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ISM<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> ©bSctUrr<br />

Volume 8 Number 89<br />

•l<br />

Thursday, June 2, 1983<br />

50 Pages<br />

Twenty-Five Cents<br />

Prayers aren't working<br />

<strong>Dust</strong> <strong>dispute</strong> <strong>heats</strong> <strong>up</strong><br />

By Artene Funk*<br />

staff writer<br />

- Local officials are doing more than<br />

"praying for rain" as they continue<br />

looking for solutions to the township's<br />

dusty roads problem.<br />

The Wayne County Road Commission<br />

— citing declines in funding — has<br />

announced a drastic cutback on its applications<br />

of the dust-retardant calcium<br />

chloride on local gravel roads.<br />

In a jam-packed schedule, <strong>Canton</strong><br />

S<strong>up</strong>ervisor James Poo|e will meet today<br />

with the Wayne County Road Commission,<br />

with Wayne County Executive<br />

William Lucas and with officials from<br />

other townst<br />

ed by the cuts in chloriding.<br />

"By Friday, I hope to have a solution<br />

or a proposal, which I will announce at<br />

the (Township Board) meeting (next<br />

week)," Poole said. "Because it has to<br />

be resolved, one way or another."<br />

AT ISSUE is who is responsible for<br />

maintaining local gravel roads, and<br />

who should pay the expense for maintenance.<br />

Road commission spokesmen<br />

say they have funds to maintain only<br />

primary roads.<br />

Townships in Wayne County say they<br />

have neither the equipment nor the<br />

money to pay for chloriding.<br />

'Who is responsible?" Poole said.<br />

"The law says they (road commission)<br />

are. How come the county gets money<br />

to maintain (roads)? They don't have<br />

the money. I don't have the money."<br />

Wayne County commissioner Milton<br />

Mack, whose district includes <strong>Canton</strong>,<br />

has jumped into the controversy. Mack,<br />

who has been meeting with Poole and<br />

other local officials, has issued a chal-<br />

> "<br />

James Poole, <strong>Canton</strong> s<strong>up</strong>ervisor<br />

lenge to the politically and financially<br />

independent road commission to start<br />

chloriding Immediately, or explain why<br />

the job cannot be done.<br />

Mack also wants to see the road<br />

commission come under the junsdic-<br />

Uon of Wayne County Executive Wil<br />

liarrr Lucas.<br />

T think there has to be a better answer<br />

than praying for rain." Mack said.<br />

"They (road commission) have the<br />

money to give big pay raises to their<br />

employees and to keep jobs. The whole<br />

issue with the road commission is a<br />

matter of priorities."<br />

THE ROAD COMMISSION is funded<br />

through revenues from gasoline taxes<br />

and license plate fees While cities<br />

receive their funding directly, townships<br />

are under the road commission's<br />

jurisdiction.<br />

Wayne is the only Michigan county in<br />

Cured leukemia patient<br />

leads <strong>Canton</strong> blood drive<br />

By M.B. Dillon Ward<br />

staff writer<br />

Dick Folsom of American Red Cross, anticipating<br />

difficulty in coming <strong>up</strong> with the 1,000 pints of<br />

blood required daily by each of 75 area hospitals<br />

this summer, credits <strong>Canton</strong> Township's Mary<br />

Dingeldey with easing his task.<br />

Two years ago, the former leukemia patient<br />

founded <strong>Canton</strong>'s annual blood drive — slated this<br />

year for June 11 at <strong>Canton</strong> Township Hall — in an<br />

effort to "give something back" to blood donors<br />

who helped save her life.<br />

Dingeldey underwent a bone marrow transplant<br />

in 1981, and the experimental operation cured her<br />

of the malignant blood disease. The mother of three<br />

has had to give <strong>up</strong> her full-time job, but she's resumed<br />

her position as one of <strong>Canton</strong>'s movers and<br />

shakers.<br />

She founded the Children's Leukemia Foundation<br />

western Wayne chapter, which is sponsoring the<br />

blood drive along with her family, friends and <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Township. The new CLF chapter stages fundraisers<br />

