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By Vernon T., February 11, 2013, Energy Efficiency, Events & Fun, News

Thomas_Edison2Born on February 11, 1847, Thomas Alva Edison’s early life did not hint at how much technical change his genius for invention would bring to the world. Born to middle class parents in the prosperous canal town of Milan, OH, he did, however, possess an insatiable curiosity. Said to have a head too large for a seven-year-old, his elementary school teacher viewed the hyper-inquisitive youngster as having an “addled” brain. Angered by this, his mother pulled him from public school after only three years and taught him at home.

Young Edison also suffered from considerable hearing problems due to scarlet fever; later in life, he would lose about 80% of his hearing. Even though he was offered the chance of an operation that would restore some of his hearing, Edison turned it down saying the added noise would make it hard for him to work.

Following the family’s move to Port Huron, OH, the 14-year-old Edison persuaded him parents to let him begin selling newspapers and snacks on the local railroad and soon began producing his own little newspaper, The Weekly Herald, on the train. When he saved a stationmaster’s child from being run over by a boxcar, Edison was given the chance to learn how to become a telegraph operator. It was an opportunity which would eventually help him build the first industrial research lab in Menlo Park, NJ and produce over 1,000 inventions that would change the world.

For the remainder of his teen years, Thomas Edison worked as a railroad telegraph operator. He favored the night shifts since they allowed him the luxury of being able to read and experiment. At age 21, he struck out for better work on the East Coast, eventually landing a job in Boston with Western Union. His scientific curiosity deepened, and when he started attending lectures at Boston Tech (later to change its name to M.I.T.), he then met fellow electrical experimenters. Chief among his new acquaintances were Alexander Graham Bell, inventor of the modern telephone, and Benjamin Bredding, inventor of the duplex telegraph (which modulated and phased electric pulses to send telegraph signals in two directions at the same time).

Having already patented the electric vote-recording machine, Edison’s distraction with his own projects eventually got him fired from Western Union. After landing a high-paying job in New York City, Edison was able to continue inventing. Improving upon Bredding’s designs of the duplex telegraph, Thomas Edison developed the quadruplex telegraph. This basic form of multiplexing would eventually give rise to the teletype, telephone networks, and computer networking. With this development, he was able to sell the rights to Western Union in 1874 for $10,000, using the profits to set up the world’s first industrial research lab in Menlo Park, NJ.

Edison was also trying to develop his own carbon microphone for Bell’s telephone. While experimenting with a system using an embossing point pressed against paraffin paper to produce electric impulses, he noticed that sound vibrations were causing the point to leave indentations. These indentations, he realized, could easily be used to imprint —or record— the human voice. Edison tinkered with the design, ultimately developing a tin-foil wrapped cylinder that would be turned in the player/recorder by a hand crank. This device became known as the phonograph, and the first recording was Edison reciting “Mary Had a Little Lamb”. (Edison’s 1927 re-enactment)

It was then that Thomas Edison became an overnight sensation, dubbed by the newspapers as the “Wizard of Menlo Park.” But he and his staff were not content to loiter on their laurels. Even though the incandescent electric lamp had been in existence for decades, a practical and affordable version did not exist. This was due to the problem of obtaining a high enough vacuum inside the bulb and using a substance that would glow brightly under electric current yet have a long lifespan. The result used a carbonized bamboo filament that lasted over 1200 hours.

The first public demonstration of his electric light bulb occurred on Dec 31, 1879 when Edison lit up a street of Menlo Park. Having formed the Edison Electric Light Company in New York City a year earlier, Edison declared “We will make electricity so cheap that only the rich will burn candles.” Even though patent lawsuits would take years to settle, the affordable electric light bulb spelled the end of the gaslight age.

One of the biggest inventions by Edison and his Menlo Park staff was the first power grid. In 1880, he formed the Edison Illuminating Company to supply 59 customers with DC electricity in lower Manhattan  Even though there would be a vicious public relations battle between him and Nikola Tesla over the use of AC power versus DC (and AC would win), Edison’s utility was the first of its kind. It became the model for generating, distributing, and and billing for electricity for homes and businesses. In 1936, the company bought out Consolidated Gas and changed its name to ConEd.

Thomas Edison himself died in October, 1931, but not before he developed 1,093 different patents (including the motion picture camera) during his lifetime. While some were inventions or co-inventions (including the motion picture camera), many were improvements on already existing technology that put it into the hands and homes of average people.

Happy Birthday, Tom!

Source Link Bounce Energy

 

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louisiana hines dead

“She would talk about being an obedient child, and her mother telling her an obedient child would live a long life. She always tried to be an obedient child to her mother and God,” she went on to say.

The uncertainty over Hines’ age resulted from her birth certificate being delayed and issued in the 1940s, when Hines was already an adult.

According to recent Census Bureau data, the nation’s centenarian population has grown by 65.8 percent over the past thirty years. And while 82 percent of them are said to be female, the world’s oldest person is actually a man — 115-year-old Jiroemon Kimura of Japan.

Source Article and Some Video on How to Live to 100

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Detroit! I am so excited to be performing at The Palace on Saturday, February 23rd after the Detroit Pistons/Indiana Pacers game. Come and get your praise on with me post game on Faith and Fellowship night! GO PISTONS!”

