August 13, 1998 - Simon McBurney, artistic director of the Theatre de Complicite. "The Street of Crocodiles" opens tonite at Theatre de la Jeune Lune, but every production is sold out already. If you're one of the lucky ones who got tickets for "The Street of Crocodiles", the sold-out surrealist production that opens tonite in Minneapolis.
August 11, 1998 - John talked with the Jungle Theatre's managing director, Julie Sands and Kevin Kling about whether the Jungle theatre is folding for good now that it's losing it's lease to an adult fantasy gift shop.
May 15, 1998 - U-N Secretary General Kofi Annan (KOH-fee ANN-nin) is the commencement speaker this Sunday at Macalester College. Annan came here from Ghana in 1959 and graduated from Macalester in 1961. He often speaks about freezing his ears off because he wouldn't wear earmuffs. Mike Shuster covers the United Nations for National Public Radio, and he spoke with Minnesota Public Radio's John Rabe about Annan and the job he's done at the U-N. National Public Radio's Mike Shuster, speaking with Minnesota Public Radio's John Rabe. Listen for Kofi Annan's speech at Macalester College Sunday at two on Minnesota Public Radio. Sun 28-MAY 11:09:03 MPR NewsPro Archive - Wed 04/11/2001
February 3, 1998 - Geneva Smitherman of Michigan State University, John Rickford of Stanford, and Barbara Shin of the Minneapolis School system discuss the place of Ebonics in American education.
October 2, 1997 - The Timberwolves players are presenting a united front today, after the long-awaited announcement about Garnett's historic contract, but at least one onlooker says it has great potential to divide the ranks. Andrew Zimbalist is a professor of economics at Smith College. His latest book, "Sports, Jobs and Taxes" is due out next week. Zimbalist explains that, first, there are only twelve guys on a basketball team, compared to 25 for baseball and 45 for football, meaning you can spend more on each one. The second is an end-run around the salary cap called the Larry Bird exception.
September 30, 1997 - The small campus of Macalester College in St. Paul is reeling from an alleged racist incident and its aftermath. A couple of weekends ago, a black female student reported that someone wrote on her dorm room door's message board: "We hate you, we hate you. Hugs and kisses. The KKK." A nearby poster of Tiger Woods was similarly defaced. In response, there were dorm meetings, a letter to all students from the college president condemning the attack, and a convocation yesterday attended by 450 students. Roberto Ifell is special assistant for Diversity and Campus Community at Macalester.
September 30, 1997 - Student Aishah Jackson, external president of the Black Liberation Affairs Committee at Macalester College, comments on Macalester administration's reaction to racial incident on campus.
September 26, 1997 - Gay-themed movies and T-V shows generally address the most broad themes of gay life, like the difficulty of coming out. Edmund White's latest book, "The Farewell Symphony," digs deeper into the trials and tribulations faced by homosexuals in American society today. Yet, taking a mentor's advice, White keeps you at a little distance, letting you draw your own conclusions. "The Farewell Symphony" is an autobiographical novel about White's repressive Midwest childhood and his life as a usually struggling writer in New York and Europe, during which time he had sex with thousands of men. In the title, White may be saying farewell to Brice, his lover of five years, who died of AIDS in 1994. This was White's first reciprocated love affair and you'd think he'd be more prominent in the book, but Brice makes only cameo appearances in "The Farewell Symphony." We learn why he's mostly quiet about Brice when White is reunited with an old flame.
September 26, 1997 - Gay-themed movies and T-V shows generally address the most broad themes of gay life, like the difficulty of coming out. Edmund White's latest book, "The Farewell Symphony," digs deeper into the trials and tribulations faced by homosexuals in American society today. Yet, taking a mentor's advice, White keeps you at a little distance, letting you draw your own conclusions. "The Farewell Symphony" is an autobiographical novel about White's repressive Midwest childhood and his life as a usually struggling writer in New York and Europe ... during which time he had sex with thousands of men. In the title, White may be saying farewell to Brice, his lover of five years, who died of AIDS in 1994. This was White's first reciprocated love affair and you'd think he'd be more prominent in the book, but Brice makes only cameo appearances in "The Farewell Symphony." We learn why he's mostly quiet about Brice when White is reunited with an old flame.
September 23, 1997 - The Fargodome has been flooded with hundreds of complaints about ticket scalping for its October 25th Elton John concert. Several national companies apparently hired people to stand in line and buy tickets when they went on sale, and then sent the tickets out of state for resale. The 29-thousand tickets at the Fargodome sold out in 59-minues Saturday morning, and a private ticket broker in Connecticut is now offering thirty-dollar tickets for 129-dollars. The broker's phone answering system says a substantial "service charge" has been added to the original price. Parrell (LIKE "PERIL") Grossman is North Dakota's Director of Consumer Protection says it's a dis-service charge. Parrell Grossman is North Dakota's Director of Consumer P