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  • 31
    Jan
    2013
    2:34pm, EST

    Mile-long pile-up in Detroit kills three

    Paul Sancya / AP

    A car is jammed between two trucks after a mile-long pile-up on Interstate 75 in Detroit on Jan. 31.

    By Kari Huus and Nadine Comerford, NBC News

    A massive chain-reaction crash on an interstate highway in Detroit on Thursday killed three people, including two children, and left at least 40 injured, local authorities said. That was the first of three major pileups reported on icy Michigan roads Thursday amid blinding snow squalls.  Read the full story

    Paul Sancya / AP

    Vehicles are at a standstill after a multi-vehicle accident in Detroit on Jan. 31.

    Paul Sancya / AP

    The front of a car is under a truck after a multi-vehicle accident on Interstate 75 in Detroit on Jan. 31.

    David Coates / AP

    Debris sits on the road after multi-vehicle accident on Interstate 75 in Detroit on Jan. 31.

    Follow @NBCNewsPictures

    1 comment

    gee, do you think maybe people were driving too fast and tailgating ?

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    Explore related topics: weather, car, michigan, detroit, us-news, highway, automobile, transportation
  • 14
    Jan
    2013
    1:35pm, EST

    Corvette Stingray turns heads as it returns to Chevy's lineup

    Tannen Maury / EPA

    The 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray is presented at a Pre-North American International Auto Show introduction in Detroit on Jan. 13. The all-new 2014 Chevrolet Corvette Stingray could put a much-needed halo around a company whose critics still tend to dismiss it as “Government Motors.” Read Story

    Slideshow: 2013 Detroit Motor Show

    Uli Deck / EPA

    The 2013 North American International Auto Show is considered one of the industry's most important and closely watched auto events in the world and will be open to the public on Jan. 19.

    Launch slideshow

     

    2 comments

    The Corvette Action Center has all the details and tons of photos on the 2014 C7 Corvette Stingray:

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  • 27
    Apr
    2012
    4:16pm, EDT

    Bald eagle teaches physics lesson

    David Coates / The Detroit News via AP

    Noe Navarrette, Donovan Wilson and Jennifer Martinez use velocity guns to gauge the speed of a bald eagle at Western International High School in Detroit.

    The program, Physics in Flight, allows students from physics class to watch a red-tailed hawk and bald eagle fly near their school, then perform physics equations based on the flight.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    •Sign up for the msnbc.com Photos Newsletter

    Comment

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    Explore related topics: education, detroit, us-news, bald-eagles, animal-tracks
  • 27
    Feb
    2012
    8:38am, EST

    Bulldozed: Romney's boyhood home now just a memory

    John Makely / msnbc.com

    An empty lot in Detroit's Palmer Woods neighborhood where Mitt Romney's boyhood home once stood.

    Mike O'Brien of NBCpolitics.com writes:

    DETROIT -- All that's left of Mitt Romney's boyhood home is an empty lot, his family's old house in Detroit's Palmer Woods neighborhood having been bulldozed two years ago in May.

    The Romney family home fell victim to a familiar predator in the city of Detroit: abandonment and blight. The city ordered the demolition of the home, at 1860 Balmoral Drive, in 2010 as part of an initiative to address blight throughout the city.

    Romney has made frequent mention of his roots in southeast Michigan during his campaigning before Tuesday's primary in the state. He elaborated on the fate of his boyhood home, in which the family lived until 1953 according to the Boston Globe, at a stop Thursday evening in Milford:

     "I was born in Detroit, Harper Hospital, our home was right around six-mile and Woodward, a place called Palmer Park. And uh, we had a home there. It’s been bulldozed now because it turned, I guess, into an eyesore or a place where drugs were being used so they had to tear it down. It was a lovely home."

    Ricardo Thomas/ The Detroit News via AP

    This May 15, 2010 photo shows the onetime home of Michigan's Romney family in the Palmer Park section of Detroit. A demolition crew in Detroit torn down on Tuesday June 8, 2010 the 5,500-square-foot house that was lived in by former Massachusetts Gov. Mitt Romney when he was a child. The dilapidated, two-story home torn down Tuesday in the Palmer Woods area was one of 3,000 set for demolition this year under Detroit Mayor Dave Bing's plans to improve neighborhoods by getting rid of dangerous structures and eyesores.

