Posted at 7:07 AM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
(3 Comments)
Filed under: Five by 8
1) "SUCH IS THE PASSAGE OF TIME..."
A young man from Japan made a connection to the Upper Midwest when he was an exchange student almost 50 years ago. Then he grew up, thought he was going on a business trip to Minnesota, and ended up back in Cedar Rapids.
2) ALONE TOGETHER
If you go to an office today, will you try to hide from your co-workers? "We're getting used to a new way of being alone together," says Sherry Turkle, a psychologist and professor at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. She tells NPR that technology is letting us hide from one another at work.
Is that a big deal? There are few reliable studies on the effect of the Internet in the workplace. Are we more productive? Lonelier? Happier? Turkle spoke a few months ago as part of a TED talk on the subject.
"The feeling that 'no one is listening to me' make us want to spend time with machines that seem to care about us," she says.
3) WHY IT'S OK TO NOT KNOW WHAT YOU'RE DOING TODAY
Author Neil Gaiman's (Close enough; he's one of us) commencement speech to The University of the Arts Class of 2012. The message: People who know what they're doing know what's possible and what's not possible.
And so, it is not necessarily a good thing to know what you're doing.
Related: Gaiman's Theft of the Dial segment on The Current:
4) WHEN POLITICIANS GIVE UP
Meanwhile, politicians are giving up left and right in the face of the impossible.
Politics isn't for everybody, especially for people who like to get things done, apparently. But it certainly seems like more and more politicians are giving up because the process doesn't allow them to change things in the fashion they'd like.
The latest is Sen. John Harrington, a former Saint Paul police chief, who won the seat vacated by Sen. Mee Moua.
"I did not have the passion for it the way it deserves," Harrington tells the Pioneer Press in explaining why he's decided to give up the seat. "I don't really feel like we made the kind of significant change the community and state needed."
Lots of lawmakers have walked away from their jobs this year, with many saying they can't make a difference.
Discussion point: Is the problem with the process or the expectations of what's possible?
5) THAT'S NUMBER 30; LET'S GO HOME
From his accounts, it was a much harder trip than Reggie Deal had planned. The blind baseball fan's attempt to visit 30 baseball parks in 30 days ended yesterday at Wrigley Field in Chicago.
We had one rain delay of an hour 51 on May 11 at Minnesota, but no games were lost due to weather or other issues. We had only one shutout and it did not come until the 27th game at Pittsburgh, Pirates over Cubs 1-0 on May 25. One game ended on a double play and it was the same game that featured the only grand slam, May 24 at Cincinnati as the Reds knocked off Atlanta 6-3. Another no-hit game was thrown during my tour, May 2 at Anaheim while I was at St. Louis. Other chances at historic baseball accomplishment or even common accomplishments avoided me for 30 straight games as well, no cycle, no triple play, no inside the park homer, no three homer game by any player, no back-to-back-to-back homers by any team, no complete game for a starting pitcher, no extra inning games, no games ending with a walk off in the bottom of the 9th. IN fact, in only one game did the outcome change hands in the 9th inning, Yankees blowing a 1-0 lead and falling 4-1 at home against the Rays May 9.
Personal highlights for me along the way. Rangers, walked on the field along the warning track covering the entire field with my friend Heather Compton, tour of other stadium facilities. Astros, meant and was photographed with the Houston Mascot, participated in the in-stadium contest called Stros Verses Joes, I named 34 states in 15 seconds, the designated Astro named 19. Braves, took in batting practice on the field near home-plate, tour of other stadium facilities, joined friends at all of the afore mentioned games.
Minnesota made it into his list of trip highlights, thanks to meeting Joe Mauer and sitting next to an old-timer.
Here's the piece I wrote about Deal when he was in Minnesota.
Bonus: Should parents kiss their kids on the lips? (Fargo Forum)
TODAY'S QUESTION
Bob Dylan, who will receive the Presidential Medal of Freedom today at the White House, may be the most recognized of Minnesotans. Today's Question: Who is the most under-recognized Minnesotan?
WHAT WE'RE DOING
Daily Circuit (9-12 p.m.) - First hour: Sportswriter Frank Deford.
Second hour: Are our schools facing a new segregation crisis?
Third hour: Why sitting is the new smoking.
MPR News Presents (12-1 pm): Award-winning MPR documentary, "Boy from the North Country: Bob Dylan in Minnesota." Dylan receives the Presidential Medal of Freedom today.
