Kenzie Jeyne demonstrates a pole dancing hold on a tree just outside Ypsilanti City Hall during a protest held by employees and supporters of the Déjà Vu Showgirls strip club on Friday, Nov. One demonstrator scaled a tree as if it were a pole and held themselves parallel to the ground, mimicking a routine. Meanwhile, some passing cars blared their horns in apparent support as they turned onto Michigan Avenue in front of the government building’s stone façade. “It helps put money back into the community as well,” he said, showing a tattoo on his wrist with the club’s name and area codes for Detroit and Oklahoma City, where the company sent him to work during the pandemic. 1, we’re helping people get back to work,” said Déjà Vu Floor Manager Edward Otis, clad in a black “Vu” beanie and holding a sign that read “We want Ypsi to be grand too.” 19, employees and dancers, past and present, had a simple message: let us do our jobs again in Ypsilanti. Déjà Vu: A timeline of the city’s dueling legal battles with downtown strip club The club, meanwhile, is now attempting to shift the focus toward its workers, who aren’t otherwise involved in the courtroom. Ypsilanti claims that has endangered the club’s already limited ability to operate downtown under current zoning maps and is asking the court to permanently shut it down. The city fired back with a lawsuit of its own in state court in July, accusing the club’s owners of illegal construction without a building permit. Additionally, you do and shall grant E2E a worldwide, non-exclusive, royalty-free, fully paid, sublicensable and transferable license to use, copy, edit, modify, reproduce, distribute, prepare derivative works of, display, perform, and otherwise commercially exploit the Photos in connection with E2E (and its successors and assigns') business, including without limitation for syndicating or redistributing part or all of the Site (and derivative works thereof) or the Service in any media formats and through any media channels (including, without limitation, mobile apps, third party websites and feeds).Déjà Vu kicked them off with a lawsuit filed against Ypsilanti in April in federal court, claiming the city slow-walked consideration of plans to repair and rebuild after a fire damaged its interior last year, while also lobbing accusations about city officials’ motivations. By submitting content directly on E2E.com, or through any E2E page, property, mobile application, mobile version, embedded version, or email content or email link generated by E2E, you hereby certify that you personally took the photo and/or have the intellectual property rights to use and transfer the photo you have submitted. Be Useful: Submit relevant photos that help tell the story.Īll user submitted photos (“Photos”), whether publicly posted, anonymously posted, or privately transmitted, are the sole responsibility of the person who submitted the Photos.Be Appropriate: No nudity, hateful images, spam, and irrelevant photos.Photo Rights: Submit your original photos not somebody else's photos.
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