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DBusiness Daily Update: SMBA Awards 331 Small Businesses $3M in Grants to Winterize Operations, Cinch I T to Open First Michigan Location in Troy, and More

DBusiness Magazine DBusiness Daily Update: SMBA Awards 331 Small Businesses $3M in Grants to Winterize Operations, Cinch I.T. to Open First Michigan Location in Troy, and More Our roundup of the latest news from metro Detroit and Michigan businesses as well as announcements from government agencies, including updates about the COVID-19 pandemic. To share a business or nonprofit story, please send us a message. Courtesy of Bridge Our roundup of the latest news from metro Detroit and Michigan businesses as well as announcements from government agencies, including updates about the COVID-19 pandemic. To share a business or nonprofit story, please send us a message.

Social Justice: City of Hope/1968 Poor People s Campaign exhibit opens

Men of Change: An outdoor exhibit celebrates Black men

As a teen, Bella Cornell used her prom dress for Indigenous activism Now it s in the Smithsonian

As a teen, Bella Cornell used her prom dress for Indigenous activism. Now it s in the Smithsonian. Megan Sims © Provided by Yahoo! Lifestyle In 2018, Bella Cornell (Chocktaw) wore a prom dress to bring awareness to missing and murdered indigenous women. Her dress is now on display at Smithsonian National Museum of American History s Girlhood (It s Complicated) exhibit. (Photo: Smithsonian Institute) In 2018, Bella Cornell, a member of the Choctaw Nation, wore a beautiful custom-made red dress to her senior prom in Oklahoma. The piece, which was handmade by Della Bighair-Stump, a member of the Apsaalooke (Crow) Tribe of Montana, was made with red fabric, a color that represents missing and murdered Indigenous women, and worn as a form of activism. The pattern on the bodice is of Crow origins as a nod to the designer and the diamonds are important to the Choctaw people.

Museum Exhibitions Put Faces to the Impact of War |

By Sandra G. Leon Two upcoming exhibitions at the New Americans Museum (the NAM) at Liberty Station look to inspire a greater understanding of the impact of war both on the individual and on our American society. 100 Face of War, opening July 15th, is a traveling exhibit from the Smithsonian Institution that raises questions of national identity, of the veterans’ place in our society, of the moral, human and economic costs of war, and of the stereotypes that color our understanding of war through portraits and essays of veterans themselves. The exhibition will be complemented by new interpretive text, graphic elements, educational and programming resources, and a complete graphics package.

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