Talk of the Nation (1-3 p.m.) - First hour: Egypt, after the elections.
Second hour: For centuries, soldiers fought and died on battlefields or hospital tents. Michael Stephenson tells the story behind those deaths, and describes the changing face of combat,in a new book, "The Last Full Measure."
All Things Considered (3-6:30 p.m.) - Doctors push hard to get their patients at the top of waiting lists for organ transplants. But with more demand for organs than supply, physicians' desires to put their patients ahead of others can become a problem. NPR looks at how doctors are being kept honest in the wait for organ transplants.
(3 Comments)
Posted at 11:10 AM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
(10 Comments)
Filed under: Crime and Justice, Schools
A story out of Texas has us wondering where the line is between the letter of the law and common sense.
Diane Tran spent a night in jail last week because she had more than 10 unexcused absences.
Tran works a full-time job, a part-time job and takes advanced placement and dual credit college level courses, according to KHOU TV in Houston. She helps support two siblings.
"She goes from job to job from school," Devin Hill, one of Tran's classmates, told KHOU-11. "She stays up until 7:00 in the morning doing her homework."
The judge said he wants to make an example of the girl. "If you let one (truant student) run loose, what are you gonna' do with the rest of 'em? Let them go too?"
Of course, the student already is an example.
(10 Comments)
Posted at 12:03 PM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
(4 Comments)
Filed under: Economy
City |
Change from February |
| Phoenix | 2.2% |
| Seattle | 1.7% |
| Dallas | 1.6% |
| Denver | 1.5% |
| Tampa | 1.3% |
| Charlotte | 1.2% |
| San Francisco | 1.0% |
| Washington | 1.0% |
| Miami | 0.9% |
| Portland | 0.5% |
| San Diego | 0.4% |
| Cleveland | 0.4% |
| Los Angeles | 0.1% |
| Las Vegas | 0.0% |
| Boston | -0.2% |
| Atlanta | -0.9% |
| Minneapolis | -0.9% |
| New York | -0.9% |
| Chicago | -2.5% |
| Detroit | -4.4% |
| City | Change over last two years |
| Washington | 0.6% |
| Dallas | -1.1% |
| Denver | -1.3% |
| Detroit | -1.5% |
| Phoenix | -2.9% |
| Boston | -3.6% |
| Miami | -3.7% |
| Charlotte | -4.7% |
| Los Angeles | -6.4% |
| San Diego | -6.6% |
| New York | -6.7% |
| Minneapolis | -6.8% |
| San Francisco | -7.9% |
| Tampa | -8.0% |
| Cleveland | -8.4% |
| Seattle | -8.7% |
| Portland | -10.2% |
| Las Vegas | -12.4% |
| Chicago | -14.2% |
| Atlanta | -20.4% |
Posted at 1:18 PM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
(3 Comments)
Filed under: Economy
The IRS is patting itself on the back today in announcing the closing of 43 small offices, which will save more than $40 million.
"Given today's tight budget environment, we have to be willing to make the tough but responsible calls to save taxpayer dollars," IRS Commissioner Doug Shulman said in a recent news release..
Tough? Hardly. None of the people at the offices are going to his/her job. In fact, many of them are going to be allowed to telecommute now.
In its fiscal year 2013 budget request, the administration requested an 8-percent funding increase for the IRS.
The amount of money being saved by the IRS is the equivalent of the average U.S. household saving $14.67.
Posted at 2:40 PM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
(8 Comments)
Filed under: History

Bob Dylan got most of the local coverage today when he received the Medal of Freedom from President Barack Obama. After all, he's one of us.
But so is John Doar, who's also in the group of medal recipients and who hasn't gotten anywhere near the same attention.
Doar is a native of New Richmond. He's receiving the medal because of his work handling civil rights cases for the Justice Department in the '60s. That sounds interesting -- maybe in a Minnesota way -- but the description hardly fits Doar's work.
He didn't sit in Washington pushing a few papers and making the occasional court appearance. He put himself next to those in harm's way during the civil rights movement's most violent times.
(8 Comments)
Posted at 2:24 PM on May 29, 2012
by Bob Collins
A group of experts has named the top 10 plants that changed Minnesota. The list is noteworthy as much for the plants that didn't make the cut as much as the ones that did. Buckthorn, Eurasian milfoil, hosta, grapes, potatoes and sugar beets didn't make the cut, according to the news release. I might've found room on it for dandelions.