     It's a different portrait of the property painted in an Associated Press story about the demolition:

     Unlike thousands of other vacant houses in the city, the structure at 1860 Balmoral in Detroit's exclusive Palmer Woods area wasn't open to trespass, neighbors said as it crashed and crumbled to the ground.

     There didn't appear to be any vandalism and it certainly didn't become a haven to drug dealers like many others across the city, 58-year-old Tyrone Stewart said.

    Mike O'Brien / msnbc.com

    Boarded up storefronts on Woodward Ave. near Palmer Park in Detroit.

     The Palmer Woods neighborhood is hardly a portrait of poverty or disrepair; most of the homes in the community are well maintained and worth hundreds of thousands of dollars, even in a depressed housing market. A golf course and the University of Detroit Jesuit high school, an all boys' Catholic prep school, are nearby. A more familiar sight of abandoned and crumbling storefronts stand across Woodward Avenue at 7 Mile, opposite the east end of Palmer Woods.

     Len and Barb Marshick of Belleville, Mich. said at a Friday night rally for Rick Santorum, Romney's main opponent in the Michigan primary, that they drove by the Balmoral Drive property during its demolition. They bemoaned the destruction of the link between the would-be president and the community that raised him.

     "Romney hasn’t lived here for so long, I just don’t think the average person thinks he’s a Michigan guy," Barb said.

    Slideshow: Mitt Romney

    Story: Romney begins closing arguements in Michigan

    Paul Sancya / AP

    The former home of one of Michigan's most prominent political families lies in debris after being demolished in Detroit Tuesday, June 8, 2010. Crews demolished, as part of Detroit's plan to tear down neighborhood eyesores and dangerous houses, the 5,500-square-foot, two-story structure where George Romney raised his family for a time before being elected governor. Former Massachusetts governor and one-time Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney was raised in the home in the once prestigious Palmer Woods area.

    83 comments

    WOW, to be priveledged and to live in a prestigious neighborhood and grow up in a 5,500 sq. ft home - now to think Romney wants to live in the White House = six stories and 55,000 ft² (5,100 m²) of floor space, 132 rooms and 35 bathrooms, 412 doors, 147 windows, twenty-eight fireplaces, ei …

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    Explore related topics: mi, politics, detroit, mitt-romney, michigan-primary, decision-2012
  • 9
    Jan
    2012
    4:55pm, EST

    Automakers battle in Detroit for the heart, mind and pocketbook of the America car buyer

    Rebecca Cook / Reuters

    The Lexus LF-LC sports car concept is driven onto the stage during the first press preview day for the North American International Auto Show in Detroit, Jan. 9, 2012.

    Slideshow: slideshow=

    Mike Cassese / Reuters

    Upscale sedans, fuel-efficient electric cars – and old-school muscle cars – make their debuts at the 2012 North American International Auto show.

    Launch slideshow

    Paul Eisenstein reports on msnbc.com that the huge midsize market segment is now up for grabs, with the two long-standing giants, Toyota and Honda, suddenly facing some serious challenges from an assortment of American, Korean and even German alternatives.

    “We think we have a real opportunity to keep growing Fusion sales” by delivering a mix of stand-out styling, good mileage and more features than buyers would normally expect in the segment, said Ford’s global marketing czar Jim Farley.

    View our slideshow to see many of the new models.

    Stan Honda / AFP - Getty Images

    The MINI Roadster is introduced at the 2012 North American International Auto Show on Monday.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1 comment

    What concerns me more is why insurance companies are allowed to decide who lives or dies in this country. Why are they allowed to ruin peoples lives?

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  • 30
    Dec
    2011
    11:02am, EST

    Detroit churches face up to downsizing

    Detroit's struggles with a declining population and the near-death of the U.S. auto industry are well documented, but less well known are the travails of the local Catholic church, the latest institution in this failing city to face up to downsizing. 