The title HERE I AM for gospel star Marvin Sapp’s eighth and latest album is more than a little ironic when one considers that “Never Would Have Made It” from his 2007 release Thirsty has been among the most ubiquitous gospel songs of the last three years – let alone all time. The mega-selling “Never Would Have Made It” held down the #1 slot at Gospel radio for almost a full year; topped the Urban AC chart (the first to do so since Yolanda Adams’ “Open My Heart”); was a top selling ringtone and ringback, and propelled Thirsty to the top of the gospel charts for 27 weeks. So no one has had any problem finding Marvin Sapp since the ascent of that uplifting anthem. The singing preacher has been spreading his message with pride, reverence and triumph.

How does an artist go about following up such a monumental success? Marvin Sapp’s answer is simple. “If it’s not broken, don’t fix it,” he states. “I have the same musicians, the same singers and even recorded at the same venue. Why did I do everything the same – because I wanted to produce the same anointing.”

HERE I AM was recorded live on October 16, 2009, in Marvin’s home city of Grand Rapids, Michigan. The recording took place at Resurrection Life Church, a multi-million dollar, state of the art facility that seats up to 5,000. The project – produced by progressive Contemporary Christian music chameleon Aaron Lindsey with vocal direction from the incomparable Myron Butler – crackles with live instrumentation, the energy of the audience, and the soul stirring grace of Marvin’s voice and verses. What Marvin and company have come up with is an album of vintage Marvin Sapp – songs of reassurance, praise and guidance – along with a couple of new musical twists.

“The title track, ‘Here I Am,’ speaks to me as an individual and the things I’ve endured over the last three years since Thirsty,” Marvin explains. “I’m still standing, even under the waves of pressure and difficulties – from sickness in my wife’s life to the more general challenges of my own life.”

The CD’s first single, “Best in Me,” covers a theme that is very familiar in Marvin’s work and is even returned to throughout HERE I AM – that all are worthy in God’s eyes if you seek Him. “It’s for anybody that’s ever been told ‘you’ll never be anything’ or anyone who acknowledges that they have made a mistake in life,” Marvin shares. “They need to understand that no matter how far you have fallen, God can pick you up wherever you are, dust you off and put you on a street called Straight. He sees the best in you when everyone else sees the worst.”

Along with the title track and first single, two other songs from the center portion of the concert form a powerful quadrant of reassurance that is the heart of the album. Those other two songs are “He Has His Hands On You” and “Don’t Count Me Out.”

“‘He Has His Hands on You’ is a song of encouragement, letting people know that what they face as individuals is all part of God’s master plan,” Marvin continues. “It was written by Stan Jones – a phenomenal singer/writer/producer. I’m glad I took a chance with this young writer knowing that what he had to share would be a blessing to many. When I first heard the song, I dove at the opportunity to do it because it speaks to so many people. Many times they feel like giving up because they don’t understand the process of God. Just knowing they are part of his plan can keep them encouraged.”

“‘Don’t Count Me Out’ is my testimony…actually inspired by the life of David,” Marvin explains of the Biblical man that he has come to relate to and write about throughout his career. “It never ceases to amaze me that man is always judging you on your outside when God is looking at your heart. A lot of church folk write people off when they’re down, but God specializes in taking misfits and making masterpieces out of them.”

Marvin drops an up-out-your-seat praise jam titled “Fresh Wind” that is as irresistible as it is righteously funky and infectious. “On that one I went back to my good brother Jonathan Dunn – one of the most prolific singers and musicians of our time,” Marvin states. “‘Fresh Wind’ speaks of how people need to experience an individual revival…by tapping into the Holy Spirit. Some folks think that once they’ve experienced the will of God one time that’s all they need. The truth is that our daily prayer ought to be for God to send a fresh wind on a consistent basis – that we may be replenished in spirit and function the way that He is calling us to function. This song is just some old-fashioned Pentecostal Church!

Most revolutionary of all is the rock-infused anthem “Praise You Forever” – a musical first for Sapp. “I wanted to stretch out and do something totally different,” Marvin confesses. “It’s where we are as a musical society – crossing from gospel to AC. I took a flying leap into another genre believing it would be a positive, edgy challenge for me to try.”

Marvin Sapp was introduced to the gospel community by Fred Hammond as a six year member of the vocal group Commissioned. “I am a preacher – called by God – who happens to sing,” is the way he defines his ministry – which was given its official blessing upon his receiving of the Doctor of Divinity Degree from Aenon Bible College and the Doctor of Ministry Degree from Friends International Christian University. Sapp’s previous releases as a solo artist are the self-titled Marvin Sapp (his solo debut for Word Records – 1996); Grace & Mercy: Live (1997); Nothing Else Matters (1999); I Believe (his 2002 Verity debut); Diary of a Psalmist (2003); Be Exalted (2005) and Thirsty (2007).

When he isn’t spreading the word of God through over 200 preaching and speaking engagements a year, Sapp ministers at The Lighthouse Full Life Center Church in Grand Rapids, where he is senior pastor. By 2012, he hopes to have built a 1,500 seat sanctuary connecting to “FLC.” His ultimate goal: to encourage Believers to elevate their level of worship and praise. And he starts at home with his wife of 18 years, MaLinda and their three children Marvin II, Mikaila and Madisson.

Musing on the pressure of following up the success of that instant classic song, Marvin concludes, “The mind blowing thing about Thirsty is that I put it out without expectation. There was no way to predict that ‘Never Would Have Made It’ would have the impact that it had. I sequenced it as track #11 out of 12…and part of a medley on top of that!

With HERE I AM, I’m just trying to keep the message as clear and concise as possible. Honestly, I’m a little worried about how it will be received…but I did my very best. After that, you let God to do the rest.”

