Showing posts with label michigan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label michigan. Show all posts

Sunday, March 30, 2014

UConn Upsets Michigan State, Returns to Final Four

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UConn Upsets Michigan State, Returns to Final Four

Thursday, March 27, 2014

US Senators request meeting with BP after Lake Michigan oil spill

At Not Just The News, the privacy of our visitors is of extreme importance to us (See this article to learn more about Privacy Policies.). This privacy policy document outlines the types of personal information is received and collected by Not Just The News and how it is used.


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US Senators request meeting with BP after Lake Michigan oil spill

Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Status of Michigan same-sex marriages

Michigan Governor Rick Snyder said Wednesday that state officials have decided that about three hundred same-sex marriages that were performed in four counties in the state last weekend were legal, but that marital benefits for those couples will be on hold while a federal appeals court ponders the validity of a state ban on such unions.  The governor’s statement is here.


The governor said the state’s refusal to recognize those new marriages for purposes of benefits was based on the fact that the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit on Tuesday had postponed a federal judge’s decision striking down the state ban.  State officials have appealed that decision to the Sixth Circuit, and the challengers have asked that court to put the review on an expedited schedule.


In association with Bloomberg Law




SCOTUSblog



Status of Michigan same-sex marriages

Saturday, February 1, 2014

2 Michigan Shootings Leave One Student Dead, 2 Hurt


(Newser) – One of two students shot in their apartment near the Michigan State University campus died this morning at an area hospital of multiple gunshot wounds, police said. The dead student was identified as 20-year-old Dominique Nolff, of Middleville in western Michigan. He was pronounced dead at 9:23 am, about 12 hours after he and his 20-year-old roommate were shot. His roommate, from Grand Haven—whose name wasn’t released—was treated and released from a hospital.


East Lansing police found the two students after responding last night to a report of a shooting at the Cedar Village apartment complex. “This does not appear to be a random act,” police said in a statement. Police described the suspect as a 20- to 25-year-old man who was wearing tan pants, a black coat, and black shoes or boots. The shootings near Michigan State occurred hours before a separate shooting near Ferris State University in Big Rapids, about 50 miles north of Grand Rapids. Early this morning, a male student was shot in an apartment complex just off Ferris State’s campus. His wounds were not considered life-threatening.




Newser



2 Michigan Shootings Leave One Student Dead, 2 Hurt

“Fargo” In Michigan ? – Strange Case of 32-year-old Chopped Up Murder Victim Near Detroit Michigan Eerily Similar To Movie “Fargo”…

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“Fargo” In Michigan ? – Strange Case of 32-year-old Chopped Up Murder Victim Near Detroit Michigan Eerily Similar To Movie “Fargo”…

Friday, January 3, 2014

TYT Network Reports - Michigan vs Federal Government - Who Wins?

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TYT Network Reports - Michigan vs Federal Government - Who Wins?

Monday, December 16, 2013

Michigan Man Arrested For Punching Mother In Face While Decorating Family Christmas Tree

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Michigan Man Arrested For Punching Mother In Face While Decorating Family Christmas Tree

Friday, November 15, 2013

Michigan Man Charged With Murder In Shooting Death On Porch

Michigan Man Charged With Murder In Shooting Death On Porch
http://isbigbrotherwatchingyou.com/wp-content/uploads/2013/11/2bd37__worthy_wide-98efed780a383c8b72220f66cb02b11ef6decfe8-s6-c30.jpg





Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announces second-degree murder charges against Theodore P. Wafer, 54, of Dearborn Heights, Mich., Friday. Wafer has reportedly told police that he feared a break-in on the night Renisha McBride was shot.



Paul Sancya/AP

Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announces second-degree murder charges against Theodore P. Wafer, 54, of Dearborn Heights, Mich., Friday. Wafer has reportedly told police that he feared a break-in on the night Renisha McBride was shot.



Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announces second-degree murder charges against Theodore P. Wafer, 54, of Dearborn Heights, Mich., Friday. Wafer has reportedly told police that he feared a break-in on the night Renisha McBride was shot.


Paul Sancya/AP



Prosecutors in Michigan are charging a man with second-degree murder for a Nov. 2 incident in which Renisha McBride, 19, was shot in the face after knocking on his door in Dearborn Heights, a suburb west of Detroit.


Theodore Wafer has reportedly told police that he feared a break-in when he heard sounds on his porch. Officials said Friday that the fatal shot was fired through the house’s open front door, passing through a locked screen door before striking McBride.


