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Successful alumni from EMU business school to teach students tricks of the trade

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Eastern Michigan University's business school has invited more than 30 accomplished alumni back to the Ypsilanti college to offer current students tips on how to succeed in the field.

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EMU business school dean Michael Tidwell outside of the College of Business building.

Joseph Tobianski | AnnArbor.com

EMU's first-ever Professional Development Business Conference will be held at the EMU College of Business on Sept. 19.

Sessions will be conducted by prominent alumni, including the board chairman of Virginia-based commercial finance company MCG Capital Corp., the CEO of United Bancorp, the chairman of AON Risk Solutions and the CFO of Logic Solutions.

The conference runs from 8:30 a.m. to 4 p.m.

“The conference is part of our larger effort to focus on the professional development for our students,” Michael Tidwell, dean of the College of Business, said in a release. “We recognize that success for today’s graduates hinges on their level of technical proficiency and professional polish in the first few months of a new career. Connecting our alumni with our students helps students build these skill sets while broadening their professional network.”

Kellie Woodhouse covers higher education for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at kelliewoodhouse@annarbor.com or 734-623-4602 and follow her on twitter.


Officials: Pole barn fire believed to have started by lightning causes rocket-like explosion

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This hydraulic cylinder reportedly shot into the sky like a rocket at a pole barn fire near Chelsea Monday morning.

Courtesy of CAFA

A fire that burned a pole barn to the ground Monday morning near Chelsea was likely caused by a lightning strike, officials said.

The blaze caused an explosion in the barn while fire crews were at the scene and sent a hydraulic cylinder shooting up into the air like a rocket, said Fire Captain Derek Klink of the Chelsea Area Fire Authority.

There were no reported injuries.

Chelsea fire crews were called to a residence in the 1100 block of Pierce Road in Sylvan Township at 8:01 a.m. for reports of a barn fire. A neighbor said they saw a bolt of lightning connect with the pole barn on an adjacent property, Klink said.

When fire crews arrived at 8:07 a.m., the pole barn was fully engulfed with flames. There was also a loud explosion followed by a hydraulic cylinder being launched into the sky, according to Klink.

"It shot straight up in the air," he said.

Crews had the fire out by 8:35 a.m. and cleared the scene by 10:21 a.m. The barn, which was filled with various tools and machinery, was a total loss. Klink did not yet have any financial damage estimates.

While lightning is believed to have started the fire, it remains under investigation.


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John Counts covers cops and courts for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at johncounts@annarbor.com or you can follow him on Twitter.

Man accused of fatally shooting co-worker will head to trial

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Leonard Ware

Courtesy of WCSO

Jury selection for the murder trial of the 34-year-old Ypsilanti Township man accused of shooting a co-worker to death last fall will likely begin Sept. 9.

Leonard Ware appeared Monday for a final pretrial hearing in the Washtenaw County Trial Court where his attorney, Jeff Taylor, said that while both the prosecution and defense are still waiting on DNA evidence from the lab, Ware wanted to proceed to trial.

A pretrial hearing date of Sept. 4 was set, but will only happen if attorneys need it pending DNA-related lab results.

Judge Darlene O’Brien said jury selection would take place Sept. 9 with testimony beginning Sept. 10.

Ware is charged with open murder, carrying a concealed weapon, being a felon in possession of a firearm and being in possession of a firearm during the commission of a felony.

He is accused of shooting and killing Bhagavan Allen, 29, in the middle of Ypsilanti's Grove Street in October 2012. The incident between the two men began with an argument at Marsh Plating Co., where Ware was Allen’s supervisor.

Ware faces spending the rest of his life behind bars if convicted. He is being held without bond in the Washtenaw County Jail.

John Counts covers cops and courts for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at johncounts@annarbor.com or you can follow him on Twitter.

Severe thunderstorm warning in effect for Washtenaw County

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The National Weather Service has issued a severe thunderstorm warning in effect for southern Livingston County and all of Washtenaw County until 7:30 p.m. Monday.

At 6:21 p.m., a severe thunderstorm was located 6 miles south of Gregory was and moving east at 25 mph.

Quarter-size hail and 60 mph wind gusts are possible. Hail damage to vehicles is possible, as well as wind damage to roofs, siding and trees.

The storm is expected to hit the following locations: Chelsea and Pinckney State Recreation Area around 6:35 p.m., Hudson Mills metropark and Hudson Mills around 6:45 p.m., Dexter around 6:50 p.m., Delhi Mills around 7:00 p.m., Barton Hills around 7:05 p.m. and Ann Arbor around 7:10.

A second severe thunderstorm was also trailing in behind this first storm and will approach Gregory and Unadilla between 6:45 and 7 p.m.

The warning includes areas surrounding these locations: Willis, Dixboro, Ypsilanti, Whitmore Lake, Saline, Salem, Pinckney, Milan and Gregory.

See updated weather conditions on AnnArbor.com's weather page.

Rain can't dampen spirits of new eras on first day of high school football practice

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Ypsilanti Community High School defensive line and offensive line coach Dion Powell looks to motivate the team during practice in the rain at the school on Monday, August 12, 2013.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

The rain came down in buckets on the varsity field at Ypsilanti Community High School on Monday. Scattered about the natural grass field were nearly 50 varsity players, clad in new black uniforms with white numbers and all black helmets.

The downpour was relentless, but there was no dampening the spirits of the team made up of the combination of Ypsilanti and Willow Run high schools as everyone was excited for a fresh start.