Marvin Sapp Website

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Credit: Sean Marshall on Flickr

 

 

This past December, the city of Detroit got its first comprehensive guidebook since the 1980s. Assembled and edited by a trio of siblings — Emily, Robert and Andrew Linn, all lifelong Detroiters from the city’s Lower East Side neighborhood — the book From Bell Isle to 8 Mile: An Insider’s Guide to Detroit features some 1,000 entries from more than 30 contributing writers.

Below, Robert Linn, an urban planner and data analyst who works for the non-profit Data Driven Detroit, talks about the process of pulling the book together, the response it has gotten from residents and visitors alike, and how the guide will, like the city it covers, expand and grow in the future.

Next City: So this is really the first Detroit guidebook in 30 years?

Robert Linn: We see it as the first comprehensive guidebook in 30 or more years. There have been guides to the city’s architecture, or the city’s restaurants. There’s a great guide for kids’ activities, and there’s a great guide to arts in the city. But this is the first one that includes a range of amenities and destinations.

NC: How did you go about filling in the gaps?

Linn: It was a very long process. I ended up driving about 3,000 miles in the city, and we did a lot of focus groups and surveys. We had a little box for suggestions that we took to public events like parades and festivals to create ideas. In my work as a planner, I’ve become sort of a data specialist, so I created a spreadsheet of several thousands things that someone had recommended to us, be it online or in person or in a focus group. And then we set out on actually visiting all of them to get a sense of what seemed most worthwhile to be in the book.

 

 

 

 

NC: How did you pick and choose what went into the book?

Linn: That was a challenge for us. There are many possible reasons something could be in the guide. It could be unique in the region, or very interesting, or [have] important architecture. In the book we have listings for everything from monuments to dive bars to soccer teams.

What was most important to us was to show a range of every type of business or cultural attraction. Obviously we can’t include every possible establishment, so we wanted to show a variety, but also what was most exceptional to us.

NC: Your book also offers a look at the history of different neighborhoods within Detroit. Besides the obvious way that this helps — finding what is located where — do you think it’s important for visitors to understand the city on that very local level?

Linn: Perhaps more so than in many cities, Detroit is really a city of neighborhoods, and every neighborhood was developed at a different period, with a different architectural style, for a different group of new residents arriving from different countries. As such, the city still has so many interesting remnants of these very, very different histories.

Link to Next City for the Whole Interview

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AN INTERNATIONAL SEARCH ENDS IN DETROIT

recommended by Mike C. – PG 13 – Great Detroit Musical History and Story on Film

How is it possible that a musician named Rodriguez could bomb with two albums in the U.S., disappear into obscurity for years and then be unknowingly resurrected as a successful, inspirational hero in totally different country? Searching for Sugar Man tells the uplifting, almost unbelievable true mystery of Rodriguez, a story more extraordinary than any of the existing myths about him. From the producer of the Oscar-winning Man on Wire, Searching for Sugar Man is that rare film which connects with audiences and critics alike on an extraordinarily emotional level. Winner two awards at this year’s Sundance Film Festival, including the Audience Award, director Malik Bendjelloul’s documentary is a film about hope, inspiration and the resonating power of music. Academy Award nominee for Best Documentary Feature. Official Web Site

In 1968, two producers went to a downtown Detroit bar to see an unknown recording artist – a charismatic Mexican-American singer/songwriter named Rodriguez who had attracted a local following with his mysterious presence, soulful melodies and prophetic lyrics. They were immediately bewitched by the singer, and thought they had found a musical folk hero in the purest sense – an artist who reminded them of a Chicano Bob Dylan, perhaps even greater. They had worked with the likes of Marvin Gaye and Stevie Wonder, but they believed the album they subsequently produced with Rodriguez – Cold Fact – was the masterpiece of their producing careers.

Despite good reviews, Cold Fact was a commercial disaster and marked the end of Rodriguez’s recording career before it had even started. Rodriguez sank back into obscurity. All that trailed him were stories of his escalating depression, and eventually he fell so far off the music industry’s radar that when it was rumored he had committed suicide, there was no conclusive report of exactly how and why. Of all the stories that circulated about his death, the most sensational – and the most widely accepted – was that Rodriguez had set himself ablaze on stage having delivered these final lyrics: “But thanks for your time, then you can thank me for mine and after that’s said, forget it.” The album’s sales never revived, the label folded and Rodriguez’s music seemed destined for oblivion.

This was not the end of Rodriguez’s story. A bootleg recording of Cold Fact somehow found its way to South Africa in the early ‘70s, a time when South Africa was becoming increasingly isolated as the Apartheid regime tightened its grip. Rodriguez’s anti-establishment lyrics and observations as an outsider in urban America felt particularly resonant for a whole generation of disaffected Afrikaners. The album quickly developed an avid following through word-of-mouth among the white liberal youth, with local pressings made. In typical response, the reactionary government banned the record, ensuring no radio play, which only served to further fuel its cult status. The mystery surrounding the artist’s death helped secure Rodriguez’s place in rock legend and Cold Fact quickly became the anthem of the white resistance in Apartheid-era South Africa. Over the next two decades Rodriguez became a household name in the country and Cold Fact went platinum.

