Archive for the ‘Minneapolis’ Category

The Mississippi and the Mill City

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

I got to go check out the sights along the Mississippi riverfront in downtown Minneapolis last Sat. afternoon (I’m trying to catch up on posting some pictures). I didn’t realize there was so much to see there – I wasn’t really expecting much. But there was a lot of historical information about the old mills on the sight and the falls plus some great walking trails. I was planning to go see what was going on in St. Paul for the 150 year celebration that weekend, but stopped off to take a quick look at the bridge construction work in downtown Minneapolis first. In trying to get to the bridge I stumbled into mill area. So I ended up spending a couple hours looking around on my “quick detour” and I never made it to St. Paul! Here are a few pictures and you can see all of them here (I took a bunch just to try some different camera settings and didn’t delete most of them).

First off, the ruins of the old mills.

park

The city of Minneapolis grew up around the grain processing and flour producing businesses, powered by the energy of the Mississippi river and the St. Anthony falls. They were able to channel part of the river into the banks and use water turbines to drive their machinery. The hydro power plant located at the falls is the second oldest (by only a couple weeks) hydro power plant in the western hemisphere! It began operation in 1882. There is a hydro plant still in operation today at the same site.

An old turbine and the museum:

turbine museum

The partial remains of the old mills are still visible today and there is a Mill City Museum (will visit soon) to capture the history of the industry in the city.

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r2 r3

And even some wildlife among the ruins along the riverbank:

deer

Minneapolis was the flour milling capital of the nation from 1880 to 1930. Gold Medal Flour is now General Mills and now owns Pillsbury (since 2000).

gold medal sign

gold medal pillsbury

mill diagram


riversign

A series of 29 locks and dams along the Mississippi River has been installed to make the river deeper and wider. They are designed to maintain a depth of at least 9 feet along the entire river. Here’s a tour boat rising through the lock near the falls:

boat1 boat2

Running from Lake Itasca, Minnesota to the Gulf of Mexico, the Mississippi is the 4th longest river in the world, behind the Nile, Amazon and Yangtze and drains over 40% of the lower 48 states.

river map

St. Anthony Falls:

falls


Some sights along the river…A view of the under-construction I-35W bridge just downstream:

bridge

The photogenic Guthrie Theater with its Endless Bridge (the bridge has no end!) jutting out over the street:

guthrie

guthrie2 (view from the river).

The architect recently won the prestigious Pritzker Prize in Architecture.

A flock of segways on a tour:

segway

Can someone tell me why all these trees are leaning the same direction? (east bank of the river)

trees

The Minneapolis skyline from the stone arch bridge:

skyline

The rest of the pictures here.

St. Paul Saints baseball fans upset about bobblefoot giveaway

Saturday, May 24th, 2008

saints

Some fans threatened to never attend another Saints baseball game over the tasteless souvenir that will be given away at the game. They are giving away “bobblefoot” stalls to commemorate both National Tap Dance Day and the Senator Larry Craig incident at the MSP airport last year. WCCO gets reactions from fans.

I can certainly understand why parents would be upset – how do they explain this to their kids?  It’s not very family-friendly entertainment.

ST. PAUL, MN (May 21, 2008) – Some of the most famous dance halls in the country include Radio City Music Hall in New York, the Fox Theater in Detroit and now the list includes a restroom at the Minneapolis/St. Paul Airport. With so much fanfare around dancing, the St. Paul Saints will honor “tappers” during National Tap Dance Day.

During the Sunday, May 25 game the first 2,500 fans in attendance will receive a bobblefoot. The design is a bathroom stall, with a foot that peaks out of the bottom and “taps” up and down. The day coincides with National Tap Dance Day.

While many people tap their foot because they are impatient, others may do it because they are nervous. It doesn’t matter if your tapping style is done with a “wide stance” or is used as some sort of code, the Saints are asking all fans to tap to their heart’s content on May 25.

The stalls are already popping up on eBay:

bobblefoot

MSP Vandals Disrupt Service for Xcel Energy, Qwest & Comcast Utility Customers

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Three twenty-something Twin Cities men plead guilty to causing outages to local electric, phone and television customers through senseless acts of vandalism. Their activities were nothing to joke about:

Law enforcement seized key-making equipment, computers, utility uniforms, badges, lock-picking tools, keys for U locks, an Xcel Energy credit card, radios, a U hospital pager, Northern States Power padlocks, Xcel Energy hard hats, padlocks from various businesses and much more from the mastermind of the operation.

From the Pioneer Press:

# A special investigative team made up of police, the FBI and Xcel Energy staff was created to look into a series of thefts, vandalisms and disruptions of power grids across the Twin Cities. It eventually involved as many as 10 jurisdictions.

# Unknown individuals had been cutting or disabling the locks to the “overhead throw” switches, which are used by emergency crews to cut power to areas. There were 27 incidents where these locks were tampered with and the switches thrown, killing power for hundreds or thousands of homes and businesses.

# Glennie said he met McCombs through online “urban exploring” Web sites. Urban exploring involves going into underground or off-limits areas. He met Walter through McCombs.

