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What does an environmentalist do when she realizes she will inherit mineral rights and royalties on fracked oil wells in North Dakota? How does she decide between financial security and living as a committed conservationist who wants to leave her grandchildren a healthy world?<br /><br />After her father&#39;s death, Lisa Westberg Peters investigates the stories behind the leases her mother now holds. She learns how her grandfather&#39;s land purchases near Williston in the 1940s reflect four generations of creative risk-taking in her father&#39;s Swedish immigrant family. She explores the ties between frac sand mining on the St. Croix River and the halting, difficult development of North Dakota&#39;s oil, locked in shale two miles down and pursued since the 1920s. And then there are the surprising and immediate connections between the development of North Dakota oil and Peters&#39;s own life in Minneapolis.<br /><br />Catapulted into a world of complicated legal jargon, spectacular feats of engineering, and rich history, Peters travels to the oil patch and sees both the wealth and the challenges brought by the boom. She interviews workers and farmers, geologists and lawyers, those who welcome and those who reject the development, and she finds herself able to see shades of gray in what had previously seemed black and white.

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A new investigation of the meteoric rise, lifetime of achievements, and unique persona of &quot;boy wonder&quot; and perennial candidate Harold E. Stassen.<br /><br />In ten unsuccessful runs at the U.S. presidency, Harold E. Stassen became infamous as a perennial candidate. But his lifetime of achievements, now mostly forgotten, demonstrate his contributions to Minnesota&#39;s political evolution, to international cooperation, and to world peace, as well as his importance to American history. It&#39;s time to consider Stassen, again.<br /><br />At the start of his career in the 1930s, extremism thrived in both state and national politics. Fear-mongering was an increasingly effective weapon in the battle for votes&mdash;and for international influence. Stassen&#39;s leadership as the moderate &quot;boy governor&quot; of Minnesota, lauded by national media, revitalized the state&#39;s Republican Party and helped pave the way for the national party&#39;s return to power. In the middle of his third term as governor, this principled man enlisted in the navy, served in the Pacific, directed the liberation of Japanese prisoner-of-war camps, and helped write the charter for the United Nations. After the war, he served in Eisenhower&#39;s cabinet, showing his energy and his ambition. Stassen argued successfully throughout his career for moderation, tolerance, and common sense&mdash; &quot;the middle way&quot;&mdash; at a time when America, and the world, was in woefully short supply of each.

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What does it take to move forty dogs, three sleds, twenty tons of food and gear, and six men from all over the world across nearly four thousand of the coldest miles on earth? Cathy de Moll, the executive director of the 1990 International Trans-Antarctica Expedition, introduces the wild cast of characters who made it happen, on the ice and off: leaders Will Steger and Jean-Louis Etienne, who first met accidentally, on the way to the North Pole; Valery Skatchkov, the Soviet bureaucrat who supplied a &quot;hot&quot; Russian airplane; Yasue Okimoto, who couldn&#39;t bear to leave headquarters in Minnesota while her boyfriend was on the ice; Qin Dahe, the Chinese member of the team, who didn&#39;t know how to ski; the millions of children who followed the expedition in schools around the world, learning about the fragility and ferocity of the seventh continent; and many others.<br /><br />These stories of near misses and magical coincidences are as suspenseful and compelling as the expedition&#39;s headlines&mdash;and they have never been told. But they also reflect the greatest lesson of the project: the international cooperation that was needed for the expedition&#39;s success is every bit as essential for the preservation of Antarctica today.

Аннотация

On March 7, 1986, the seven men and one woman of the Steger International Polar Expedition set out by dogsled to reach the North Pole. Their spectacular feat of daring, courage, and commitment was deemed by National Geographic to be a &quot;landmark in polar exploration.&quot; The melting of the polar ice cap makes it unlikely that anyone will repeat their achievement.

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While there is no single hero of the Minnesota women&#39;s movement, Rosalie Wahl, the first woman on the Minnesota Supreme Court, changed the way her fellow judges saw the cases they decided. A champion of both women&#39;s rights and civil rights, she brought new attention to the problems that faced women impoverished by divorce, women abused by their partners, and others who coped with poverty and discrimination. With sharp intelligence and hard work, Wahl herself had overcome childhood tragedy and a difficult marriage to become a defense attorney, a respected judge, and a mentor to many.<br /><br />?As essential backdrop to Wahl&#39;s inspiring story, Lori Sturdevant charts the progress of the women&#39;s rights movement in Minnesota and showcases notable leaders on both sides of the aisle. Meet Arvonne Fraser and Emily Anne Staples, founders of the Minnesota Women&#39;s Political Caucus; Joan Growe, the first Minnesota woman elected to state office; and many more who paved the way for women&#39;s rights in Minnesota. Her Honor is both a powerful record of an era and a tribute to a humble leader.

