December 18, 1996 - Newspapers -- dailies and weeklies, all over Minnesota -- are rushing to incarnate themselves on the Internet. Less than a year ago, seven papers had online editions; now, fifty Minnesota newspapers can be found on the World Wide Web, and more are going on-line every week. This, even though the electronic readership is still small -- some papers reach only dozens of readers per issue.
November 27, 1996 - MPR’s Leif Enger interviews Mary McGowan, owner of Trocano’s restaurant, about opening the doors to local community for Thanksgiving.
November 19, 1996 - Mainstreet Radio’s Leif Enger reports on new children’s comic book which highlights the history of the Mille Lacs Ojibwe Band. The book, "A Hero's Voice," looks at broken treaties, important figures in Ojibwe history, and the spiritual tie between the tribe and the lake.
November 11, 1996 - The first feature-film created entirely in Minnesota will be released in theatres this month, but you probably won't see it. "The Visionary" was scripted, filmed and scored locally, with Minnesota actors, stuntmen and crew.
November 8, 1996 - Minnesota has more timberwolves in the wild than ever before, and they're covering more ground. Once limited to the arrowhead region, wolves are now establishing packs as far south as Camp Ripley. As the firearms deer season opens tomorrow, hunters in central Minnesota have a better chance than ever to see a wolf in the woods; and some of them aren't happy about what they see as "the competition."
October 10, 1996 - In high-profile political races, up to two-thirds of a campaign budget might be spent on advertising, most of it on TV. With so much riding on these ads, the way a thirty-second spot is designed and delivered is something not taken lightly.
September 20, 1996 - This is a story, let's say it up front, about coonhounds. Now, any story about coonhounds is going to sound more like Mississippi than Minnesota; but the fact is, coonhound culture is thriving here.
September 2, 1996 -
August 19, 1996 - Chucking your job -- most people dream of it sometime. Leave your desk, leave your boss, leave office politics, hit the road. For most of us, that's destined to remain a dream; but Loren Eyrich has managed to pull it off. A few years ago, Eyrich walked off his job at a Florida car dealership, and never went back. He bought an old pickup camper and hit the road: oldies on the radio, coffee in the thermos, a plate of ribs waiting in the next small town. Of course, making a living that way isn't easy. Eyrich keeps himself in coffee and ribs by writing a fat quarterly newspaper on the joys and burdens of the traveling life. The newspaper is called Heartland Highways -- and Leif Enger found Eyrich along one of them, camped in a state park south of Brainerd.
August 13, 1996 - Mainstreet Radio’s Leif Enger reports that a state park campground built among Indian burial mounds is being moved and reopened in a new location. Almost immediately after the campground at Mille Lacs Kathio State Park was constructed in the 1960s, it was learned the campsites were situated in a Mdewakanton Dakota cemetery dating back to the 1600s. Years later, efforts to right a wrong are being completed as the campground is relocated off the Native sacred ground.