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Former Michigan Speaker of the House and Chairperson of the Michigan Medical Marijuana Licensing Board's corruption sentence explained, a new middle grade book partly based on an author's experience with a jaw malocclusion, and tonight's community dialogue about the Israeli-Palestinian conflict at Wayne State University.
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Author Curtis Chin joins us to talk about his memoir, "Everything I Learned, I Learned in a Chinese Restaurant." Chin spent much of his childhood in his parents' Chinese restaurant, and is here to share some of the memories and lessons from that time that have stuck with him.
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More flooding expected in Michigan as climate continues to warm, a new book centered in Detroit's former Chinatown, accessing resources for tribal businesses, and then Michigan voices from this past weekend's Middle East peace rallies.
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Greg Harden former Executive Associate Athletic Director, Student Athlete Health & Welfare for the University of Michigan, offers his thoughts on weathering failure and framing success.
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Possible resolutions to the increasingly fractured nature of NCAA sports conferences, U of M's former executive associate athletic director's new book, and 50 years of Hungry Howie's.
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Connecting the dots between striking workers in the auto and entertainment industries, a conversation with the author of a novel based on two lovers' secret code, and creating a support system for Black women tattoo artists.
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The fictional characters of "Dearborn," Ghassan Zeineddine's new short story collection, reflect the very real experiences of many Arab Americans in Dearborn.
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Middle school is a notoriously difficult time to be a kid. We talked with Detroit-based author Jack Cheng about his new young adult novel, The Many Masks of Andy Zhou.
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Janie Paul's new book, "Making Art in Prison: Survival and Resistance," documents the stories and work of artists who are and have been through Michigan's prison system.
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On today's show, 1A host Jenn White joined for a conversation about her Michigan roots. Plus, more on proposed manufacturing plants, the Reconstruction era revisited, and Dearborn's new health department.