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Final Progress Report
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS: Chrysler Corporation, Ford Motor Company, General Motors Corporation and the American Automobile Manufacturers Association (AAMA) thank the Advisory Group members for their advice and support during the US Auto Project. The Auto Companies and AAMA also acknowledge the guidance and counsel provided by the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality (MDEQ), US EPA Region V, and the Council of Great Lakes Governors (CGLG). PRINTING SPECIFICATIONS: Cover: 80 lb. 100 percent recycled, 100 percent post-consumer, non-coated, chlorine free Paper: 24 lb. 100 percent recycled, 100 percent post-consumer, non-coated, chlorine free Ink: Soy-based Reproduced by Michigan Great Printers Project participant CONTACTS FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION: For hard copies of the US Automotive Pollution Prevention Project Final Progress Report, contact Chrysler, Ford, or General Motors at the addresses listed below or the Environmental Assistance Division of the Michigan Department of Environmental Quality at 1-800-662-9278. Chrysler Ford Debby Rowe, CIMS 482-00-51 Sue Rokosz Chrysler Corporation Ford Motor Company 800 Chrysler Drive Parklane Towers East, Suite 1400 Auburn Hills, MI 48326-2757 One Parklane Blvd. [email protected] Dearborn, MI 48126 [email protected] General Motors MDEQ Sandra Brewer, 482-303-300 Marcia Horan General Motors Corporation Environmental Assistance Division 465 W. Milwaukee Ave. Michigan Department of Environmental Quality Detroit, MI 48202 P.O. Box 30457 [email protected] Lansing, MI 48909 [email protected] INTERNET ACCESS: The US Auto Project Final Progress Report and pollution prevention industry case studies can be accessed at the MDEQ internet web site: http://www.deq.state.mi.us/ead/p2sect/auto/ US Auto Project Final Progress Report - November 1998 Page i Final Progress Report US Automotive Pollution Prevention Project TABLE OF CONTENTS Page Executive Summary iv I. -
National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form 1
FHR-8-300 (11-78) United States Department of the Interior Heritage Conservation and Recreation Service National Register of Historic Places Inventory Nomination Form See instructions in How to Complete National Register Forms Type all entries complete applicable sections_______________ 1. Name_________________ —————————historic Religious Structures of Woodward Avenue Ti f\3,5- and/or common_____________________________________ 2. Location street & number N/A_ not for publication Detroit & Highland Park city, town N£A_ vicinityvi of congressional district 1st and 13th, state Michigan code 26 county Wayne code 163 3. Classification Category Ownership Status Present Use district public _X _ occupied agriculture museum 1private unoccupied commercial park structure X both work in progress educational private residence site Public Acquisition Accessible X entertainment _X _ religious object in process yes: restricted government scientific being considered X yes: unrestricted industrial transportation N/A no military other: 4. Owner of Property name Multiple (see attached list of property owners) street & number Woodward Avenue city,town Detroit-Highland Park .N/Avicinity of state Michigan 5. Location of Legal Description courthouse, registry of deeds, etc. Wayne County Register of Deeds street & number 2 City/County Building city, town Detroit state Michigan 6. Representation in Existing Surveys__________ title Detroit Urban Conservation Project has this property been determined elegible? __yes X no date 1976-77 federal _X_ state county local -
Post Trial Motions: Setting the Stage for Appeal
