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  • MSU is birthing a new midwife program to improve women’s health care, filings for political races continue to pour in, and the head of the U.S. Health and Human Services Department talks about healthcare challenges in Montana.
  • Residents allowed to vote on an amendment to protect abortion rights, a school in central Montana will open this Fall despite a severe budget deficit, and Montanans are asked to help create an art project celebrating history.
  • Walking drugs over the Mexico border lands a Billings women in prison, wolf trapping regulations near Montana secure a change, and a saloon in Big Sky garners an Oscar in the food world.
  • Today on The Worm we'll tell you how the Blackfeet Nation is working to improve access to clean water, then we'll take you up in the air to learn how pollution from British Columbia coal mines flows into Montana and Idaho waters, and Christians around the world are preparing to celebrate one of their most significant holidays, what Holy Week entails.
  • Republican Congressman Matt Rosendale runs for reelection, crypto scams target Montanans and more on today’s episode of the Worm.
  • More residents request help to pay their utility bills, Bozeman leaders make a unanimous decision on the future of the city manager, and the country’s top legal advisor visits Montana.
  • Bozeman reinstates a program for healthier routes to school, Republican U.S. Representative Matt Rosendale's election plans are up in the air and more.
  • A hospice home in Montana's largest city closes its doors, some election drama in Kalispell, and a final decision made on the expansion of Holland Lake Lodge.
  • Confusion continues over an abortion ballot initiative, the first wave of charter schools set to open in July, and whether the weather cooperates for the solar eclipse today remains a mystery.
  • Students encouraged to learn about Indian Boarding schools through a project at the Western Heritage center, and rainy days and Mondays did not get eclipse watchers down.
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