9 minutes

North Dakota Monitor
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Dickinson State University on Thursday became the first North Dakota college to have a reduced-credit degree program approved by the State Board of Higher Education.  The board voted to approve Dickinson State’s plan for a 90-credit bachelor’s degree program in management. Undergraduate degrees typically require 120 credit hours, but the board earlier this year adopted […]

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North Dakota Monitor
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Dickinson State University on Thursday became the first North Dakota college to have a reduced-credit degree program approved by the State Board of Higher Education.  The board voted to approve Dickinson State’s plan for a 90-credit bachelor’s degree program in management. Undergraduate degrees typically require 120 credit hours, but the board earlier this year adopted […]

9 minutes

Colorado Newsline
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The special cargo arrived on the evening of May 3, 1876, on a westbound express train to Denver, where it was watched carefully and wheeled in through the side door at the Colorado National Bank. The barrel looked “quite as unpretentious and common as an ordinary beer keg,” the Rocky Mountain News reported the following […]

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Colorado Newsline
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The special cargo arrived on the evening of May 3, 1876, on a westbound express train to Denver, where it was watched carefully and wheeled in through the side door at the Colorado National Bank. The barrel looked “quite as unpretentious and common as an ordinary beer keg,” the Rocky Mountain News reported the following […]

9 minutes

Arkansas Advocate
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Arkansas lawmakers ended the fiscal session this week as expected, and will return to the Capitol Monday for a special session focused on tax cuts.  Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders issued a proclamation Thursday that set the special session’s agenda, which includes cutting individual income and corporate tax rates.  State lawmakers warmed up their tax-cutting skills […]

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Arkansas Advocate
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Arkansas lawmakers ended the fiscal session this week as expected, and will return to the Capitol Monday for a special session focused on tax cuts.  Gov. Sarah Huckabee Sanders issued a proclamation Thursday that set the special session’s agenda, which includes cutting individual income and corporate tax rates.  State lawmakers warmed up their tax-cutting skills […]

9 minutes

Daily Montanan
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It’s difficult to ignore the news these days, unless maybe you’re underwater.  Which would seem to be the case for Montana’s Sen. Tim Sheehy since, in spite of farmers and ranchers not being able to afford the fertilizer they need for crops or the diesel to power their equipment, Sheehy believes the top issue for […]

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Daily Montanan
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It’s difficult to ignore the news these days, unless maybe you’re underwater.  Which would seem to be the case for Montana’s Sen. Tim Sheehy since, in spite of farmers and ranchers not being able to afford the fertilizer they need for crops or the diesel to power their equipment, Sheehy believes the top issue for […]

9 minutes

Wisconsin Examiner
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May Day protests for immigrant and workers’ rights are planned for Friday in Wisconsin.  Voces de la Frontera is organizing the “Day Without Immigrants” actions in Madison and Milwaukee. The marches are part of the May Day Strong nationwide day of action. Organizers are calling for “No work. No school. No shopping.”  In Milwaukee, protesters […]

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Wisconsin Examiner
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May Day protests for immigrant and workers’ rights are planned for Friday in Wisconsin.  Voces de la Frontera is organizing the “Day Without Immigrants” actions in Madison and Milwaukee. The marches are part of the May Day Strong nationwide day of action. Organizers are calling for “No work. No school. No shopping.”  In Milwaukee, protesters […]

Roberto Hernandez Vargas lived in the United States for nearly three decades without any contact with ICE agents. He has no criminal record. There was no warrant for his arrest or order for removal. He had started the process of applying for permanent residency with the sponsorship of his son, Roberto Hernandez, Jr., a U.S. […]

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Minnesota Reformer
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Roberto Hernandez Vargas lived in the United States for nearly three decades without any contact with ICE agents. He has no criminal record. There was no warrant for his arrest or order for removal. He had started the process of applying for permanent residency with the sponsorship of his son, Roberto Hernandez, Jr., a U.S. […]

