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    mn90

    Explore " mn90" with insightful episodes like "Minnesota Stone Cutters", "Minnesota's Homegrown Communist, Gus Hall", "Minnesota's Most Able Attorney", "Minnesota's Deadliest Snowstorm" and "Michael Koppelman and the 11-Billion-Year-Old Gamma Ray" from podcasts like ""MN90: Minnesota History in 90 Seconds", "MN90: Minnesota History in 90 Seconds", "MN90: Minnesota History in 90 Seconds", "MN90: Minnesota History in 90 Seconds" and "MN90: Minnesota History in 90 Seconds"" and more!

    Episodes (69)

    Minnesota Broadcaster’s Pioneering Use of Satellites

    Minnesota Broadcaster’s Pioneering Use of Satellites
    The invention of the satellite newsgathering truck by lifelong Minnesota broadcaster Stanley S. Hubbard was met with skepticism when he first demonstrated it in 1981. But as MN90 producer Marisa Helms reports, nowadays every T-V station that has a meaningful news operation has a satellite newsgathering truck. No matter where news is happening or when it’s happening, we can all watch it live thanks to Mr. Hubbard.

    A Druggist in a Time of Influenza

    A Druggist in a Time of Influenza
    James Douglas Falconer might have chosen to become a vet like his dad Thomas. Instead, the young man from Alexandria, Minnesota, trained as a druggist. September 1918, Falconer started his new job at Rexall Drug Store in Marshall—in the very month Spanish flu appeared in Minnesota. Suddenly, the 29-year-old found himself on the frontlines of an epidemic that had no cure. Yet that didn’t stop customers from lining up. Britt Aamodt has the story.

    The Dance of Healing

    The Dance of Healing
    University of Minnesota professor Brenda Child heard a story growing up on the Red Lake reservation about a sick girl and the vision her father received of a dress and a dance that would—and did—heal her. Professor Child wanted to know if that story gave a clue to the origins of the Ojibwe jingle dress and dance of healing during the Spanish flu epidemic.

    Inventing The Slider

    Inventing The Slider
    For nearly 50 years, Charles Albert Bender was the only Minnesota-born baseball player inducted into the Hall of Fame, in part for inventing the slider, a powerful pitch for striking out batters. Bender’s rise to fame is poignant. He was an Ojibwe, born on the White Earth reservation in northern Minnesota, and later forced to live at a boarding school in Pennsylvania. Listen to MN90 producer Marisa Helms’ story about the inspirational life of Charles Albert Bender.
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