Order tramadol Buy fioricet online Nfl pool pick Nfl predictions Betting Debt reduction Doxycycline Gambling Lansoprazole Tramadol hcl 50mg Buy plavix Buy valium online Order valium online Consolidate debt Viagra price Acomplia Cozaar Pay off debt Purchase viagra online Play bingo online Full tilt poker bonus Butalbital Ambien generic Generic levitra Celebrex Stomach Lunesta Lipitor Massage therapy Paramedic Nutritionist Home inspector Oncology Caverta Xanax weight loss School loan consolidation Personal loans Phentermine prices Online stock trading The cheapest airline ticket Generic phentermine Airline tickets Renters insurance Abilify Cheap airline Dog Food Buy hydrocodone Myspace Limewire Ebay Russian brides Spy ware Trading online Law lemon Inventory software Insurance quotes Yahoo Youtube.com Aricept 
The Center for Michigan :: A Forum for Our State's Future


Conact Us
Newsletter
About the Center
Michigan's Defining Moment
Donate
The Center at Work

Michigan old and new


By John Bebow - December 12, 2008

Looking back and looking forward as Michigan's auto crisis deepens and its people hurtle toward a very uncertain 2009.

Here's an enraging, one-sided look at Detroit by Time Magazine. It's a photo essay that takes great pains to seek out the very worst vacant remains of the city's industrial past. Yes, Detroit has struggled for years with vacant structures, I'd argue similar scenes to these photos can be found in many cities across the land. It leaves a bitter taste for Time to post this gallery, at this moment, while ignoring the positive steps in downtown redevelopment, the river walk, the new hotels, the Opera House, the university district.

The compelling story in Detroit is how its people and businesses continue to seek growth (just like those small saplings known to grow on top of vacant buildings). Maybe Time Magazine could come back for a look at the Detroit Young Professionals Vanguard Awards to honor young trailblazers working to reinvent the city. Ralph Waldo Emerson quote on the front of the awards invitation applies to all of us in this state at this moment...

"Do not go where the path may lead, go instead where there is no path and leave a trail."

Finally, here's a celebration of Michigan's new economy: announcement of a new $550 million nuclear research facility at Michigan State University. Here's how Lansing PR guru Roger Martin summed up its importance yesterday...

In these challenging economic times, it’s nice to get some good news. As you may know, we have provided public relations assistance to Michigan State University’s effort to win federal government approval for the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB), a $550 million nuclear physics research project. MSU was in competition for the project with the Argonne National Laboratory in Illinois. Today, the U.S. Department of Energy awarded the project to MSU, along with the nearly 6,000 construction jobs and 500 additional full-time jobs it will bring to Michigan and the Lansing area. These are high-paying and highly skilled jobs coming to one of the world’s finest universities and to a state in desperate need. As hard as we worked on this project, please know the administration of MSU and the staff of the cyclotron worked even harder.


Related Posts
Three seeds for Michigan's transformation
Through the mist of the MI economy
Dueling views of Detroit
The Detroit News – "Bold moves needed to change state's low skill culture"
Universities' return on investment

One Comment

  1. bob durivage
    Posted January 2, 2009 at 9:06 pm | Permalink

    Any research on recycling the stuff?

Post a Comment

Your email is never published nor shared. Required fields are marked *
*
*