Sign up for Chalkbeat Detroit’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system and Michigan education policy.Mayor Mary Sheffield wants the Detroit Public Schools Community District to use the money it previously spent on city bus passes to expand after-school programs.But the money freed up in March when Sheffield made bus fare free for all Detroit students would only allow the district to add high-quality after-school programs at three pre-kindergarten through eighth grade schools, administrators said this week.The mayor’s Ride to Rise program will save roughly $700,000 for DPSCD, Superintendent Nikolai Vitti said during the district’s April board meeting. It would cost $200,000 annually at each school to run programs serving around 120 students, five days a week, with a ratio of 15 kids to one staff member, Vitti said during a board committee meeting Wednesday. The last time DPSCD explored the idea of paying for after-school programming at each of its K-8 schools was before the COVID pandemic. Vitti said Wednesday that the cost was too high for the district.“We were looking at $20 million, and that’s why we walked away,” he said.After the mayor asked DPSCD to consider using the free bus fare money for new out-of-school programs, Vitti said the district did an analysis to determine options with the greatest potential impact.The district mapped out the current availability of after-school programs and identified schools with high rates of chronic absenteeism and lower enrollment since 2020, said Vitti.The three schools selected — Ronald Brown Academy and Bow and Marquette elementary-middle schools — were chosen as sites that future investments would likely pay off, Vitti said.The presentation was the first breakdown of how the district might allocate the funds and was not an official recommendation to the board, which has the final say. It will begin discussing the budget for the next school year at next month’s committee meeting and must approve a budget by the end of June.Sheffield has made access to after-school enrichment one of her key priorities to improve education and outcomes for youth in the city. Her goal is for there to be a program within a 2-mile radius of every Detroit school. She also proposed $2.2 million in the city’s budget for such programs — an increase of 120% from 2025.Many families in Detroit and southeast Michigan want their kids to have access to after-school programs, but only about 1 in 5 students do, according to a 2025 survey.Years of research show after-school programming benefits school attendance, student behavior, and academic performance.In Detroit, chronic absenteeism is high and academic performance lags behind statewide averages because of systemic barriers.At the state level, legislators have also increased funds for before and after-school programs. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer recommended increasing the grants to $135 million in the next budget. The state education budget has not yet been approved. The grants are awarded to specific after-school program providers.Every DPSCD school offers after-school tutoring in literacy and math at the K-8 levels and SAT preparation for high schoolers.But tutoring does not offer the kind of enrichment, social activities, sports, or social emotional development after-school programming does. Those activities give students opportunities to explore robotics, music, visual arts, and more. Providers say the programs help leverage kids’ interests into academic success.Some DPSCD schools use their budgets to pay for their own programs, but the district does not allocate specific dollars to pay for them, Vitti said. Organizations also use philanthropic or state grants to offer programs at district schools.Board Chair LaTrice McClendon asked officials during Wednesday’s meeting to put a call out to community organizations and nonprofits that may be able to provide programming at DPSCD schools.Vitti agreed, but cautioned there are not many providers in the city with the funding or capacity to expand.“We did dig into this during the pandemic, and it was disappointing. When you try to ensure for quality and the right number of staff-student ratio and the background to actually do it, there aren’t that many providers,” he said. Hannah Dellinger covers Detroit schools for Chalkbeat Detroit. You can reach her at hdellinger@chalkbeat.org.