“You wouldn’t even notice that they hadn’t been together before,” said Rufus Pipkins, the longtime Willow Run coach who was hired to lead the combined team. “Ypsilanti is a small community and a lot of these relationships are kind of already formed.

“It actually wasn’t a hard transition with the kids to get to know each other. They just kind of like came in and just kind of started working together.”

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A Ypsilanti Community High School football player puts his arms around teammates as they huddle during practice in the rain at the school on Monday, August 12, 2013.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Having a new head coach tell them what to do on the first day of practice is nothing new to the ex-Ypsilanti High School players. Pipkins is the third coach in as many years the players have been under and the fourth to lead the Ypsilanti program since David Poole resigned during the 2009 season.

What was new to both Ypsilanti and Willow Run players was the high turnout. There were nearly 50 players at varsity practice on Monday and Pipkins expects a JV roster of about 25. Two seasons ago, Ypsilanti’s roster size was in the teens by season’s end and Willow Run’s hasn’t been much higher.

“It’s exciting to see a lot of kids, and a lot of talent,” said senior Mike Cadwell, who will compete for the quarterback position.

Fellow senior Dauda Sylla didn't see any Willow Run or Ypslanti players on Monday. Only teammates.

“We’re combining two teams and there can’t be Willow Run and Ypsi, it has to be one team one mind, and we have to act like one machine,” Sylla said.

New Pioneer coach taking changes in stride

New Pioneer football coach Jari Brown spent part of Monday figuring out which players hadn’t filled out the necessary paperwork to begin practice. He needed to know which players, from freshman to seniors, had physicals on file and everything else necessary to begin practice.

It was a far cry from being an assistant coach - as he has been at Lincoln, Huron and Chelsea - for the past decade. Now that he’s in charge, everything - not just the offensive or defensive linemen - is on him.

“It’s still taking some getting used to. I have to remind myself sometimes still that I’m the head coach, that I’m in charge, so I’m still working through some of that,” Brown said on Monday, the first day football teams in the state of Michigan were permitted to hold practice.

Brown realizes being in charge of the entire team as oppose to just a specific unit will be different, but said he’s taking it all in stride.

“It’s exciting, a little nerve racking. I didn’t know how I’d feel coming out,” Brown said. “But once you get out to the field it’s like my domain.”

Thirty-six players came out for varsity practice on Monday. Brown expects the numbers to go up as does his new starting quarterback, Brandon Bertoia.

“We’ve been having a consistency problem but once the hype of football comes in I think everyone will buy in,” Bertoia said. “I’m not worried.”

Pete Cunningham covers sports for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at petercunningham@annarbor.com. Follow him on Twitter @petcunningham.

A wet start to football season in Saline, while Huron starts fresh under a new coach

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Saline High School football players line up during practice at the school on Monday, August 12, 2013.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Even in the pouring rain on the first day of the new season, the Saline football team ran its practice like a well-oiled machine Monday.

The Hornets spent the latter half of their second session running plays 11-on-11, and hardly looked like a team on its first day of practice.

A player on the sideline at Hornets Stadium held up a number, and players sprang into action with a snap -- running routes, blocking and dropping into coverage. After a whistle ended plays, it was only a few seconds before the ball was snapped again. On the scoreboard, a clock counted down five minute increments.

And Monday, the first official day of high school football practices across Michigan, came after a nine-month offseason program when Saline players were working with one another three days per week or more.

“I’ve never played on a college program, but it’s that kind of feeling and expectation that coach Palka brings,” senior defensive lineman John Smutny said.

It’s only year two of Joe Palka’s time as the Hornets head coach, and already the expectations are high. That's because last year, the program recorded its first 10-win season, and got two wins from a state title game.

But the Hornets may have gotten ahead of themselves last season, and Palka isn’t accelerating the timeline for his program to become one of the best in the state.

“I think it probably maybe falsely raises expectations a little bit," Palka said of last year. "In my experience, to really win a state championship, or to get to that level is really a five or six-step process. It’s not a one or two-year process.

Three hours after Saline wrapped things up for the day, the rain had stopped at Huron High School’s Riverbank Stadium in time for a new coaching regime to take charge.

New coach Craig Jobe coached his first official River Rats practice Monday afternoon, where he takes over a team that went 0-9 last year and has four wins in the last three years.

How did the new team look?

“It’s hard to say,” Jobe said. “People look good without pads. I’m still waiting to get the pads on, we should get a good feel for who we are.”

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New Huron HIgh School football head coach Craig Jobe, far right, directs his coaching staff on the first day of football practice Monday, August 12.

Chris Asadian for AnnArbor.com

Jobe, a teacher at Huron, said he installed most of the offense and defense during his team camp a few weeks back. Monday, he was able to do 11-on-11’s with both teams working on plays. There were some teachable moments, along with some moments of promise on what’s hoped to be an improved team.

About 25 players were on the field with the varsity Monday afternoon, although Jobe said he hopes to add 10-15 more who didn’t have their paperwork submitted in time to practice.

A squad of 35-40 players would mark an uptick from last year’s squad, and be a good first step toward turning the program around.

“We’ve got to work on our numbers, we know that,” Jobe said. “Numbers were down last year, so we’re just trying to get some depth.”

Kyle Austin covers sports for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at kyleaustin@annarbor.com or 734-623-2535. Follow him on Twitter @KAustin_AA.

Images from the first day of Huron and Pioneer football practice

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High school football practice began across the state of Michigan on Monday. Some teams practiced early, but both the Huron High School and Pioneer High School football teams took to the practice fields in the late afternoon and evening.

