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HARRISON, Mich. (AP) - Laid-off factory worker Bob Rose fiddles with an unlit cigar and strokes his salt-and-pepper beard as he contemplates his future in Michigan.
He's not sure he has one.
Rose, 53, lost his job when an auto supplier closed nearly two years ago. His unemployment benefits run out in early April. None of the 20-plus jobs he has applied for has panned out. And when he asks headhunters about manufacturing employment options in his home state, the news isn't good.
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