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Chalkbeat
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Sign up for Chalkbeat Detroit’s free newsletter to keep up with the city’s public school system and Michigan education policy.Mayor Mary Sheffield wants the Detroit Public Schools Community District to use the money it previously spent on city bus passes to expand after-school programs.But the money freed up in March when Sheffield made bus fare free for all Detroit students would only allow the district to add high-quality after-school programs at three pre-kindergarten through eighth grade schools, administrators said this week.The mayor’s Ride to Rise program will save roughly $700,000 for DPSCD, Superintendent Nikolai Vitti said during the district’s April board meeting. It would cost $200,000 annually at each school to run programs serving around 120 students, five days a week, with a ratio of 15 kids to one staff member, Vitti said during a board committee meeting Wednesday. The last time DPSCD explored the idea of paying for after-school programming at each of its K-8 schools was before the COVID pandemic. Vitti said Wednesday that the cost was too high for the district.“We were looking at $20 million, and that’s why we walked away,” he said.After the mayor asked DPSCD to consider using the free bus fare money for new out-of-school programs, Vitti said the district did an analysis to determine options with the greatest potential impact.The district mapped out the current availability of after-school programs and identified schools with high rates of chronic absenteeism and lower enrollment since 2020, said Vitti.The three schools selected — Ronald Brown Academy and Bow and Marquette elementary-middle schools — were chosen as sites that future investments would likely pay off, Vitti said.The presentation was the first breakdown of how the district might allocate the funds and was not an official recommendation to the board, which has the final say. It will begin discussing the budget for the next school year at next month’s committee meeting and must approve a budget by the end of June.Sheffield has made access to after-school enrichment one of her key priorities to improve education and outcomes for youth in the city. Her goal is for there to be a program within a 2-mile radius of every Detroit school. She also proposed $2.2 million in the city’s budget for such programs — an increase of 120% from 2025.Many families in Detroit and southeast Michigan want their kids to have access to after-school programs, but only about 1 in 5 students do, according to a 2025 survey.Years of research show after-school programming benefits school attendance, student behavior, and academic performance.In Detroit, chronic absenteeism is high and academic performance lags behind statewide averages because of systemic barriers.At the state level, legislators have also increased funds for before and after-school programs. Gov. Gretchen Whitmer recommended increasing the grants to $135 million in the next budget. The state education budget has not yet been approved. The grants are awarded to specific after-school program providers.Every DPSCD school offers after-school tutoring in literacy and math at the K-8 levels and SAT preparation for high schoolers.But tutoring does not offer the kind of enrichment, social activities, sports, or social emotional development after-school programming does. Those activities give students opportunities to explore robotics, music, visual arts, and more. Providers say the programs help leverage kids’ interests into academic success.Some DPSCD schools use their budgets to pay for their own programs, but the district does not allocate specific dollars to pay for them, Vitti said. Organizations also use philanthropic or state grants to offer programs at district schools.Board Chair LaTrice McClendon asked officials during Wednesday’s meeting to put a call out to community organizations and nonprofits that may be able to provide programming at DPSCD schools.Vitti agreed, but cautioned there are not many providers in the city with the funding or capacity to expand.“We did dig into this during the pandemic, and it was disappointing. When you try to ensure for quality and the right number of staff-student ratio and the background to actually do it, there aren’t that many providers,” he said. Hannah Dellinger covers Detroit schools for Chalkbeat Detroit. You can reach her at hdellinger@chalkbeat.org.

9 minutes

Mirror Indy
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College students ‘shop’ for toiletries and bedding at a kickoff each August. The post How this Indy nonprofit is providing students with college essentials appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Mirror Indy
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College students ‘shop’ for toiletries and bedding at a kickoff each August. The post How this Indy nonprofit is providing students with college essentials appeared first on Mirror Indy.

9 minutes

Mirror Indy
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The festival will feature international cuisine and performances. The post Lawrence International Festival celebrates the city’s diversity appeared first on Mirror Indy.

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Mirror Indy
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The festival will feature international cuisine and performances. The post Lawrence International Festival celebrates the city’s diversity appeared first on Mirror Indy.

The Trace Wins First-Ever Webby
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9 minutes

The Trace
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The Trace is pleased to announce that it is the recipient of a Webby award in the category of News & Politics for Websites and Mobile Sites. Winners were announced on April 21. This year marks 30 years of the Webby Awards, which honor excellence on the internet. This is the first time The Trace […]

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The Trace
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The Trace is pleased to announce that it is the recipient of a Webby award in the category of News & Politics for Websites and Mobile Sites. Winners were announced on April 21. This year marks 30 years of the Webby Awards, which honor excellence on the internet. This is the first time The Trace […]

Eastside Community Network launches study group to develop policy recommendations on data centers before they arrive in Detroit neighborhoods.

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BridgeDetroit
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Eastside Community Network launches study group to develop policy recommendations on data centers before they arrive in Detroit neighborhoods.

Plus: New York nears ban on renting jail space to ICE, and Michigan Supreme Court bans courthouse immigration arrests The post Immigration News Today: House Passes Bill to Fund Most of DHS, End Government Shutdown appeared first on Documented.

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Documented
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Plus: New York nears ban on renting jail space to ICE, and Michigan Supreme Court bans courthouse immigration arrests The post Immigration News Today: House Passes Bill to Fund Most of DHS, End Government Shutdown appeared first on Documented.

9 minutes

The 19th News
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The Trump administration’s push to exclude transgender Americans is moving to the nation’s homeless shelters. On Tuesday, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) introduced a proposed rule that requires federally funded shelters to house prospective tenants based on their birth sex alone. Advocates say that if made official, the new rule will prevent […]

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The 19th News
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The Trump administration’s push to exclude transgender Americans is moving to the nation’s homeless shelters. On Tuesday, the Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) introduced a proposed rule that requires federally funded shelters to house prospective tenants based on their birth sex alone. Advocates say that if made official, the new rule will prevent […]

The plan, which would involve moving youth among five state-run facilities, came as a surprise to many advocates, lawmakers and staff earlier this year.