# Their criminal activity “accelerated a great deal” from early 2007 and “became almost like an addiction,” Glennie said. All three worked to defeat locks belonging to Xcel Energy, Qwest and Comcast, cutting service to customers.

# Glennie told a probation official that he had “always had an obsession to having access to things.”

# Walter, one of the co-defendants, told police after his arrest that the threesome would collect the locks like trophies, he said.

# On the night of the November incident, they had wanted to “mess with” another urban explorer who had said something bad about McCombs online. So they attempted to disrupt the phone service where the man lived.

Otherwise, the targets were random.

“This is really just a senseless, senseless act,” Vlieger said.

For his plea of guilty to damaging utility property, Glennie was sentenced to 90 days in jail. He will have to serve another year if he does not abide by the terms of his probation.

FBI infiltrating RNC protest groups

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

In preparation for the Republican National Convention, the FBI is soliciting informants to keep tabs on local protest groups

moles

Need some extra cash this fall?  The FBI is looking for a good informant…

—someone to show up at “vegan potlucks” throughout the Twin Cities and rub shoulders with RNC protestors, schmoozing his way into their inner circles, then reporting back to the FBI’s Joint Terrorism Task Force, a partnership

“This is all part of a larger government effort to quell political dissent,” says Jordan Kushner, an attorney who represented Ganley and other Critical Mass arrestees. “The Joint Terrorism Task Force is another example of using the buzzword ‘terrorism’ as a basis to clamp down on people’s freedoms and push forward a more authoritarian government.”

Local CBS Meteorologist: Global Warming ‘extremism’ uses ‘squishy science’

Thursday, May 22nd, 2008

Local Minneapolis-WCCO (CBS) meteorologist, Mike Fairbourne, says that the environmental movement is practicing “squishy science” when it ties human activity to global warming. Comments from WCCO.

Fairbourne is one of 31,000 scientists (9,021 PhDs) who agree that the human impact on global warming is overblown. Here’s the petition.

petition

“Do we need to be wise stewards [of the Earth]? Absolutely,” Fairbourne said. “Do we have to pin everything that happens on global warming? No, we need to have cooler heads.”

Asked why there has been so much momentum toward connecting human activity and global warming, Fairbourne said, “They’re doing it for a lot of reasons; some may be scientific, but most of them are political. We need to be calm and look at scientific evidence and evaluate it.”

Fairbourne, a University of Utah graduate, said he has talked “to a number of meteorologists who have similar opinions” as his, adding that he is concerned about “the extremism that is attached to the global warming.”

According to the Daily Glean, zero local MSP meteorologists publicly adhere to the theory that human activity is the cause of “global warming.” If the “evidence” supports global warming, why do so many scientists disagree?

Star Tribune readers respond:

worry poll link

squishy poll link

Pictures along the Mississippi River in Minneapolis

Sunday, May 18th, 2008

Here are some pictures I took this past Saturday along the Mississippi River in Minneapolis. I’ll have to put together some commentary to go along with them soon. Until then you can peruse the pictures…

The Modest Mississippi and the Great Mill City – 2008-05-17 MN

Too many pictures, I know!  A lot of that is from me testing different camera settings.  I did actually delete about 100 extras, but there are still a bunch of duplicates!

Frustrated NWA flight attendant starts fire mid-flight + other bizarre news

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Unbelievable!

A 19 year old twin cities resident and NWA flight attendant lit some paper towels on fire to set of the plane’s smoke alarm and bring the flight to an early end because he was frustrated with the MSP to Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada route.

nwa

KARE11.com reports:

The charge of setting fire aboard a civil aircraft carries a maximum penalty of 20 years in prison.

Pilot Steve Peterka told authorities that an indicator light came on about 35 minutes into the flight, showing smoke in the rear bathroom.

Peterka called Rojas, who was assigned passengers in the back of the plane, and asked him to check the bathroom, documents said. Rojas, another flight attendant and a passenger were credited with quickly putting out the flames with fire extinguishers, authorities said.

Investigators later found a lighter in one of the overhead bins. Rojas confessed after authorities interviewed him, the complaint said.


In other unbelievably bizarre news – another local 19 year old survived jumping head-first into a wood chipper.


And some less odd news – a MN Judge tries to close a loophole in a recent smoking ban. Since smoking is allowed only as part of a theatrical performance, bars held “theater nights” where patrons paid a small fee to become an “actor” in the evening performance (i.e. smoking).

Following the ruling, Bullseye owner Robert Ripley said he is asking his bartenders to prevent smoking indoors and remove all ashtrays.

But he also seized on a footnote in the ruling speculating that some performances may fit within the statewide ban and that they may be considered on a case-by-case basis.

“I think we’re going to start writing our own scripts,” Ripley said.

February, customers in bars from the Iron Range to the metro area — with the bars’ encouragement — started dressing in Renaissance costumes or calling themselves Garth Brooks and lighting up.

