Topic: Flint (Michigan)
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Focus Lower wages now at Big Three automakers, but new hires aren't whining
A sixth-generation GM worker is delighted to have landed a job at the US automaker, even if her wages and benefits don't hold a candle to what her own father made there. Such jobs, it seems, are still prized.
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Scott Weiland rejects 'firing' by Stone Temple Pilots
Scott Weiland says 'How can I be 'terminated' from a band that I founded, fronted, and co-wrote man of its biggest hits?" Scott Weiland says the Stone Temple Pilots dispute is now in the hands of lawyers.
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'No black nurses' lawsuit: 2nd nurse says she was asked not to touch infant
'No black nurses' lawsuit: a second Flint, Mich. nurse sues hospital, saying she saw the notice left on a hospital assignment board that said, 'Please, No African American nurses to take care of ... baby per Dad's request.'
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'No black nurses' lawsuit: Nurse asked not to touch infant
'No black nurses' lawsuit: An black nurse at a hospital in Flint, Mich. filed a lawsuit last month alleging her supervisors bowed to a father's request to have no black nurses take care of his infant.
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Legal piracy? Antigua gets OK to start selling copies of US hit movies, songs
The World Trade Organization ruled that the tiny island nation is entitled to suspend American intellectual property rights due to an ongoing trade dispute with the US.
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'I'm finna start training so hard …'
A new form of a familiar idiom shows how an Olympian went for the gold.
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Tax VOX Should states pay bonds to knock down buildings?
Two Ohio Members of Congress have introduced a bill to allow states to issue tax-exempt bonds to demolish buildings, which is a bad solution to a serious problem of urban development.
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Opinion: Trayvon Martin: the crime of being black, male, and wearing a hoodie
Whatever happens to neighborhood watch captain George Zimmerman, the dialogue on race must go on. Media perpetually associate criminality with black males. Legislators criminalize black dress. And the criminal justice system disproportionately penalizes black men and boys.
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Iran's high court dismisses death sentence against American
Iran's supreme court threw out a death sentence Monday against Amir Mirza Hekmati, an Iranian-American convicted of spying by a lower court and sentenced to be executed.
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Chapter & Verse Newbery, Caldecott winners: Jack Gantos, Chris Raschka take the top prizes
Award-winners Jack Gantos and Chris Raschka both wrote stories based on real-life incidents.
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Photos of the Day: Photos of the Day: 06/17
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Oklahoma, Alabama, Joplin: Why we're seeing so many tornadoes and superstorms
The superfunnels that hit Tuscaloosa, Ala., in late April and Joplin, Mo., on Sunday, are generated by storm systems whose journeys across the country are slowed by a roadblocked jet stream.
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Local jobs: Top five cities leading the turnaround
Last year, these five metropolitan areas were struggling economically with unemployment above the national average. By February 2011, however, they were among the fastest recovering cities in the United States, most of them with unemployment rates below the national average of 9.5 percent. Here’s a look at these Top 5 fast-recovery cities:
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Black History Month: 7 great books for teens
From gritty memoir to evocative fiction, these stories offer powerful lessons about race in America.
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Most dangerous city survey names St. Louis, Camden, Detroit
Most dangerous city: The annual rankings are based on population figures and crime data compiled by the FBI. Some criminologists question the findings, saying the methodology is unfair.
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Top 10 banned fashions
Most of the time we use the phrase "fashion police," we don't mean it literally. But in many places around the world, your sartorial choices can get you fined, imprisoned, or worse. Here is our list of the top 10 banned fashions.
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Hurricane Katrina anniversary: Can New Orleans' new mayor revive the city?
Mitch Landrieu wasn't mayor of New Orleans when hurricane Katrina hit. But he is now, and at the five-year Katrina anniversary, residents are looking to him to move the city forward.
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Elias Abuelazam serial stabber case befuddles experts
Criminologists say the serial stabber may be a hybrid criminal: someone who is motivated by the grievances of a mass killer but uses the tactics of a serial killer. Police arrested Elias Abuelazam in Atlanta Wednesday.
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Runaway Toyota Prius: Feds say they can't explain
Federal government officials said they can't explain why a Toyota Prius suddenly accelerated last week.
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Cities, not just banks, are pursuing foreclosures, too
Desperate for revenue, more cities and counties are proceeding with tax foreclosures when residents fall several years behind on their property taxes.
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Hoop houses extend urban farmers' growing season
Urban farmers can extend the growing season several months in fall and spring with hoop houses, a variation of greenhouses.
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Movie review: 'Capitalism: A Love Story'
Michael Moore's amorphous, told-you-so attack is short on remedies.
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Karate class combines martial arts and gardening
Teens take a break from practicing karate moves to tend to an urban garden.
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Jobless? Here are 10 zany opportunities.
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What the future of the auto industry will look like
Surging demand for cars in rapidly growing nations will mean a robust car industry in 20 years. The US will have a piece of it – though smaller than today – and the models it turns out will be much greener as the iconic industry reinvents itself.







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