MICHIGAN DEFENSE Quarterly Volume 24, No. 2 October 2007 IN THIS ISSUE: • Alteration of Electronic Evidence • Court Rules Update • The Effect of Plaintiff’s Bankruptcy • Guest Column: Judicial Philosophies on the Claim • Amicus Committee Report • Defending Construction Injury Liability Cases • MDTC Schedule of Events • The Effect of Fultz on Third Party Claims • Practice Tips • Young Lawyers Section: Post-Trial Motions THE STATEWIDE ASSOCIATION OF ATTORNEYS REPRESENTING THE DEFENSE IN CIVIL LITIGATION MDTC OFFICERS Peter L. Dunlap, President Robert H S. Schaffer, Vice President J. Steven Johnston, Secretary Lori A. Ittner, Treasurer MICHIGAN DEFENSE TRIAL COUNSEL, INC. MDTC BOARD OF DIRECTORS Jana M. Berger James H. Hughesian P.O. Box 66 • Grand Ledge, Michigan 48837 • Phone: 517-627-3745 • Fax: 517-627-3950 Karie Boylan Catherine D. Jasinski www.mdtc.org • [email protected] Hal O. Carroll Phillip C. Korovesis Alan J. Couture Thomas R. Meagher Timothy A. Diemer Todd W. Millar Michigan Defense Quarterly Norton T. Gappy Allison C. Reuter Vol. 24 No. 2 • October 2007 REGIONAL CHAIRPERSONS Jeffrey C. Collison, Saginaw/Bay City President’s Corner .................................................................................................... 4 Tyren R. Cudney, Kalamazoo John Patrick Deegan, Traverse City/Petoskey Smoke and Mirrors: The Fabrication and Alteration of Electronic Evidence Phillip C. Korovesis, Southeast Michigan Ridly S. Nimmo II, Flint By: Sharon D. Nelson, Esq. and John W. Simek............................................... 6 Edward P. Perdue, Grand Rapids Erin J. Stovel, Lansing The Bankrupt Plaintiff And The Issue Of Standing Keith E. Swanson, Marquette By: Michael J. Rinkel And Susan J. Zbikowski .............................................. 10 DEFENSE RESEARCH INSTITUTE I-Beams And Hard Hats:Defending Construction Liability Cases REPRESENTATIVE By: Trevor J. -
Best Theaters in Detroit"
"Best Theaters in Detroit" Erstellt von : Cityseeker 7 Vorgemerkte Orte Detroit Opera House "Restored to Grandeur" Restored to its former splendor, the Detroit Opera House is a downtown landmark that finds itself right in the middle of the action, bordered by the Theatre District, Comerica Park and Greektown. The superb acoustics in the hall provide a prime venue for the Michigan Opera Theatre and for a variety of other performing arts productions, including plays, concerts and by Bnosnhoj dance performances. In days gone by, it was a theater, concert and movie house, the fifth-largest in the world when it opened in 1922. The frescoes, marble stairways, draperies and chandeliers from its glory days have been restored. The Opera House reopened in 1996 with a performance by Luciano Pavarotti. +1 313 237 7464 www.michiganopera.org/ 1526 Broadway Street, Detroit MI Fox Theatre "Unequalled Treasure of Wretched Excess" The preservation of this theater is one of Detroit's proudest achievements. The 5048-seat palace of the arts, arguably the most opulent in the nation when it opened in 1928, was designated a national landmark in 1989 after a USD11,000,000 refurbishment by new owner Mike Ilitch. The oldest, continually operating theater in the United States features a 10-storey by IAN RANSLEY DESIGN + marquee, a six-storey lobby with a two-ton chandelier and 300,000 glass ILLUSTRATION jewels in its interior. The exotic presentation of lions, gold fixtures and jaw- dropping grandeur harkens back to the flamboyant era of movie houses. The Fox is now busy with concerts, family-oriented shows and a wide variety of other offerings. -
National Register of Historic Places Multiple Property Submission Listings Michigan
National Park Service U.S. Department of the Interior NATIONAL REGISTER OF HISTORIC PLACES MULTIPLE PROPERTY SUBMISSION LISTINGS MICHIGAN FINDING AID Old Fire House No. 4, Kalamazoo Multiple Resource Area, Photo by Gary Cialdella, Kalamazoo Historical Society Prepared by National Park Service - Intermountain Region Museum Services Program Tucson, Arizona February 2015 National Register of Historic Places – Multiple Property Submission Listings - Michigan 2 National Register of Historic Places – Multiple Property Submission Listings - Michigan Scope and Content Note: The National Register of Historic Places (NRHP) is the official list of the Nation's historic places worthy of preservation. Authorized by the National Historic Preservation Act of 1966, the National Park Service's National Register of Historic Places is part of a national program to coordinate and support public and private efforts to identify, evaluate, and protect America's historic and archeological resources. - From the National Register of Historic Places site: http://www.nps.gov/nr/about.htm