WSMH FOX 66 on Facebook WSMH FOX 66 Twitter WSMH FOX 66 RSS Feed WSMH FOX 66 Mailing List
Wsmh:inc-ads

FOX 66 News at Ten

WSMH FOX 66 :: News - News at Ten - Local residents travel to see presidential inauguration
Local residents travel to see presidential inauguration

A group of Saginaw Country residents traveled to Washington for the 2013 presidential inauguration. They watched President Barack Obama as he embarks on his second term.

President of the Saginaw Area Democratic Club Jamie Forbes attended the parade with her parents. It was her second trip to see the inauguration. She went four years ago with her dad, and this time they had tickets.

"I'm pretty sure I got to see Obama through the tinted glass," said Forbes.

She described the trip as energizing.

"I really think that the best part of experiences like this is the people that you meet. We're able to see so many people with like minds and be inspired to go back to our communities and make change," said Forbes.

Forbes met up with a group of about 20 Mid-Michigan residents.

Copyright 2013 WNEM (Meredith Corporation).  All rights reserved.

Local residents travel to see presidential inauguration

Tuesday, January 22 2013, 11:13 AM EST

National News Headlines

AP PHOTOS: College commencements across nation
In a commencement address at Atlanta's historically black Morehouse College, President Obama said graduates should "find time to defend the powerless." The president said his own success was due to "the special obligation I felt, as a black man like you, to help those who need it most, people who didn't have the opportunities that I had — because there but for the grace of God, go I.

Tornadoes hit Kan., Okla.; no injuries reported
Authorities say tornadoes have touched down in Wichita, Kan., and a suburb of Oklahoma City but there are no immediate reports of injuries or significant damage.

Officer shot in Marathon showdown wants to work
With a bullet still in his body, the police officer who survived a showdown with the Boston Marathon bombing suspects said Sunday he's determined to return to duty.

AP CEO calls records seizure unconstitutional
The president and chief executive officer of The Associated Press on Sunday called the government's secret seizure of two months of reporters' phone records "unconstitutional" and said the news cooperative had not ruled out legal action against the Justice Department.

Suspect in NY bias shooting is charged with murder
The man who police say hurled homophobic slurs at a gay man on a Manhattan street before firing a single fatal shot to his head has been charged with murder as a hate crime.

Two members of FBI's Hostage Rescue Team killed in training accident

Two members of the FBI’s ultra-elite Hostage Rescue Team were killed Friday during a training  accident involving a helicopter off the coast of Virginia Beach.


Trace volcano ash reaches small Alaska city
Trace amounts of ash from a remote Alaska volcano have fallen on an Aleutian Islands community, but the latest ash cloud remained just under the 20,000-foot threshold considered to be a major threat to trans-continental aircraft.

Heritage group appeals city's Confederate flag ban

A federal appeals court is considering the Sons of Confederate Veterans' challenge of the city of Lexington's decision to exclude the heritage group's battle flag from its city light poles.


150 years after Civil War, Stonewall Jackson remembered . . . with lemons

Civil war general Thomas “Stonewall” Jackson is still being honored 150 years after his death, with visitors bringing lemons to shrines that honor his memory, therawstory.com reports.


Officer who shot NY student faced harrowing choice
The police officer who accidentally killed a Long Island college student along with an armed intruder faced the most harrowing decision of a law enforcement career: choosing the split-second moment when the risk is so high that you must act to save a life, says an expert in the field.

News at Ten Stories

Wsmh:inc-ads

News Videos

IE6 Float Fix
Wsmh:inc-ads