Join host Kurt Hauswirth for an alternative music discovery experience and tune in to The Shuffle Saturdays at 4 p.m. EST, ...
The results from independent data firm School Perceptions, LLC, shows nearly 2,000 people responded to the survey. An official with School Perceptions says all major subgroups support the district ...
HANCOCK, MI— The Michigan Strategic Fund has awarded the City of Hancock $4.5 million to repurpose a former Finlandia ...
Everett Kelley, the president of the American Federation of Government Employees, talks about a judge's ruling stopping the Trump administration from firing federal worker during the shutdown.
BATES TOWNSHIP, MI— Michigan State Police from the Iron Mountain Post are investigating how a Bates Township girl was wounded ...
Air traffic controllers are finding it increasingly difficult to keep doing their jobs without getting a paycheck during the government shutdown. Some are starting to speak out.
The Federal Reserve is expected to cut its benchmark interest rate by a quarter percentage point because the central bank is ...
NPR's A Martinez speaks with author Shea Serrano about his new book, "Expensive Basketball," an examination of some of the game's most iconic players and moments.
NPR's Leila Fadel speaks with Sudanese-American poet Emi Mahmoud about the fall of Al-Fashir to the Rapid Support Forces in Sudan.
School leaders hope lockdown drills will help protect their students in the event of a mass shooting. But what does it do to students' mental health?
President Trump mentioned again this week the possibility of running for a third term. Doing so would be unconstitutional, so why does the president keep floating the idea?
With the government shut down, one IRS bureaucrat has gone full time into serving up street food. We pay a visit to Shyster's Dogs in Northeast Washington, DC.
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