Despite his enormous popularity, Rodriguez’s personal life remained a mystery to almost all of his listeners. Various South African journalists and fans tried to uncover the truth about his life, and yet almost nothing was discovered – even about his legendary demise. When his second album was finally released on CD in South Africa in the mid ‘90s, two white South African fans – “musicologist detective” Craig Bartholemew and record shop owner Stephen “Sugar”
Segerman – decided to join forces in an attempt to get to the bottom of the enduring mystery of who Rodriguez was, and how he died. The investigation they embarked on was daunting; they initially found only inconsistencies and dead ends. Taking their cue from Watergate, they finally came up with a strategy to “follow the money,” figuring that if they could trace Cold Fact’s royalties, they might have a chance of uncovering the truth. They looked for clues in the only place available – Rodriguez’s lyrics. A mention of a suburb in Detroit finally led them to track down one of the original producers of Cold Fact, Mike Theodore. This contact uncovered a shocking revelation that in turn set off a wild chain of events that was stranger – and more exhilarating – than they could ever have expected.

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There is a section of Woodward Avenue—the spinal street of Detroit that runs 27 miles up to Pontiac, Michigan—that looks like a patch of quilt stitched in from Europe. Rows of neo-Gothic churches glisten in the dappled October sun, their limestone stairs and multicolored glass panes reflecting the prosperity of former times. There’s Metropolitan United Methodist, built in 1926 in ochre granite imported from Massachusetts. There’s the Cathedral of the Most Blessed Sacrament, finished in 1930 to seat the archdiocese of Detroit, its wrought-iron gates preserving the church’s gleam over the past century. St. John’s (formerly North Woodward Congregational) boasts an unusual Gothic red-and-white brick design, as well as the honor of being the first black church on Woodward Avenue. Together these and other churches earned this stretch of Woodward the name Piety Hill. It’s a neighborhood that once pulsed with spiritual vibrancy and stability in a city rocked by economic and social upheaval.

“See that church?” says Piety Hill resident Lisa Johanon. She points to a Gothic beauty whose blood-red doors promise life inside. “For $125,000, it’s yours.”

Like many churches on this street, Woodward Avenue Presbyterian (later Abyssinia) watched its upper-middle-class members, both black and white, leave the city of Detroit starting in the 1950s. After a series of mergers, expensive repairs, and a pastor’s death in 2005, the church got locked in court battles. Its leaky roof ate away its wooden floors, and vandals scrapped its pipe organ in 2009. While it served as the set of a recent Tyler Perry movie, it is foreclosed and in ruins.

Johanon knows Abyssinia and the other churches well. Her nonprofit emerged from a partnership between seven of them 18 years ago. Central Detroit Christian (CDC) Community Development Group was launched to serve the poor in the Boston-Edison Historic District, the onetime neighborhood of Henry Ford. But all the founding pastors have left; two of the churches have closed. “We’ve just faced such random, massive abandonment that it’s unreal,” says Johanon.

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Recently, the Challenge Detroit fellows were graciously invited to a performance from Midwest’s premier contemporary dance company, who fittingly hail from Michigan. The Eisenhower Dance Ensemble put on an amazing performance entitled, Red, Hot and Blue. With themes of love, passion, happiness and even a little circus thrown in there, the show was inspiring, emotional and coming from someone with a chronic case of incoordination- impressive!  The performance took place at a true Detroit Gem, the Detroit Opera House, which by the way has 2,700 seats!

It was my first visit to the Detroit Opera House, as well as the first time I experienced a contemporary dance performance. As I sat under the gold adorned sky of the Opera House, I was thankful for the existence of a program called Detroit Passport to the Arts, which was created by Natalie Bruno, another inspiring Detroit Doer! Detroit Passport to the Arts is a program which promotes and introduces the exciting and rich cultural scene of the city to people 45 and under. Every year a Passport can be purchased at an extremely affordable price, which is your ticket to six different performances throughout the year. The mission of Detroit Passport to the Arts is to, “cultivate the next generation of  arts and culture enthusiasts in Metro Detroit through increased awareness of and access to the arts community. “ That means that instead of having Metro Detroiters just watching So You Think You Can Dance on television, they are actually coming to Detroit and experiencing dance (and music and theater) performances in person!  It’s awesome.

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A vandalised home covered with red spray paint and smashed windows, sits vacant in an east side neighborhood of Detroit.

The street used to be a busy hub of families, but its occupants have fled their homes leaving whole blocks empty and dark.

The city’s budget problems have deepened to such an extent that it could run out of cash in a matter of weeks or months and ultimately be forced into what would be the largest-ever Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy filing in the United States.

Ghost town: A vacant and blighted home, covered with red spray paint, sits alone in an east side neighborhood once full of homes in DetroitGhost town: A vacant and blighted home, covered with red spray paint, sits alone in an east side neighborhood once full of homes in Detroit

 

The story of Detroit's decline is decades old - its tax revenue and population have shrunk and labor costs have remained out of unfeasible The story of Detroit’s decline is decades old – its tax revenue and population have shrunk and labor costs have remained out of unfeasible

 

Signs of decline are everywhere in Detroit – crime is rising with the murder rate of one per 1,719 people last year, more than 11 times the rate in New York City.

The jobless rate is above 18 percent, more than twice rate for the country as a whole.

At the Detroit Auto Show earlier this month, luxury was in the air.
Pricey new Bentleys and Maseratis glittered – including a Maserati 2014 Quattroporte with a $132,000 price tag; U.S. Cabinet Secretaries and dignitaries rubbed shoulders; and many of the well-heeled attendees ponied up for a $300-a-ticket black-tie charity ball.

