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

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:124 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:72 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:186 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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Detroit's Michigan Science Center to unveil new 'Science of Rock 'n' Roll' …

Community 06-18-2013 Hits:107 mlive staff - avatar mlive staff

Detroit's Michigan Science Center to unveil new 'Science of Rock 'n' Roll' exhibit

  DETROIT, MI - Get ready to rock at the Michigan Science Center. The museum, at 5020 John R, will unveil to the public Thursday a new exhibit called "The Science of Rock 'n' Roll" that show visitors how science and technology have changed the way music is made today. The exhibit is expected to included "a series of fun, engaging musical displays" and all visitors to "create their own compositions, remix famous songs and even use state-of-the-art technology to record themselves as singing, guitar playing and drumming rock stars," according to a press release. For complete story click here

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Apple joins Facebook and Microsoft in revealing US surveillance requests

News Briefs 06-18-2013 Hits:62 theGauardian staff - avatar theGauardian staff

Apple joins Facebook and Microsoft in revealing US surveillance requests

  Tech giant promises that iMessage, FaceTime, location details and Siri requests remain private in effort to reassure customers. Apple has joined rivals including Facebook, Google and Twitter in calling on the US government to allow it to publish more details of the secret court orders its receives to disclose customers' information. The company gave more details of its dealings with US authorities Monday as it sought to reassure customers in the wake of the scandal surrounding the National Security Agency's Prism surveillance program. For complete story click here

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Michigan Consumers may Save due to SCOTUS decision

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Michigan Consumers may Save due to SCOTUS decision

  AARP: Supreme Court Decision May Save Money for Michigan Consumers on Prescription Drug Costs AARP is hopeful a U.S. Supreme Court decision today will end pay-for-delay prescription drug agreements that cost consumers and taxpayers billions of dollars a year in Michigan and across the nation. Pay-for-delay agreements involve brand name and generic drug manufacturers entering into arrangements that pay the generic drug manufacturer to delay bringing its lower-priced alternative to market. This practice not only denies consumers access to lower-cost treatment options as soon as possible, but also prevents competition, said Joyce Rogers, AARP Senior Vice President, Government Affairs. AARP, which filed an amicus brief in the case, is pleased the High Court’s decision recognizes that pay-for-delay arrangements may violate antitrust laws, Rogers said. Given that in Michigan more than 120 million prescriptions were filled in 2011, pay-for-delay agreements for Lipitor and other drugs (including other popular prescriptions like Nexium, Plavix, Provigil and Cipro) can hit consumers in their pocketbooks. In 2011, Michigan had about 1.2 million uninsured people. “The delay and lack of low-cost options reverberates throughout the health care system – including Medicare and Medicaid – and is especially burdensome for consumers,” Rogers said. “AARP is hopeful this decision will lead to an end to such agreements and that ultimately courts will find them anticompetitive and illegal, promoting more competition and helping reduce prescription drug costs for programs like Medicare and Medicaid as well as for consumers and other payers of health care.” Ending these harmful agreements is an example of a responsible way to reduce Medicare costs without cutting benefits or forcing seniors and future retirees to pay more. AARP has long advocated for ending these agreements that excessively extend patent monopolies and can result in patients foregoing needed treatment because of the high cost of brand name drugs. These agreements also artificially inflate health...

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Detroit Riverfront promises a new day for Detroit

The Detroit Riverfront opt

 

Inbound traffic to downtown Detroit where sidewalks are packed with people is increasing thanks to blockbuster events like the Detroit River Days Festival. The one-of-a-kind festival along Detroit’s riverfront attracted thousands of visitors last weekend, lured by such attractions as tall ships, towering sand sculptures, live concerts and various other family-friendly activities.

Music headliners included national acts such as Boyz II Men and the Whispers, in addition to local favorites like the Howling Diablos and Thornetta Davis, who performed amidst dozens of street performers, aerialists, jugglers and dance acts.

This effort and others, headed by Detroit RiverFront Conservancy President and CEO Faye Alexander Nelson, have helped reinvigorate interest and enthusiasm in Detroit’s riverfront.

Nelson has quietly managed to raise capital investment topping $300 million since taking the helm in 2003. She has overcome formidable barriers, barriers that have crushed others who have attempted to sustain such urban promotions.

Her efforts deserve our gratitude and applause. Detroit is a better place in which to work, live and play, as well as a more welcoming place in which to conduct business, due in large part to the Detroit RiverFront Conservancy and Faye Alexander Nelson.


