1964-10-07; Saline Reporter |
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VOLUME 15, NUMBER 4 - WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 7, 1964
Band Shell
Held Up
Till Spring
The Saline Reporter
10c PER COPY — $3 PER YEAR
Construction of the proposed
new band sheU on Henne Field
has now been definitely staUed
until next spring - and an additional financing problem has
popped up.
The problem 'arose when it
was discovered that the roof
would require steel beam construction for safety, and this
brought the cost estimate to
§8,212. The band sheU fund now
has $4,200, with a total of
$5,200 subscribed. The $5,200
would have been enough under
earlier cost estimates.
Howard Kuhl, who designed
the sheU with the help of regis-
tered architects, and Milton
Finkbeiner, contractor who has
agreed to supervise construction, met in late September
with the Board of Education on
the unexpected difficulty.
Said School Board President
Bess Tefft: "The board felt
that - since we are faced with
the necessity for a new school
-- we could not undertake any
additional expanse. Money for
a band shell wiU have to be
raised in some way."
School Superintendent Harold
Hintz and RusseU Hollenback,
president of the Band Parents
Club, have also conferred on
the matter. Said Hintz: "We
felt that it wouldn't be used
until next year in any case, and
if it were built in the spring, it
would be finished by the time
it would be needed."
"We hope to appeal to the
public to get enough to complete the project," Kintz • said.
New Voter
Registration
Hits Peak
City voter registration is at
an all-time high, City Clerk
E. J. Muir announced today, -— —
with a record 216 new registra- KNIGHT /APPOINTED
tions since the primary election T0 PLANNING GROUP
in September.
Approximately 1,485 Salini- City CouncU Monday night
ans were registered to vote appointed James Knight, Jr., as
when registration for the No- a member of the city planning
^novation
y Co
Architect Hired to Make
Structural Study of Building
An upcoming structural stu- Although several alternatives
vember 3 election closed Mon- commission, to fUl the unex- dy of the City HaU will deter- have been studied, the Michi-
day. pired term vacated by the res- mine whether it is suitable for gan Employee Retirement plan
"We've never had anywhere Ration of Phyllis Douthat. . renovation, or whether a new is the most seriously considered
near that many new ones " Muir Council accepted "with deep City Hall is to be constructed. . , . although, under the new
observed. "That's way way up" regret" the resignation of Mrs. City Council Monday night State Constitution, it can be
Many of the'-new registrations Doutnatc wno has enroUed as a unanimously approved a motion put into effect by a three-fifths
-. , _ 6 „ _„.,_, are those of hew residents in full-time student at the Univer- to employ Architect Tivadar vote of Council but cannot be
in faet, that Dan Lirones, of the University of Michigan the Crestwood KnoUs subdivi- sity of Michigan. -She expects Balogh to make the study in abolished even by referendum.
audio-visual department, took a picture of it to use in in- sion, Muir said, and many came t0 receive her deeree tWs year- *f+ ^Tl^L^t^J^,' £„fJ? ' PlSn iS P61>
structing teachers in Saginaw schools next semester. * + ""* ™"
The map was prepared by 4th grade youngsters in Jane
Fick's class, to help acquaint them with map mechanics, directions, and their own home town.
What are audio-visual aids? Well, the map of Saline on
the blackboardjabove) is a sample ... so good an example,
CF Fund
from residents of the Hollywood
Drive area who have lived in
the city for more than a year
but had not voted here before.
Others come from residents of T^JLaI D_cA_*
longer standing who vote only ■ OC9I l>IS6S
in presidential years and hence « ft* r% |^v^^
had to re-register under the | Q $7 lO^S
two-year registration law. . ^ /
mit his report at an early meet- manent.
ing. He had previously told EEC0NSIDER SIDEWALK
Councilmen that such a study Council also reconsidered ae
would require only about five problem of t^ broken sidewaik
hours' work. on lots 30 and 31 adjacent tQ
Balogh is one of three archi- Crestwood Knolls subdivision;
tects with whom Council has the lots are owned by H. I.
conferred on possible designs Johnson, of 494 S. Ann Arbor
and costs for a new fire hall - St.
but there has been no decision The sidewalk had been bro-
Contributions to the Cystic
CHv CrtfioiaU Fibrosis fund drive are "climb- as to whether the fire haU shaU ken once and replaced by F. J.
