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WJBK currently broadcasts 68½ hours of locally produced newscasts each week (with 11½ hours each weekday and 5½ hours each on Saturdays and Sundays); in regards to the number of hours devoted to news programming, it is the highest local newscast output among all broadcast television stations in the state of Michigan.
By January 1980, when WGN became the market's second television station to offer a 24-hour schedule (after WBBM-TV, which adopted such a schedule in 1976), the station began to regularly feature an overnight presentation of older black-and-white and some more recent theatrical and made-for-TV movies at 1 a.m. (later 3 a.m. by September 1983 ...
Detroit Artists Market (DAM) is the oldest continuously running non profit gallery in the Midwest. [1] The DAM is a contemporary art gallery in Detroit , Michigan [ 2 ] located in the cultural Midtown neighborhood near the Detroit Institute of Arts and Wayne State University .
The holiday market will run from noon to 5 p.m. at the Fisher building Saturday. This article originally appeared on Detroit Free Press: Detroit’s Fisher Building to host pop-up holiday market ...
The Gibraltar Trade Center was a public market in the Metro Detroit region of the U.S. state of Michigan. As of its closure, it had one remaining location in Mount Clemens, Michigan which was previously home to the Mount Clemens Race Track. From 1980 to 2014, there was a second location in Taylor, Michigan. [1]
The Michigan FrontPage is a weekly African-American newspaper based in Detroit, Michigan, serving the African-American community. It was founded in 2000 by a former publisher of the Michigan Chronicle and has been owned by the Chronicle 's parent company, Real Times Inc., since 2003. Its headquarters are in the Real Times offices in Midtown ...
Bruce_F._Caputo,_official_95th_Congress_photo.png (376 × 435 pixels, file size: 219 KB, MIME type: image/png) This is a file from the Wikimedia Commons . Information from its description page there is shown below.
After the sale, the News was printing 900,000 copies daily and 1.2 million on Sundays. (The first such Sunday run, on November 13, 1960, broke the record for largest print run in the history of Detroit.) About 300,000 of the 900,000 daily copies and 200,000 of the Sunday copies were printed on the Times' presses.