Wayne County Prosecutor Kym Worthy announced the charges against Wafer Friday. He also faces charges of manslaughter and possession of a firearm during a felony. Worthy said she believes Wafer owned the weapon legally.


Earlier in the day, officials released a toxicology report showing McBride was found to have high levels of alcohol in her system, along with trace amounts of marijuana. No toxicology test was performed on Wafer, Worthy said.


When asked today whether race is an issue in the case, Worthy said, “No, it’s not relevant at all, not to our charging decision.”


Wafer, a 54-year-old homeowner, has reportedly admitted to shooting McBride in the early hours of Nov. 2 with a 12-gauge shotgun after hearing what he thought were the sounds of someone trying to break into his house. Today, Worthy said the home showed no signs of an attempt to force entry, and that according to the evidence, Wafer opened the front door himself.


Worthy said the evidence suggests McBride knocked on a locked screen door and that the shot that killed her was fired through the screen door. She also said that it doesn’t appear Wafer and McBride knew each other.


An arraignment for Wafer has been scheduled for Friday afternoon. Prosecutors expect him to turn himself in before that appearance.


In announcing the charges, Worthy also described the statute on self-defense in Michigan law.


“There is no duty to retreat when you’re in your own house. But someone who claims self-defense must have an honest and reasonable believe of imminent death” or other significant harm, she said, adding that the person would need to use force to prevent that imminent harm.


While some of the details of what happened that night haven’t been made public, The Detroit Free Press has assembled what may be a rough chronology:



“According to police, McBride’s vehicle struck a parked vehicle in Detroit more than two hours before she was shot. Police said that just before 1 a.m. Nov. 2, a witness called 911 to say a woman was speeding down the street in the area of Bramell and Majestic, hit a parked vehicle, got out of her car and left.


“She later returned to the scene, according to a second 911 call, but was gone when police arrived. That caller told police the woman appeared to be intoxicated.”




Citing sources, the newspaper says McBride was driving a car that was registered in her father’s name.




News




Read more about Michigan Man Charged With Murder In Shooting Death On Porch and other interesting subjects concerning NSA at TheDailyNewsReport.com

Friday, October 11, 2013

Pharmaceutical drugs now pollute Lake Michigan, study confirms











DeliciousPin It

(NaturalNews) Following the release of several reports in recent years highlighting the presence of pharmaceutical contaminants in many of the nation’s drinking water supplies, a new study published in the Elsevier journal Chemosphere reveals that pharmaceuticals are now turning up in large quantities in the Great Lakes as well. A summary of this new research recently put out by Environmental Health News reveals disturbing levels of undiluted pharmaceuticals just two miles from Milwaukee’s main wastewater outfalls.

For their study, researchers from the University of Wisconsin – Milwaukee’s School of Freshwater Sciences and the University of Wisconsin – Madison’s State Laboratory of Hygiene conducted tests on water samples collected from various spots in Lake Michigan, both close to shore and out to deeper waters. The team looked specifically for the presence of 54 pharmaceuticals and personal care products (PPCPs) in these samples, which came from both surface water and sediment that was sampled over the course of two years.


Upon analysis, it was determined that 32 different PPCPs were present in Lake Michigan water, and 30 in Lake Michigan sediment. Several of these PPCPs were also identified up to 3.2 kilometers, or about two miles, away from the city. Among these were metformin, a popular oral anti-diabetic drug; caffeine; the antibiotic sulfamethoxazole; and triclosan, a toxic antibacterial and antibiotic compound found in many conventional hand soap and toothpaste brands.


According to the study’s abstract, the team determined the ecological risk of these substances by measuring their maximum environmental concentrations as detected in the lake and comparing them to the predicted “no-effect” concentrations. From this, they determined that 14 PPCPs present in the lake are currently of “medium or high ecological risk,” meaning they are a threat to both animal life and humans. And the greatest concentrations of these chemicals were found near the shore, where people wade at beaches and algae and other aquatic life abounds.


“In a body of water like the Great Lakes, you’d expect dilution would kick in and decrease concentrations,” says Dana Kolpin, a U.S. Geological Survey (USGS) research hydrologist based out of Iowa, as quoted by Environmental Health News. “That was not the case here,” she adds, noting that these new discoveries contradict previously held assumptions.


While the immediate effects of this widespread pollution problem are still largely unknown, we do know that many of these drug compounds have already been shown to change the behaviors and hormone profiles of various animals, as evidenced by previous studies. This implies that humans may also be at risk, especially as the sheer volume of pharmaceutical runoff increases over time.

