October 1, 1975 - This is a very short audio file with no identifying information. The spreadsheet says it is General Mills Assistant Treasurer James Weaver speaking on some appointment, but the speaker in the file doesn't talk about an appointment--only about a proposed national boycott. Neither the company nor the speaker are identified.
October 1, 1975 - James Larson, project manager of the Rayson Project (?), does battle with building trade unions as he works to rennovate Stevens Square in Minneapolis.
October 1, 1975 - Dan Gustavson, representing 34 craft unions, says it is mandatory that all work union. He also says, "General Mills fired US," he says, but not why(?). General Mills gave grant money to revitalize the Stevens Square neighborhood and assume this audio file is referring to this project.
July 17, 1975 - Closing arguments at the Forbes trial. Forbes was accused of using his hockey stick as a weapon. Prosecuter states that crime is crime no matter where it happens. Defense argues that hockey is competative and the situation needs to be handled by the NHL and not the courts.
July 16, 1975 - MPR’s Dan Olson reports on Jimmy Carter presidential campaign. Carter talks about potential competitor Governor Wallace, traveling across the country, and Secretary of State Henry Kissinger’s U.S. foreign policy.
July 15, 1975 - Trial to determine if injury acquired in an NHL game (between Henry Boucha and Dave Forbes) constitutes a criminal act (aggrivated assault). Boucha received an eye injury (from which he never really recovered) resulting from a stick to the face from Forbes in a game between the North Stars and the Bruins. Discussion of testimony regarding the game in question, and what the facts were in the case.
July 15, 1975 - Discussion of prosecution's case in a trial to determine whether or not a fight between Henry Boucha and Dave Forbes (which resulted in an eye injury to Dave Boucha) was criminal assault.
May 6, 1975 - The speaker featured here laments the current state of opinion regarding the elderly, highlighting the notions of the elderly population being a homogenous mass, lacking in motivation and/or facutly.
May 6, 1975 - Speaker Rebecca Eckstein rails against stereotypes of the elderly, specifically how that population is treated and displayed via advertising and other media.
January 14, 1975 - MPR’s Dan Olson interviews a man who visited novitiate after Menominee Warrior Society takeover. Interviewee talks about who comprises novitiate occupiers, describes an Indian Grand Jury held to determine the complaints people had on the reservation, discusses how Menominee land lost for taxes and then sold, and an explanation of the Menominee tribe’s situation compared with other tribes in a white-dominated society.