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USU’s Nora Eccles Harrison Museum of Art is presenting a new exhibition this week in honor of Utah female artist Jane Catlin.
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Nearly 400 members of the medical community in Utah and across the U.S. delivered a letter to policymakers urging them to save the declining Great Salt Lake.
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In other news, an affirmative consent bill, which aims to address Utah's low sexual assault prosecution rate, has been proposed for the fourth time. And, a plane was recovered from Pineview Reservoir after crashing over the weekend.
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What about birds? Why are they so alluring, so beloved by so many? Whatever the reasons, the bird is the word!
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Utah legislators target college diversity offices and hiring efforts. Four Salt Lake City elementary schools will permanently shut down. And how hosting the Olympics could impact Salt Lake City’s bad air.
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The hosts of Both Sides of the Aisle discuss Utah's social problems from air quality to healthcare access.
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In other news, Brighton Resort has changed its rules around parking reservations after rider feedback.
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On this episode; Patrick Kearon is the newest apostle of The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints, Utah Attorney General Sean Reyes won’t run for reelection, and the price Utahns pay for poor air quality.
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On this episode, West-siders breathe the legacy of redlining, Salt Lake City Mayor Erin Mendenhall orders a crackdown on homeless camps, and Utah leaders react to the death of Latter-day Saint apostle M. Russell Ballard.
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Once upon a time my family met what we now call ‘paralyzing berries’ on a hillside hike. I still don’t know the common name, let alone the scientific one. I sure could’ve used Naturalist Jack Greene’s plant identification and probable warning not to taste those tart wild berries that day.