throughout the year<br />

THE AREA'S BLOOD s<strong>up</strong>ply — especially low in<br />

June, July and August when schools are closed,<br />

auto plants are down and people take vacations —<br />

grows more acute as medicine becomes more'sophisticated.<br />

"Hospitals are constantly coming <strong>up</strong> with new<br />

ways to use the blood, and it's difficult for us to<br />

keep <strong>up</strong> with the demand," Folsom said.<br />

"A heart bypass operation, a lifesaving measure<br />

they didn't even have years ago, can use from five<br />

to 15 pints.<br />

"Hip replacements require more blood than any<br />

other type of operation Up to 60 pints of blood can<br />

be used<br />

which the road commission doesn't<br />

charge extra for chloriding of local dirt<br />

roads, said Irma Clark, assistant director<br />

of public information for the<br />

WCRC. The townships were given one<br />

year's notice about the cuts, she said.<br />

"In the past, we have been subsidizing<br />

that (chloriding) operation," Clark<br />

said. "When we have it (funds), we do<br />

It. When things start to dry <strong>up</strong>. there<br />

are no extra funds."<br />

Clark estimates the total chloriding<br />

cost for local roads at $500,000. In <strong>Canton</strong>,<br />

the cost would be $90,000, according<br />

to local estimates.<br />

The road commission will continue<br />

chloriding on the primary roads of<br />

WAm?h. Beck. Haggerty anSjoy, as often<br />

as necessary.<br />

<strong>Canton</strong>'s Township Board recently<br />

approved a. $4,200 expenditure for a<br />

one-time application of chloride on certain<br />

gravel portions of Sheldon. Lotz,<br />

Lilley and Palmer. Those areas were<br />

selected because many residents complained<br />

about dust creating health and<br />

traffic hazards, township officiate &aid<br />

According to Mack, other townships<br />

also will be hard-hit by the chloriding<br />

problem. These include Van Buren,<br />

Sumpter and Huron townships.<br />

S<strong>up</strong>ervisors in those communities indicated<br />

they might file a lawsuit if the<br />

Wayne County Road Commission fails<br />

to provide chloriding service. Mack<br />

said. The gro<strong>up</strong> also said they might<br />

take action questioning the formula under<br />

which gas taxes are allocated, he<br />

added.<br />

"I would prefer not to alter the funding<br />

formula," Mack said. VI think it's<br />

more efficient to do it in a central way<br />

— but only if it is done efficiently."<br />

"Our s<strong>up</strong>ply now is good, but it's not going to be<br />

getting any better." /<br />

Because the Detroit chapter of the American Red<br />

Cross is the third largest in the nation, pleas for<br />

help have come from flood- and storm-battered<br />

areas of the country where s<strong>up</strong>plies have been exhausted.<br />

Folsom said.<br />

See related editorial<br />

Page 10A.<br />

on<br />

EXIGIBLE TO give blood every eight weeks are<br />

most people between the ages of 17-65. Persons<br />

aged 66-70 may donate if given written permission<br />

from a physician.<br />

It will take about 4i> minutes for aonors to register,<br />

give a brief medical history and have their<br />

pulse, temperature, blood pressure and iron<br />

checked. The actual donation takes less than 10<br />

minutes, and creates about as much discomfort as a<br />

pinch in the skin just above the elbow.<br />

After a snack of juice and cookies, donors are<br />

free to leave. a<br />

About six weeeks later, donors will receive a Red<br />

Cross donor card giving their blood type.<br />

Prospective donors may make appointments between<br />

10 a.m. and 4 p.m. for the drive at 1150 S.<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Center Road by calling 981-5898 or 495-<br />

0 r 0fl<br />

-LF workers also will be signing <strong>up</strong> donors at<br />

V ; jers Thrifty Acres and K mart stores in <strong>Canton</strong>.<br />

LHngeldey hopes the drive, which falls during National<br />

Leukemia Week, will genefcte 100 pints of<br />

blood. 15 more than last year's total. It's a realistic<br />

Taking a break<br />

A psir of Csnton Cowboys, an under-14 soccer<br />

team, relax between games during the first-ever<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Soccer Invitational. The tournament,<br />

which included 98 teama, started Friday and fin-<br />

Mary Dingeldey<br />

BILL BRESLER/staff photographer<br />

goal because the drive is community-oriented, she<br />

said.<br />

"It's scary for some people to give blood, but I<br />

think it's different when people know who you are.<br />

Maybe it's a more personal thing when people can<br />

zero in on one person I knew all the people who<br />

donated last time."<br />

At the heart of Dingeldey's efforts this year are<br />

the seven persons in the Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong> area wbtf<br />

have leukemia. Dingeldey counsels several of them,<br />

as well as referrals from physicians in Michigan<br />

and Minnesota, her home state.<br />

Gallimore school robbed; 2 arrested<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> police have recovered more<br />

