1964-11-11; Saline Reporter |
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VOLUME 15, NUMBER 9-WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1964
Saline
■ # * *
* # *
* * *
10c PER COPY — $3 PER YEAR
TED FUND DRIVE STANDS AT ONLY
District to Vote
new building, the brochure
says, "as there will be enough
FiHSHClH0" NeW monev in tke increased alloeat-
** _ _ ed millage recently voted (15
Elementary School mm limit raised to is mms) to
finance the additional costs of
Registered voters of the Sa- operating the new. school."
line Area School District will Since Saline>s is now a regis.
go to the polls on December 14 tration school district, only xe-
to decide on a $790,000 bond is- gistered electors may vote in
sue for a new elementary the December 14 election, to be
school. • held at the Intermediate School.
Also included in that amount Voters may register with their
is $35,000 for repairs and some city or township clerks any
remodeling at the three present time through Monday, Novem-
schools. The total cost (archi- jjer 16.
tect's estimate) of the new elementary school is $755,000.
A breakdown of the estimated costs is-included in a bro-
Meanwhile, an open meeting
will be held by the Board of
Education and the Schools Advisory Council on December 2,
chure, last of a series of three at 8 p.m. in the High School
put out by the Board of Educa- gymnasium, to answer any
tion, Which will be sent out to questions concerning the pro-
registered voters this week. It posed new building.
includes: Tentative plans for the. build-
Construction $612,000 ^ itself were described in an
Site development 18,000 earlier brochure.
Furniture and equipment 50,000
TWO MORE LISTED
AS MARCH Ofr DIMES
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN
Mrs. Paul Woods will serve
I as chairman of the teens com-
** mittee in. the forthcoming
.4
Sunday Deadline Set
For Residential Areas
The Saline area United Fund usually good," he said. "In oth-
March of. Dimes campaign, not campaign, now only four days ers, they're light." But the ar-
Mrs. James Keezer as was an- short of the deadline for the eas include a large number of
nounced last week by the Jun- residential portion of the drive, new homes this year,
ior Child Study Club, the or- stands at 19.6 per cent of its Only the residential part of
ganization sponsoring the drive goal, Buford Soden, campaign ^he drive is to close Sunday, he
in Saline. chairman, announced today. emphasized. The business,' in-
The club announced this week Only $2,548 has been report- dustry, and service club cam-
that Mrs. Richard Lehtonen has ed. To meet all commitments paigns will continue until they
been named chairman of the in the 1965 budget, $13,095 is are completed.
bowling committee.
Kids Create
Havoc at
Disposal Site
needed. Since many Saline area resi-
But '-reports are starting to dents work out- of town, and
come in slowly," said Soden. contribute at their place of em-
"They'll probably all come in, ployment, he added a reminder
with a rush, in the next few that contributions given at
days." f work may be ear-marked for
A comparison shows that "we
the Saline drive. "We want to
are about on a par with last brinS as mudl back into Sa~
year at this time," he added. line as possible."
"We should have been slightly _
IO Hornet
TD's Swamp
Onsted Team
by Hal Ceronsky
Ten touchdowns led Saline to
Site purchase 35,000
Planning fee 34,400
Survey, qualification of
bonds, etc. 5,600
Repairs and remodeling 35,000
The total is $790,000.
There will be no debt millage
increase necessary, the brochure points out, as increased
valuation in the school district
makes it possible to finance the
bond issue without raising the a 64-47 win over Onsted last
debt millage. Moreover, the two Friday. Jim Griffin scored five
mills currently being-levied for ®£-the TD's and- N<eSL Still/threw
the present elementary school four touchdown passes,
debt will no longer be needed In the first quarter, Griffin
for that purpose. scored three times --' once on a
The brochure continues: seven yard run'; once on a
"There will be enough money in screen pass from quarterback
the bank with the 1965 debt Still, for 44 yards; and again
tax levy to pay off this obli- on a 51-yard run-back on an
gation. This millage, (.002), interception. Gary Johnson
could then be used to finance went 15 yards for another first
the proposed bond issue. Future period touchdown,
increases in valuation could re- Dave Feldkamp made two ex-
sult in a lowering of the debt tra points to make the score
millage, depending on how 26-6 at the end of the first per-
quickly the district wanted to j0d.
amortize its obligations." In the second quarter, Russ
Neither will additional mil- Michalke took a pass from StiU ■?