Beyond negative campaigning, candidates owe voters facts

By Lena Epstein Koretzky

Society loves risks. We love the feeling, the rush of our heart beat, the heat tingling throughout our body, from the bottom of our toes, to the core of our chest. Risks are exhilarating and uplifting, they are the jolt of energy that builds up, only to explode with the high of euphoria or deflate with the low of disappointment.

I’ve always considered myself a risk taker. As a student in Cambridge I spent a brief weekend with girlfriends attempting my luck at poker. Although never having played the game, I was confident in my ability to succeed.

Although I brought to the table a top-notch poker face, I focused far too much energy worrying about my girlfriends’ hands than my own. In my methodical attempt to dissect my opponents’ every breath, hand gesture, or eye twitch, I would end up convincing myself that I knew more about their hand than I did my own. And that’s what I played to. Sometimes I would get lucky, but more often than not I would lead myself down a road of misguided decisions.

I lost $84 in my weekend pursuit of poker glory.

Needless to say, my passion for poker never came to fruition and I will not be watching the World Series of Poker on ESPN this summer. Instead, I will focus my time following another game, an exciting game, a competition that holds many similar traits to the game of poker and impacts us all: politics.

If you’ve ever been looking for a time to start following politics, the cards that will unfold this summer are sure to be entertaining. Like poker, politics is a game of calculated risks, a game that runs on big money and involves a sophisticated state of the art “poker-face.” As Barack Obama and Mitt Romney enter the final table of this campaign season, their heads-up play will see them analyzing not only their own hands, but also each other’s. Money will be spent and risks will be taken.

Besides the potential ‘campaign worker turned mistress’ or secret sexting scandals, it should be fairly easy to predict an opponent’s hands at this level of presidential politics. As a political sommelier, I’m less excited with discovering which candidate can read their opponents hand, as I am with what each candidate will do with that knowledge.

Unfortunately, if history has its way, both candidates will continue a long standing tradition of negative campaigning, focusing less on their own strengths, and more on their opponents’ faults. America risks the possibility of going to the voting booth in November and casting a ballot not based on which candidate has sold themselves as having the better hand, but on who has sold their opponent as having a worse hand. There is a difference and the latter brings a greater risk.

Although there is always the exception, when a candidate campaigns on their hand, the strengths and experiences that make them the most viable candidate, they are more inclined to focus on the realities and truths behind why they made the decisions they made and hold the beliefs that they believe. Naturally, they have a firsthand knowledge of their own experiences and philosophies and thus can more intimately articulate the facts.

From a political perspective, we could call this “acceptable boasting with a purpose.” But when candidates focus more of their campaigns on their opponents, the realities that should make up a campaign become distorted and convoluted. The substance that allows one to speak truthfully about their own experiences becomes exaggeration and misleading to one attempting to speak truthfully about their opponents.

One of the most successful campaign ads in American political history was the “Daisy Girl” commercial run by Lyndon Johnson. Reacting to comments from Johnson’s Republican opponent that he would consider use of nuclear force with regards to Vietnam, the ad depicted a little girl playing with a daisy, followed by a sudden change of screen to a nuclear bomb exploding. Highly controversial for 1964, the ad was immediately pulled, but not before news organizations picked up the film to run in their evening broadcasts. In the end, Daisy Girl is considered a key reason why Johnson won that election.

As negative as Johnson’s campaign ad was, and as a taboo as it was for 1964, it worked. Almost 50 years later, negative campaigning is more common than ever in campaign politics, almost a pre-requisite to any candidacy, quite simply because this method helps people win. Negative campaigning won’t go away; as long as candidates want to win, they will inevitably always continue to use this in some capacity.

But the modern voter has an advantage over the 1964 voters. With modern technology and the ability to obtain quick, credible and factual information, the voter has a more enhanced ability to learn about the candidates, both from their campaigns as well as a multitude of other outlets.

Voters need factual information to judge each candidate independently on which one can deliver a more promising four years for America. And although I could spend time urging each candidate to mitigate their negative campaign advertising, I also am a realist. Instead, I will urge each voter to mitigate their risk in choosing the right candidate. Do your research, become informed, and get behind the candidate that truly represents the best hand.

As we enter the final table of the political World Series this summer, make an effort to look beyond the poker faces. Choosing the wrong president is a risk that America cannot afford to take.

Lena Koretzky is a political observer and advocate.

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