than $1,000 worth of equipment reported<br />

stolen in a break-in at Gallimore Elementary<br />

School early this week<br />

According to reports, burglars broke<br />

in through a gymnasium window shortly<br />

before 3 a.m. Monday. Gallimore is<br />

on Sheldon Road south of Joy.<br />

, who saw a<br />

from the school, said LL Larry Stewart<br />

of the <strong>Canton</strong> police department<br />

No damage was done to school property,<br />

Stewart said<br />

POLICE HAVE arrested an It-year<br />

old man and his 15-year-old com panloo.<br />

Both were released to their parents.<br />

pending formal charges, Stewart<br />

said. A 16-year-old youth also has been<br />

implicated. All three are <strong>Canton</strong> residents.<br />

Recovered Monday afternoon were<br />

an electric typewriter, calculator, tape<br />

Grass trimmer<br />

recorder, radio, microscopes and other<br />

science apparatus reported stolen' from<br />

the school A resident in the Hanford-<br />

Ridge area found the items stuffed in<br />

A 33-year-old Plymouth woman was<br />

seriously injured Sunday afternoon<br />

when she received an electrical shock<br />

from a grass trimmer '<br />

Apparently the woman's necklace<br />

touched the trimmer's connector (dug<br />

— causing the electric shock, according<br />

to police.<br />

As of Tuesday, Diane Harris of Mayflower<br />

Street was listed in stable condition<br />

at the intensive care unit of Oakwood<br />

Hospital.<br />

The report we're getting is that she<br />

is slert and coming along nicely," a<br />

hospital spokesman said<br />

About 5 p.m Sunday Harris was<br />

working la her backyard with an electric<br />

Toro grass trimmer, police said.<br />

Audrey Stump, a neighbor, told police<br />

she heard the grass trimmer stop<br />

sad looked out her window. Stump ssw<br />

Harris had fallen down<br />

Please turn to Page 5<br />

his storage shed, according to Stewart.<br />

Police used fingerprints from the<br />

items to identify the suspects. Stewart<br />

said.<br />

shocks woman<br />

.I'S husband, Steve, unplugged<br />

the extension cord to the trimmer and<br />

administered CPR until the fire department<br />

arrived, the report said<br />

"Stump said he ohaerved a metal<br />

chain that was around the vidtim victim's<br />

neck stuck to the connector plug."<br />

the report stated.<br />

Harris was taken to GakWood Hospital's<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Clinic and later tranferred<br />

to Oakwood Hospital in Dearborn.<br />

<strong>Artfest</strong><br />

Hnrrrttf<br />

BILL BRESLER/*l«tt ptotograpttar<br />

iahed with championship matches Sunday. The<br />

games were part of the dedication of Fiodin<br />

Park and <strong>Canton</strong>'s new recreation complex. For<br />

more on the tournament, pleaee turn to Page 1C.<br />

Students' art, music<br />

to bring pep to park<br />

A band concert in Kellogg Park tomorrow<br />

night will kick off Student <strong>Artfest</strong><br />

'83.<br />

Student <strong>Artfest</strong> "83, to be held Saturday,<br />

will feature art exhibits and performances<br />

of students of all ages in the<br />

Plymouth-Can ton community schools.<br />

The concert will begin at 7:30 p.m.<br />

Friday. It will feature the Plymouth<br />

Centennial Educational Park (CEP)<br />

concert band.<br />

The symphony band's senior concert<br />

will follow at 8 p.m. The senior concert<br />

will honor all graduating members of<br />

the band.<br />

Performed at'/rau p.m. wm be John<br />

Phillip Sousa's march, "Nobles of the<br />

Mystic Shrine;" Giovannini's "Chorale<br />

and Capriccio;" and Alfred Reed's "Jubiliant<br />

Overture."<br />

The symphony band will play a variety<br />

of selections played this past year,<br />

including Gustav Hoist's "The Planets"<br />

and selections from "No, No, Nanette,"<br />

by Vincent Youmans.<br />

In case of bad weather, the concerts<br />

will be held in the auditorium of Plymouth<br />

Salem High on Joy, west of <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Center Road<br />

