luther King,Jr. day breakfast sponsored by the General Mills Foundation. We have a couple of excerpts of Ambassador Young's remarks. Ambassador Young said the civil rights work to be done in this country is what he calls integrating the nation's money. Young says people whose neighborhoods are redlined by lenders are like residents of an underdeveloped nation living inside the United States.