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Amber Alert Cancelled for missing 3-year-old girl from Detroit

Community 05-20-2013 Hits:115 Mlive - avatar Mlive

Amber Alert Cancelled for missing 3-year-old girl from Detroit

Update: According to Detroit Police, Stacey Anderson, the child’s father, released 3-year-old Alonna Anderson to her relatives. She is safe and was not harmed. Both suspects are still wanted for kidnapping. DETROIT — The Detroit Police Department has issued an Amber Alert for a missing 3-year-old girl who reportedly was last seen Sunday.Alonna Anderson is described as a 3-year-old black female, 3 feet tall and 48 pounds. She has brown eyes and black hair. She was last seen in the area of Northfield Avenue and I-96 in Detroit wearing a floral shirt and skirt with white, pink, green, yellow and orange flowers on the shirt. For Full Story Click Here.

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Judge McCree Faces Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission Today

News Briefs 05-20-2013 Hits:156 Deadline Detroit - avatar Deadline Detroit

Judge McCree Faces Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission Today

A Wayne County Circuit judge accused of having an affair with a complaining witness in a child support case before him, then discussing the case with her, is expected to testify during a hearing over the allegations that begins this morning in Ann Arbor. For Full Story Click Here.

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Winning numbers for largest Powerball jackpot are ...

Community 05-20-2013 Hits:197  - avatar

Winning numbers for largest Powerball jackpot are ...

A retailer holds a Powerball lottery ticket at a store in Decatur, Georgia, on Friday, May 17. The multistate Powerball jackpot was $590.5 million, with a cash value of $376.9 million, according to the Multi-State Lottery Association.   Eyeing the Powerball jackpot << < 1 2 3 4 5 > >> STORY HIGHLIGHTS NEW: Saturday's jackpot was a record $590.5 million Powerball is played in 43 states and the District of Columbia Largest jackpot was $656 million in Mega Millions game in 2012 (CNN) -- The winning numbers for the largest multistate Powerball jackpot are: 22, 10,13,14, 52 and the Powerball number is 11. Saturday's jackpot was a record $590.5 million. It marks the second largest in Powerball history, surpassing a $587.6 million jackpot split by winners in Arizona and Missouri in November. The jackpot has a cash value of $376.9 million. The largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history was $656 million in the Mega Millions game in March 2012. That was split by three tickets sold in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland. That mark will be dwarfed if no one wins the Powerball jackpot Saturday. With no winner, the jackpot will be about $925 million for Wednesday's drawing, according to Kelly Cripe, spokeswoman for the Texas Lottery, which is part of the multistate lotteries. The Powerball game is played in 43 states, the District of Columbia and the U.S. Virgin Islands. A single ticket costs $2, and the odds of winning the jackpot are 1 in 175,223,510. Why you keep playing the lottery But before you start dreaming of that mansion in Barbados, allow us to pour an icy bucket of mathematical reality over your head: You almost certainly aren't going to win. You stand a better chance of walking onto the golf course and hitting two consecutive holes in one than winning that jackpot. But that didn't stop hundreds from driving to the Trex Mart in Dearborn, Missouri, store where one of two...

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13 People Shot In Detroit Within 24-Hour Period

News Briefs 05-18-2013 Hits:119 News One - avatar News One

13 People Shot In Detroit Within 24-Hour Period

  Detroit recently hired a new police chief. But if Chief James Craig[1] was expecting a honeymoon period, he was sadly mistaken. Fox 2 News Detroit reports[2] that 13 people were shot within a 24-hour period. Though, during a press conference this week, the department failed to mention it, according to Fox 2 News[3]. In fact, when a reporter asked about the high number of shootings during a press conferece, a police department spokesperson shut it down. For some reason, asking about crime numbers seemed to be a bit of an issue. It’s something that Detroit Police Commission Chairman Rev. Jerome Warfield says he wants to change. “Part of community policing is to arm the community with as much information as you can give them in order [that] they may look out for you,” Warfield said. “If these type of activities are going on, then the community can coalesce and come together and then be able to help the police in their job.” The most recent shooting involved the death of 54-year-old Almeter ...

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Detroit Institute for Children Competes for Art Van Charity Challenge

Community 05-18-2013 Hits:288  - avatar

Detroit Institute for Children Competes for Art Van Charity Challenge

  The Organization is Competing in Art Van Furniture’s Third Annual Million Dollar Charity Challenge Bonus Challenge The Detroit Institute for Children (DIC) needs your help - not in dollars, but in votes! Through May 30, you can vote daily for the organization in the Art Van Million Dollar Charity Challenge Bonus Challenge. The top three charities with the most votes will win grants of $25,000, $15,000 or $10,000. DIC supporters can vote by going towww.artvancharitychallenge.com. “We’ve seen our children take their first steps, say their first words, and feed themselves for the first time, often when their families were told they would never be capable of doing so.” For almost 100 years, the Detroit Institute for Children (DIC) has been one of Michigan’s largest stand-alone clinics providing life-changing medical and rehabilitative care to children with conditions such as cerebral palsy, neuromuscular diseases, developmental delays, autism spectrum disorders, genetic syndromes, and traumatic injuries. “The intervention services we provide truly transform our patients’ and their families’ quality of life,” says Mark Cleary, President and CEO. “We’ve seen our children take their first steps, say their first words, and feed themselves for the first time, often when their families were told they would never be capable of doing so.” The Detroit Institute for Children truly fills a void in the Metro Detroit healthcare system. The organization’s services are available to all children, including children from inner city, low-income families with little to no insurance who are generally denied elsewhere. “With medical and therapy costs easily adding up to $100,000s every year per patient, the Art Van grant could help fund thousands of therapy sessions for our children,” adds Cleary. Since 2009, Art Van Furniture has raised an impressive $17.5 million for 150 Michigan charities through its challenge component. To vote for the DIC, or for more information, please visit www.artvancharitychallenge.com. And to learn more about the DIC, please visit our website at www.detroitchildren.org.    

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Some City of Detroit Offices Closed on May 20 for Budget-Required Furlough

Community 05-17-2013 Hits:854  - avatar

Some City of Detroit Offices Closed on May 20 for Budget-Required Furlough

  Some City of Detroit offices will be closed on Monday, May 20 for budget-required furlough (BRF): ·        Board of Ethics ·        City Council ·        Communications & Creative Services Division & Total Copy Center ·        Detroit Building Authority ·        Greater Detroit Resource Recovery Authority (GDRRA) ·        Human Resources (with the exception of Payroll Division) ·        Human Rights ·        Mayor’s Office ·        Purchasing Division (Finance Department) ·        Recreation (Administration, Recreation Centers & Community Affairs) However, these departments will be open on May 20: ·        Buildings, Safety Engineering and Environmental Department (BSEED) ·        Department of Public Works ·        Finance Department (Income Tax, Assessments, Property Tax & Treasury) ·        Planning & Development Department

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Sharpton and Hannity debate Obama presidency

Civil rights activist and radio talk show host Rev. Al Sharpton and rightwing radio show host and political commentator Sean Hannity fired up their troops during a discussion billed as “The Great Debate: President Obama’s Report Card” at the Sheraton New York Hotel and Towers in midtown Manhattan recently.


But instead of debating the first two and a half years of the Obama administration, Hannity spent much of the debate digging up boogeymen from the 2008 presidential campaign, while Sharpton beat back a barrage of often unsubstantiated conservative talking points and delivered several verbal bombs of his own.

The sold-out event was part of the 20th anniversary celebration of the National Action Network, the civil rights organization Sharpton founded in New York in 1991. And the dialogue between the two familiar adversaries started out cordially enough.

“Rev. Al, over the years, you and I have had passionate debates and we often disagree,” Hannity said. “I’m very honored to be back again because in spite of our disagreements, we have had a free, fair and open exchange of ideas. It’s an honor to be back. I really appreciate your invitation. Thank you.”

“I think that we have got to take the poison out of political discussions,” Sharpton said. “I think we need to see that people that disagree can do it without being disagreeable.” But just seconds after Hannity laid down a series of sweeping generalizations about the national debt and Obama’s role in creating it, the conservative commentator invoked the name of 1960s radical Bill Ayers and some of the most poisonous vitriol of the 2008 presidential campaign.

“I didn’t think we would ever have a president of the United States that started his campaign in the home of a unrepentant terrorist Bill Ayers, a guy that bombed the Capitol, New York City police headquarters right here in this city and also bombed the Pentagon of the United States and says he’s not sorry about it,” Hannity argued, unearthing right wing arguments many thought were buried with Obama’s victories in the Democratic primary and general election in 2008. But Hannity went even deeper.

“I never thought we would have a president who sat in the pews of a guy by the name of Jeremiah Wright that said ...” Jeers and groans from Sharpton supporters cut Hannity off in mid-sentence before he pressed on.

“I want God to bless America, I want God to bless everyone in this room. I don’t want anybody to say ‘God damn America,’” Hannity added as his supporters offered a spattering of applause before he continued. “He said of Rev. Wright, ‘I am fortified by him, he is like family to me. I could no more disown Rev. Wright than I could the Black community.’” Hannity went on for several moments, touching on First Lady Michelle Obama, Nazism, Israel, the auto industry bailout and much more before ending his first statement with, “Obama has been timid and weak, and I think it’s time for change.”

Sharpton forcefully punched back. “First of all, let me say that what you just heard is the reason that President Obama won the election, and that is you cannot run the nation on negatives,” Sharpton shot back in response to Hannity’s onslaught.

“We opened this discussion not to talk about what we didn’t believe would happen because I hate to give you the memo, Mr. Hannity. Mr. Obama, with all of the allegations you raised, won the election,” Sharpton added.

“So, obviously the American people did not believe the allegations that were made, all of which were raised during the election. All of this was run, and you know better than anyone because it was run all day and all night on Fox News.”

Then Sharpton specifically rebuked Hannity’s assertion about Bill Ayers’ living room being the birthplace of Obama’s political career with a historical jab at a conservative icon.

“That’s like me saying I don’t understand why Ronald Reagan started his campaign in Mississippi, in a town that was only known for being where three civil rights workers — two Jews and a Black — were killed,” Sharpton explained. “But, why go back into that when that election is settled? We can go forward.” For the next several minutes, Sharpton and Hannity sparred back and forth over an array of subjects, including the looming government shutdown and who is ultimately responsible for the country’s current economic dire straits. “They (Republicans) promised that if the country is going bankrupt and we need fiscal responsibility, they would go back to 2008 spending levels. Paul Ryan’s budget takes us back to 2008 spending levels. Promise fulfilled,” Hannity said.

And Sharpton fired back. “You want to start the economic story with Obama restoring an American house that had been leveled, rather than starting with the fact that the American house was leveled economically and he had to do things to rebuild the house that he didn’t bring down,” Sharpton argued. Then Sharpton, in response to Hannity’s repeated characterization of President Obama as “the anointed one,” brought the house down when he delivered what was perhaps the line of the evening.

“The problem is,” said Sharpton, “that if you’re going to have a messiah, he has to at least hang around for the resurrection.”

 

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