STUDENT ARTFEST '83 will open<br />

the next day, beginning at 9 a.m. and<br />

running until 3:30 p.m.<br />

The artfest, now in its third year, is a<br />

what's inside<br />

Brevities<br />

6A<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Chatter<br />

2B<br />

Church<br />

7B<br />

Clubs In Action<br />

4B<br />

Crossword<br />

6E<br />

Entertainment . . . 9-12C<br />

Obituaries<br />

2A<br />

Opinion<br />

10A<br />

Spwft<br />

I-&C<br />

StroMer .<br />

tOA<br />

Suburban Life 1-5B<br />

The View<br />

1B<br />

Travel<br />

8C<br />

WSDP<br />

2A<br />

Classified . . . . Sec. D-€<br />

NEWSLINE .<br />

SPOffT&LINE<br />

459-2700<br />

991-2312<br />

display of student art work and performing<br />

talent in a day designed for enrichment<br />

and enjoyment for the entire<br />

family.<br />

Both public and non-public schools in<br />

the Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong> area are participating<br />

in the show It will feature visual<br />

arts ranging from watercolors,<br />

jewelry, pottery, Raku and metal work<br />

„ through performing arts involving<br />

band, orchestra, choral music, dance<br />

and drama.<br />

The culinary arts also will be represented<br />

with student-baked goods on display<br />

andfor purchase<br />

The event is free It is being funded<br />

by contributions from parent-teacher<br />

organizatons, clubs and individuals.<br />

This year's event has three cochairpersons.<br />

They are teachers Mike<br />

Chiumento, Karen Janer and Lynne<br />

Lonigro, all of West Middle School.<br />

"'We have more booths spoken for<br />

this year than ever before," said Dr.<br />

Mike Homes, assistant s<strong>up</strong>erintendent<br />

for instruction. "This will certainly be<br />

the biggest display ever.<br />

"The people involved are all very enthusiastic<br />

The day will be bright with<br />

sunshine and Kellogg Park again will<br />

be filled with the sounds and sights of<br />

students, teachers, pAtnts and residents<br />

enjoying a great time."<br />

"RENTED ALL<br />

THREE UNITS"<br />

Mad many, many ca*a« Ranted aM thraa<br />

umt». avan though a co<strong>up</strong>* or tha units<br />

wara unflnMhad. on tha nma day tha papar<br />

cama outr P McDonald axtramaly<br />

aattaftad wtth tha raaponaa of tha<br />

—ou—vw a tsesrwn AMamwtNTB TO<br />

•<br />

Rommm 6#r«<br />

One call<br />

does it all!<br />

591 - 0 9 0 0 * —<br />

l/se your MtsfrCmrd or Wsa


2A([P,C)<br />

OAF. Tnursaay, June 2. 1963<br />

Specialist works with parents of poor readers<br />

An important part of every child's<br />

education involves learning to read.<br />

While some children experience little<br />

difficulty reading, for others learning<br />

to read presents a major problem.<br />

Parents want to help their children<br />

during this difficult experience but often<br />

don't know where to begin, says<br />

Sandra Buike, a reading specialist who<br />

lives in Plymouth and maintains an office<br />

in Dearborn<br />

"Usually this occurs because parents<br />

don't know what they art dealing<br />

with." said Buike. "Often children who<br />

are having trouble with their reading<br />

or otner school work display disr<strong>up</strong>tive<br />

or inappropriate behavior, including<br />

withdrawal in the classroom and/or<br />

the home.<br />

"Parents, therefore, aren't certain if<br />

they are dealing with a behayior problem<br />

or a learning problem."<br />

Golf tournament<br />

The sixth annual Randy Williams<br />

Memorial Golf Tournament will be<br />

Saturday. Aug. 20, at Fellows Creek<br />

Golf Club in <strong>Canton</strong>.<br />

The tournament will be a benefit for<br />

a special fund set aside to pay for room<br />

and board of any Plymouth Centennial<br />

Educational Park (CEP) athletic team<br />

which advances to state championship<br />

play.<br />

HAVING SPENT 14 years working<br />

in various capacities with children and<br />

adults who have problems reading.<br />

Buike begins her work with a thorough<br />

diagnostic evaluation of the problem<br />

"A good diagnosis is very important.<br />

It is the diagnosis that determines<br />

reading strengths and weaknesses, and<br />

provides the basis for the design of the<br />

remedial work," said Buike.<br />

Following the evaluation, Buike and<br />

the parents discuss the test results. At<br />

this time a decision is made about the<br />

next course of action for the child.<br />

"Generally a reading problem is not<br />

the result of a single cause." she said.<br />

"Physical, psychological, home and<br />

school factors can influence'one's ability<br />

to read. Therefore, it is very important<br />

that the diagnostic evaluation look<br />

at the individual as a whole versus<br />

looking for reading deficiencies."<br />

The tournament originally was started<br />

as a benefit for the faunily of Randy<br />

Williams, a young man who died of<br />

cancer in his early 30s about five years<br />

ago, leaving a wife and child.<br />

Now the golf tourney is held in Williams'<br />

honor with money raised going<br />

to benefit CEP teams seeking a state<br />

title. In recent years the money also<br />

For the majority of disabled readers,<br />

Buike maintains, once the diagnostic<br />

evaluation has determined their particular<br />

reading strengths and weaknesses,<br />

a well-developed program based on the<br />

student's individual reading needs will<br />

in time result in reading proficiency<br />

and an increase in self-confidence.<br />

Parents often ask about the length of<br />

the remediation period and if the program<br />

will result in a "cure."<br />

"It is very difficult to answer these<br />

questions," said Buike. "There is research<br />

which suggests that a program<br />

of remediation or tutoring include a<br />

minimum of 50 instructional hours for<br />

improvement to be significant and lasting.<br />

"However. I think it is an individual<br />

matter. While you can't expect instant<br />

results after two or three sessions, one<br />

student may work with a tutor for 6 to<br />

to benefit champs<br />

has been used to help needy families in<br />

the Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong> community.<br />

The tournament will feature threeman<br />

scramble play, golf cart, dinner,<br />

refreshments, and prizes for a donation<br />

of $50 each. Tee times will be assigned.<br />

Fellows Creek is located on Lotz<br />

Road, one block east of 1-275 and north<br />

of Michigan Avenue in <strong>Canton</strong>.<br />

The committee planning the tourney<br />

10 weeks and make fantastic progress<br />

while another student may need-s<strong>up</strong>port<br />

services through high school and<br />

even college.<br />

"As for 'cured' — reading is a developmental<br />

process and our reading is<br />

contingent <strong>up</strong>on our experience with<br />

the world as a whole.<br />

"As we grow personally, experientially,<br />

professionally," said Buike, "our<br />

reading grows. "Cure' implies that<br />

reading is a technical art — simply the<br />

mastery of phonics, which of course, it<br />

isn't. Phonics or reading skills are a<br />

part of the reading process but they are<br />

just that, only a part of it."<br />

AFTER SEVEN YEARS as an elementary<br />

classroom teacher in two<br />

Michigan school districts, Buike left<br />

full-time teaching and enrolled in gradual<br />

studies at Michigan State Univer-<br />

«*ty-<br />

this year also is seeking businesses<br />

"which are willing to sponsor a hole.<br />

Any business sponsor may contact Larry<br />

Olson at 453-2434 or another committee<br />

planner<br />

Other members of the committee include<br />

Mike Patrick, Jo Humphries.<br />

Mike Kisabeth, and Chuck Olson, chairman.<br />

At MSU she majored in reading instruction<br />

and in research on teaching.<br />

She was a research intern for the Institute<br />

for. Research on Teaching in the<br />

College on Education and completed<br />

extensive research on how students and<br />

teachers interact in reading classrooms<br />

and how teacher decision-making influ- •<br />

ences the ways in which students are<br />

taught to read<br />

Upon completion of her doctorate,<br />

Buike assumed a position as an assistant<br />

professor at the University of<br />

North Carolina at Greensboro. There<br />

she taught courses on developmental<br />

and clinical reading, completed a study<br />

with parents of disabled readers, and<br />

published several articles.<br />

The research study completed while<br />

she was co-director of the university's<br />

reading clinic has proven beneficial in<br />

her work with parents of disabled readers,<br />

she said.<br />

"It was from this study that I discovered<br />

how important it is for me to work<br />

with the parents of disabled readers.<br />

Parents feel frustrated, very guilty,<br />

and sometimes angry at the situation.<br />

"The stress levels at home are particularly<br />

high. Helping parents to understand<br />

their child's problem, deal<br />

with their guilt and feelings of failure,<br />

and work with the school usually help<br />

ease the situation at home."<br />

As the mother of a third and fourth<br />

grader. Buike knows first-hand that<br />

even a minor learning problem can<br />

create tension in a family.<br />

"I think sometimes parents need to<br />

know that they are not the only ones<br />

with a child experiencing reading/<br />

learning problems. They need s<strong>up</strong>port<br />