V^Iiy M*llUdlS j ,.? according t0 Mrs. Robert be constructed alone, or■ in com- Winton, developer of the sub-
Conler With FHA Starling Sr county chairman binatl0n ^th a new City Hall, division. Then the sidewalk on
On Subdivision and the'total now stands at ap^ ^^ landA at the corner of E. lot 31 was broken again, when
City Councilman George G. proximately $2,100. Mic^an Ave" ?f H?r,s St. a contractor drove a trucMoad
T t. ^ -,-. .,.,. .V -*. ..--_. . , would accommodate a fire haU, of dirt over it Thp dirt that
Johnson and City Attorney A^- The sum includes §520 raised but saM M Jack Bennett £ JfthHidewalk was not de-
lan Grossman visited the Fed--by door-to-door soUcitation in «T+>_ _-.,«,, „,«/.„„+. ma „„„,.+ ,. „ " ^loewcUK was not ae
eral Housing Authority office the city of Saline; $25 contribu- ^^"^f S^on ^ S^iS ^PIT^-(lt T*
, in Detroit Friday in behalf of ted from the welfare fund of w-Voth ^L a^ LnPv ^p tV P ? &t ^^der,
, s -c=- tc- *.. *• _, t. . ,.. . , „, ,. , „„_ ._ tot. isotn land ana money are Johnson said" hence he fplt nn
.,! lb dissatisfied home owners m Universal Plastics; and $35 40 available for construction of a obligatL to replace thfside-
Crestwood KnoUs subdivision, from a benefit all-day coffee fl>_ t._ii h_ _,_;t, "uT xejjidce me siae
Thp ripvplnnPTV V T WircW, -hmr* T^ld .= + Wl-Parl'* rivi„Q Tn „ \..' ™ VV , , __. WalK-
But if the study shows the Council agreed; DPW Super-
present City HaU not suitable intendent Mike Strait was in-
The developer, F. J.
was also present.
Winton, hour held at El-Rad's Drive In.
Contributions have also been
Women's; Club
Federation to
Meet Monday
Lucy Gregory, women's director of Radio Station WOIA, will
headline the program of the
Washtenaw County Federation
of Women's Clubs when it meets
at Whitmore Lake Methodist
Church on Monday. She will
speak on "The Changing Sound
of Radio".
Mrs. Roy Berry of Ann Arbor, president of the Federation, wUl preside at the "business
meeting and hostesses are members of Whitmore Lake Women's Club.
Registration wUl hegin at 1
p.m., and all members of affiliated clubs ■ are invited to attend.
Saline is represented in the
County Federation by the Saline Child Study Club, the Junior Child Study Club, Saline
Business and Professional Women's Club, Wffling Workers
Club, and Saline Woman's Club.
Need for a new elementary school is vividly illustrated
in the examples of overcrowding in the present school shown
here. Above, a 4th grade class taught by Mrs. Ron Attinger
and Mfs. Howard Kuhl meets in the too-small ..teachers' room
. . . leaving the teachers literally no place to pause and catch
their bresath. Below; the lobby bf the school becomes a combined storage department and cloak-room, adding to the congestion.
ARCHITECT ADDRESSES
ADVISORY COUNCIL
STUDY CLUB
TO ORGANIZE
DIMES DRIVE
Local Farmer
To Visit Egypt
On Exchange Trip
Andrew Camobell Pittsfield ea Schools Advisory CouncU; length of time, he should no-
Anarew campDeu, .rittsneia V _!...,.__ __ tifv ttra whir.li win court nut
Chief among the home own- received from the Junior ChUd fnT. 1.™™,.,+,-™ .ivrai.j >,„,„ +n „+„,„+ 7, + • j, . .,
ers'_ complaints, and those with Study Club and the Saline Com- S^TT^ty^^nJS ^ILll^.To^te
which he is most concerned, munity Hospital AuxiUary. Oth- combinationj J least for the sent to the developer since he
Johnson said, were those deal^ er contributions from organiza- ^ „ s^_& Councilman order£ ™ S to S 3?
ing with sanitary sewer con- tions are known to be forthcom- George Johnson. uiueieu me girt 10 ior as.
struction, masonry and grading, ing.
The two and a half hour mee- The letter drive, mail re- RAISES OBJECTION MFHA Tnriliriprl
ting was "fruitful", Grossman quests sent throughout rural An objection was raised by t VTp Yn nT
said. The FHA wiU send two areas of the county, city of Councilman L. Z. StUl: "You In IVlJCiA Lontab
field r&en to Siiliua to re-cheek Ann Arbor, and Dexter and-take the City Hall out of this. ;,,_& section nleeting on MEHA
the subdivision, -and FHA rep- Chelsea, has so far returned block and it will finish the js scheduled at the MEA re-
resentatives were "highly coop- $1,273, Mrs. Starting said. block." (The only other occu- gjon ni teachers' conference hi
erative, to the full extent of A car-wash for the benefit Pied business site in the block An nArbor, at 1:30 p.m. Fri-
their authority," he added. . of the OF fund has been sched- at the present time is a den- aaV) October 16, in the' east
However, FHA has no direct uled by Saline Jaycees at the tist's office.) . cafeteria of Ann Arbor High
sanction against the builder, Community Ford garage, from" Still also suggested that the School."
