You are here: Home News City

Father, Son to Graduate Morehouse College Together

Father and Son Scheduled to Graduate Morehouse

ATLANTA — This weekend will be a busy one for Dorian Joyner, Sr. Sunday morning, he will watch his oldest son graduate from Morehouse College.

Joyner will have a front row seat for commencement. After all, he will be a fellow graduate himself.

Joyner started his Morehouse journey back in 1984, but never finished. Three years ago, he decided it was time to come back. By then his son, Dorian Joyner, Jr. was already a freshman.

When the younger Joyner heard his father was coming back to Morehouse, he admits, it was a shock at first.

Read more at the Grio.

(Photo: NBC Atlanta)

  • Written by Blayne Alexander, NBC Atlanta

Couple Killed in Chicago Heights Fire

Chicago Heights couple killed in house fire

A married couple died early Friday in a house fire in south suburban Chicago Heights. The flames broke out around 1:40 a.m. in the 200 block of East 24th Street, fire officials said. Neighbors said the entire front of the home was on fire when they heard sirens. "I happened to look out and I saw the front porch mainly up in flames," neighbor Courtney Wilson said.

There is no sign of any working smoke detectors, the fire chief said, so the couple may not have known until too late that their home was on fire. Firefighters ran into the burning home where they found a man and woman in a second-floor bedroom. They rushed the two out of the home, but the woman, identified by family members as 47-year-old Lillian Hill Harrison, had already passed away.

The chief said first responders tried to save 43-year-old Lemont Harrison, an amputee, but he passed away. "Their bedroom's upstairs, so they were probably up there asleep, and the fire went so fast," Lillian Hill Harrison's father, Charles Cowan, said. Neighbors said they have seen children at the home before, but the fire chief said the two adults were the only ones inside when the fire broke out. The fire marshal was on the scene trying to find a cause of the blaze. Neighbors said at one point both the car out front and the house were on fire. It's not clear which came first.

Read more at NBCChicago.

(Photo: NBCChicago screenshot)

  • Written by Lauren Petty and Michelle Rellerford

Powerball Jackpot: 3rd Highest in US History

Powerball is the 3rd largest in U.S. history.

(CNN) -- The Powerball jackpot for Saturday's drawing will be at least $550 million, the third largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history, after no one matched the winning numbers in Wednesday night's draw.

Wednesday's jackpot in the multistate lottery was $360 million. The numbers were 2, 11, 26, 34 and 41 with a Powerball of 32.

Saturday's jackpot will be the second largest in the history of the Powerball game, behind a $587.6 million jackpot that was split by winners in Arizona and Missouri in November.

The largest lottery jackpot in U.S. history was $656 million in the Mega Millions game in March 2012. That was split by three tickets sold in Illinois, Kansas and Maryland.

Read more at CNN.

(Photo: Scott Olsen/Getty Images)

  • Written by CNN
Man Facing Eviction Finds Lotto Ticket Worth Nearly $5M

Man Facing Eviction Finds Lotto Ticket Worth Nearly $5M

 

Last February, a judge gave Richard Cerezo (pictured) and his family just a few months to move out of their Geneva, Ill., home. They facing foreclosure.

As they packed for the fateful day they would be forced to leave their home, Cerezo and his wife stumbled upon a bunch of old lottery tickets in a glass cookie jar. When he took the tickets to a 7-Eleven to check them, one was worth $4.85 million, according to the Chicago Tribune[1].

Upon finding the tickets, Cerezo’s wife warned him to either check the tickets or she would just throw them away. So he took the tickets to a local 7-Eleven in Aurora. After checking the first nine tickets, Cerezo says he came up empty. But his luck took an exciting turn.

“The following one was $3, so I was excited,” he said. “I get to pay for my Pepsi. And then the last one said file a claim,” which meant it was worth at least $600.

The management consultant went

...
  • Written by News One

Magnificent Mile $100K Jewelry Heist a Hoax

Detectives on Thursday night said a report of a brazen robbery on Michigan Avenue a day earlier was unfounded.

A south suburban woman who said she frequents shops on the Magnificent Mile told police she was robbed of tens of thousands of dollars worth of jewelry. But Chicago police say they recovered video from the area and confronted the woman, who asked that her name not be publicized, about inconsistencies in her story.

"It appears as though she wasn't carrying jewelry. People make mistakes. She's not crazy but she called us and told us this didn't happen," a Chicago police sergeant told NBC Chicago. "She had a bad day. We reviewed every single piece of video we could find and saw nothing. It didn't sound right."

Read more at NBCChicago.

(Photo: NBCChicago)

 

  • Written by NBCChicago

Subcategories