— someone knowledgeable to talk<br />

with. They also need to learn techniques<br />

to cope with the situation and<br />

receive praise for their positive efforts."<br />

In December 1982, Buike resigned<br />

from her position at North Carolina<br />

and returned to her native Detroit. She<br />

presently is working on a private basis<br />

with children and adults in the greater<br />

Detroit area. She also has worked with<br />

teachers and principals in several area<br />

school districts since her return.<br />

Fun-filled<br />

keeps folks<br />

Members and friends of St. Thomas<br />

A Becket Catholic Church took advantage<br />

of the three-day Memorial Day<br />

weekend to throw a big party arvf i festival.<br />

The event, on the church grounds on<br />

Lilley near Cherry Hill, had a little bit<br />

of everything. It was the second annual<br />

spring festival for the church.<br />

There were plenty of carnival rides<br />

to thrill the kids, bingo, raffles, dancing<br />

Staff photos by Bill Brealer<br />

festival<br />

busy<br />

and video games. A Las Vegas<br />

lured pa trims who just couldn't<br />

the prospect of winning a bit of i<br />

Pancake lovers got, a chance to fill<br />

<strong>up</strong> on stacks of flapjacks at an all-youcan<br />

eat pancake breakfast.<br />

Patrons also had a chance to tap<br />

their toes to the music of the wellknown<br />

Red Garter Band, several other<br />

bands and the Centennial Dancers of<br />

Plymouth.<br />

ham to P/.im<br />

'! '<br />

J f itnAur<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 OitE<br />

These gleeful kids are having the time of their life. Riding the "Heart Flip" are Jason Frola and Frank Day, both 12.<br />

'<br />

lC)3A<br />

PROGRAM HIGHLIGHTS<br />

Thursday, Jane 2<br />

_• 11:40 a.m. — Good News from the<br />

Kiwanis: interview format.<br />

Friday. Jane 3<br />

• 6 p.m. — Album Playback with Jeff<br />

Robinson featuring Sheena Easton's"<br />

album,"Madness. Money & Music."<br />

• 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. — Adult contemporary<br />

music and baseball state tournament<br />

district play, if Salem or <strong>Canton</strong><br />

advance. Games to be broadcast starting<br />

at 10 a.m., 12:30 p.m.. and 3 p.m.<br />

Monday, Jane 6<br />

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Tuesday, Jose 7<br />

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Dissatisfaction with Omnicom<br />

sparks cable consortium plan<br />

By Gary M. Catee<br />

staff writer<br />

A cable television consortium in the Omnicom Cablevision area<br />

could become a reality in the near future as Plymouth Township<br />

asks communities to join the gro<strong>up</strong>.<br />

j<strong>Canton</strong> Township as well as Plymouth, Northville and Northville<br />

Township — all of which are served by Omnicom — will be requested<br />

to take part. -<br />

Plymouth Township decided in April to pursue a cable consortium.<br />

as well as hire an independent cable consultant.<br />

That action followed reports on Omnicom's service from a cable<br />

task force and the township attorney. Both reports suggested the<br />

cable company's performance could be improved.<br />

TUESDAY NIGHT, THE township board approved a proposed<br />

job description for a consultant and asked Township S<strong>up</strong>ervisor<br />

Maurice Breen to contact other Omnicom communities to join the<br />

consortium.<br />

The decision was based on the recommendation of a two-member<br />

committee — trustees Lee Fidge and Smith Horton — established<br />

to Investigate the hiring of a cable consultant<br />

Fidge and Hortoo recommended the consortium be established<br />

and a job description approved before a consultant is hired.<br />

In their report to the board, the two trustees listed a proposed<br />

job description and suggested it be passed onto the consortium for<br />

final approval<br />

INCLUDED IN THE proposed job outline were the following<br />

tasks:<br />

Collides head-on<br />

Car crash kills Plymouth<br />

A 26-year-old Plymouth man died in a head-on collision early<br />

Friday morning on MiU near East Middle School.<br />

Douglas G. Glover. 400 Plymouth Road, was pronounced dead at<br />

the scene by Community EMS paramedics. No one else was injured<br />

in the accident, according to police<br />

Glover was travelling north on Mill when his 1982 Toyota<br />

crossed the center lipe of traffic and struck an oncoming truck,<br />

Plymouth Lt Henry Berghoff said<br />

The driver of the track, 54-year-old Norman Boyle of Inkster,<br />

told police Glover's car was travelling at a "high rite of speed "<br />

Boyle attempted to stop when Glover's car crossed the line<br />

Who can resist the wheel of fortune? Tony Camilieri spins the wheel. Where it stops, nobody knows.<br />