“You’re not going to see fish die-offs [from pharmaceuticals] but subtle changes in how the fish eat and socialize that can have a big impact down the road,” adds Kolpin. “With behavior changes and endocrine disruption, reproduction and survival problems may not rear their ugly head for generations.”


Since federal regulations for PPCPs in water are currently non-existent, the problem will most likely persist until proactive solutions are eventually implemented. It is also important to note that most PPCPs are not filtered out by wastewater treatment plants, as the filtration systems currently used by most of them were not designed to capture these pervasive compounds. This means that these toxins end up being dumped right back into waterways unchanged.


“People should reconsider the notion that the Great Lakes are so large that this stuff cannot hurt us,” adds Olga Lyandres, a research manager with the Alliance for the Great Lakes organization. “The stuff you excrete and wash down the drain ends up in the same bodies of water that you drink out of.”


Sources for this article include:


http://www.environmentalhealthnews.org


http://www.sciencedirect.com


http://www.naturalnews.com





Articles Related to This Article:


Mystery silver substance ‘tri-calcium orthophosphate’ found in Lake Michigan, prompts beach closure

Pharmaceuticals in the Water: Why Medication Contamination is a Danger to Our Health and the Environment (transcript)


Pure Water, Pure Consciousness: Finding a Water Filter That Works


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The Poisoning of America’s Water Supplies


Daniel Vitalis Part II: Water Gurus, Water Filters and Bottled Water


Water: The World Is Facing a Dire Shortage of This Essential Element



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Pharmaceutical drugs now pollute Lake Michigan, study confirms

Tuesday, September 10, 2013

On the News With Thom Hartmann: Fast-Food Restaurant in Michigan Proves It Is Possible to Pay a Living Wage, and More

In today’s On the News segment: Diplomacy works; the Kansas state legislature says they’re orchestrating a campaign against child poverty; in Wisconsin, the state’s Libertarian Party is joining forces with the Green Party to support a solar energy proposal; Moo Cluck Moo currently starts workers at $ 12 an hour, and will increase that to $ 15 an hour on October 1st of this year; and more. 



You need to know this. Diplomacy works. On Monday, Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said, “We are calling on Syrian leadership to not only agree on placing chemical weapons storage sites under international control, but also it’s subsequent destruction and fully joining the treaty on prohibition of chemical weapons.” Shortly afterward, a Syrian official told reporters that his nation welcomed the proposal. In a series of television interviews that same evening, President Obama called the Russian proposal a “possible breakthrough” and a “positive development.” The plan for a Syrian surrender of chemical weapons was a response to an off-the-cuff comment by Secretary of State John Kerry, who was asked what Syria could do to avoid a military strike by the United States. Secretary Kerry responded, saying, Assad “could turn over every single bit of his chemical weapons to the international community in the next week, but he isn’t about to do it and it can’t be done obviously.” Almost immediately, Russian officials urged Syria to accept the proposal, and Syria accepted. Within 24 hours, China and Iran backed the plan as well, and pulled us back from brink of a potential world war. This is what happens when our leaders use diplomatic efforts, rather than military strikes, to resolve a conflict. In a single day, we went from facing a world war, to Russian officials working on an “effective, concrete” plan for Syria to hand over chemical weapons. And, once those weapons are surrendered, there is little risk that chemicals will wind up in the hands of terrorists. Some media reports claim that President Obama worked out this proposal with Vladimir Putin during the G20 summit in Russia, and other reports say that Secretary Kerry’s off-hand comment initiated the proposal. Regardless of who gets credit, the lesson is clear. Dropping bombs is not the only way to resolve a conflict.


In screwed news… The Kansas state legislature says they’re orchestrating a campaign against child poverty. However, their plan is more about imposing their so-called moral values on Kansas residents, than about lifting families out of poverty. Republican Governor Sam Brownback put together the Task Force on Reducing Childhood Poverty, which was supposed to study the issue, and recommend ideas to help struggling families. What they came up with were nine recommendations like “understanding the importance of marriage and families” and reducing the availability of food assistance throughout the state. Rather than proposing jobs or education that could help people earn more money, the state task force proposed free marriage licenses, and suggested investing in something called “Healthy Relationship Education in Middle and High School.” The task force simply perpetuated the meme that if you’re living in poverty, it could only be the result of your bad choices. Republicans love to talk about limited government, and staying out of people’s lives, but it looks like that doesn’t apply to the low-income people living in Kansas.