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&quot;Writing in a style that reads like fiction, Griffith takes readers into heart-stopping action alongside caver John Ackerman, who found unexplored Goliath Cave in southeastern Minnesota.&quot; St. Paul Pioneer Press<br /><br />Narrow passages, twisting upward or dropping precipitously. Huge vaults filled with fantastic shapes. Tunnels twined in tangled mazes. Over centuries, underground rivers can carve holes and rooms in solid rock; drips of water build walls of stone. Natural caves shape another world beneath our feet. Dangerous and beautiful, these places remain unknown&mdash;until someone decides to investigate.<br /><br />In 2004, businessman and caver John Ackerman drilled an entryway into Goliath Cave, a huge and unexplored complex in the karst region of southeastern Minnesota. Squeezing through tiny openings, scuba diving through silt-filled waters, scaling walls, and traversing crevasses, he and his fellow cavers painstakingly mapped ever-further reaches of the complex in an exploration that continues to this day.<br /><br />But man-made caves that do not breathe can be even more dangerous than their natural cousins. In St. Paul, also in 2004, five teenagers entered an area where intermittent fires robbed the air of oxygen. Only two emerged alive.

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There&#39;s an old Yiddish saying: two people can keep a secret if one of them is dead. But two living people could keep a secret&mdash;as long as one of them was Augie.<br /><br />Augie Ratner, the proprietor of Augie&#39;s Theater Lounge & Bar on Hennepin Avenue, was the unofficial mayor of Minneapolis&#39;s downtown strip in the 1940s and &#39;50s. In a few blocks between the swanky clubs and restaurants on Eighth Street and the sleazy flophouses and bars of the Gateway District, the city&#39;s shakers-and-movers and shake-down artists mingled. Gangsters and celebrities, comedians and politicians, the rich and the famous and the infamous&mdash;all of them met at Augie&#39;s: Jimmy Hoffa, Henny Youngman, Kid Cann, John Dillinger, Jack Dempsey, Peggy Lee, Groucho Marx, Lenny Bruce, and Gypsy Rose Lee. Augie Ratner knew everyone, and everyone knew and liked Augie, and they told him everything.<br /><br />Mixing careful research with long suppressed family and community stories, Neal Karlen, Augie&#39;s great-nephew, tells the real story of the seamy underside of Minneapolis, where Jewish mobsters controlled the liquor trade, invented the point spread in sports betting, and ran national sports gambling operations. Even after Mayor Hubert H. Humphrey supposedly cleaned up the town, organized crime quietly flourished. And Augie was at the center, observing it all.

Аннотация

On June 27, 1868, Hole in the Day (Bagonegiizhig) the Younger left Crow Wing, Minnesota, for Washington, DC, to fight the planned removal of the Mississippi Ojibwe to a reservation at White Earth. Several miles from his home, the self-styled leader of all the Ojibwe was stopped by at least twelve Ojibwe men and fatally shot.<br /><br />Hole in the Day&#39;s death was national news, and rumors of its cause were many: personal jealousy, retribution for his claiming to be head chief of the Ojibwe, retaliation for the attacks he fomented in 1862, or retribution for his attempts to keep mixed-blood Ojibwe off the White Earth Reservation. Still later, investigators found evidence of a more disturbing plot involving some of his closest colleagues: the business elite at Crow Wing.<br /><br />While most historians concentrate on the Ojibwe relationship with whites to explain this story, Anton Treuer focuses on interactions with other tribes, the role of Ojibwe culture and tradition, and interviews with more than fifty elders to further explain the events leading up to the death of Hole in the Day. The Assassination of Hole in the Day is not only the biography of a powerful leader but an extraordinarily insightful analysis of a pivotal time in the history of the Ojibwe people.<br /><br />&quot; An essential study of nineteenth-century Ojibwe leadership and an important contribution to the field of American Indian Studies by an author of extraordinary knowledge and talent. Treuer&#39;s work is infused with a powerful command over Ojibwe culture and linguistics.&quot; &mdash;Ned Blackhawk, author of Violence Over the Land: Indians and Empires in the Early American West

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&quot;One day I realize that my entire back seat is filled with relatives who wonder why I&#39;m not paying more attention to their part of the family story. . . . Sooner or later they all come up to the front seat and whisper stories in my ear.&quot;<br /><br />Growing up in the 1950s in suburban Minneapolis, Diane Wilson had a family like everybody else&#39;s. Her Swedish American father was a salesman at Sears and her mother drove her brothers to baseball practice and went to parent-teacher conferences.<br /><br />But in her thirties, Diane began to wonder why her mother didn&#39;t speak of her past. So she traveled to South Dakota and Nebraska, searching out records of her relatives through six generations, hungering to know their stories. She began to write a haunting account of the lives of her Dakota Indian family, based on research, to recreate their oral history that was lost, or repressed, or simply set aside as gritty issues of survival demanded attention.<br /><br />Spirit Car is an exquisite counterpoint of memoir and carefully researched fiction, a remarkable narrative that ties modern Minnesotans to the trauma of the Dakota War. Wilson found her family&#39;s love and humor&mdash;and she discovered just how deeply our identities are shaped by the forces of history.

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Joseph A. Amato follows his own poor, obscure, and truly &quot;mongrel&quot; family through seven generations, revealing their place in the key events of America&#39;s past. Using powerful family traditions to clarify his personal connection to the larger stories of our nation, Amato advocates for the power of the history closest at hand in building personal identity and resisting mass culture.