March 30, 1992 - MPR’s Bill Wareham interviews Garrison Keillor on coming back home to Minnesota and A Prairie Home Companion.
March 30, 1992 - A DFLer details the trends coming out of the ongoing presidential primary races and the focus of party members to decide on a strong candidate to go up against President Bush.
March 31, 1992 - Former Minnesota Governor Elmer L. Andersen shares his political thoughts on Harold LeVander, another former governor. LeVander died on March 30th, 1992.
March 31, 1992 - Part one is a series of interviews with four Minnesota women about their lives. This is followed by in-studio guests Anita Pampusch and Aviva Breen. Pampusch is the president of the College of St. Catherine, and Breen is the executive director for the Legislative Commission on the Economic Status of Women.
April 1, 1992 - MPR’s Paula Schroeder interviews Paul Thomas, co-author of Eat for Life. Thomas details healthy eating patterns and the history of the American diet.
April 1, 1992 - MPR’s Beth Friend talks with author Robert Olen Butler about his book, A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain. The short story collection captures the Vietnamese immigrant experience in the aftermath of the Vietnam War. In segment, Butler reads a passage from book.
April 1, 1992 - Midmorning’s Paula Schroeder talks with sportswriter Ted Robinson about Tom Kelly and Season of Dreams: The Minnesota Twins' Drive to the 1991 World Championship, a book he co-authored with the Twins manager.
April 1, 1992 - Midmorning’s Paula Schroeder interviews Tom Kelly, manager of the Minnesota Twins. Kelly shares memories and feelings about the challenging 1990 season, in which the Twins stepped of the field with a 74-88 record and finished 7th in AL West.
April 2, 1992 - Roy Bauer, co-author of The Silverlake Project: Transformation at IBM, shares the inside story of one of the most successful computers in IBM history.
April 3, 1992 - Roger Sween, a library cooperation specialist at State Library Services-Minnesota Department of Education, talks with MPR’s Gary Eichten about the variety of choices involved in declaring a ‘State Book.’