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Seventy-five years ago, Golden Valley-based General Mills formally came into being. Over the next several months, the company is celebrating three quarters of a century on the New York Stock Exchange. General Mills' Minneapolis roots actually date back to just after the Civil War. Over the years, the company has produced enduring brand names like Betty Crocker, Wheaties and Cheerios. And General Mills has produced a lot of things that have nothing to do with food, including toys, golf shoes, and even a small submarine.
On October 15, 1852, the first train of the Chicago and Rock Island Railroad traveled from Chicago to Joliet, Illinois. Two years later it would bring a delegation of East Coast journalists and dignitaries to the Mississippi River as part of the Grand Excursion to Minnesota. Over the next 50 years, as the Rock Island Line grew, it carried passengers and freight through 14 states and became part of the story of the American west. Then it inspired a song that has been passed from generation to generation. Minnesota Public Radio's Jim Bickal has traced the stories of the song and the railroad and discovered that together they tell quite a tale.
The 200th anniversary of the Louisiana Purchase is taking a back seat to the Lewis and Clark bicentennial observance. However, the Louisiana Purchase is arguably a bigger deal -- literally. In one stroke the size of the country was doubled. Behind the transaction lurks a tale of geopolitics and intrigue.
Two men who headed the United States in the '60s couldn't be more different. One used race and red-baiting to get ahead. The other was a champion of civil rights and civil liberties. One was a southern conservative, the other was a northern liberal. One was an insider. Each tried to use the other and they ended up running against each other for the nation's ultimate political prize. But together, Lyndon Johnson from Texas and Hubert Humphrey from Minnesota changed American history.
It's said that the twisted cedar
tree has thrust from the rocky bluffs on Lake Superior for more
than 300 years.
The so-called "w" at the tip of Minnesota's Arrowhead
region is a fixture in Minnesota calendars and tour books, and a
symbol of the Grand Portage Band of Chippewa. To the Chippewa, or
Ojibwe, who call it Manido-Gree-Shi-Gance or
"spirit-little-cedar," it's a sacred site where tobacco offerings
have been sprinkled for generations.
We discuss the future of small town Minnesota. The first annual symposium on small towns, "Rural Minnesota and a Century of Change," was held Wednesday and Thursday at the Center for Small Towns at the University of Minnesota, Morris. Are there lessons from the past that small towns can use to help them now? How do the issues facing small towns now compare to what they've faced over the past few generations?
More than seven months after the plane crash that killed Sen. Paul Wellstone and seven others, the man who changed the tone of the public memorial service for the victims into a political rally-like atmosphere says he doesn't understand why. In an in-depth interview with Minnesota Public Radio's Mark Zdechlik, Rick Kahn spoke about his memorial service comments and the ensuing political fallout.
Voices of Minnesota conversations with two of Minnesota's most prominent theater figures. Vern Sutton talks about his career as an professor and performer. And Bonnie Morris talks about her nearly 30 years of work as a founder of the Illusion Theater in Minneapolis.
The Minnesota Historical Society will close seven of its 27 historical sites and lay off nearly one-third of its staff due to state budget cuts. The society will lose $8 million in state funding over the next two years. The sites, around the state, will be closed to the public, but will still be maintained.
Forty years ago, on May 7, 1963, the Guthrie Theater in Minneapolis opened its doors for the first time. The new theater was Sir Tyrone Guthrie's brainchild. The internationally-known director wanted to build high quality theater outside the influence of the New York scene. Four decades on, Guthrie's vision endures, but the theater now appears to be at a crossroads.