Top Stories
The University of Michigan is recruiting and training volunteers from among its employees to serve as "protest/disruptions response" teams during commencement ceremonies next week, including at the main commencement at Michigan Stadium.
What you need to know for the 2024 Election
Dough Dynasty
Latest Stories
-
Noor Kestou, the owner of a building in Clinton Township that exploded in March leaving a man dead, has been arrested and charged with felony involuntary manslaughter.
-
Former U.S. Representative Peter Meijer has withdrawn from the Republican U.S. Senate primary race in Michigan.
-
Jill Biden was scheduled to speak at the Gerald R. Ford Presidential Foundation's annual First Ladies Luncheon, but after losing her voice, she asked another White House official to deliver her speech.
-
The Democratic and Republican candidates for the open U.S. Senate seat are finalized, a concert where the attendees are the band, and after 20 plus year absence, Detroit has a food co-op.
-
Researchers at Michigan State University say their study shows a correlation between state-funded paid family leave and a reduction of child maltreatment.
-
Taxpayers getting the short end of the stick is not unusual. But it does come at a time when Michiganders are particularly sensitive about highly touted deals in which we are likely going to get a diminished return on investment. Deals that Michigan made for big automotive battery projects just a couple of years ago are now being questioned and revisited.
-
The federal government announced a $138.7 million settlement to over 100 survivors for the FBI's failure to thoroughly investigate sexual abuse allegations against Larry Nassar.
-
Hundreds of students have been arrested. Columbia says progress was made in negotiations with protesters, while at GWU, students are flouting orders to clear encampments.
-
A state House panel held its first hearing Thursday on legislation to create a right to legal representation for people facing eviction from their rental homes.
-
A state House committee held a hearing Thursday on an audit looking into the Michigan Unemployment Insurance Agency's ability to catch fraud during the COVID-19 pandemic.
-
Grocery prices are a key component of any household budget, and rising food prices can sour the electorate's mood.
-
A look back on what led to the Flint water crisis and what more still needs to be done in the city, a new natural gas project in northern Michigan, the role Michigan might play in November's presidential election as a swing state, multi-displinary artist Tiff Massey's upcoming exhibit at the DIA, and a conversation with Flint mayor Sheldon Neeley.
-
Six of the 15 people who face felony charges stemming from the alleged plot to overturn Michigan's election results were back in court this week.
-
The union representing non-tenure track faculty at the University of Michigan has voted to authorize a strike.
-
The federal government's settlement made to sex abuse survivors for failing to stop Larry Nasser sooner, a book that investigates the economic experiences of five working class families, and a trip to multi-disciplinary artist Tiff Massey's studio in Detroit.
-
A Michigan bill package to make physically assaulting someone because of their sexual orientation, age, or disability status a hate crime moved out of a state House committee Tuesday.
Close To Home: The Conflict In Gaza
Stateside Show & Podcast Episodes
News Headlines From NPR
- Hamas says it's preparing to respond to Israel's latest Gaza cease-fire proposal
- Opinion: We do anything to make our kids smile
- A 100-degree heat wave in Gaza offers a sweltering glimpse of a tough summer to come
- Both sides prepare as Florida's six-week abortion ban is set to take effect Wednesday
- An Afghan migrant, age 17, drowned in a Bosnian river. Here's how citizens responded
- Got brothers or sisters? Warm sibling bonds help boost happiness as you age