The Multiple Property Submission (MPS) listings records are unique in that they capture historic properties that are related by theme, general geographic area, and/or period of time. The MPS is the current terminology for submissions of this kind; past iterations include Thematic Resource (TR) and Multiple Resource Area (MRA). Historic properties nominated under the MPS rubric will contain individualized nomination forms and will be linked by a Cover Sheet for the overall group. Historic properties nominated under the TR and MRA rubric are nominated as part of the whole group and will contain portions of nominations that come directly from the group Cover Sheet. -
Detroit, Michigan 48226
ADVANCE PROGRAMS for Detroit Meetings of Theatre Library Association (Wednesday, July 7, 1965) and Music Library Association (Thursday and Friday July 8 and 9, 1965) This year it has been possible to work out a measure of coordination between the meetings of these two specialized associations concerned with the performing arts. The meetings are being held on successive days in Detroit's Cultural Center with headquarters in the Detroit Public Library's rebuilt and greatly enlarged Main Library at 5201 Woodward Avenue. There will be excursions to the opening night of the Meadow Brook Festival at Oakland University and to Ann Arbor for a day of meetings at the University of Michigan's new School of Music building. Details of the programs follow. Program chairman for the Theatre Library Association meeting is Barnard Hewitt of the University of Illinois' Department of Speech and Theatre. Program chairman for the Music Library Association meeting is Forrest H. Alter of the Flint Public Library's Art, Music and Drama Department. Local arrangements chairman for the two meetings is Kurtz Myers of the Detroit Public Library's Music and Performing Arts Department, assisted by William Hulsker of the Wayne State University General Library (Humanities Division) and William J. Weichlein, University of Michigan School of Music. It is hoped that we will have a good representation of our memberships at these meetings and that a substantial number of the librarians attending the American Library Association Conference in Cabo Hall, who are interested in the performing arts as an area for library service, will join us for some of our programs. -
Oakland University's 2015 Social Guide for New Faculty (And Not-So
Downtown Detroit Comerica Park – Tigers Baseball Oakland University’s 2015 Social Guide for New Faculty (and Not-So-New Faculty) Oakland University Saturday Morning at Bear Lake or, as the students call it, “Beer Lake” Eastern Market Prepared by: Jeff Chapman, Erin Meyers, Rebecca Mercado Thornton, Judy Ableser, Christina Moore, Victoria Kendziora and OU Faculty 1 Table of Contents Welcome 3 Top Ten List 4-5 Don’t Be Afraid of Detroit 6-7 CETL Monthly Social Hour 8 Junior Faculty Social Hours 9 OU Parking Map 10 Recreation Center 11-12 OU Athletics 13 OU Music Dance and Theater 14 Meadowbrook Hall 15 Meadowbrook Theater 16 OU Art Gallery 17 Favorite Local Communities to Explore 18 Restaurants 19-23 Coffee Shops 24 Bars/Nightlife 25-26 Concert Venues 27 Grocery/Specialty/Ethnic Markets 28-29 Outdoors/Recreation 30 Professional Sporting Events 31 Things to Do in Detroit 32 Festivals 33-34 Salons/Spas/Barbershops 35 Hidden Gems 36-37 Shopping 38 Live Theater 39 Comedy Clubs 40 General Area Info/Guides 41 2 Welcome So you just signed your contract to begin work at Oakland University, and the headlines in the National News are that “Detroit is Bankrupt.” Your friends and family back home, in sunny wherever, think you are crazy. Relax, you are not crazy, in fact, you have just moved to an amazingly rich, culturally diverse, exciting regional area with more things to do then you will have time to enjoy it. The Metro Detroit area is thriving with great restaurants, theater, bars and clubs, concerts and music, shopping, arts and culture. -
MDOT-DTOGS Development of Alternatives