Melanie Maxwell is a photographer for AnnArbor.com. She can be reached at melaniemaxwell@annarbor.com.

Ypsilanti-Willow Run merger creates unique two-starter quarterback battle

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The Ypsilanti Community HIgh School football team had its first ever football practice on Monday, August 12.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Having a returning starter is a luxury most high school football coaches hope for.

Having two? Well, that’s usually not even possible, let alone preferable.

But that’s exactly what Ypsilanti Community High School coach Rufus Pipkins has on his hands. With the merger of Willow Run and Ypsilanti’s districts, Pipkins has not one, but two returning starting quarterbacks.

Marquis Smith started for Pipkins last year at Willow Run as a freshman and impressed with his legs and arm while Mike Caldwell started for Ypsilanti and is looking to do the same as a senior. Ypsilanti won only one game last year and Willow Run won just two, so neither has the spot in the bag and will push each other for the spot.

“We’ve got a healthy competition at quarterback, they’re really competing in a good way,” Pipkins said.

Caldwell is the senior and has faced superior competition in the Southeastern Conference, but he said there is no entitlement on his part. Caldwell said he and Smith are just competing hard and will see where the chips fall eventually.

He said the most important thing they try to keep in mind is that the end goal is the team winning.

“Me and Marquis, we push each other to the limit,” Caldwell said. “I mess up, Marquis messes up, but at the end of the day we both help each other out.”

If I’m in and I mess up, he’s going to correct me and I do the same for him,” Caldwell added. “We both want to win.”


Local Americana band Corndaddy makes it to the big time with first headlining show at The Ark

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Corndaddy at the Water Hill Music Fest.

photo by Patrick Clancy | courtesy of Corndaddy

Fifteen years ago, a handful of local guys with a love of American roots and rock music, playing together just for fun, formed the band Corndaddy. Since then they’ve been steadily honing their craft, to the point where they will play their first headlining show at The Ark Friday night.

Corndaddy has just released its third full-length album, "Heart of the Matter," which they helped finance by raising $3,551 via the crowdfunding Web site Kickstarter.

“I like to say Corndaddy endures,” said rhythm guitarist/vocalist Jud Branam. “We just keep going. What else are we going to do?

“Over time we finally learned to play our instruments,” he quipped.

Besides Branam, Corndaddy is Kevin Brown (lead guitar, mandolin, harmonica, vocals), Jerry Hancock (bass) and Hugh Huntley (drums).

PREVIEW

Corndaddy

  • Who: Ann Arbor-based band consisting of local musicians Jud Branam, Kevin Brown, Jerry Hancock and Hugh Huntley. Midwest Territory Band, led by Rollie Tussing, opens.
  • What: Americana, twangcore, alt-country and roots music.
  • Where: The Ark, 316 S. Main St.
  • When: 8 p.m. Friday, Aug. 16.
  • How much: $15. Info: www.theark.org or 764-761-1800.
“What’s nice about Corndaddy, what I like about the place that we are, is that you can call it everything,” Branam said. “It used to be called college rock back in the early ’80s when you had the Beat Farmers and Green on Red, the Del Fuegos, REM … then a few years ago it became alt-country and you had Uncle Tupelo and The Jayhawks and a lot of those groups that were awesome and that we loved … then it morphed into being called Americana, and there’s a whole crop of those bands.

“But it all comes from the same place; we refer to ourselves more as country rock out of the Byrds and the late ’60s. We were young in the late ’60s and that’s the musical well we like to draw on. Country rock never goes away,” Branam added.

Although this is Corndaddy’s first time headlining The Ark, the band has played there for numerous songwriting festivals, tributes and benefit shows. Special guests at the show will include Jim Roll, who played banjo on the new CD, and saxophone player Daniel Bennett, who also appears on the disc. Paul Lippens will play mandolin, Kevin Devine will play accordion, and Will Stewart—a founding member of the band—will be there to sing on the album’s title cut, which he co-wrote.

“We’ll play the new record and highlight some of the songs from the other records as well,” Branam said, adding that the new album of originals is “an expansion for us, with the horn parts and some Hammond organ on it. It’s almost got a more Memphis soul vibe to it and it’s more of a rock record.”

One style of music that’s noticeably absent, he said, is country.

“That’s one thing that’s interesting about this record,” Branam said. “There’s bluegrass, an Everly Brothers waltz type of a duet tune and some rock songs and different things.

“This time it kind of went to the rock side of the fence.”

Man pleads guilty to robbing store owner at gunpoint, then trying to bribe him to lie

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Desmond Parker

Courtesy of WCSO

A 27-year-old Detroit man admitted in court Monday to robbing the owner of an Ypsilanti store at gunpoint, as well as trying to bribe the man.

Desmond Parker appeared in the Washtenaw County Trial court where he pleaded guilty to six counts related to the two cases in exchange for concurrent terms and the dismissal of five counts at the time of sentencing.

In one case, Parker pleaded guilty to counts of armed robbery, felony firearm, carrying a concealed weapon and possession of a weapon by a felon. A charge of resisting arrest will be dismissed as part of the plea bargain.

In a second case, Parker pleaded guilty to one count of witness intimidation and another count of solicitation of lying to a peace officer. Three counts of witness intimidation and a count of false report of a felony will also be dismissed at the time of the sentencing.

Parker was composed and barely audible in the courtroom Monday when he told Judge Darlene O’Brien he robbed an Ypsilanti store owner in the 800 block of Huron River Drive on July 2.