Iage be needed to operate the for 31 yards and a touchdown, O.i' \FvM1±l,c,
' ' and Griffin broke into the open kJdlilie XOUlilS
• on a reverse, scoring a 73-yard InjUre^ |n QRY
Onsted tallied once in the se- CfESh Saturday
cond period to bring the score |g; - J
to 39-12 at the end of the half. Three Spine area youths
Still threw to Griffin, in the were hospitafp|ed late Saturday
third stanza, for a 31-yard TD night, after ffjhe car in which
pass, and was on the receiving they were travelling went out
end of a 33-yard_ pass from of control on, a curve on Au-
GAY FESTIVITIES MARK 50TH ANNIVERSARY. Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Warner, 214 E. Henry St., reached their Golden
Wedding date last week. Both of them still bear a strong resemblance jto the photo above, snapped shortly after their
marriage in Saline in 1914. Proving they still have youth on
their side, the Warners plan a second honeymoon in Florida
sometime this winter.
Meanwhile, Mr. and Mrs. Warner were guests of honor^
at a party given by friends Friday evening at the American
Legion Hall. High point of the fun was a mock wedding conducted by the cast below. Readers who are unable to identify the celebrants will find their names in a outline on page
three.
A plague of malicious des- ahead, since we're seeking a
truction by youngsters at the nine per cent increase. How-
sewage disposal plant has stall- ever, we will make every at-
ed construction of the addition, tempt to complete the residen-
cost the city more than $100, tial canvass by the announced
and kept Harry Bishop, plant deadline, November 15."
manager, busy overtime. It is difficult to assess the
Bishop told police that some-
actual progress of the drive at
Phone Co.
Plans Major
Expansion
General Telephone plans a
$3.9 million expenditure for service improvement and expan-
Community
College Gets
Local Boost
«j.oiiujl; *.»ja\j. j_j\_ri___.\_t\_r LJ.J.UI, uwiuv.-
one, probably children, opened this time' he said> since only
the gate valves and pulled the Partial reports have been re-
cork from the ends of the trick- ceived from schools, business,
ling filter gate, some time Sun- ^ustey, service, dubs andI re- ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^.^ ^
day, thus flooding the excava- ^ ential areas 2,4, 6 and 7. including approximately
tion and fhe pumping station. - ^^Lgf* residential ^ $2 million in the southern sec-
ea"Cont5butions in some resi- £on of the division, Ron E.
dential areas seem to be un- Kinsman, eastern division man-
- ager, announced. Planned out-
All work on the construction
was halted until the areas could
Y*. be pumped out, at a cost of
V about $100. Bishop has also put
s -.! in overtime hours because:
Children have been throwing
Home Recordings
To Be Made Here
lay in the Saline exchange is
$44,500, for increased line capacity and added central office
(equipment for extended area
service. Work is planned for
September,- '65.
The eastern division's southern area is bounded by the
s.i lumber, shovels,,.rocks "and oth-
V er debris intone* sewage'treat- -r-, W •
-V ment * beds,; fie-..said"; and on' t0Y beFVICeffleil
~kl Tuesday, November^ Sf-'Uiier ■■■--.- .-■■-■
P;o 5:30 p.m., someone opened a "fhe ''Voices irom Home" pro
S V&'lve, dumping sewage and jeet to' send family recordings Temperance and Blissfield ex-
Yj waste into the Saline River. to servicemen will be conducted changes to the south, Hudson
The health hazard of the ri- here~ again by the American to the west, Saline to the north
ver pollution is more than Red Cross, Marian Hering, Red and to the east by the Ida and
matched by the fact that sev- Cross representative, announc- Erie exchanges,
eral children have been caught ed this week. ^ ^ "Our 1965 program, repre-
swimming in the digester (a Although the recordings will senting an increase of more
tank full of water) and ordered not be made until December 9, than $650,000 over our 1964 ex-
to leave the premises.