These are the winners:
Alfalfa: Only with winter-hardy alfalfa could dairies be profitable in Minnesota. Wendelin Grimm, a German immigrant, selected winter survivors from his alfalfa fields and developed Grimm alfalfa in the 1860s. Today, Minnesota ranks sixth in the nation in milk cows, milk production, and total cheese and honey production. Alfalfa is a favorite of honeybees, and like all other legumes, it adds nitrogen to the soil.
American elm: Though ravaged by Dutch elm disease, this beautiful shade tree, native throughout the state, still graces many streets and landscapes today. Tolerant of city conditions and the robust Minnesota climate of hot summers and cold winters, the American elm is a survivor. Genetics and breeding have given new hope for Dutch elm disease-resistant selections for urban and suburban sites. Elms support more than 200 species of butterflies and moths.Apples: Challenged in 1860 by Horace Greeley's statement that "I would not live in Minnesota because you can't grow apples there!" Peter Gideon introduced the Wealthy apple in 1868. It was followed in 1922 by the Haralson, and subsequently 26 U of M introductions, including the Honeycrisp in 1991, the Zestar!® in 1996, and SweeTango® in 2009. Honeycrisp was recognized as one of the top 25 innovations of the decade in 2005 by TIME magazine. Millions of Honeycrisp trees have been planted worldwide, and in 2006, Honeycrisp became Minnesota's state fruit.
Corn: Valued at $7 billion annually, corn covers 7.3 million acres in Minnesota, making the state fourth in U.S. production. Yields have changed from 39 bushels/acre in 1959 to 146 bushels/acre in 2007, due to cold-hardy varieties produced especially for Minnesota. U of M introductions account for nearly 200 hybrids. In 1992 TIME magazine designated hybrid seed corn as one of the most significant events that shaped our world during the past 1,000 years. Corn has more than 3,500 uses in commercial and industrial products and manufacturing processes.
Purple loosestrife: Originally planted as an ornamental garden plant, purple loosestrife is the poster child for invasive plants. It has taught us how significantly a plant can transform the valued wetlands and waterways in Minnesota. Careful management with biological and chemical controls, along with education and cooperative measures learned from purple loosestrife, should help us deal with other invasive plants in the future.
Soybeans: Valued at $3 billion annually, soybeans cover 7.3 million acres in Minnesota. Originally grown as forage, the seed and oil crop was developed by researchers at the U of M. Soybeans are an excellent source of protein: Each seed is 40 percent protein, compared with 25 percent for other legumes, and 12 percent for other cereal grains. Soybeans' uses range from livestock food for poultry and Minnesota's 49 million turkeys, to baby formula, adhesives, oil products and more. Minnesota is third in U.S. soybean production.
Turf and lawn grass: From a sea of prairie grass to a sea of green carpet, turf and lawn grasses − predominately Kentucky bluegrass − have transformed Minnesota's landscape. Valued for recreation, erosion control, and preventing pollutant runoff from entering Minnesota's waterways, grass cools and covers countless acres in Minnesota. Only through best management practices can turf benefits offset the inputs that can harm the environment. Turfgrass contributes $8 billion to the state's economy in retail and wholesale sales of sod, seed, and related equipment for homeowners, as well as recreational sports uses.
Wheat: Wheat was the first large monocultural grain crop in Minnesota. As early as 1879, 72,000 bushels of Minnesota wheat were exported to Spain. Wheat built Minneapolis, Minnesota's industrial "Mill City," which today does more than $200 billion of food and agricultural related business annually. Minnesota ranks third in U.S. spring wheat production, and 10th in overall wheat production.
White pine: White pine forests once covered more than 3.5 million acres in Minnesota, but today cover less than 100,000. Prized for its strong, straight trunks, white pine built the cities of the Midwest and provided lumber for the ships of England as early as the 1600s. Today more than one million white pine seedlings are planted annually in Minnesota. On average, more than 30 white pine trees are planted for every tree harvested.
Wild rice: A staple food of the Ojibwe for centuries, the location of wild rice determined early human settlement in Minnesota. Minnesota today produces more than half of the world's hand-harvested wild rice and is second in the nation in the production of cultivated wild rice. Native to lakes and wet areas, wild rice was named Minnesota's state grain in 1977 for its cultural and economic significance.
In March, while the group was taking suggestions for the list, MPR's Tom Crann talked with Mary Meyer of the University of Minnesota...
| May 2012 | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| S | M | T | W | T | F | S |
| 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | ||
| 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
| 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 |
| 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 |
| 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | ||