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HUD Awards $40 Million in Housing Counseling Grants/Michigan agencies to re…

Community 06-19-2013 Hits:13  - avatar

HUD Awards $40 Million in Housing Counseling Grants/Michigan agencies to receive nearly $601,000

  HUD AWARDS $40 MILLION IN HOUSING COUNSELING GRANTS Michigan agencies to receive nearly $601,000 CHICAGO - As part of its continuing effort to assist families and individuals with their housing needs and to prevent future foreclosures, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development (HUD) today announced more than $40 million in housing counseling grants to 334 national, regional and local organizations. As a result of these grants and the additional funding they help leverage, more than 1.6 million households will have a greater opportunity to find housing, make more informed housing choices or keep their current homes. Michigan counseling agencies will receive nearly $601, 000(see chart). Agencies in Michigan receiving funds are: LANSING MICHIGAN STATE HOUSING DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY $400,191.00 DETROIT ABAYOMI COMMUNITY DEVELOPMENT CORPORATION $17,429.00 FREMONT NCCS CENTER FOR NONPROFIT HOUSING $18,167.00 GRAND RAPIDS LINC COMMUNITY REVITALIZATION INC., F/K/A LIGHTHOUSE COMMUNITIES, INC $13,000.00 Grand Rapids GRAND RAPIDS URBAN LEAGUE $16,690.00 Grand Rapids HOME REPAIR SERVICES OF KENT COUNTY $17,429.00 Jackson COMMUNITY ACTION AGENCY $21,119.00 LANSING FRANKLIN STREET COMMUNITY HOUSING CORPORATION $20,381.00 Pontiac OAKLAND COUNTY HOUSING COUNSELING $17,798.00 Pontiac OAKLAND LIVINGSTON HUMAN SERVICE AGENCY $19,643.00 TRAVERSE CITY NORTHWEST MICHIGAN COMMUNITY ACTION AGENCY, INC $22,215.00 YPSILANTI HOPE AMERICA, INC. - A/K/A HELPING ORDINARY PEOPLE EXCEL $16,690.00 MICHIGAN STATE TOTAL                                              $600,752 Make no mistake: these grants will do a lot of good said HUD Secretary Shaun Donovan. The HUD-approved counseling agencies this funding supports are crucial in helping families manage their money, navigate the homebuying process, and secure their financial futures. The evidence is clear that housing counseling works. These grants are a smart investment to help families and individuals find and keep housing which helps promote neighborhood stability in the long term. These grants are a solid investment in the future of this state housing counseling works. It will help keep families in their homes which stabilizes neighborhoods said Antonio R. Riley, HUD's Midwest Regional Administrator.  More than $38 million in grant funds will directly support the housing counseling services provided by 27 national and regional organizations, 8 multi-state organizations, 22 State Housing Finance...

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House Passes Far Reaching Anti-Abortion Bill

News Briefs 06-19-2013 Hits:17 ABC News - avatar ABC News

House Passes Far Reaching Anti-Abortion Bill

WASHINGTON — The House of Representatives voted this evening to pass legislation to ban abortion after 20 weeks, except in what Democrats assailed as “narrow” cases of incest of a minor, rape, and health of the mother, prompting a partisan debate on the House floor as lawmakers grappled over the question of how soon a fetus is able to detect pain in the womb.The bill, H.R. 1797 – Pain-Capable Unborn Child Protection Act, passed by a vote of 228-196. Six Republicans opposed the measure, while six Democrats crossed the aisle to support it.Republicans contend that a fetus is capable of detecting pain well before the current cut-off for abortions, at 24 weeks. Continue To ABC News...

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Detroit Council Member Kwame Kenyatta Resigns

News Briefs 06-19-2013 Hits:26 My Fox Detroit.com - avatar My Fox Detroit.com

Detroit Council Member Kwame Kenyatta Resigns

As reported by My Fox Detroit.... Detroit City Council member Kwame Kenyatta says he's quitting Friday. Kenyatta didn't give a specific reason to radio station WWJ, but he says the council is virtually powerless now that Detroit is being run by an emergency manager. Read more: http://www.myfoxdetroit.com/story/22630393/detroit-council-member-kame-kenyatta-quitting-friday#ixzz2WfW1DY00

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31st Metro Detroit Youth Day set for July 17 on Belle Isle

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:175 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

31st Metro Detroit Youth Day set for July 17 on Belle Isle

  Metro Detroit Youth Day celebrates youth, focuses on reducing crime, and emphasizes education The 31st annual event takes place Wednesday, July 17 on Belle Isle WARREN – (June 13, 2013) – For more than 30 years, Metro Detroit Youth Day (MDYD) has welcomed Detroit’s youth for a day of encouragement, fun, guidance, and to award college scholarships. On Wednesday, July 17 from 8:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m., Belle Isle will host more than 34,000 students from Flint to Windsor, and Ypsilanti to Detroit. “The main goal of Metro Detroit Youth Day is to reduce crime and bullying by bringing together metro Detroit’s youth for a day of positive experiences, fun and constructive activities, sports workshops, exposure to Michigan’s colleges and universities, and much more,” said Ed Deeb, co-founder and chairman, of Metro Detroit Youth Day; and chairman of the Michigan Food and Beverage Association. Deeb added, “When we started Metro Detroit Youth Day 31 years ago, it was to instill peace in the community following altercations. It is truly a success story about people and organizations working together for harmonious relationships and a better community. We must continue to work together to also protect our youth and inspire them to do the most good.” This year’s event features workshops, clinics, entertainment, contests, dignitaries, and more, including the following: Reduce Crime With an emphasis on reducing crime, MDYD will offer four workshops for students focused on student and general crime, health and wellness, anti-bullying, and entrepreneurship. Sports MDYD will include sports clinics including martial arts, golf, tennis, weight lifting, boxing, track and field, football, basketball, and more. New to Metro Detroit Youth Day this year are partnerships with The Detroit Pistons and the NFL Alumni Detroit Chapter/Gridiron Institute. The NFL Alumni Detroit Chapter and the Gridiron Institute have partnered with the 2013 MDYD to present their 2013 Youth Football Clinic for metro...

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Thrill of victory: Success among many feels better

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:97 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

Thrill of victory: Success among many feels better

  Success feels good, but it is better when people win in big groups—even if the chance of success is the same, a new University of Michigan report indicates. Researchers found that people feel happier and more satisfied if their accomplishment is against competitors in larger groups than identical success among smaller groups. "Success among larger pools is associated with more positive emotional reactions because people perceive the performance as more indicative of real superiority," said Ed O'Brien, the study's lead author and a U-M doctoral student in social psychology. In other words, the win against many competitors represents their "true" abilities, not an outcome that might be described as a "fluke" with fewer individuals seeking victory, O'Brien said. O'Brien and Linda Hagen, a doctoral student in marketing at U-M's Ross School of Business, conducted five studies to understand people's reaction to victories depending on the number of competitors in different scenarios, holding constant the chance of success. In one experiment, participants read about a runner who placed in the top 10 percent of a race with few (20) or many (20,000) competitors, and estimated how happy he felt. They also rated how prestigious they thought the race was. The results indicated that participants thought the runner would be happier placing among the top 10 percent in a race with many runners, as well as consider it a prestigious race compared with the smaller event. Using the same race example, another experiment asked participants to rate what they thought the runner would infer about his true running abilities after the victory and winning future races. The participants thought the runner's victory against many people was significantly representative of his real running abilities and future success than the same win versus fewer people. "These findings suggest...

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NATIONAL PROGRAM OFFERS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INTERNSHIPS (AND JOBS) TO LO…

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:235 Michigan Chronicle Staff - avatar Michigan Chronicle Staff

NATIONAL PROGRAM OFFERS INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY INTERNSHIPS (AND JOBS) TO LOW INCOME YOUNG ADULTS

  Nationwide (BlackNews.com) -- Year Up is a one-year, intensive training program that provides low-income young adults, ages 18-24, with a combination of hands-on skill development, college credits, and corporate internships. Their program emphasizes academic and professional rigor, setting expectations high for quality of work and professional behavior. A strong structure guides students through the steps necessary for achieving success in the classroom and the workplace. For the first six months of the program, students develop technical and professional skills in the classroom. Students then apply those skills during the second six months on an internship at one of Year Up's 250+ corporate and government partners. Students earn up to 23 college credits and a weekly stipend, and are supported by staff advisors, professional mentors, dedicated social services staff, and a powerful network of community-based partners. Since its founding in 2000, Year Up has served over 6,000 young adults. For more details on how to apply, visit: www.findinternships.com/2013/06/year-up-it-internship.html To search hundreds of other internship programs, visit: www.FindInternships.com  

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End of an era

Sam Logan and Bankole ThompsonI’ve written many tributes about heroic men and women, but this is one that I didn’t imagine I would have to write so soon. It was only a month ago that I presented the Sam Logan Lifetime Achievement Award at the Michigan Chronicle Legacy Awards gala. Little did I know that would be his last major public appearance. 

SPECIAL TRIBUTE 

The fact is, Sam Logan’s passing is the end of an era for the Michigan Chronicle.

