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Photo: Mercedes Streeter
Detroit is home to all sorts of weird art installations that give the city some awesome flavour. Even knowing that, I did not expect to see a whole aeroplane sitting in the middle of a street.
The plane has been a mystery that some people have been trying to solve for over a year. Now we know how it got there.
Detroit, Michigan, is a city rich with character. While the city may be best known for cars and abandoned buildings, art is all over the city. You can find murals on countless city blocks, there are a bunch of cool installations and sculptures. But when the plane turned up, people wondered, naturally where it came from. How does a plane end up seemingly abandoned on a street?
Wake Forest is known for its expansive acreage of green space and its family-friendly vibe. With niche boutiques, renowned brunch spots and one-of-a-kind coffee shops, it is certainly an idyllic place to spend your days, however, it also boasts an increasingly popular nightlife scene for people of all ages.
“The historic downtown in Wake Forest is vibrant and lively, with a dynamic and ever-increasing range of fun for everyone,” said Jason Cannon, president of the Wake Forest Business and Industry Partnership, a nonprofit dedicated to establishing Wake Forest as a destination for business and industry through economic development activities.
“As the downtown corridor expands, the Town is giving people more options and ways to enjoy nightlife in Wake Forest. From its multiple breweries, cocktail and rooftop bars, unique dining options, a bowling alley, and performing arts at the Renaissance Centre, there’s no shortage of ways to quite literally get out on the town.”
Wednesday, 17 Mar 2021 09:03 PM MYT
General Motors headquarters at the Renaissance Centre in Detroit, Michigan August 25, 2009. Reuters pic
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NEW YORK, March 17 US automotive safety regulators reviewed evidence related to an allegedly defective steering sensor that was used in roughly 778,000 older General Motors Co vehicles but ultimately decided against opening a formal investigation into the matter.
The National Highway Traffic Safety Administration (NHTSA) told Reuters about the previously unreported review. The agency evaluated information related to a lawsuit against the automaker brought by the widower of a 42-year-old woman who died after her 2007 Chevrolet Trailblazer SUV crashed, according to documents Reuters reviewed. The cause, her widower alleges in the lawsuit, was a defective steering sensor that the automaker failed to adequately warn drivers about despite long knowing the compon