9. EVALUATION OF ALTERNATIVES This section presents the methodology and a summary of the results of the third and final level of evaluation to facilitate the identification of an LPA for the DTOGS project. This section will cite data that is located several appendices to this report because of the volume of details the technical analysis required. Table 9-1 on the following page presents the refined evaluation criteria used in this analysis, which are based on the DTOGS project’s goals and objectives. This third level of analysis also adds a new goal: FTA New Starts Benchmarks. The key performance indicator associated with this goal is the cost effectiveness index (CEI), defined as the cost per new rider. Section 9.2 presents the detailed definition of this additional performance indicator. Following is an outline of Section 9: Evaluation of Alternatives to facilitate review of this section, along with a list of appendices produced for each analysis. Generally, this report presents the methodology first, then a summary of the results next. Section 9.1 Transportation and Mobility - Appendices: (H) Operating Plan; (I) Ridership Forecast Methodology and Results; (J) BRT and LRT Design Guidelines; (K) BRT and LRT Concept Plans and Typical Sections; and (L) Capital Cost Methodology and Results Section 9.2 FTA New Starts Benchmarks - Appendix: (M) Cost Effectiveness Index Calculations – Methodology and Results Section 9.3 Economic Opportunity and Investment - Appendix: (G) Land Use and Economic Impacts of the Gratiot, Michigan, and Woodward -
Connecting People to Care
DWIHN Your Link to Holistic Healthcare CONNECTING PEOPLE TO CARE 2020-2021 Provider Directory Published: October 12, 2017 Revised: August 3, 2021 DWIHN Your Link to Holistic Healthcare Dear Enrollees, On behalf of our Board of Directors and staff, the Detroit Wayne Integrated Health Network (DWIHN), formally the Detroit Wayne Mental Health Authority thanks you for choosing to receive your behavioral health services from us. We are committed to becoming your premier community mental health provider. Our goal is to assure that the people we serve have “Inclusion and Choice” when it comes to all of your services and supports. We have changed our name to reflect all of the services that we provide to the 75,000 citizens in Wayne County. We offer support to people with mental health concerns, those with intellectual and developmental disabilities, children with serious emotional disturbance and individuals with substance use disorder. We are committed to providing a holistic approach to care in these five areas: behavioral, economic, physical, social and spiritual. We are doing that by collaborating with holistic Provider Partners who can assist you in many different areas of your life so you can live and work as a productive citizen in the community of your choice. My pledge to you is that all DWIHN decisions be made in your best interest. Our system of care will provide safeguards against stigma; promote delivery of care with integrity, dignity and respect. We are also very proud to offer care that is evidenced-based and data driven which enhances the outcomes of your recovery and maintains quality of services rooted in integration of care. -
Fall 2019 + Winter 2020
THE ULTIMATE GUIDE FOR EVERYTHING TO SEE AND DO IN THE D OCTOBER 2019-MARCH 2020 All Set P. 46 for Sunday Close your weekend in The D with brunch, tailgating, tours and more For additional video content, download the Zappar app and scan this page. WELCOME TO THE GMRENCEN WHERE DETROIT MEETS THE WORLD Photo credit: Andreas Keller Visit GM World for a HOTEL ROOMS year-round auto show WITH A VIEW experience. Dine at one of thirty restaurants. Stay at the center of everything in Detroit. Host your conference in 100,000 square feet of meeting space. Attend one of the many events hosted at the GMRENCEN. The possibilities are endless. /GMRENCEN @GMRENCEN @GMRENCEN GMRENCEN.com FALL 2019 & WINTER 2020 / OCTOBER-MARCH CONTENTS Food, Glorious Food 38 46 Sunday Fun Day FROM THE PRESIDENT 2 Empire Kitchen 12 & Cocktails ONLINE 5 THE ULTIMATE GUIDE FOR EVERYTHING TO SEE AND DO IN THE D VISIT DETROIT SOUVENIRS 112 OCTOBER 2019-MARCH 2020 P. 46 7 FUN DAY • SUNDAY DETROIT’S NEW RESTAURANTS All Set EXPERIENCE for Sunday Close your weekend in THE D 8 The D with brunch, tailgating, tours and more ITINERARIES 32 REASONS TO LOVE THE D 36 FALL & WINTER FALL 2019 & WINTER 2020 FALL For additional video content, 53 download the TO DO Zappar app and HIGHLIGHTS scan this page. OCTOBER-MARCH EVENTS 54 RECURRING EVENTS 66 For additional About the cover LOOKING AHEAD 67 FOOD, GLORIOUS video content, The breakfast burger CRUISES + TOURS 68 FOOD 38 look for this box in the and build-your- ENTERTAINMENT 72 Visit Detroit serves up magazine, own bloody marys MUSEUMS, HISTORICAL SITES + COLLECTIONS 76 six of the city’s new then download and mimosas at SHOPPING 80 the ZAPPAR and upcoming restaurants Corktown’s Bobcat SPORTS 84 APP and scan with sizzle and a story the page. -
