Indiana Chamber of Commerce makes plans for the region mymixfm.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from mymixfm.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
changing 12 Points area.
“12 Points Revitalization was approved for a matching $50,000 grant from the Indiana Housing and Community Development Authority. If our community raises $50,000 by June 7, 2021, IHCDA will match the contributions dollar-for-dollar for streetscape improvements in the 12 Points Building Business. This $1,000 from Duke Energy will go toward the $50,000 match,” Tiffany Baker, 12 Points Revitalization Economic Development Chair, explained. “Funds will be used to add lighting on Lafayette Avenue, add a gateway arch over Lafayette Avenue, free community WiFi in Gold Medal Plaza and bike racks throughout the neighborhood.”
Terre Haute Meals on Wheels was also a recipient, which depends on donations and assistance to continue its work providing food to people in West Central Indiana.
By Syndicated Content
Apr 30, 2021 10:14 AM
TERRE HAUTE, Ind. – The Terre Haute Chamber of Commerce, along with Downtown Terre Haute, on Friday announced the relaunch of the popular First Friday event series. Terre Haute Chevrolet will again serve as the event’s title sponsor.
“Terre Haute Chevrolet is proud to support Downtown Terre Haute as the title sponsor for First Friday,” Terre Haute Chevrolet General Manager Kevin Cauble said. “We’re thrilled to have the opportunity to support the businesses of downtown, along with an event that brings our community together for a fun and safe experience.”
Since its inception in 2015, First Friday has served as a family friendly way to experience downtown Terre Haute on the first Friday of the month. Restaurants, museums, shops and local businesses work together to present specials, activities and live music throughout downtown.
Butt pinches, threesome requests and a glass ceiling: sexism is systemic in Michigan’s political culture
Updated on 9:28 AM;
Today 7:45 AM
A woman stands underneath the glass ceiling on the ground level at the Michigan State Capitol in Lansing Michigan. Nicole Hester/Mlive.com
There’s a glass ceiling in the Michigan Capitol.
Designed as a glass floor for the building’s rotunda, it’s a big draw for school groups and other Capitol visitors. Little girls lay on it, faces pressed to the cloudy glass to see if they can make out shapes moving one floor down.
But to the women entering below – staff, consultants, public relations professionals, interns, journalists, lobbyists and lawmakers – it’s a visual reminder of what they’re pushing up against.
Monique Roffey is an award-winning writer born in Trinidad in 1965 whose novels include
The White Woman on a Green Bicycle and
House of Ashes, which were shortlisted, respectively, for the Orange and the Costa prizes. She is also a senior lecturer at Manchester Writing School. Her sixth novel,
The Mermaid of Black Conch, won the Costa book of the year and is shortlisted for the 2021 Rathbones Folio prize, announced on 24 March.
1. Art
Bottle and bowl with poetry in Persian, 1180–1220, Iran.
This may well be the first thing I go and see on 21 June. They’ve got something like 350 objects that go back over 5,000 years. I’m completely magnetised by Iran and yet, it’s so mysterious and so closed off to us. I’m obsessed with looking at artefacts. I saw the Buddhist display not long ago at the V&A and I loved that. I like looking at old things. At the Museum of London, they have tons of things they found in the Thames, from hairy mammoth skulls to Viking helmets to