• Prepare a comparative study of cable television services and<br />

prices in six to 10 southeastern Michigan communities<br />

• Prepare conclusions on whether Omnicom is providing subscribers<br />

with a reasonable service for a reasonable price.<br />

• Advise officials of precisely which aspects of cable service or<br />

pricing the community has regulatory authority over.<br />

• Recommend to the officials revisions to the cable ordinances<br />

in accordance with the conclusions.<br />

Fidge and Horton didn't recommend a consultant for employment,<br />

however. Horton said-he did have a list of consultants who<br />

are available.<br />

THE TWO TRUSTEES recommended a consultant be selected<br />

after the consortium completes the job description.<br />

"This is just the start," Fidge said.<br />

The consortium idea has been discussed by other communities in<br />

the past, however, action was never taken.<br />

Omnicom officials said they would"work with a consortium, yet<br />

warned the township that the company was responsible for overseeing<br />

the cable operation. The company views the role of a consortium<br />

as advisory, rather than regulatory.<br />

In discussing the consortium concept in April, Plymouth Township<br />

officials said the gro<strong>up</strong>'s work would be to oversee the cable<br />

operations and public access programming.<br />

There was some coocern expressed about a consortium in the<br />

past because each of the communities has a different cable orfli-.<br />

nances which outlines the responsibilities of the cable company<br />

The Walled Lake area operates with a cable consortium and has<br />

a consultant working with the gro<strong>up</strong>.<br />

f.<br />

man<br />

However, the car hit the left-front fender of the truck, Berghoff<br />

Glover, who was pinned in the car. sustained multiple injuries.<br />

Emergency personnel st the scene "couldn't find any vital signs,"<br />

Berghoff said. Police are investigating the cause of the accident.<br />

Glover's car didn't leave any skid marks on the pavement, causing<br />

police to believe he might have lost consciousness before the<br />

wreck because he apparently didn't attempt to stop.<br />

"We don't know where be was coming from or going to; however,<br />

his direction of travel may indicate he was heading home,"<br />

Berghoff said '<br />

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sbouki happen about June 6 or 7." he<br />

said. According to Fkam. the Wayne<br />

County Road CocmmasMB is renting the<br />

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"We win be parting the cars out at<br />

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CURRENTLY, i m^jiF aren't plans<br />

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however it's something Ficam a<br />

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"It wouid be nice to have loct-<strong>up</strong> in<br />

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We also are going to be looting at<br />

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said<br />

Currently the Livonia Police Department<br />

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Mon-ftac MThun i Fr, Mlpm<br />