Johnson pointed out. Their on- 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Sunday, Oc- city design and build the fire i^e two-day MEA conclave
ly recourse under regulations tober 18, for donations of $1.50 haU, rather than hiring an ar- wni be held Thursday and Fri-
in effect when Crestwood KnoUs a car. chitect. "With an architect, it's day. October 15 and 16.
was built is to refuse financing A meeting of the CF group going to cost you around jy[iss ^da Inglis. MEHA board
to future building by any firm is scheduled at 8 p.m. Wednes- $36,000," he said. "We can build member, is chairman o f the
with which an offending build- day, October 28, at the Saline one suitable for the fire depart- MEHA section, and Dr. Dwight
er is associated. Savings Bank community room, ment for somewhere around Rich, executive secretary of the
Many o f the buyers' com- The public is invited. $20,000 . . . I've gotten some organization, wiU give a report
plaints on Crestwood Knolls estimates on materials." Fire- 0n progress of the retirement
homes have been corrected by JUVENILES APPREHENDED men have suggested that a rec- viiiage here.
the builder. Although there are Police this week reported ap- tangular building 60 by 80 feet The section is open to the
more than 90 occupied homes prehension of two juvenUes would house the department's public.
there, FHA fUes contained on- who, they said, were responsi- trucks and equipment and pro-
ly seven complaints that were ble for entering a residence at vide room for a smaU office SOCIAL SERVICES
still "open", i.e., not yet cor- 107 E. Bennett St., last week and meeting room. MEETING SCHEDULED
rected. While the family was away, and ORDER ACTUARIAL STUDY The annual meeting of Sa-
Johnson wUl write to aU 15 taking eight packages of cigar- In other action Monday Coun- line Area Social Services, Inc.,
of the complainants with fuU elites, $1.50 in pennies, and. a cU ordered a new actuarial stu- will be held at 8 p.m. Tuesday
details of the meeting, he said, piece of cake. dy (the last was in 1962) in at the home of Grace Stierle,
He emphasized the required The case has been referred preparation for setting up an 2914 Saline-Ann Arbor Rd. All
procedure for bringing a com- to juvenUe authorities. employee retirement system, interested persons are invited,
plaint to FHA attention: the : : •
Architect Guido Binda was owner must first notify the buU-
■the speaker at the Tuesday ev- der of the problem, in writing,
ening meeting of the SaUne Ar- Then, after a "reasonable"
™ „? -Lr-tVi V a m ^lut. Y"1"^"' ™^-" b h d h- k tch t tify FHA, which wUl send out
The Saline Junior ChUd Stu- Township farmer who lives at X1£ a"uwcu ** 1U s" =""=•-<-" "■>• forms tQ be filled Qut r____ese saiine cioseu out i^inuxiin ^u-u -lui uie nunieu. aiso missing irom tne squaa.
dy Club will organize the 1965 3930 Piatt Rd., wiU leave Sun- m* proposed new elementary contain the FHA case in the Hornets' first conference Jerry Feeman, who didn't An undiagnosed illnes has put
Hornets Close Out Lincoln 20-0
by Hal Ceronsky and could be a stumbling block ther two weeks. Steve MiUer is
Saline closed out Lincoln 20-0 for the Hornets. also missing from the squad.
March of Dimes campaign for day, October 18, oh an exchange ^'"i01 dI1Q Ult»-U&&t;" t-us>LS'- number (winch can be obtained ^ame, played here Friday. play in Friday's game because him into the hospital for ob-
the Saline area, the group de- trip to Egypt. ~ AdvtaorTcounS is! fcheduled from the lending institution) Saline took the lead iT\ th,e °f a broken toe, wUl be out ano- servation.
CampbeU .-wUl travel under SL™ is scheduled ^ ^^ ^^ Failure first quarter as quarterback
to include the number may Neil stm threw a Pass to left
cause delay in the procedure, haU Jim Griffin for a 59-yard
cided at their Monday evening
meeting at the Saline Savings the auspices'- of "Farmers in
Bank community room. World Affairs", similar to the
November 4.
They made the decision after "People to People" program, WGPO PlanS
a request to undertake the drive with the sponsorship of the
was received from Mrs. Lewis U.S. State Department and De- Sm(Yi*P*ashorrl
Baker, HI, Washtenaw County partment of Agriculture, and ^ . „• l ci l
campaign director for the 1965 organized by the National _\\_ High oCuOOl
March of Dimes. Grange and Farm Union.
After the business meeting, He is one of nine American
Johnson said.
TD. Later in the same period.
Griffin threw a pass to StUl
for a 37-yard touchdown.