Cuts: Spray paint on the front of a vacant and blighted home says the gas and water utilities have been turned off in the east side neighborhood Cuts: Spray paint on the front of a vacant and blighted home says the gas and water utilities have been turned off in the east side neighborhood

 

Running out: The city's budget problems have deepened to such an extent that it could run out of cash in a matter of weeks or months Running out: The city’s budget problems have deepened to such an extent that it could run out of cash in a matter of weeks or months

 

But in a city that is slowly dying, the glitz didn’t extend much beyond the Cobo Center exhibition hall.

General Motors Co (GM.N) and Chrysler (FIA.MI), which along with Ford Motor Co (F.N) gave the Motor City its identity, survived near-death experiences after filing for bankruptcy during the financial crisis.

Now, Detroit itself is edging closer to a similar precipice, only unlike the automakers, its chances of getting a federal bailout are almost nonexistent.

The story of Detroit’s decline is decades old: Its tax revenue and population have shrunk and labor costs have remained out of sync.

ced into what would be the largest-ever Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy filing in the United StatesBankrupt: Detroit could ultimately be forced into what would be the largest-ever Chapter 9 municipal bankruptcy filing in the United States

 

Frustrated by the lack of concrete progress, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, a Republican, last month appointed a team to scour the city’s books.

The audit could result in a state takeover of Detroit’s finances through the appointment of an emergency financial manager.

Such a manager, who would seize control of the city’s checkbook, could then propose federal bankruptcy court as the best option.

Snyder, who has called the situation ‘a crisis in terms of financial affairs,’ said the team would deliver its report in February.

Investigation: Frustrated by the lack of concrete progress, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, a Republican, last month appointed a team to scour the city's booksInvestigation: Frustrated by the lack of concrete progress, Michigan Governor Rick Snyder, a Republican, last month appointed a team to scour the city’s books

‘Detroit is teetering on the verge of bankruptcy after the City Council has failed to make the necessary cuts to deal with having a smaller population,’ said Rick Jones, chairman of the Republican majority caucus in the state Senate.

Jones, who has indicated he does not favor a bankruptcy, said he would like to see an emergency manager installed to fix the city’s problems. If that failed, there would be a case for finding a way to shrink the Detroit municipal area, he argued.

Detroit’s population is now just over 700,000 – down 30 percent since 1990 – but the city still has to provide services to an area encompassing more land than San Francisco, Boston and the borough of Manhattan.

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A stroll around the factory floor here reveals the kind of assorted automotive projects that fire imaginations.

Classic Fords and Chevrolets under restoration are parked in neat rows, including a Mustang customized for the ill-fated revival of the Knight Rider television series and another that’s a custom prototype for the Chinese market. A 2014 Chevrolet Silverado pickup, yet to appear in showrooms, waits to be prepped for auto show display.

So far, two small auto companies share the cavernous space in the former auto plant in this Detroit suburb. Working together as Automotive Performance Industries, the hunt is on for at least a couple more entrepreneurs who can join up to follow the same model — working on their own projects or as a team.

The rebirth of a former car factory as a business incubator for small start-ups aiming to make it big someday, points to a hopeful trend in the auto industry. More of the old factories left behind by the cutbacks of Detroit’s Big 3 automakers during the recession are becoming homes to myriad new businesses. Sometimes the sites stay devoted to automotive uses, but other businesses have swooped in as well — from herb growers to shopping-center developers. They are creating jobs that can begin to replace some of the thousands lost when General Motors, Ford Motor and Chrysler cut back over the past decade.

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The entertainment and food lineup for Detroit’s annual Motown Winter Blast near Campus Martius Park was revealed Monday at a press conference inside the Westin Book Cadillac.

And there’s a few new twists this year including a “Smore Happy Hour,” a hockey shot competition and even a visit from the Girl Scouts of Southeastern Michigan’s cookie van.

The event is free, but a donation of either $1, a canned good or a children’s book is encouraged. It will be held Feb. 8-10′ more event details can be found in Mlive Detroit’s post earlier this month.

At least 54 entertainment acts and 14 restaurants are expected to participate in this year’s event. Quicken Loans is this year’s headlining sponsor and provided much-needed financial support.

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Detroit Works Project looks to re-imagine the city. The Kresge Foundation has pledged $150 million over the next five years to implement DWP’s “long-term framework” plan, called “Detroit Future City.”

001 – Foreword & Executive Summary by

 

Detroit Future City: Economic Growth

Detroit Future City: Land Use Development

Detroit Future City: The City Systems Element

Detroit Future City: Neighborhoods

Detroit Future City: Land And Building Assets

Detroit Future City: Civic Engagement

Detroit Future City: Acknowlegements

Detroit Future City: Cover

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The Cancer Thrivers Network for Jewish Women invites fellow “thrivers” to join them 1:30 – 3 p.m., Monday, January 21 for an afternoon of knitting, crocheting and camaraderie.  The session will be held at the JCC, 6600 W. Maple Road in West Bloomfield.  There is no charge, and dessert and coffee will be served.

Reservations are requested to Miriam Cohen, (248) 670-0223 or miriampc@comcast.net; or Sharon Rocklin, (248) 489.9156 or ssrock@myway.com.

New learners and experienced knitters and crochet devotees are welcome. Participants are asked, not required, to bring any leftover, washable yarns and size 5 – 11 knitting needles to donate.  The project will be making squares to be assembled as lap blankets for chemotherapy patients.  

The Cancer Thrivers Network for Jewish Women is a program of the Jewish Community Center whose mission is to enrich and empower women cancer survivors through activities, friendship, resources, education and humor.  The Network welcomes women who have been diagnosed with any kind of cancer at any time in their lives. 