In the best of the rest of the news…


The possibility of another war isn’t the only thing that can create unlikely political bedfellows. In Wisconsin, that state’s Libertarian Party is joining forces with the Green Party to support a solar energy proposal. Both parties have endorsed a plan that would allows customers to lease solar panels and other renewable energy products that they can’t afford to buy outright. Paul Ehlers, the Wisconsin Libertarian Party Chair, said, “There are all kinds of philosophical disagreements [with the Green Party], but at the end of the day this was pretty much a no-brainer.” The measure is known as the Clean Energy Choice Initiative, and it is far more likely to gain traction in the state legislature – which is controlled by Republicans – now that the Libertarians and Tea Party in the state support it. Michael Vickerman, with RENEW Wisconsin, said that thanks to the coalition with Libertarians, green energy advocates “can talk to Republican legislators in a way we couldn’t in the past.”


As the heated debate about raising the minimum wage continues, one fast-food restaurant in Michigan is proving that it’s possible to pay a living wage. Moo Cluck Moo currently starts workers at $ 12 an hour, and will increase that to $ 15 an hour on October 1st of this year. Co-owner Brian Parker said, “We always wanted to be at $ 15 an hour. If just feels human to do it.” And, they say higher wages are actually a great investment. The company has seen better customer service, lower employee turnover, and less time and money spent hiring and training new workers. According to the Think Progress Blow, increasing employee pay can also help increase productivity, and provide a boost to the local economy when workers have more money to spend. Overall, better pay is a win-win-win for the business, the employee, and the local shops and restaurants. And, as the fast-food strikes continue in several cities around our nation, workers are pointing to good-paying, successful businesses like Moo Cluck Moo, and providing a heck of a lot of free publicity.


 And finally…Most young girls are focused on friends, school, or hobbies, but not Brynne Larson and her friends. The trio is much more interested in exorcism. That’s right, Brynne’s father, Rev. Bob Larson, supposedly trained the girls in the practice of expelling demons, and they headed off to England to fight the “satanic element” of Harry Potter. The girls say that the popularity of the J.K. Rowling’s series shows a rise in occult activity across the pond. In a video posted by Daily Mail, 18-year-old Brynne said, “Harry is using this magic for good. So here we have the dangerous idea that you can use this magic for good or bad. When in reality, all magic is bad ’cause you’re getting your power from Satan.” No word yet on whether Rand Paul plans to help the girls, or whether Aqua Buddha will be involved.


And that’s the way it is today – Tuesday, September 10, 2013. I’m Thom Hartmann – on the news. 




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On the News With Thom Hartmann: Fast-Food Restaurant in Michigan Proves It Is Possible to Pay a Living Wage, and More

Saturday, August 17, 2013

Michigan Republican David Camp says will not run for Senate



DETROIT | Fri Aug 16, 2013 2:38pm EDT



DETROIT (Reuters) – U.S. Representative David Camp said on Friday he would not run for Michigan’s open U.S. Senate seat in 2014 despite pleas from fellow Republicans that he would be the strongest candidate for the party.


Camp, chairman of the powerful Ways and Means Committee of the U.S. House, said he would focus instead on creating a “more effective and efficient” U.S. tax code in Congress.


“After much thought and careful consideration, I have decided not to run for the United States Senate,” Camp said in a statement.


His decision leaves Republicans without a leading candidate for the Michigan seat being vacated by longtime U.S. Senator Carl Levin, a retiring Democrat.


Michigan, which voted for President Barack Obama in last year’s general election, has a Republican governor and Republicans have a majority in the state Senate and House of Representatives.


Republicans need to add six seats to their total in the U.S. Senate in 2014 to gain the majority in the upper chamber and control the legislative agenda.


Democrats appear to be focusing on U.S. Representative Gary Peters as their candidate in Michigan. In Congress, Peters represents a district that includes some Detroit suburbs.



Reuters: Politics



Michigan Republican David Camp says will not run for Senate

Friday, July 19, 2013

VIDEO: Going for Broke: Detroit Files for Bankruptcy









Detroit has filed for Chapter 9 Federal Bankruptcy Protection, making it the largest US city to make such a filing. The move comes after years of financial struggles. (July 19)

















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VIDEO: Going for Broke: Detroit Files for Bankruptcy

Saturday, March 16, 2013

VIDEO: Gay Couple Marries on Michigan Reservation Despite State Ban

A gay couple in Michigan challenged the statewide ban on same-sex marriage by officially exchanging vows Friday.

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VIDEO: Gay Couple Marries on Michigan Reservation Despite State Ban