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This is a list of African American newspapers that have been published in Michigan. It includes both current and historical newspapers. It includes both current and historical newspapers. The first known such newspaper in Michigan was The Venture of 1879, followed in 1883 by the Detroit Plaindealer .
On July 20, 2016, Detroit police arrested six unknown individuals for chaining themselves to a precinct of the Detroit Police Department, their protest honoring Jones. The Detroit chapter of the Black Youth Project 100 (BYP100) and Black Lives Matter Detroit organized the rally on what would have been her 14th birthday.
Detroit, Michigan: A state trooper shot Williams and a 20-year-old man as they fled from a looted warehouse. [13] July 24, 1967 Edward Kemp: 35 Detroit, Michigan: An officer shot Kemp as he fled holding stolen cigars. [13] July 24, 1967 Richard Sims: 35 Detroit, Michigan: Four officers chased Sims for allegedly trying to break into a bar.
A school bus driver has been suspended after a viral video shows her fighting a 12-year-old girl, a Michigan school district told local media. ... near Carver STEM Academy in Detroit. The girl was ...
WDFN (1130 kHz) is a commercial AM radio station in Detroit, Michigan. Owned by iHeartMedia, it broadcasts an all-news radio format under iHeartRadio's Black Information Network (BIN), targeting Detroit's African-American community. Its studios and offices are on Halsted Road in the Detroit suburb of Farmington Hills.
Char Goolsby, center, of Detroit, talks with people helping dispatch a group to knock on doors to get residents to get out and vote for the 2024 presidential election at her home in Detroit on ...
Rather than being threatening, New Era Detroit’s open display of guns — broadly legal in Michigan — is hailed by many people for protecting Black women in dangerous neighborhoods at night.
On September 15, 1968, WXON-TV began broadcasting on channel 62. [3] Licensed to nearby Walled Lake, Michigan, WXON-TV operated on channel 62 for four years.In 1970, it purchased the construction permit of WJMY, a channel 20 station that was built out but which its owner, United Broadcasting, had no financial resources to operate, for $413,000 in United's expenses related to the permit. [4]