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Flatwater Free Press
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The plan, which would involve moving youth among five state-run facilities, came as a surprise to many advocates, lawmakers and staff earlier this year.

Generations of prominent families have been fixtures as Jazz Fest performers for decades.

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Verite
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Generations of prominent families have been fixtures as Jazz Fest performers for decades.

Claim: An X user @mista_plasmah alleged that there was a blackout during a church service attended by Ghana’s President, John Mahama, to mark the 60th birthday of the country’s Chief of Staff, Julius Debrah. Verdict: False. DUBAWA’s checks revealed that there was no blackout, as alleged, and that the localised “dumsor” during the service was … The post FALSE! No ‘Dumsor’ at Ghana’s Chief of Staff’s 60th birthday service attended by Mahama  appeared first on Dubawa Ghana.

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Dubawa
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Claim: An X user @mista_plasmah alleged that there was a blackout during a church service attended by Ghana’s President, John Mahama, to mark the 60th birthday of the country’s Chief of Staff, Julius Debrah. Verdict: False. DUBAWA’s checks revealed that there was no blackout, as alleged, and that the localised “dumsor” during the service was … The post FALSE! No ‘Dumsor’ at Ghana’s Chief of Staff’s 60th birthday service attended by Mahama  appeared first on Dubawa Ghana.

Tune in for conversations about how rural libraries support telehealth in their communities, and how Kansas is often misrepresented on the big screen. Plus, Appalachian grave sweeping traditions, rural Colorado's coolest new music venue, ancient astronomical observatories, and music from Brigid and Johnny Reedy. The post Yonder Radio: Libraries as Telehealth Hubs, Kansas on the Big Screen, and Rural Third Spaces appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

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Daily Yonder
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Tune in for conversations about how rural libraries support telehealth in their communities, and how Kansas is often misrepresented on the big screen. Plus, Appalachian grave sweeping traditions, rural Colorado's coolest new music venue, ancient astronomical observatories, and music from Brigid and Johnny Reedy. The post Yonder Radio: Libraries as Telehealth Hubs, Kansas on the Big Screen, and Rural Third Spaces appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

Jocelyn Catterson is an artist, educator, and musician based in Del Norte, Colorado in the San Luis Valley. She works at the intersection of art and science, combining data with design to tell stories of water, land use, and climate change.  Anya Petrone Slepyan and I visited Catterson at her office in Del Norte to […] The post Q&A: Jocelyn Catterson on Working at the Intersection of Art and Science appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

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Daily Yonder
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Jocelyn Catterson is an artist, educator, and musician based in Del Norte, Colorado in the San Luis Valley. She works at the intersection of art and science, combining data with design to tell stories of water, land use, and climate change.  Anya Petrone Slepyan and I visited Catterson at her office in Del Norte to […] The post Q&A: Jocelyn Catterson on Working at the Intersection of Art and Science appeared first on The Daily Yonder.

11 minutes

Radio Slobodna Evropa/Radio Liberty
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Poverenik za zaštitu ravnopravnosti Milan Antonijević ukazao je da je "i pored svih napora i dostignutih standarda, oblast rada i zapošljavanja već godinama u samom vrhu po broju podnetih pritužbi" toj instituciji.

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Radio Slobodna Evropa/Radio Liberty
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Poverenik za zaštitu ravnopravnosti Milan Antonijević ukazao je da je "i pored svih napora i dostignutih standarda, oblast rada i zapošljavanja već godinama u samom vrhu po broju podnetih pritužbi" toj instituciji.

Баробар бо ин муассисаҳо, даҳҳо хонаҳои истиқоматӣ ва заминҳои наздиҳавлигӣ аз обу лойқа пур шудаанд ва мақомот ҳаҷми зиёнро арзёбӣ мекунанд.

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Радиои Аврупои Озод/Радиои Озодӣ
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Баробар бо ин муассисаҳо, даҳҳо хонаҳои истиқоматӣ ва заминҳои наздиҳавлигӣ аз обу лойқа пур шудаанд ва мақомот ҳаҷми зиёнро арзёбӣ мекунанд.