DOCTORS* PARTNERSHIP
TO BE DISSOLVED
Washtenaw's proposed Com- Rugs Michalke> to complete the stin Rd., crashed into a tree
Hornets' eighth touchdown. >. stump, flipped- end-over-end in
Onsted made a healthy try a ditch and came to rest on its
at catching up in the third per- roof. The 1964-model car was
iod, and tallied three times, to demolished. ',
make the score 51-33 going in- The acci,jent.- occurred on Auto the last quarter. stjn Rd., near Ernst Rd., in
munity College got a strong
boost from the speaker at last
week's meeting of Saline Rotary Club. Wyeth Allen, executive director of the Citizens'
Committee for a Community
College for Washtenaw County,
she suggested that families may penditures, win be a continua-
wish to make appointments ear- {ion of our previously announc-
ly and begin to plan what they ed primary objective of reduc-
will want to say. ing all parties per line to a
There is no charge for the maximum of four in suburban
service, which makes 15-min- exchanges." Kinsman said in
The medical partnership of ute records of the voices of the making the announcement
Douthat-Garrison will be dis- entire family if desired and ., _ ^ .
solved as of January 1 they sends them via air mail to the creage fte J y,s invest.
-eported this week; but both serviceman who will not be at ma. . , , V,;1/q;„„c, „„A
•Vc .. j. .. . oi -., . . . ment in land, buildings, and
will continue to practice in Sa- home for Christmas. A num- „„,„;_ „*. A «,„ „„_,+* t,,-,„-
.. . . „ ,. . ... ... equipment in the eastern divi-
iine- ber of Saline families used the „•!„+„ „,„„,. +-h„r. anc k -»ii
T-. tit, -rv xt-j. -n .'-.. sion to more than »2b.5 mii-
Dr. Rudenz Douthat will service last year. j. „ he gaid
maintain his present offices at The recordings will be made .',.,„„,„, +„i«wu,„,0 „.-„+ +„
510 Saline-Ann Arbor Rd. Dr. at the Federated Church. Additional telephone plant to
_, „ . ... , . ... ^ , expand both local exchange and
^lf.r1^T *? *ri- £ ^T6 TShingJ°- m?e«?n loi distance service in the eas-
offices on Davenport St. which appointment, or obtain further ter£ flivision in 1965 ^ cost
were formerly occupied by the information, may call Mrs. Ar-
late Dr. Harold Miller. thur Gill, 429-7357.
(Continued on page 4)
H HARASSMENT AND PROPRIETY:
Pastor Reports on Mississippi
posed new school would fill a
definite and growing educational gap which exists here.
"Washtenaw County is sur-
t +t, r al nprWI rarv"~ """"' '"""'" ~" """"' "" ISN'T SHE SWEET? The
told Rotarians that the pro- , V" X .^ Yon vard TDBndSewater Township, as the young lady above served M The Reporter's long-distance, Shortly after the barrage of may challenge them as to mor-
- - ■ " "■" - S^ reC^1V-iqril who also °ar W3S travellinS east- flower girl in the mock wedding person-to-person phone call to phone calls, the Mississippi au- al character; then there is a
pass from JNeii fc> l . Injured in.'ithe crash were honoring the Ed Warners' 50th a Magnolia, Miss., jail did all thorities released their 13 -pri- public hearing. The publicity
made a successrui t?^ P^, Raymond Feldkamp, 20, of 8990 anniversary, at the Legion Fri- kinds of good, the Rev. George soners without explanation . . . leaves all registered Negroes
to Tom button ° Charles FeldkamP Rd-5 the driver of the day evening. If you can't quite Laurent reported this week. He but without actually dropping wide open to retaliation,
rounded by areas which have *VV&£ YYSs from Griffincar; Paul Maiion, 20, of 9705 remember where you've seen was the recipient of the call. the charges. They just said it Mr. Laurent was not roughly
already acted to fill this gap," f YV ,5. extra rjoint onMarion Rd.; and Michael Frey, her before, you'll find her name Mr. Laurent was one of many would be all right to congre- treated in the jail, but (he saw
said Allen. "All available indi- \°h m , !____f 21, of 7706 Saline-Ann Arbor in the "Mock Wedding"1 outline ministers sent into Mississippi gate in the parking lot, Mr., many of his new friends kicked
cators show that we should do ^l^Tnhn™ nlaved his bestRd^ on PaSe three- " a Negro registration project Laurent said. and manhandled, including a