To say that  Logan, the Chronicle’s longtime publisher and founder of the Michigan FrontPage, will be sorely missed is an understatement. 

That this towering figure, who means a lot of different things to a lot of different people, will no longer be around a newspaper that was so closely identified with him seems surreal. 

That the Michigan Chronicle will from now on operate in the shadows of a man who spent more than four decades at the paper, in the process becoming the personification of this media institution, is a reality everyone at 479 Ledyard now has to face.  

Sam Logan was a man who not only transcended generations; he also took part in events that shaped generations, and in some cases created such events. 

He understood the marketplace he was operating in and subsequently placed the Chronicle at the center as a leader on almost every issue that’s been crucial to Detroit and this region’s long political and social history as well as that  of  the nation.

No matter how controversial his positions have sometimes been, Sam Logan stood behind his convictions and did not waver in making his positions clear.  Even when people vehemently disagreed with him, he took great satisfaction in knowing that he was making them think. 

Such was the man who sat at the helm of a newspaper that has given African Americans a voice and place to express their views on life and death issues since 1936. 

When institutions are wrapped around larger than life personalities, it becomes a challenge for those institutions to smoothly continue to function after the exit of those personalities. That explains why many in the community today feel so deeply about the passing of Sam Logan. As someone put it, in a sense Logan was the Michigan Chronicle for decades. 

No matter where he stood on the ideological spectrum and using the Chronicle to convey his message, Logan was respected across the aisle. Not everyone liked his decisions, but almost everyone respected him for knowing how to stake his position. 

At the Chronicle, we certainly have lost a giant, a friend and a professional colleague whom we enjoyed working with. Logan believed in his staff and knew how to appeal to the best of our skills and intentions. He knew how to utilize the talents and strengths of his team, a hallmark of a great manager. 

Logan was seldom in contention with his staff. He was always cool about things and even when he disagreed with us, he was very careful about how he conveyed that disagreement to the rest of the team. The last thing he wanted was to make any staff members feel frustrated and unappreciated. 

He knew how to recognize talent and provided an environment conducive to that talent growing. 

The Michigan Chronicle was Sam Logan’s home. He lived and breathed the paper. 

Whether he was showing up early in the morning or leaving late in the evening, the Chronicle was his world and he was very clear about how he wanted the paper to be perceived in the community. 

During our conversations he would tell me that he did not want the paper to be seen as a special interest publication. The Chronicle, in his view, should cater to all sides of the ideological divide. 

Notwithstanding its Black identity, Logan always ensured the Chronicle was also talking to people who had traditionally been outside the Black press coverage range. 

He grew up in an era when the Black press was the only voice for African Americans and he fully understood the importance of that alternative voice. He pushed the Chronicle to continue that role, and at the same time remained cognizant of the fact that we live in an interconnected world where we are all affected, hence the need for the paper to reach out beyond perceived realms. 

Prior to my arrival at the Chronicle as editor, I heard so many stories about Sam Logan. Even those who did not know him had something to say about him. 

The first day I walked into his office after accepting the appointment, he embraced me as if we’d known each other for ages. It was like a reunion, and later that evening we went to the Detroit Athletic Club (DAC), one of his favorite spots, for dinner and further discussion. 

Throughout the first four months into my tenure, he would invite me to meet him for drinks at the DAC. He would also invite some of his friends and associates to meet me because he wanted them to know who the new editor was and what to expect from him. 

Our best performances were a source of great pride for him. I remember when I would come back from scoring big, often exclusive interviews he would savor every detail of how the interview went, leaving out no details.  We always knew he had our back and his support was unwavering. 

We would spend time together talking about the paper and its editorial positions. He understood that the survival and relevance of any media entity today hinges on its editorial sanctity. He guarded that. As he would always remind me, “Do not let anyone in the world tell you what to write or how to write it.” 

So as we mourn Sam Logan’s departure with a great sense of professional and personal loss, we owe it to his legacy to continue in his indefatigable spirit to give voice in the community.  

Bankole Thompson is the editor of the Michigan Chronicle and the author of a six-part series on the Obama presidency, including Obama and Black Loyalty published last year. His latest book is Obama and Christian Loyalty with an epilogue written by Bob Weiner, former White House spokesman. His upcoming books in 2012 are Obama and Jewish Loyalty and Obama and Business Loyalty. Listen to him every Thursday, 11:30 a.m., on WDET 101.9 FM Detroit and every Sunday, 9 to 10 p.m. on the Obama Watch program on WLIB 1190 AM-New York.  E-mail This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. .

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