J C C Website

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by Tom Stankard

Growing up, Jeanne Fowler and her little brother, Peter, experienced one of the most horrific childhoods you can ever imagine.

Every day, Jeanne and her brother were beaten and tortured by their parents. Jeanne and Peter clung to each other to escape the pain and find love. But on July 28, 1953, their bond was broken. The Police answered a call coming from Veronica and Peter Burowsky Sr.’s apartment. When they arrived, the Police found young, three-year-old Peter Jr. lying motionless on the floor. Sadly, that evening, Jeanne and her sibling helplessly watched their mother beat their three-year-old brother to death.

The Burowsky children were taken from their abusive parents and put in separate foster homes. The foster children were sent to families regarded as “pillars of their community,” being told they were only here to work. Jeanne worked her butt of all day as a slave. Meanwhile the beatings never stopped.

In 1964, Jeanne escaped from her nightmare. She decided it was best to keep her abusive life a secret, afraid that if she told someone, she would be punished. From then on, she was a survivor of abuse, not a victim!

Out of the kindness of her heart, Jeanne started a non-profit organization, Big Family of Michigan in 2000. Driven by the memory of her brother Peter, Jeanne and Big Family of Michigan try to help children waiting to be adopted and more importantly, put a stop to child abuse so no child ever has to go through what she experienced ever again.

Jeanne started her non-profit organization by hosting birthday parties for foster children. Today, Big Family is alive and well. In total, Big Family of Michigan leases 5,000 feet of storage and counting. In the future, Big Family of Michigan hopes to become a national organization.

Big Family of Michigan works together with adoption centers, foster parents, social workers and, of course, children to make sure every foster child receives the love, care and items essential to being successful.

Every year, Big Family teams up with the Detroit Special Response Team and local business to host a Christmas party for the foster children. The local businesses provide food and other various party favors and to top it all off, volunteers pass out toys to the children. Making it a Christmas celebration they will never forget.

One special day, the Detroit Tigers reached out to Big Family of Michigan and offered the children a chance of a lifetime, the opportunity to see them in person. The Tigers pulled all the stops, providing three buffet lines, the team even put the childrens’ names on the giant scoreboard out in left field for everyone to see.

Big Family goes out their way to help children when “aging out” of the system by generously giving suitcases full of everything they could possibly need to live an independent life on their own. From moving to an apartment or going off to college, Big Family helps them get their foot in the door.

All this isn’t possible without your help. As a non-profit organization, Big Family of Michigan relies on donations in order to make all the childrens’ dreams come true. Anything that you can do to help would be greatly appreciated. At the moment, Big Family is in need of the following items to give to young adults “aging out” of the program: linens; lamps; small household appliances; new childrens’ toys and televisions.

If you would like to make a donation, make it out to Big Family of Michigan, Inc. on 30541 Utica Road Roseville, Michigan 48066.

If you would like to contact them directly, give them a call at 586-445-7735 or log onto http://www.bigfamilyofmichigan.org

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Now that the Advent and “Shopping” Season is over let’s fix our eyes and hearts on Jesus.  The REAL Season of Christmas begins today, ending on The Epiphany which is Jan 6th.  I know many people, not in more liturgical settings of Christian worship, may not keep this in mind.

Our Americanized Commercialized Christmas definitely begins before Thanksgiving with a focus on gifts, giving and shopping and not too much on Advent (means: coming) which is a preparation season on the Church Calendar.  In most American Minds when the gifts are unwrapped Christmas is over.  Really, Dec. 26th is just the second day of Christmas.

LookUpDetroit thought it might be worthwhile to use this real Christmas Season to checkout the Metro Manger Scene around Detroit and focus on the Reason for the Season – Jesus Christ.  We invite pictures of Manger Scenes in Wayne, Oakland and Macomb to combine with some devotional and informational about that little newborn .

Together let’s invite Jesus into some “Public Space” online.

Immanuel Lutheran Church - Macomb, MI

Manger Scene at Immanuel Lutheran Church in Macomb, MI

Nahum Tate(1652-1715), ca. 1700

While shepherds watched their flocks by night,
All seated on the ground,
The angel of the Lord came down,
And glory shone around.

“Fear not,” said he, for mighty dread
Had seized their troubled mind,
“Glad tidings of great joy I bring
To you and all mankind.”

“To you, in David’s town this day,
Is born of David’s line
The Savior who is Christ the Lord,
And this shall be the sign:

The heavenly Babe you there shall find
To human view displayed,
All meanly wrapped in swathing bands,
And in a manger laid.

” Thus spake the seraph, and forthwith
Appeared a shining throng
Of angels praising God and thus
Addressed their joyful song:

“All glory be to God on high
And on the earth be peace,
Goodwill henceforth from heaven to men
Begin and never cease.”

Immanuel Lutheran Church - Macomb, MI

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thy will …

by Lookup Webmaster on December 16, 2012

in Faith & Fellowship,Macomb County,Oakland County,Wayne County

December 14, 2012

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I’ve been editing a story today about kids toys, written by one of our ace reporters in Stockholm. Jens. A man I’ve come to love. He used to write comic books. Like me, he’s now a father, tapping out a living by jotting out yarns for our newspaper.