The Hornets played weU on
offense as Dave Feldkamp
Clothina Exchange
Planned at School
An exchange of used clothing fought his way- for a 40-yard
The WSCS of the Saline Me- will be held at Jensen Elemen- taUy, but the play was caUed
group discussion and study was farmers who- wUl make the trip, thodist Church wiU hold their tary School on Thursday, Octo- back on an off-side penalty. Sa-
led by Mrs. WiUiam Law on the They wiU return December 9. annual smorgasbord supper at ber 15. line's defense held up strong
subject "Mothers Must Grow, They may visit other coun- the SaUne-High School on Sat- Sizes for infants through 4th against Lincoln. Near the end
Too". Hostesses were Mrs. Ow- tries of their choice on the way urday, October 17, from 5 to 7 grade wiU be exchanged. Par- of the first half, Lincoln punt-
en Armbruster and Mrs. Ralph home, but the exchange pro- p.m. ents are asked to bring clothing ed to Saline's 30-yard line; ^
Gross. gram is only with Egypt, which The kitchen committee wiU for exchange to the aU-purpose Griffin took the kick and dash- . *
The next meeting is sched- will send farmers to this coun- be Mrs. James Beal, Mrs. Erwin room, but not before Wednes- ed 70 yards for Saline's third ,
uled November 2. try next summer. . Frederick, Mrs. Gerald Coe, day. October 14. touchdown. '
. , Campbell was selected to Mrs. Harold Smith, Mrs. Ray Tickets wiU be issued for each StUl and Feldkamp made Sa- >
CITY EMPLOYEES make the trip by William J. Davis and Mrs. Davis Toth. item brought in, and those who line's two extra points.
10 ATTEND SCHOOL Brake, master of the Michigah The dining room wiU be in do not wish to take an exchange Russ Michalke stood out in
City DPW Superintendent Grange, lecturer of the nation- charge of Mrs. Oscar Ferguson may leave their tickets for con- the second half as he played for
Mike Strait and ah employee, al Grange, and a vice president and " Mrs. Harold Gage,- with tribution. Leftover clothing wiU Griffin, who was injured in the
Harry Bishop, have been auth- of "Farmers in World Affairs". Mrs. Harry Holmes and Mrs. be distributed at the discretion closing minutes of the second
orized by City CouncU to at- He was notified only a week Walfred Larson assisting. of schopl authorities and SaUne period. Al Hartman played his
tend a school for sewage dis- ago and has since had "so many Tickets may be purchased for Area Social Services, Inc. usual good game, both on de-
Posal operators in Flint, on Oc- shots I've lost count". adults at $1.75 and children un- Times for the exchange are 1 fense and offense. The team as
tober 27 and 28. ' ' . , der 12 at $1, from the ticket to 3 p.m. and 5 to 7 p.m. a whole played weU and more
: - DRAINAGE APPROVED committee, Mrs. Frank Carter, consistently than in the pre-
HAY Ride PLANNED City CouncU -Monday night Mr. and Mrs. Walter Towler, FB GROUP TO MEET vious two games.
The Luther ,League of St. approved grading and drainage Mrs. Ted Stimpson and Mrs. The Union Farm Bureau Two of. the three first place
»-*.
John's Church have invited the plans for 37 lots in RoUing Mea- Bruce Parsons. group wffl meet Thursday, Oc- teams wUl meet as Saline goes
youth1 group of Bethel Church dows No. 1 subdivision, thus' Mrs. Richard Cole and Mrs. tober 9, at 9:30 p.m. at the to Dexter Friday. The third,
to a hay ride on Saturday Oc- clearing the way for buUding Vern Osterhout are in charge of home of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel first place team is Dundee. Dex-
tober 10, at 8 p.m. ' permits on the lots in question, publicity. Klein. ter has won 12 straight games,
~ Photo by Paul Emerson
A Lincoln tackle stops Russ Michalke's determined rush,
but only temporarily, in the second half of the shut-out game
Friday. Although aU Hornet scores came in the first part of
the game, Michalke gave Lincoln plenty of trouble after he
went in for Griffin, who was injured in the closing minutes of
the first half. The final taUy: Saline 20, Lincoln 0.
Object Description
| Title | 1964-10-07; Saline Reporter |
| Date | 1964-10-07 |
| Publisher | Paul Tull |
| Description | An issue of a Saline, Michigan newspaper. Published weekly. Focused on Saline and the surrounding Washtenaw County area. Previously published in Ann Arbor with the title Reporter. In May 1958, the newspaper offices moved to Saline and the title of the publication changed to Saline Reporter. No longer published. |
| Subject/Keywords | Saline (Mich.) � Newspapers; Washtenaw County (Mich.) � Newspapers; |
| Copyright Permission | This material is in the public domain. |
| Type | Newspaper |
| Format | JPG/JPEG |
| Language | English |
