January 27, 1998 - Like the rest of the nation people in our area are talking about the goings-on in Washington. We asked folks in Bemidji, St Paul, and Sioux Falls for their opinions on the scandal and whether the President ought to talk about it in tonight's State of the Union speech.
January 27, 1998 - MPR's Cara Hetland reports from Sioux Falls, South Dakota, where the Minnesota Twins are utilizing a caravan to hopefully draw crowds to ballpark as the team fights for a new stadium… while at the same time cutting team player payroll and dealing with talk of selling/moving team. Players admit it's tough to sell tickets for what may be a lame duck season.
January 27, 1998 - Attorneys for tobacco companies are expected to finish their opening arguments this morning in Minnesota's landmark tobacco trial. The state's attorney told jurors yesterday the tobacco industry deceived the public about the dangers of smoking and put profits before health. The State and Blue Cross Blue Shield are suing the industry for nearly two-billion dollars in smoking-related health care costs. Minnesota public radio's Elizabeth Stawicki reports: The state's attorney Mike Ciresi told jurors minnesota's case comes down to what the industry knew about the dangers of smoking; when it knew it and what it did about it. He stood at a podium, spoke deliberately for about two hours and never veered far from his notes. The courtroom was packed with attorneys, public officials such as the attorney general and the u-s attorney and local and national media including the wall street journal and the LA times.
January 27, 1998 - MPR’s Karen Louise Boothe profiles Jesse “The Body” Ventura, who is jumping back into the political ring with his decision to run for governor on a Reform Party ticket. It's hard to pin a label on Ventura. He's not your typical politician.
January 27, 1998 - Asian students studying in Minnesota are facing an educational crisis as a result of the economic turmoil in South Korea, Indonesia, and other countries. Plunging currencies overseas mean many students cannot pay their bills here and some Asian students are dropping out. Others are desperately seeking ways to stay and the University of Minnesota is trying to help. Minnesota Publuc Radio's Tim Pugmire reports.
January 27, 1998 - Tobacco companies say smokers won't buy safer cigarettes. Attorneys representing tobacco companies today denied claims they've made cigarettes more addictive, and say they've supported research into the health risks of smoking. Opening statements in Minnesota's case against the tobacco industry wrapped up today. Minnesota Public Radio's Laura McCallum reports.
January 27, 1998 - Political commentator David Gergen is in St. Paul tonight to speak to business leaders about the President's State of the Union and the crisis in the White House. Gergen is the editor of U.S. News and World Report, and served as an advisor to President Clinton and before him, Presidents Nixon, Ford and Reagan.
January 28, 1998 - A new plan is afoot to relieve commuter congestion on Minnesota's busiest roadway. Transportation planners are proposing a commuter bus system for Interstate 35W through Minneapolis, Richfield and Bloomington. The bus plan is an alternative to the one billion dollar 35W re-design floated a few years ago to relieve car congestion. Minnesota Public Radio's Dan Olson has more. audio . . . sfx 42nd street overpass It's 5pm on a Friday afternoon and the illuminated brakelights make the four lanes of 35W through south Minneapolis look as though they are carpeted in red. Traffic is barely moving - with one exception. audio . . . bus whoosh
January 28, 1998 - Sandy Keith retires as Minnesota's Chief Justice tomorrow (Thursday). The Rochester native is one of the few who've helped shape Minnesota from all three branches of government--as state senator, lieutenant governor and supreme court justice. Minnesota Public Radio's Elizabeth Stawicki has this profile of the outgoing chief justice. In 1946 Sandy Keith tried to shake off the dirt from what he called the hick town of Rochester and move on to bigger and better things. Keith, the son of a mayo clinic physician, headed east and obtained degrees from Amherst and Yale. After a stint as a Marine lieutenant during the Korean war, Keith returned to Rochester taking a job as an attorney in Mayo Clinic's legal department. His boss was Harry Blackmun who would later become a U-S Supreme Court Justice. Politics was always a topic of discussion in his parents' household but Keith's interest flared in the 1950's when he won a seat in the state senate. Don
January 28, 1998 - The highway lobby is trying again this year to get the Legislature to raise the state gas tax. The gas tax is constitutionally dedicated to highway construction, and the highway interests have been trying in vain to raise it for ten years. This year, they're hoping a new strategy will make the difference. Minnesota Public Radio's Martin Kaste reports: The highway lobby and its rural allies at the Capitol have unable to get a gas tax hike through the Legislature since 1988 because URBAN legislators won't let them. A hard core of urban and a few suburban legislators has held the gas tax hostage for years because the rural lawmakers won't support more funding for mass transit in the cities. The pro-highway interests are now promising something for BOTH sides. They've introduced a bill to dedicate all sales taxes on cars