likewise." ' f the seasra against The three were taken to Sa" '— sponsored in part by the Na- "Publicity is the only thing rabbi (white). Hot water was
A community coUege here f^f5 Y^ Onsted -- twoline Comm-unity Hospital, . rj4.ii/rj tional Council of Churches and we can use to change things thrown on women prisoners
would serve a three-fold pur- >-ne^ea ™ , In the Onstedwhere FeldkamP and Marion Hearing' feet Monday the United Presbyterian Church there," he said. who were singing,
pose, Allen explained. „°3 Tnhnson was most effec- were treated for cuts and brui" On Meha Re-ZOninff and coordinated by the Council He returned to Saline on elec- Said Mr. Laurent: "People
1. Washtenaw County em- f. ' „£& un the middleses- FeldkamP suffered a bad =» of Federated Organizations tion night with the foUowing ask us, 'Why do you go where
Ployers in general feel that new ™f °"J™ UTf several of Sa- ^ash on his left arm, and Mar- A City Council hearing is (COFO). report: you're not wanted?' ... but we
!--•-■>--•• - ■ - .-- — - ~-± ana setmig -v ionj a broken nose# -j^ey were scheduled at 8 p.m. Monday on He arrived there on Monday, Of Pike County's 15,000 Ne- ARE wanted, very much want-
re-leased from the hospital the request of Meha retirement October 26, and was jailed ~ groes, 221 are registered, and ed and very welcome in the Ne-
Tuesday afternoon. village for re-zoning .from R-l -with 12 other persons of both some were allowed to vote . . . gro community. They provide
Frey, who suffered three to R-2. races - the foUowing day, on a a few. But the rules, if they can food and lodging, and once they
fractured vertebrae, was given The Meha site north of the charge of "trespassing", for re- be caUed that, are arbitrary raised $1,000 bail in one after-
emergency treatment at the Sa- ^ty was automatically annexed fusing to leave the Pike County and haphazard: a shoemaker noon from their own people,
line hospital and then moved Ss R-l (single family) under Court House parking lot in may aUowed. to pass the regis- They are very grateful for the
to St. Joseph Mercy Hospital the present zoning law. Repre- Magnolia. tration test, whUe every color- help we try to give."
in Ann Arbor, where he is stiUsentatives have requested a They were held over night, ed high school teacher is re- COFO, the coordinating
high school graduates are not j.^^ touchdowns
ready for employment with
their firms, except in jobs at
the unskilled or semi-skilled levels. Yet job opportunities for
skilled technicians and semi-
professionals go begging. The
community college, with, a two-
year curriculum, would gave
young people the skills needed
to fit them for these opportunities.
2. Even though Washtenaw
County has two state universities, these schools are already
so overcrowded that many high Saline's "fastback", Jim Grif-
change to R-2 (multi-family) and none were aUowed to use jected. One woman who attemp- group, is made up mostly or
to conform to the intended use the phone . . . until after The ted to take tlie test was asked young people, coUege age, he
and agreements already in ef- Reporter phoned for George about obscure details of the said. "Some are very bnUiant;
feet with the city. Construction Laurent and he was aUowed to highway department; another some have interrupted then-
is under way on several -dwel- accept the caU. Other incoming was asked, "How many bubbles work on doctorates to spend a
Christmas packages for ser-lings there. calls helped to break the com- are there in a bar of soap?" year there. I got no impression
vicemen at overseas addresses The proposed new zoning or- munications ban, he said: Sen. . Another deterrent to Negro whatever of cracknottedness."
a patient.
CHRISTMAS PACKAGES
SHOULD BE MAILED NOW
uatinn -ivm-cpn* Tbo community to take out one of Onstedrs de- must be mailed not later than wiU comply with the present son went there in person and "moral character may be deter- speeding (whether or not they
S:rnSTedonPage6X fensive baefcs. December 10,-he said. law. contributed $10,000 bail. mined". Any qualified elector (Continued from Page Four)
Object Description
| Title | 1964-11-11; Saline Reporter |
| Date | 1964-11-11 |
| 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 |