In my line of work, it’s impossible to escape the news even when lost in a story about playthings. Today, as I edit, I am continually interrupted by the dispatches coming into my email box from our reporters covering an unthinkable event in Connecticut. Reports on the count of victims killed and injured. Reports on the shooter, his tools, his connection to the elementary school. Reports that I’d rather not see. A sample:

WSJ: Death Toll in Connecticut School Shooting Is 20 Children, Six Adults

WSJ: Connecticut State Police Spokesman J. Paul Vance Confirms 26 Killed in Shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School

WSJ: Shooting Happened in Two School Rooms, According to State Police

A few minutes ago, after learning more about this tragedy, an image popped into my head of the newest addition to our family — Vaughn Tanner Stoll. Today is his ninth day on our earth and I can’t help but think he would be better off if he had just stayed tucked in his mommy’s womb. What a world we’ve invited him to experience. Where God’s will apparently takes such evil turns on a Friday afternoon less than two weeks shy of Christmas.

I think of Vaughn because I am reminded of the pain he was in yesterday and the similar feeling of helplessness I experienced while watching him cry out as I have now watching these dispatches come across my screen. What could I do but hold the boy’s tiny hand and look in his dark blue eyes and offer a few words of love.

It was the eighth day — the day of circumcision. Kimberly left me to stand with the doctor in the kitchen while she took the kids for a walk. She didn’t want to see our child in that condition — strapped to a table under the scalpel aimed at his family jewels. I didn’t either, but I stayed and experienced with him as much of the discomfort, as much of the cold air on an open wound, as much of the questioning why it needed to take place as I could. I clothed myself in his pain.

Then it hit me, just a couple of minutes ago, that I am more like Vaughn than I am like the father holding his hand. I am in a state of utter dependence. We all are. In the aftermath of tragedy, we are sort of strapped to a table and compelled to ask God one, single question to which there is never an easy answer: why? Why crush us like this? Why beat the shit out of kids in Connecticut or Columbine or Calcutta? If you can stop these things, what’s the point in standing there and watching them happen?

And why, against such a dysfunctional backdrop, did the author of the Lord’s Prayer prompt us to say the four words that seem so distant and, in some cases, so sinister and even sarcastic: Thy Will Be Done. If this is a portrait of thy will being done, we need a new artist.

If you get the chance someday, read Mark Twain’s Mysterious Stranger and you’ll find solidarity in the desire to punch back at God. The last paragraph, really, is all you need to read to get the gist of the entire story.

I love Twain, not because I agree with him, but because I empathize. To be angry with God in times like these is natural. To question him is to be human. To request a break from his presence is predictable.

But to abandon the first two words that serve as the preface to this prayer — Our Father — is a mistake.

As a father, I can’t always stop the pain that confronts my children, but I can choose to partake in their suffering. To share their burden. Yesterday, I would have paid my entire fortune to be the one laying on the table staring down the barrel of a knife aimed at my private parts instead of my 8-day-old son. No one offered me that option.

Perhaps he is a father like me, or a mother like Kimberly…at least in this regard. Perhaps he is the father who can’t always prevent, but is the father who longs to comfort. A father who stands next to me, holding my hand, holding my head, holding my pacifier.

Experience has taught me this. The depth of his love in times like these is so unfathomable that his presence and his emotion can easily be lost in the smoke of our anger and the fire of our disgust. He walks with us, suffers with us. And longs to intervene. And I am thankful when he does. He always does.

Where my will as a father would be to comfort those I cannot really help, his will is to heal the wounds of those who suffer at the hands of those who have no regard for his will. In giving us our own will, he turned over the ability to prevent what happened in Connecticut today. But, in giving us this prayer — thy will be done — he offers a path to redemption even when such a journey is unthinkable. He offers resurrection amid the stench of death.

You may not agree with my plan. But tonight, when I close the chapter that is December 14, 2012, I’ll do so holding the hands of Jack, Kimberly, Evelyne, and — thankfully — a Vaughn who is on the mend. And I will, with even more meaning than I did yesterday, say these words that mean everything in this broken world full of broken people prone to do broken things. Thy will be done.

John Stoll is from the Detroit Area and works as the Bureau chief for The Wall Street Journal in Stockholm.

Source Link          Church Link

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Where you live can have a number of effects on your health. In the past, we’ve told you how your neighborhood can affect your heart, your diet and even your mental health.

Now, a recent analysis of the users of the free online appointment-booking service, ZocDoc, has found which U.S. cities are the most health-conscious.

The ranking was created based on the percentage of preventive care appointments booked in each city out of the total number of appointments booked there. Anything that wasn’t illness- or injury-related was deemed “preventive,” according to a representative for the site. The cities where residents were most proactive about screenings and check-ups are the ones that came out on the top of the list.

Read for the full Story and Slideshow

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Are you put out that a community nativity display was nixed by a city council? Did a checkout clerk greet you with “Happy Holidays” instead of “Merry Christmas”? Maybe Christmas music annoys you when the Advent fast hasn’t even arrived?

Not me. I am not compelled to “reclaim” or “rescue” Christmas from the many who ignore and the few who despise its magnificent origins.

How can I be anxious or offended? I am in too much awe of its startling truth: that a baby is God, gasping for air, clasping for mother’s milk, flailing his small limbs in a feed trough; taking on my frailty, contingency, vulnerability, that I might partake in his everlasting nature.

The baby is now Lord of all things visible and invisible, forever “one of us,” still bearing his now glorified, nail-scarred flesh at the Father’s side, making all things new for all persons, hallowing the far-flung cosmos — matter’s maker now made matter, redeeming every atom and every stoney heart. This reality overpowers me with its brilliant mystery.

