by John S. Lore
President and CEO
Great Lakes Bay Regional Alliance
The future of any region is directly related to the talent, dedication, and resourcefulness of the people who call that region home. There are myriad programs throughout the Great Lakes Bay Region that help develop and enhance leadership skills, inform individuals about opportunities…
The following is a work of historical fiction. While the scene is set in Bay City during the late 1800s and is based loosely on a series of unrelated true events, names, characters, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, or are used fictitiously. All names have been changed, and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Locavores, from roadside farm stands and
farmers markets, share their bounty of freshness.
by Janis Stein
The following is a work of historical fiction. While the scene is set in Bay City during the late 1800s and is based loosely on a series of unrelated true events, names, characters, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, or are used fictitiously. All names have been changed, and any resemblance to persons, living or dead, is coincidental.
Once the domain of men in the 1950s heyday, area clubs reinvent themselves to align with family-centric lifestyles
by Andrea Deering
Gone are the days of businessmen enjoying three martini lunches—and wives only appearing during social events—at private clubs across the nation. When the Women’s Movement that had women turning from homemaker to job-taker gained momentum, women moved to infiltrate the club and golf scene. Now, as our society becomes more family centric and the economy dictates how we spend our free time, clubs are in a quandary of how to reinvent themselves to gain and maintain members.