October 3, 1974 - Gubernatorial candidate, from the 1974 election, discusses potential energy legislation that he claims will transfer power to one individual.
October 3, 1974 - John W. Johnson questions Wendell Anderson on the selection of Michael O'Donnell as temporary commissioner of banking (for seven months), the bank charters that went to the govenor's secretary, and Johnson accuses Edward Driscoll of being less than candid about his business relationships.
October 3, 1974 - Graham Watt, director of the Federal Office of Revenue Sharing, discusses possible, yet at the time unknown, cuts and/or reduction of expenditures to 1975 or 1976 federal budgets to alleviate concerns of inflation. Concerns from local and state governments regarding federal moneys and potential losses to revenue sharing are also discussed.
October 4, 1974 - Mulford Q. Sibley, professor of political science at the University of Minnesota, speaks on the immense political, social, economic, religious, and physical toll of Vietnam war. Discussion not limited to South or North division, but all parties involved, including the United States.
October 5, 1974 - MPR’s Worthington reporter Steve Monroe talks to U.S. Senator Walter Mondale who discusses the issues that will face the nation in the upcoming election.
October 5, 1974 - Daniel Ellsberg speaks out against president Richard Nixon at an anti-war rally in Augsburg College in downtown Minneapolis. Ellsberg states that Nixon was making rational decisions and was intentionally lying to the public.
October 5, 1974 - Actor and anti-war activist Jane Fonda speaking at anti-war rally held at Augsburg University.
October 7, 1974 - Former Attorney General William Ruckelshaus and Pulitzer Prize winning author and historian Arthur Schlesinger Jr. discuss how the last decade has affected the outlook of Americans in a National Town Meeting from September 29, 1974.
October 7, 1974 -
October 9, 1974 - U.S. Senator Eugene McCarthy reacts to speech by President Gerald Ford in his own short speech on office of U.S. presidency and American democracy.