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Artist Kimberly Chapman's exhibit, “Eighty-six Reasons for Asylum Admission,” is housed in CMU's Baber Room Gallery now until July 20.
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A new ruling from Michigan’s secretary of state means public officials can keep accepting free tickets to a major conference on Mackinac Island.
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The cable would run underwater in Lake Michigan, stretching from Charlevoix to the Central Michigan University Biological Station on the eastern portion of the island. Another segment would extend from the northern part of the island to the Upper Peninsula.
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Operating Engineers Local 324 wants to increase their numbers of women they hire and are making their job sites and training facilities more female friendly.
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The Associated Builders and Contractors Organization in Midland recently held their 4th annual Build Like a Girl event in February. Almost 200 girls between 5th and 12th grades got hands-on experience with exhibits to learn what jobs are possible in the trades for women.
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A recent National Association of Realtors report finds the gap between Black and white homeownership in Michigan is 31%, and single women are a growing portion of homebuyers.
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Michigan and former federal officials are warning that cuts to a federal financial watchdog agency could harm Michiganders.
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Rural residents are left holding the bills for everything from solar panels to grain dryers.
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A group of Republican state legislators is asking the U.S. Supreme Court to let them challenge two voter-approved amendments to the Michigan Constitution.
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Last Wednesday, the mayor of Bay City vetoed a resolution, that would have banned deputizing local cops for federal immigration enforcement.
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Roughly 200 people packed into a room at the Isabella County Commission on Aging on March 21 to show their frustration with Michigan's 2nd Congressional District Representative John Moolenaar and President Donald Trump's administration. Despite Moolenaar not attending, several speakers still spoke out against the representative.
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Bill would take "intrusive" question about mental health treatment off doctors' license applicationsDoctors in Michigan would no longer be required to disclose if they'd been diagnosed with or treated for a mental health condition in order to get a license, under a state House bill.