“I told him to give me money at gunpoint,” Parker said in a hushed tone.

Police said the owner was outside behind the store on a cigarette break when Parker approached him with the gun and made him go inside to open the cash register. Parker then made off with cash, but was arrested a short time later after a short foot chase with police.

Parker also admitted to trying to bribe the store owner. In February 2012, while in the Washtenaw County Jail, Parker wrote a letter to a friend asking him to go to the store owner and offer him money to change his story for authorities.

“I was going to pay him to lie to the police,” Parker said.

The plea bargain calls for all terms to run concurrently except the felony firearm count, which will be an additional two years per state statute.

Parker remains in jail on three bonds: a $100,000 cash or surety bond for the armed robbery case, a $100,000 cash bond for the witness intimidation case and 10 percent of $25,000 on the resisting arrest charge.

His sentencing was scheduled for Sept. 9.

Construction season: Roadwork planned throughout Washtenaw County this week

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Editor's note: The bounds of the Gotfredson Road closure have been corrected.

A number of roads throughout Washtenaw County will see orange barrels and detour routes this week as crews contracted by the Road Commission repair asphalt and install new limestone.

All of the work is dependent on favorable weather conditions.

Here’s the list of road closures and routes where traffic delays will be likely:

Augusta Township

  • In progress: McKean Road between Judd Road and Talladay Road will be closed during daytime hours Tuesday for limestone installation
  • In progress: Judd Road between Bunton Road and Tuttle Hill Road will be closed during daytime hours Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for limestone installation
  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Whittaker Road from Milan-Oakville to Bemis roads Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Willow Road from Rawsonville Road to about half a mile east of Whittaker Road Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday

Lima Township

  • In progress: Fletcher Road between Interstate 94 and Haist Road will be closed during daytime hours Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday for limestone installation

Salem Township

  • In progress: Traffic will be controlled by a flag operator on Pontiac Trail from Dixboro Road to 500 feet south of Angle Road until Aug. 19
  • In progress: Traffic will be controlled by a flag operator on North Territorial Road from Dixboro Road to Pontiac Trail until Aug. 19
  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Angle Road from Six Mile Road to Tower Road Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Dixboro Road from Plymouth Road to North Territorial Road Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Seven Mile Road from Spencer Road to Pontiac Trail Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday
  • Upcoming: 7 a.m. Wednesday to 5 p.m. Aug. 21 Gotfredson Road will be closed between M-14 and North Territorial Road

Superior Township

  • In progress: Lane restrictions will be in place on Prospect Road from Geddes Road to M-153 Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday

Ypsilanti Township

  • In progress: Traffic will be controlled by a flag operator on Packard Road from Golfside Road to 1,700 feet east of Hewitt Road until Aug. 21


View Washtenaw County road work, week of Aug. 12 in a larger map

Amy Biolchini covers Washtenaw County, health and environmental issues for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at (734) 623-2552, amybiolchini@annarbor.com or on Twitter.

C.S. Mott Children's Hospital to publish pediatric heart surgery outcomes online

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Tabitha Rainey, 24, of Lexington, Ky., stands over her 4-month-old son Waylon as he lies in a hospital bed at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital on Thursday, Feb. 14, 2013. Waylon, who underwent surgery for congenital heart disease, was transferred from Kentucky Children's Hospital after it discontinued its pediatric heart surgery program.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Officials at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital in Ann Arbor are working to publish survival rates for pediatric heart surgeries conducted by its surgeons online.

The move comes in the wake of a CNN investigation into the deaths of infants that had received heart surgeries at Kentucky Children's Hospital in Lexington, Ky.

The Kentucky hospital came under fire in early August as it initially declined to release mortality rates for pediatric patients that had received heart surgery. The pediatric heart surgery program at Kentucky Children’s Hospital had been suspended in October, according to a CNN report.

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Tabitha Rainey shows her son Waylon's scars Feb. 14, 2013 from a January surgery at Mott Hospital. Waylon suffers from congenital heart disease and will most likely have to have a heart transplant before he is 18.

Melanie Maxwell I AnnArbor.com

Among the patients displaced by the abrupt closure of the program was 4-month-old Waylon Rainey, who was transferred to C.S. Mott Children’s Hospital for surgery.

The University of Michigan Health System states the impending release of its data to its website was not prompted by the scrutiny placed on the pediatric surgery program at the Kentucky hospital.

“This is an initiative we began last year as a part of our ongoing efforts to strengthen relationships with physicians who refer patients to us and as part of our ongoing effort to be transparent,” according to a statement from UMHS.

The health system is anticipating that it will publish figures from 2007 to 2012. UMHS is actively working to put the information online, but does not have a date when the information will go live, officials said.

Though UMHS has previously published the outcomes for its pediatric patients who have undergone heart surgeries in documents kept on record within UMHS, it has not yet posted them online on its Quality and Safety website. The most recent report UMHS was able to provide AnnArbor.com was of 2011 data.

Outcomes for adult and pediatric patients that undergo a number of other procedures at UMHS are publicly available on the site. For pediatric patients, UMHS has published data on outcomes for children in intensive care units, those with lung conditions, transplant recipients and trauma patients.

A total of 801 children underwent heart surgery at Mott in 2011, compared with 927 in 2010 and 859 in 2009.

Mortality rates for pediatric heart surgery procedures in 2011 range from 0 percent to 15 percent, depending on the procedure.