    Reuters photographer Mark Blinch and reporter John Stoll visited two churches in the run-up to Christmas, one abandoned, another under threat of closure.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    The inside of the Martyrs of Uganda Catholic Church, which closed in 2006, is seen in Detroit on Dec. 18, 2011. When a Catholic church closes, the land and buildings go back to the archdiocese. The neighboring parishes can come and take their pick of relics or ecclesiastical equipment. If a new tenant doesn't materialize, criminals sometimes do. Thieves often strip the building of copper or pluck out stained glass.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A damaged organ at the abandoned Martyrs of Uganda Catholic Church.

    The Martyrs of Uganda church, closed by the archdiocese in 2006, is today littered with rubble, collapsed confessionals and a broken organ. Moss grows on its floors. The windows are gone and support pillars are crumbling because stones have been removed.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Chris Mitchell walks up the stairs at the St. Leo Catholic Church, which was built more than 120 years ago.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    People stand as they take part in the Sunday mass at the St. Leo Catholic Church in Detroit on Dec. 18, 2011. St. Leo, located in one of the most abandoned pockets of the nation's most depressed city, is operating on life support.

    The second church they visited, St. Leo, is on life support. It remains an integral part of the community, helping to keep its neighborhood afloat with a soup kitchen as well as free medical and dental care for local residents. But it is among nine parishes earmarked for closure in the Detroit area within the next few years.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Larry Finklea eats his lunch at the soup kitchen in the basement of the St. Leo Catholic Church.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    Jerry McCullough, left, gets a check up by Dr. Ed Jelonek, who is working on his own free time, at the Order of Malta Medical and Dental Clinic for low income Michigan residents in the basement of St. Leo Catholic Church.

    The archdiocese has cut its parish count in Detroit's city limits to 59, down from 79 in 2000. The man in charge of the downsizing is Archbishop Allen Vigneron, who says he understands what's on the line at St. Leo and other churches.

    "I am very attentive to the good work that the Holy Spirit has already got us doing ... it's not my job to rip that apart, it's my job to keep these good things going in the future," he said.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A woman walks past the St. Leo Catholic Church, which is among nine parishes earmarked for closure in the Detroit area within the next few years.

    Mark Blinch / Reuters

    A woman prays during the Sunday mass at the St. Leo Catholic Church.

    Read John Stoll's full report, Dark holiday in Detroit as church downsizes, and see more of Mark Blinch's pictures at Reuters' Photographers Blog.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    135 comments

    ... the point is, my friend, sadness that a once great city is on life support, not always because of its own internal problems, that a once vibrant archdiocese is also struggling ... that we live in a nation who allows the very wealthiest to thrive off of the lifeblood of the majority who grow ever …

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    Explore related topics: business, economy, church, religion, detroit, catholic, us-news, christianity, featured
  • 2
    Nov
    2011
    6:15pm, EDT

    A haunting symbol of Detroit's decline

    Rebecca Cook / Reuters

    The Michigan Central Train depot sits vacant just west of downtown Detroit, Mich., Nov. 1, 2011. For years, Michigan Central Station, the towering train depot on the outskirts of downtown Detroit. The last train pulled out of the station in 1988, shortly before the Honda Accord became the best-selling car in America, a humbling milestone for the city and its top industry.

    Reuters reports:

    DETROIT — The last train pulled out of the station in 1988, shortly before the Honda Accord became the best-selling car in America, a humbling milestone for the city and its top industry.

    In the intervening years, as the Big Three struggled to pick themselves up, vandals and the elements ravaged the depot. Architect Lis Knibbe says walking into the main waiting room, with its 60-foot vaulted ceilings and its graffiti-covered, water-damaged walls, was like "entering a Roman ruin."

    Read the full story here.

    Follow @msnbc_pictures

    1 comment

    We need reminders lest we forget that things have changed. However, imploding might solve the current image.

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    Explore related topics: business, auto, detroit, us-news
  • 17
    Sep
    2011
    10:49am, EDT

    Beck Diefenbach / Reuters

    Detroit Tigers pitcher Doug Fister celebrates in the visitor clubhouse after the Detroit Tigers clinched the American League Central Division after defeating the Oakland Athletics in Oakland, California, September 16, 2011.