Metro Detroit Relocation Guide 2021
P nt hot me o Co elop urte Dev sy of mic Macomb County Econo Visit us online at www.MetroDetroitArea.com Follow the DAILY PLUG for the Metro Detroit Area at www.facebook.com/dailyplugMetroDetroit DETROIT • WAYNE • OAKLAND • MACOMB GENESEE • LIVINGSTON • WASHTENAW Community Profiles.....................…4 Colleges & Universities..............68 What’s City of Detroit...........................6-8 Attractions.................................70 Wayne County.......................11-21 Parks……………………………….78 Inside Oakland County....................22-49 Basics........................................82 Macomb County....................50-61 Business Connections.................88 Livingston County................62-63 International Information...........91 O Genesee County....................64-65 Sports & Recreation....................96 u r Washtenaw County...............66-67 Health Care................................99 Sp ec ia l P art ner s LIKE IT FOLLOW IT www.facebook.com/dailyplugMetroDetroit Metro Detroit Relocation Guide™ PUBLISHER RESEARCH / EDITOR Lawrence A. Ribits Lynn Ribits Published Annually by Keaton Publications Group, LLC 8959 Sturgeon Bay Dr. • Harbor Springs, MI 49740 • (231) 537-3330 www.keatonpublications.com • e-mail: [email protected] The Metro Detroit Relocation Guide© is also published as Relocate 2 Metro Detroit™ by Keaton Publications Group, llc. Every effort has been made to ensure the accuracy of the information contained herein, however, it cannot be guaranteed. Copyright © 2005 – 2021 by Keaton Publications Group, llc. No part of this publication or the web-based Metro Detroit Relocation Guide© or Relocate 2 Metro Detroit™ may be reproduced or duplicated in any form without the expressed written permission of the publisher. COMMUNITY PROFILES Detroit • Wayne • Oakland • Macomb • Livingston • Genesee Welcome to Metro Detroit The Metro Detroit/Southeast Michigan area is made up of over 130 communities that provide a rich and diverse quality of life for its inhabitants. -
European Patent Bulletin 1984/18
1984/18 M "g J^i<J 840 _ 0 07 646 öibllotneaue ISSN 0170-9305 - 3. M A ! 1334 EPA-EPO -OEB Europäisches European Bulletin européen Patentblatt Patent Bulletin des brevets Inhalt Contents Sommaire 1 Veröffentlichte Anmeldungen 2 I Published Applications 3 I Demandes publiées 3 1.1 Geordnet nach der Internationalen 1.1 Arranged in accordance with the 1.1 Classées selon la classification Patentklassifikation 8 International Patent internationale des brevets 8 1.2 (1) Geordnet nach PCT-Veröffent- Classification 8 1.2 (1) Classées selon les numéros de lichungsnummern 107 1.2(1) Arranged by PCT publication publication PCT 107 1.2 (2) Geordnet nach PCT-Veröffent- number 107 1.2 (2) Classées selon les numéros de lichungsnummern 107 1.2 (2) Arranged by PCT publication publication PCT 107 1.3 (1) Geordnet nach Veröffentlichungs- number 107 1.3 (1) Classées selon les numéros de nummern 107 1.3 (1) Arranged by publication publication 107 1.3 (2) Geordnet nach Anmelde- number 107 1.3 (2) Classées selon les numéros des nummern 114 1.3 (2) Arranged by application demandes 114 1.4 Geordnet nach Namen der number 114 1.4 Classées selon les noms des Anmelder 122 1.4 Arranged by name of demandeurs 122 1.5 Geordnet nach benannten applicant 122 1.5 Classées selon les Etats Vertragsstaaten 135 1.5 Arranged by designated contractants désignés 135 1.6 (1) Nach Erstellung des europäischen Contracting State 135 1.6(1) Documents découverts après Recherchenberichts ermittelte neue 1.6 (1) Documents discovered after comple- l'établissement du rapport de Schriftstücke