Friday, Kentucky Children’s Hospital released data indicating the overall mortality rate in its pediatric heart surgery program ranged from 4.5 percent to 7.1 percent from 2008 to 2012, CNN reported.

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Survival rates of pediatric patients that had undergone heart surgery at C.S. Mott Children's Hospital from 2008 to 2011.

Courtesy of UMHS

Amy Biolchini covers Washtenaw County, health and environmental issues for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at (734) 623-2552, amybiolchini@annarbor.com or on Twitter.

Statistics show Ann Arbor safer for pedestrians than many Michigan cities in 2012

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Debate about the safety of pedestrians in Ann Arbor is heating up after the death of a University of Michigan student hit in a crosswalk last week.

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Sharita Williams, 20, died after being struck by this car last week in a pedestrian crosswalk on Plymouth Road in Ann Arbor.

A review of statistics show that Ann Arbor was right in the middle of the pack in 2012 when it comes to the number of crashes in Michigan cities where pedestrians were hit by vehicles.

According to Michigan Traffic Crash Facts, there were 60 crashes involving a pedestrian and a vehicle in Ann Arbor last year.

When broken down to crashes per capita and compared to other Michigan cities, including those of similar size and walkability, Ann Arbor compares favorably to other cities.

Here are some comparable Michigan cities and how they fared in 2012.

  • East Lansing: .0006999 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (34)
  • Grand Rapids: .0006381 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (120)
  • Detroit: .0006094 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (435)
  • Jackson: .0005964 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (20)
  • Flint: .0005857 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (60)
  • Ann Arbor: .0005266 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (60)
  • Lansing: .0003937 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (45)
  • Royal Oak: .0002795 pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes per capita (16)

Statewide, most pedestrian vs. vehicle crashes that took place in 2012 happened in an intersection — 797, more than 33 percent, as compared to 550 that were not in a crosswalk, about 23 percent.

However, a higher percentage of fatal crashes took place outside of crosswalks — 48 such crashes took place, about 36 percent. In comparison, 14 people died after being hit by cars while walking in a crosswalk, about 10 percent of all fatal pedestrian crashes.

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Sharita Williams

Facebook photo

Sharita Williams, a 20-year-old Clinton Township woman who was a U-M student, died early Friday morning from her injuries suffered in a crash on Plymouth Road on Wednesday. Williams was crossing Plymouth Road in a pedestrian crosswalk between Nixon Road and Traverwood Boulevard.

According to witnesses, Williams had activated the Rectangular Rapid Flashing Beacon (RRFB) signal at the crosswalk. She had entered the right lane on the eastbound side of the road and was hit by a green Chevrolet Cavalier, witnesses said. Williams eventually landed at least 10 feet away in the grassy median.

Ann Arbor police have interviewed the driver in the crash, but Lt. Renee Bush said Monday morning no arrest or citations have been made to this point. The crash is still under investigation.

Williams was studying in the College of Literature, Arts and Sciences at U-M to be a social worker and was reportedly crossing Plymouth Road to get lunch during a break from her job at the University of Michigan Conference Systems.

Kyle Feldscher covers cops and courts for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at kylefeldscher@annarbor.com or you can follow him on Twitter.

Timeline of the first day of football practice across Washtenaw County

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An Ypsilanti Community High School football player smiles while on the sidelines during practice at the school on Monday, August 12, 2013.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

Monday was the first day of high school football practice in the state of Michigan. Teams practiced from sunup to sundown across Washtenaw County. Here's a look at some things that happened in between time:

6 a.m. -- Check-in at Ypsilanti Community High School's first-ever football practice. Nearly 50 former Ypsilanti and Willow Run players are in attendance for the first day. "There can’t be Willow Run and Ypsi, it has to be one team one mind, and we have to act like one machine," said Ypsilanti senior Dauda Sylla.

8 a.m. -- After seeing the rain outside and seeing storms on the radar, Saline heads indoors to start its season. There, they take part in what coach Joe Palka calls a “glorified walk-through,” doing installations and formation recognition.

10:55 a.m. -- After suffering through a torrential downpour for the first two practices of the day, head coach Rufus Pipkins dismisses the Ypsilanti players from the field to the weight room.

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Saline's Zach Owings intercepts a pass during Monday's practice.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

11:45 a.m. -- Ypsilanti players are dismissed from the weight room After a 30 minute circuit training session. As players exit the weight room one puts on a Vancouver Grizzlies snap-back hat. The since-moved NBA team existed from 1995-2001 the Ypsilanti Grizzlies are embarking on their first season in 2013.

1:16 p.m. -- It’s still pouring rain, but there’s no thunder or lightning, so the Hornets are on the field doing 11-on-11 drills. And the rain doesn’t stop Hornets corner Zach Owings from notching a pick and drawing big applause from his teammates and coaches.

1:57 p.m -- The weather has cleared up, and most Saline players have shed their wet shirts for the series of 100-yard runs to finish up practice. For the last few, players start the dash by yelling “state champs.”

4:55 p.m. -- At Huron’s Riverbank Stadium, players are split into position groups and working on fundamentals. New coach Craig Jobe is overseeing the linemen and running backs, while the receivers work on route running near the middle of the field.

4:56 p.m. -- At Hollway Field at Pioneer High School, Pioneer breaks for water. After a quick drink, linemen go with head coach Jari Brown for technique drills while skill position players compete in 7-on-7 drills.

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A Pioneer football player enjoys a drink during a brief break at practice Monday, August 12.