Many bars said it was an often-successful attempt to win back patrons after seeing steep declines in revenue after the ban took effect last year. Notices about the smoking performances were posted on doors outside the establishments, and customers would typically buy a pin for $1 or $2 designating them as part of the show.

But Abrams didn’t buy arguments made in court last week that the performances are a form of protected free speech that fit within the law’s exception.

“The criterion for selection of the cast appears to be people with $2 and a desire to smoke in the bar. There is not the slightest suggestion that talent or an interest in conveying a message, other than smoking, is sought from any actor,” he wrote.


Twin Cities get State OK to extend bar closing time for RNC – for a fee!

Twin Cities bars can stay open extra late during the Republican National Convention, thanks to a state measure signed Thursday by Gov. Tim Pawlenty. The provision, part of an omnibus liquor bill, allows bars within the seven-county metro area to stay open until 4 a.m. from the evening of Aug. 31, through the early morning of Sept. 5. The border cities of Northfield and New Prague are included.

Cities can decide whether to allow the later bar closings and what areas or license and zoning classifications would be affected. And they will be able to charge bars a fee of up to $2,500.

Because 2AM just isn’t late enough for national Republican big wigs. Or maybe it’s an attempt to make the city more protester friendly?


And speaking of the GOP RNC this Sept. in St. Ron Paul, city leaders are partnering with Humana to provide 1000 free bicycles during the convention.

freewheelin

To use a Freewheelin cycle, participants would register with credit cards to ensure that they don’t make off with the bikes, which otherwise are expected to be free to use. They then can go online, too, to track how many miles they’ve logged and calories they’ve burned.

Humana also is making 1,000 bicycles available to Denver during the Democratic National Convention, in turn giving Denver and the Twin Cities the opportunity to join Washington at the forefront of communal two-wheel initiatives.


Stories via the Daily Glean.

Minnesota Sesquicentennial Weekend Festival (May 17-18)

Friday, May 16th, 2008

The Minnesota Statehood Weekend Festival Commemorates Minnesota’s 150th Anniversary of Statehood Saturday May 17 & Sunday May 18, 2008

Events takes place on or near the State Capitol grounds
Live music, great food and exhibitions of all things Minnesotan!
There won’t be another event like this for 50 years!
Special exhibits at the Minnesota History Center, including the Declaration of Independence and MN150 each day

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 Also, check out the MN150 wiki page.

Truvia, the latest sugar alternative

Friday, May 16th, 2008

Cargill, along with Coca-Cola, introduced a new zero-calorie sweetener called Truvia. It’s made from an extract from the leaves of the Stevia plant. Find out about the research behind the rebiana extract.

Pioneer Press: The substance is about 200 times as sweet as sugar, contains no calories and has some advantages to the food industry because it doesn’t degrade when heated or when mixed with other foods. Stevia is commonly used in Japan and parts of South America, but it’s rare in this country outside of health-food circles.

stevia

Cargill, based in Wayzata, MN, is the nation’s second largest private company, employs 158,000 employees worldwide and is involved in all sorts of agricultural operations: including grain, cotton, sugar, petroleum and financial trading; food processing; futures brokering; health and pharmaceutical products; agricultural services such as animal feed and crop protection; and industrial products including biofuels, oils and lubricants, starches, and salt.

The Wikipedia profile includes this note about Cargill’s political end economic views:

Cargill is an active proponent of free trade policies. It lobbied for China’s membership in WTO, as well as for increased trade with Cuba and Brazil. Cargill’s position is based on its strong support of neo-liberal economic principles. First, lesser trade barriers in countries where Cargill does business will lower prices on Cargill’s products, and likely increase their volume of business. Second, the decreases in the cost of food in developing countries theoretically result indirectly in higher income per capita but lower income for local farmers. Cargill benefits from increases in consumer income, because better-paid consumers become inclined to eat a diet higher in wheat, protein, vegetable oil, and processed foods. This improves opportunities for Cargill to sell its products. Cargill’s economists have reasoned that this is true of the lower income countries in particular. As a developing country grows from $1,000 to $6,000 in mean income per capita, Cargill expects the greatest profit growth from its businesses in that country.

Cargill has maintained a 100% rating on the Corporate Equality Index (CEI) released by the Human Rights Campaign since 2003.

cargil

Other random facts:

- It is responsible for 25 percent of all United States grain exports.
- It supplies approximately 22 percent of the United States domestic meat market.
- The company exports more product from Argentina than any other company.
- It is the largest poultry producer in Thailand.
- All of the eggs used in McDonald’s restaurants in the United States pass through Cargill’s plants.

Watch I-35W bridge construction live

Sunday, May 11th, 2008

Watch construction of the new St. Anthony Falls (I-35W) bridge in downtown Minneapolis.

bridgecam

You are seeing a view of the I-35W Bridge construction site looking toward the east. The Army Corps of Engineers Lock and Dam is on the right in the foreground, and the 10th Avenue Bridge is the arched bridge in the distance. Crews are working on the north (left) and south (right) banks in between those two structures. The completed 70′ piers are visible along the riverbanks and the falsework that will support the construction of the back spans is being place. From MNDOT.