I want to share this authentic Christmas. I want everyone to know this God become clay so that we might eat from the Tree of Life.

Whether they believe the story, whether they practice holy Christmas as I do — with deep joy that prostrates before his Incarnation — does not dampen my praise or slacken my faith. I do not skip a beat. It does not alarm me.

The season our society calls “Christmas” does in so many ways fall short of this great mystery, but I wonder if Christian frustration and anger at the now monthlong celebrations stem from an unexamined need for the surrounding culture to buttress our untested faith in the God who became man. Can we trust the real deal without their cooperation or support? Why does so little set us at odds with our neighbors?

Should we not welcome the chance to embody genuine belief and practice, to incarnate love, in the face of all lesser versions and visions of Christmas? This is our opportunity. This is our calling.

After all, the first Christmas occurred in obscurity, without tinsel or holly. In a small town, in a cave amid manure, straw, and animal breath, Magnificence came forth breathing, born of a woman, and almost no one noticed. A star and angels are needed to find him, down a blind, trash-strewn alley, the holy family are huddled against the night air. Then, at dawn, the fallen world went about its business, unaware that a glory had shone that would never be put out, that in time will cover the earth as the waters cover the sea. No lack of awareness or poverty of reverence, no stubborn denial, can prevent this.

When the wood of the manger joins the wood of the cross in us, when the transfiguration of humanity by the divine nature is manifested in us, when Jesus Christ is revealed in a people captivated by the hardwood glories of Bethlehem and Golgotha, we will no longer need to talk about reclaiming or rescuing anything.

Christmas does not require our defensiveness or salvage operations. It rather beckons us to a deeper imitation of Divine Clay.

The Rev. Kenneth Tanner is pastor of Church of the Holy Redeemer in Rochester Hills, Michigan.

Holy Redeemer Website

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The Lions are 4-9 and now critics are questioning Stafford’s throwing mechanics and asking themselves if he’s still the quarterback everyone thought he’d be a year ago.

Tim Twentyman Follow Tim on Twitter

With losing comes criticism;
Matthew Staffordknows that better than most.Stafford couldn’t do a thing wrong last year when the Lions were on the way to the playoffs, and he personally was on way to 5,000-yard season with 41 touchdowns.

Fast forward one year. The Lions are 4-9 and now critics are questioning Stafford’s throwing mechanics and asking themselves if he’s still the quarterback everyone thought he’d be a year ago.

“I don’t really pay much attention to it,” Stafford said of the criticism. “You win games, everyone wants to talk about how good you are. You lose games, everybody wants to talk about how bad you are.

“I understand that. That’s the nature of the beast. That’s what we do for a living.”

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Mission Statement – Habitat for Humanity – Detroit

Habitat for Humanity Detroit (Habitat Detroit) is a non-profit, ecumenical Christian-based, housing ministry that provides low-income, working families the opportunity to purchase modest, affordable housing in which to raise their families.

Volunteer Opportunities:

Detroit Website

History of Habitat for Humanity International

Habitat for Humanity is an international, non-profit, Christian-based organization whose mission is to provide low-income families with decent, affordable housing in which they can raise their families

The organization was founded by Millard and Linda Fuller in 1977. This housing ministry has grown over the years to a global organization with the 300,000th house being built in 2008. Habitat for Humanity affiliates are located in all 50 states in the U.S.A., the District of Columbia, Guam, and Puerto Rico.

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Was Reading, Pa the 1st Detroit?

by Lookup Webmaster on December 13, 2012

in Metro History

Was Reading, Pa the 1st Detroit? Learn about the automotive industry & history of Duryea Drive w/ Dr. Bryan Dreibelbis.     Interesting Video

From Wikipedia

The first production of automobiles was by Karl Benz in 1888 in Germany and, under license from Benz, in France by Emile Roger. There were numerous others, including tricycle builders Rudolf Egg, Edward Butler, and Léon Bollée.[5]:p.20-23 Bollée, using a 650 cc (40 cu in) engine of his own design, enabled his driver, Jamin, to average 45 kilometres per hour (28.0 mph) in the 1897 Paris-Tourville rally.[5]:p.23 By 1900, mass production of automobiles had begun in France and the United States. The first motor car in central Europe[16] and one of the first factory-made cars in world, was produced by Czech company Nesselsdorfer Wagenbau (later renamed to Tatra) in 1897, the Präsident automobil. The first company formed exclusively to build automobiles was Panhard et Levassor in France, which also introduced the first four-cylinder engine.[5]:p.22 Formed in 1889, Panhard was quickly followed by Peugeot two years later. By the start of the 20th century, the automobile industry was beginning to take off in Western Europe, especially in France, where 30,204 were produced in 1903, representing 48.8% of world automobile production that year.[17]

The first automobile in Japan, a French Panhard-Levassor, in 1898

1903 World’s Work Article

In the United States, brothers Charles and Frank Duryea founded the Duryea Motor Wagon Company in 1893, becoming the first American automobile manufacturing company. However, it was Ransom E. Olds and his Olds Motor Vehicle Company (later known as Oldsmobile) who would dominate this era of automobile production. Its production line was running in 1902. The Thomas B. Jeffery Company developed the world’s second mass produced automobile and 1,500 Ramblers were built and sold in its first year, representing one-sixth of all existing motorcars in the U.S. at the time.[18] Within a year, Cadillac (formed from the Henry Ford Company), Winton, and Ford were also producing cars in the thousands.

Interesting Video

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