Melanie Maxwell | AnnArbor.com

5:09 p.m. -- Pioneer quarterback Brandon Bertoia hits receiver VaShon Davis in stride 12-yards deep on a post route. Davis is small, but lightning quick, and slips past his defender and a safety untouched. He sprints all the way to the end zone.

5:35 p.m. -- Bertoia's final pass of the late afternoon practice bounces off the hands of his receiver and into those of a defender. Shortly after the interception, players exit the field for a brief break and are set to return for a 6:45-9 p.m. session.

5:40 p.m.-- After finishing up running some of their newly installed plays, players listen to a speech from Jobe before taking a quick break. He then goes over a few things with his coaches. They started their day at 3 p.m., and aren’t scheduled to finish until 8. “You’re always excited to get going,” Jobe said.

-- Kyle Austin contributed to this article.

Pete Cunningham covers sports for AnnArbor.com. He can be reached at petercunningham@annarbor.com. Follow him on Twitter @petcunningham.

Ypsilanti Township approves tax abatements for Sensitile for 2nd consecutive year

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A line of Sensitile's material.

Photo courtesy of Sensitile

In May of 2011, Sensitile Systems' co-owner Vanika Lath said the Ypsilanti Township-based company was growing by 110 percent annually. At that time, Sensitile was seeking a tax abatement on its real property from Ypsilanti Township.

Less than a year passed before Sensitile grew enough to apply for another tax abatement in early 2013, and it was recently approved by the Ypsilanti Township Board of Trustees.

This time the abatement is worth $293,000 over a 12-year period, while the 2012 abatement provided $222,000 in tax relief over a 12-year period.

Ypsilanti Township Supervisor Brenda Stumbo noted that Sensitile moved to Ypsilanti Township from Detroit three years ago and continues to expand here. She said she expects the company to outgrow its 33,000-square-foot building at 1735 Holmes Road.

When that time comes, township officials are hopeful Sensitile will stay in Ypsilanti Township, Stumbo said.

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Sensitile's Holmes Road facility

Tom Perkins | For AnnArbor.com

“We hope the small tax abatements they have received develop a positive relationship and they will continue to invest and create jobs in Ypsilanti Township,” she said. “Corporations get tax abatements worth billions of dollars in incentives from federal, state, county and local government, and it would be nice if small business could have the same opportunity. After all they are the backbone of America."

She also highlighted that Sensitile took a once abandoned building and brought it back to use.

“That means employees eating, buying groceries, getting their gas, etc. here, and that is an impact that is not easy to measure, but one that would be felt and seen if they were to leave our community,” Stumbo said.

Sensitile uses special glass and acrylic pieces that are layered together with different iridescent sheets inside. Depending on the angle or intensity of lighting, it appears as if the material is twinkling, shimmering or flashing.

The reflection and refraction of the light on the surfaces, Lath explained, “enhances the beauty of interior space, usually as an accent material.”

The panels are popular in modern restaurants, hotels, hospitals, malls, bars, stores, public spaces and a range of other locations. The material is on floors, walls, tabletops, doors, lamps and more.

The company was founded by Abhinand Lath, who developed the concept for the material while attending the University of Michigan. Sensitile’s work can now be found from Dubai to North Carolina to Hong Kong.

Township records show the company is seeking an abatement on high-tech equipment it's purchasing, though Lath did not provide specifics to AnnArbor.com when asked about the purchases.

The abatements are typically given in return for the promise of job creation. Lath also did not answer questions about employment levels, but the application for the latest abatement indicated that it would help create 10 jobs.

Lath told the Ypsilanti Township Board of Trustees that employee numbers fluctuate depending on contracts they receive for work and there is no exact figure they could provide on how many jobs they would create with the help of the abatement.

The company has 32 employees but averages around 25, Lath told the board. In April 2012, the company had 20 employees.

The board unanimously approved the abatement and Township Clerk Karen Lovejoy-Roe called Sensitile a success story.

“They are a small business, so the small tax abatement goes along way to help them continue to invest in new product lines and to employ more employees,” she said. “Supporting businesses that begin from research at our higher educational institutions in the county is a good thing for the entire county and in this case, Ypsilanti Township."


Plea deal reveals details of hospital tech with hepatitis C who worked in Ann Arbor area

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A traveling hospital technician accused of infecting dozens of patients with hepatitis C through needles tainted with his own blood reached an agreement with prosecutors that would give him a sentence of as little as 30 years instead of the nearly 100 he could have faced if convicted in a trial.

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The agreement, filed Monday, also contained new revelations that he was fired from two Michigan hospitals and resigned from two others before beginning his traveling temp career.

David Kwiatkowski, who has been jailed since his arrest in July 2012, is accused of stealing painkiller syringes from Exeter Hospital's cardiac catheterization lab in New Hampshire and replacing them with blood-tainted saline. He told investigators he had been stealing drugs for more than a decade and was "killing a lot of people," according to the plea agreement filed Monday.

If convicted at trial, he could have been sentenced to up to 98 years behind bars. He agreed to plead guilty to 14 federal drug theft and tampering charges he faced in exchange for a lighter sentence of 30 to 40 years in prison.

Kwiatkowski's attorneys did not immediately respond to emails or a phone message left at their office Monday night. A hearing on the plea agreement is set for Wednesday.

Linda Ficken, of Andover, Kan., is among those Kwiatkowski is accused of infecting. Ficken, 71, said Monday she's glad he pleaded guilty but wishes the sentence were longer.

