I don't think anybody here lives in Detroit (just guessing), but it's still local...
The Free Press endorsed Warren Evans today, which I thought was surprising.
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I don't think anybody here lives in Detroit (just guessing), but it's still local...
The Free Press endorsed Warren Evans today, which I thought was surprising.
You'd think Bing would win on name recognition.
Coleman Young Jr. has the name recognition vote wrapped up.
Someone tell me who the most radical lib of the bunch is and he'd/she'd get my vote.
The list of candidates isn't complete without Sharon McPhail...Quote:
Originally Posted by Gl'enn
So it's Bing and Cockrel? That seems like a good out come. Way to go Detroit!
KWAME
i knew it was gonna be cockrel vs bing with a side piece of Faggot Hendrix because of the lack of time this election has had. Easiest faces to remember get the most billing.
Kwame Kilpatrick lost a primary.
Dennis Archer lost a primary.
Coleman Young lost a primary.
Roman Gribbs lost a primary.
Jerome Cavanaugh lost a primary.
All ended up being mayor. :)
More lies and drama!
Quote:
Bing says it's not a 'big issue'
Associated Press
DETROIT -- Mayoral candidate and former NBA great Dave Bing said Wednesday it was "not correct" when he earlier claimed to have earned a master's degree in business administration.
But the claim on a videotape touting education and staying in school on the National Basketball Retired Players Association Web site was meant to be interpreted in a different manner, Bing told The Associated Press.
The founder and chairman of the Bing Group, a steel manufacturing operation and auto supplier, was responding to a Detroit Free Press story revealing he didn't earn an MBA from General Motors Institute, now called Kettering University in Flint, as he said on the tape.
"I felt I had an MBA for the work I had done in the industry I was in," Bing said. "When I made references to an MBA it wasn't that I went there and got it, but through what I had done.
"I made reference to how important education was for players, active and retired, and young people, that they should stay in school as long as they can and get their degrees."
The newspaper also reported that Bing didn't receive his bachelor's degree in 1966 from Syracuse University, as the former college star also claimed. Syracuse spokesman Kevin Morrow said Bing got his degree in economics in 1995, after he completed additional coursework.
In the videotape, Bing said, "I got an MBA from the General Motors Institute" after earning a BA from Syracuse. "I was one of those guys who graduated in four years."
Bing, 65, explained that as a simple discrepancy that wasn't discovered until 29 years after he left Syracuse for a Hall of Fame career in professional basketball. He doesn't remember which class it involved, but Bing said the incomplete left him three credits short of graduating.
"I did turn it in in 1966," he said of the paper. "The assumption was it was a dead issue. I surely had no reason to believe it was a problem."
But he learned in 1995 from an assistant basketball coach at Syracuse that the school did not list him as a graduate. Bing said he rewrote the paper.
"It was all about the auto industry and the challenges with being a supplier," he said. "I mailed it in. They mailed the degree out in 1995. It's at home."
The questions about Bing's education comes at a critical time, with a May 5 mayoral runoff to fill the remainder of disgraced ex-Mayor Kwame Kilpatrick's term less than two months way.
Kilpatrick and his former chief of staff were charged with lying on the stand during a whistleblowers' trial about having an intimate relationship and their roles in the firing of a police official.
During the primary campaign, Bing released his financial records and challenged the other candidates to do the same. The major candidates, including Democratic mayor Ken Cockrel Jr., refused. The same challenge was issued to Cockrel after they finished as the top two vote-getters in the Feb. 24 nonpartisan primary.
The winner of the runoff will serve as mayor until the regularly scheduled 2009 primary is held in August, followed by the general election in November.
Cockrel spokesman Jim Edmondson declined to comment until discussing the Free Press article with Cockrel.