    Pop the champagne! Detroit Tigers clinch their division

    By Phaedra Singelis, NBC News

    For the first time in last 25 years, the Detroit Tigers are going to the playoffs. Full story.

    Comment

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  • 19
    Jul
    2011
    4:10pm, EDT

    Detroit's Downtown Boxing Club offers kids academic tutoring and boxing training

    By Rich Shulman

    Sometimes life imitates art. These pictures resonate for me because they remind me of one of my favorite television shows, HBO's "The Wire". The character Dennis "Cutty" Wise (played by actor Chad Coleman) sets up an inner city boxing program for ghetto kids. Video clip at the bottom of this post.

    David Guralnick, Detroit News

    Fifteen-year-old Shante Higgs waits for her turn to spar at the Downtown Boxing Club in Detroit. The gym offers a youth program that serves about 30 students ages 8-18, who get valuable after-school academic tutoring and boxing training — all for free. It's the brainchild of trainer Khali Muhammad and Scott Smith, who work with the students from 4-6:30 p.m. each day.

    David Guralnick, Detroit News

    Seven-year-old Stormi Johnson, center, takes part in a group lesson at the Downtown Boxing Club in Detroit.

    David Guralnick, Detroit News

    Eleven-year-old Christian White practices with a punching bag at the Downtown Boxing Club in Detroit.

    David Guralnick, Detroit News

    Thirteen-year-old Cortez Todd, right, spars with head trainer Khali Muhammad at the Downtown Boxing Club in Detroit.

     

    2 comments

    my hat is off to the coach..... programs offer nothing for todays youth so they offer great solid training for mind and body.its after dinner time do youknow where your child is?hope they are at the gym.

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  • 10
    May
    2011
    3:42pm, EDT

    Fire damages historic magnet school in Detroit

    Tammy Stables Battaglia / Detroit Free Press via AP

    Fire tears through Detroit public magnet school Paul Robeson Academy on Tuesday, May 10.

    David Coates / AP

    Firefighters try to control an early morning fire as it rips through the historic Paul Robeson Academy in Detroit on Tuesday.

    The Associated Press reports:

    A pre-dawn fire has caused heavy damage at a historic public school in Detroit.

    Emergency financial manager Robert Bobb says Tuesday's blaze at the Paul Robeson Academy on the city's west side is "devastating."

    The fire started about 4 a.m. and has heavily damaged the upper floors. Investigators have not released information on the cause of the fire.

    Continue reading here.

     

    Comment

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  • 20
    Jan
    2011
    4:37pm, EST

    Paul Sancya / AP

    Detroit Tigers infielder Will Rhymes views Comerica Park before leaving the city on the team's Winter Caravan, Jan. 20, 2011, in Detroit.

    Snow covers the ball field at Comerica Park in Detroit

    By Robert Hood

    Memories of last season are only a distant flicker in January, and summer feels like it’s a million miles away.

    1 comment

    Put me in coach....

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    Explore related topics: baseball, detroit
  • 11
    Jan
    2011
    7:34pm, EST

    Patricia Beck / Detroit Free Press via AP

    A woman cleans snow from her car in downtown Detroit on Jan. 11, 2011.

    Snowstorm blankets downtown Detroit

    Msnbc.com story: Northeast eyes double winter whammy; South iced over

    1 comment

    I really have fond memories of this city and many people there. Really hurts me to see that once great city as it is today. Well, it will look clean while the snow is there and there are no tougher people anywhere. Good, tough people and, by God, a great city.

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Phaedra Singelis

is a Supervising Producer at NBC News.com Previously she worked as an editor at the New York Times and the Washington Post in addition to working as a photojournalist at numerous newspapers.

Rich Shulman

is a multimedia editor at msnbc.com. Before that, he was a picture editor at Corbis and the Director of Photography at the Everett, Wa. Herald.

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Robert Hood

is a Supervising Producer, and he has worked at msnbc.com since 1996. Before coming to msnbc.com he was an instructor in the University of Missouri - Columbia Photojournalism program, and a newspaper photographer in Wyoming and Utah. He has also freelanced for The New York Times & The LA Times.

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