"It should've been life, since he gave us potentially a death sentence," she said.

More than a year after Kwiatkowski's arrest, Ficken said, she is still angry at Kwiatkowski and at the system that let him move from job to job after he was fired over allegations of drug use and theft.

Thirty-two patients in New Hampshire have been diagnosed with the strain of hepatitis C carried by Kwiatkowski, who worked at 18 hospitals in seven states before being hired in New Hampshire in 2011. There have been seven cases in Maryland, six in Kansas and one in Pennsylvania. He was suspended from University Hospitals in Ann Arbor and also worked at St. Joseph Mercy Hospital, both before he was known to have hepatitis C.

One of the Kansas patients has died, and hepatitis C, a blood-borne viral infection that can cause liver disease and chronic health issues, played a "contributing role," the plea agreement said.

The plea agreement includes details of an interview Kwiatkowski gave investigators in New Hampshire after his arrest in which he said he knew he'd been diagnosed in 2010 but continued to "swap out" syringes of the painkiller fentanyl.

He said he had been stealing drugs since 2002 and estimated that he had swapped syringes at least 50 times in New Hampshire, at least 30 times in Georgia and more than 20 times in Kansas. Under the plea deal, Kwiatkowski would avoid criminal charges in the latter two states.

After Kwiatkowski's arrest, two of his previous employers confirmed that he had been fired over drug allegations. But several new incidents emerged in Monday's court filing.

According to the plea agreement, Kwiatkowski was fired from a Michigan hospital in 2004 after failing a drug test and was fired from another that year for gross misconduct. He resigned from two more Michigan hospitals while under investigation for drug use.

Kwiatkowski, who grew up in Michigan, later began work as a traveler sent by staffing agencies to hospitals around the country, usually for temporary jobs. In announcing federal drug charges last year, U.S. Attorney John Kacavas called him a "serial infector."

Funky sound of Chris Canas Blues Revolution helps keep the party going at Guy Hollerin's

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If you’ve ever seen the Chris Canas Blues Revolution perform, then you know the band loves a good time. The group, with its blues-meets-funk-meets neo-soul sound, is next up in the ongoing Local Blues Local Brews series at Guy Hollerin’s Saturday night.

Canas, who describes himself as a “soldier for the blues,” has put together an ensemble of veteran musicians who offer a well-chosen set of classic covers and funky, smooth originals that keep the party going and the dance floor full.

The group consists of Canas (vocals), Angie Cottingham (background vocals, percussion), Kevin Schoepke (bass) and Mickey Coleman (percussion).

On the band’s Web site, Canas said he formed the group to play his soul and funk-infused blues not only for seasoned music lovers, but also to attract young listeners to help keep the blues alive.

Whenever Canas and the gang play, the blues seem to be doing very well indeed.

Chris Canas Blues Revolution plays the Local Blues Local Brews series at Guy Hollerin’s, 3600 Plymouth Road, Saturday, Aug. 17, at 8 p.m. Admission is $5. 734-769-4323.

Rick's in Ann Arbor named one of the top 25 college bars in U.S.

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Come fall thousands of University of Michigan students will partake in one of Ann Arbor's quintessential college experiences: a visit to Rick's American Cafe.

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Rick's American Cafe

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Yup. They'll dance on Rick's sticky floors, fist pump to deafening music and sip on fishbowls filled with unidentifiable liquor.

Ah, college.

Well, believe it or not, the experience has been deemed so remarkable that Rick's on Church Street in Ann Arbor is listed as one of the top 25 college bars in the country, according to an August ranking by The Daily Meal.

Number 24 to be exact - and the only one in Michigan.

The Daily Meal looked at beer selection, drink specials, dance availability, music, prices, food availability, cover charges, location and games when compiling the ranking.

Do you agree?

If not, let us know your favorite nearby college bar in the comments section below.

Kellie Woodhouse covers higher education for AnnArbor.com. Reach her at kelliewoodhouse@annarbor.com or 734-623-4602 and follow her on twitter.

Great Lakes loons dying in record numbers from botulism outbreak spurred by ecological disturbance

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(Editor's note: This story was originally published on Aug. 5, 2013, but received limited visibility on AnnArbor.com and MLive.com.)

The Common Loon, arguable one of the most beautiful birds that grace our Great Lakes, is dying at an alarming rate. The fact that they’re dying is troubling, but the cause is downright scary. Most readers are familiar with the loon, but here’s a brief description for those who are unfamiliar with these gorgeous diving birds.

The loon is about the size of a small goose and has black and white plumage with piercing red eyes and can be found throughout the Great Lakes and other northern waters. Not only is their beauty unmatched, their eerie calls echo across waters they inhabit that make them one of the most unforgettable birds you’ll ever see or hear.

Recently, the Great Lakes Science Center - a Division of the United States Geological Survey - has discovered that the Common Loon can dive down to 150 deep catching fish with their beaks.

The loons are diving down to 150 feet to eat fish to survive. Loons only reside in the Great Lakes for a brief period in the late summer and fall on their way from their northern breeding lakes to their wintering grounds in the Gulf of Mexico and the Atlantic Ocean, but they feed heavily on highly concentrated schools of fish that occur in the deeper waters of the Great Lakes.

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Lake Sturgeon

photos courtesy of USGS

Many of the fish they’re eating are Round Gobies, an invasive fish inadvertently brought from Europe in the ballast water of ships.

Believe it or not, the goby itself is not the problem as to why the diving birds are dying. The problem is Botulism E. “Botulism E.,” you say? How and why do the Great Lakes have such a terrifying disease?

Dr. Kurt Newman with the GLSC stated the following: “Botulism E. toxin is the most toxic substance known to man. One gram of purified toxin could kill hundreds of thousands of people.”

We have to go back in time to set the stage for this situation that affects us all. It started with the invasive Zebra Mussel and then the introduction of another invasive mussel called the Quagga Mussel.

Both mussel species have the ability to filter Great Lakes water at an alarmingly fast rate, in turn, clearing up the water. Most people would think clear water in the Great Lakes is a good thing. Unfortunately, that wouldn’t be the case.

The mussels are taking away food for tiny fish to eat; they’re upsetting the food chain making its way up to the predators including the sturgeon, salmon and trout species. The salmon and trout numbers are dwindling but that’s not the point of this story; at least for now anyway.

The greater problem is the water is getting clearer, allowing the sun to penetrate to the bottom of the Great Lakes; in particular Lake Michigan.

The sunlight reaching down more than 50 feet is allowing algae mats to grow along the bottom of the lakes, especially Lake Michigan where its most hit. Algae mats are growing very fast and they’re many feet thick. The top layer of algae is getting sunlight, but the lower layers begin to decay, and large amounts of algae are sloughed off the algal beds, sometimes by storms. This results in tons of algae being washed off and decomposing on the lake bottom, and that’s where the Botulism E. bacteria grows and produces toxin.

The Goby swims through these piles of decomposing algae and eat worms and bugs that have eaten up the toxin from the rotting algae, and diving birds like the Common loon and Cormorants dive down to eat the Goby and other deep swimming bait fish.

The Gobies carrying the Botulism E. toxin are now infecting the birds that eat them. So, now we know how the birds are getting the Botulism E., but how do they ultimately die?

Simply put, Botulism E. carries a neurotoxin that affects the central nervous system of the infected birds. This neurotoxin causes paralysis and the birds often drown because they can’t perform the simple task of keeping their head above water.

Scientists with the GLSC are working with the USGS National Wildlife Health Center and the National Park Service, and they have estimated that we’ve lost more than 100,000 birds to date and the numbers are expected to get worse until scientists find a way to intervene.

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A Common Loon, dead of botulism.

Birds have been dying all over the Great Lakes, but where and when they get the toxin, and where they wash up on the beach, is unpredictable.

It was estimated that around 3000 loons died from botulism in Lake Michigan in 2012. This could have a significant effect on loon populations if it occurs often, as there are only 20,000 adult loons in the Great Lake states.

These scientists have also found that botulism outbreaks are more likely to occur when lake levels are low and water temperatures are high. These are exactly the conditions predicted under climate change, so we can probably expect the problem to get worse.

This is a relatively new problem because it affects us all. We’re dealing with a highly toxic substance that is increasing its territory on our Great Lakes. Furthermore, it’s killing our diving birds, the majestic Lake Sturgeon and the deep diving duck populations.

If you thought the Great Lakes were doing okay, then it’s time to reconsider. I’ll stay on this story and give updates in a timely manner.

Rick Taylor warmly welcomes your comments and story ideas. Feel free to email him at rtaylor@reinhartrealtors.com.

Monday's storms produce high rainfall totals across Ann Arbor

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Storms produced heavy rainfall in the Ann Arbor area Monday.

Courtesy of Eric Zwart

Storms throughout the day and into the night Monday resulted in high levels of rainfall across Ann Arbor and the surrounding area.

Within 24 hours, Ann Arbor was hit with between 1.54 and 2.93 inches of rain. Milan saw the most rainfall, with 3.25 inches by 12 a.m. on Tuesday.

“The first heavy rainfall event lasted from about 7 a.m. to about 6 p.m.,” University of Michigan weather observer Dennis Kahlbaum said. “The first event was quite long and then thunderstorms moved through with shorter, but heavier rain imbedded. These came later in the evening and overnight.”

Rainfall of an inch or more is typical of thunderstorms, but Washtenaw County has seen a lot of these heavy rainfalls this year, Kahlbaum said.

“Yesterday’s amount was close to or more than 3 inches in most areas,” Kahlbaum said. “I think we’ve seen some higher amounts, but those would be localized. This time we saw about an inch and a half of rain over Washtenaw County and then local rain, which added an inch to an inch and a half.”

Kahlbaum said these 24-hour amounts are considered to be a "5-year" event. That means there is a 20 percent chance of occurrence in any given year.

The most rainfall Ann Arbor has seen was 4.45 inches in August 1998, according to Kahlbaum.

Hail up to 1.5 inches in diameter was reported five miles northwest of Chelsea and hail 1 inch in diameter was reported just a mile southeast of Dexter at 7 p.m. Monday.

Below are the rainfall totals for Ann Arbor and the surrounding area:

  • Ann Arbor Northeast (U-M North Campus): 2.66
  • Ann Arbor Southeast: 2.93"
  • Ann Arbor Westsouthwest: 2.72"
  • Ann Arbor Westnorthwest: 2.78"
  • Ann Arbor Airport: 1.54"
  • Dexter: 2.48"
  • Chelsea: 3.07"
  • Milan: 3.25"
  • Willow Run Airport: 2.45"
  • Detroit Metro Airport: 2.57"

There is a 20 percent chance of rain Tuesday afternoon followed by mostly sunny skies for the rest of the week.

Chelsea Hoedl is an intern reporter for AnnArbor.com. She can be reached at choedl@mlive.com.

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