Convicted murderer wins<br />

request for a new trial<br />

By Gary M. Catas<br />

staff writer<br />

Ronald J. Hartwig. convicted in the<br />

1981 murder of Stacey Ann Hurrelbrink,<br />

was granted a motion for retrial<br />

last week in Wayne County Circuit<br />

Court.<br />

The 33-year-old Plymouth man was<br />

sentenced to.life in prison last year for<br />

Hurrelbrink's bludgeoning death in the<br />

basement of the Old. Village Inn. 886 N.<br />

Mill Street.<br />

The retrial motion was granted<br />

Wednesday by Wayne Circuit Court<br />

Judge William J. Giovan The decision,<br />

made after two days of testimony, can<br />

be appealed by the Wayne County Prosecutor's<br />

Office.<br />

The prosecutor has 30 days to make<br />

a decision and reportedly is reviewing<br />

the case. A date for the retrial has not<br />

been set. Neither has selection of the<br />

court where the case would be heard.<br />

"The retrial motion was granted<br />

based on failure to use resgestae witnesses<br />

during the trial." said Susan<br />

Smith, who represented Hartwig during<br />

the retrial motion<br />

A resgestae witness is anyone with<br />

important information pertaining to<br />

the trial, said Smith, a member of the<br />

state's Appelate <strong>Public</strong> Defender Commission.<br />

"If they don't bring in a resgestae<br />

witness who would help the defense,<br />

you can get a retrial," she said.<br />

The witnesses who didn't testify during<br />

Hartwig's trial last year apparently<br />

have information pertaining to his<br />

whereabouts the morning of the murder<br />

"There was a great fluctuation in establishing<br />

the time of the crime." said<br />

Plymouth Police Lt. Robert Commire.<br />

Based on statements given to police,<br />

the time of the murder was set at about<br />

4:30 a.m. Aug. 23. 1981.<br />

"I guess now they are talking about<br />

the time of the murder reverting to<br />

around 12:30 a.m.." Commire said.<br />

During last week's hearing on the<br />

motion, the defense "produced people<br />

that said they had seen the defendant<br />

around 12:30 a.m.." he said.<br />

"We were aware of them, but they<br />

weren't relevant because we had established<br />

the time of the crime as later<br />

than 12:30," he said. _<br />

However, Smith said that wasn't the<br />

reason the witnesses were important.<br />

"It's not really a question about the<br />

time of the murder. It's more a matter<br />

of the credibility of a witness who said<br />

the defendant made certain statements<br />

to her at a certain time," Smith said.<br />

Police found Hurrelbrink's battered,<br />

partially clad body tucked in brush<br />

alongside railroad tracks near the hotel<br />

about 5:30 that morning.<br />

Hurrelbrink reportedly was going to<br />

spend the night on. a mattress in the<br />

hotel's basement. She was beaten to<br />

death with a hammer in the basement<br />

and then dragged outside the building.<br />

Police found Hartwig sleeping in a<br />

car parked behind the hotel later that<br />

morning, after receiving a phone tip<br />

saying he was responsible for the murder.<br />

The murder weapon (the hammer)-<br />

was found by police divers two weeks<br />

later, at the bottom of Wilcox Lake.<br />

Outstanding seniors sought<br />

The Michigan Office of Services to<br />

the Aging (OSA) and Michigan State<br />

Fair officials recently launched a twomonth<br />

search for outstanding older<br />

persons to nominate for Senior Citizen<br />

of the Year Awards.<br />

The awards, to recognize service and<br />

leadership, will be presented at the<br />

Michigan State Fair on Senior Citizens<br />

Day. Monday. Aug. 29.<br />

Applications for the awards have<br />

been distributed to senior organizations<br />

and agencies throughout the state. The<br />

deadline for submitting applications is<br />

Friday. July 22.<br />

"We got an early start on the campaign<br />

this year," said Olivia P. Maynarri<br />

flirwlnr of tho Hffi r,l<br />

to the Aging.<br />

"We wanted to include this activity<br />

as a part of our celebration of Older<br />

American Month. It's a way of paying<br />

tribute to older people who are vital<br />

and integral part of their community."<br />

According to state fair officials.<br />

"The awards process will operate<br />

much as it has in the past. This year,<br />

however, more of an effort will be<br />

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C a n t o n<br />

O b s e r u r r<br />

Published every Monday and Thursday<br />

by Observer & Eccentric Newspapers.<br />

36251 Schoolcraft. Livonia, Ml 48150<br />

Third-class postage paid at Livonia, Ml<br />

48151 Address all mail (subscription,<br />

change ot address. Form 3569) to P.O<br />

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HOME DELIVERY SERVICE<br />

Newaatand ^ ^py 25«<br />

Carrier . . . . . . . monthly. $1.75<br />

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All advertising published in the <strong>Canton</strong><br />

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advertising department. <strong>Canton</strong> Observer.<br />

461 S. Mam. Plymouth. Ml.<br />

48170 (313)459-2700 The <strong>Canton</strong> Observer<br />

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ad-takers have no authority to<br />

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Drive for<br />

100 pints<br />

of blood<br />

Continued from Page 1<br />

Because blood has many components,<br />

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she points out.<br />

Reaching Dingeldey's goal will take<br />

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C R A B<br />

A P P L E<br />

N 0 W<br />

6'-7" .. R^g. »25 # 15<br />

American Beauty<br />

C R A B A P P L E NOW<br />

6 "" 8 ' Reg '25 # 18<br />

F r a»t growsr, Large Double Red Flowers. BfOi2«-gr®en<br />

LEAVES<br />

N E W P O R T PLUM NOW<br />

8 '" 10 Reg. '40 # 25<br />

Hardy. Fast-grower<br />

Purple Leaves<br />

NOW<br />

10--12' Reg. *60 •40<br />

R O Y A L R U B Y C R A B<br />

B4 8 2--2W Reg '82.50<br />

E C T E M E Y E R<br />

W E E P I N G<br />

C R A B<br />

A P P L E<br />

6'-T , Purpto -red flowers<br />

- wees oooo i<br />

NOW<br />

•50<br />

NOW<br />

Reg '36 $ 27<br />

l-« WXK£ SUPPLCS LAST<br />

ANNUALS<br />

Most Flats $ 7.95<br />

ROSES $ i S 5<br />

Trays 79*<br />

Standard Patented Varieties Slightly Higher.<br />

We heve m good ootoction<br />

of PoronnMel<br />

Open: Mon-Sat<br />

Sun 4 MotMeys<br />

453-5500<br />

P L Y M O U T H<br />

N U R S E R Y<br />

Don't<br />

crack<br />

under<br />

stress<br />

You don't have to crack Ijnder stress, you know.<br />

• Because no matter what you've-tried to do about siress <strong>up</strong><br />

till now. the STRESS STOPPERS program can help you<br />

lH just six sessions of three hours each, you'll acquire the<br />

tools you need and learn how to<br />

• Identify stress<br />

• How it affects you<br />

a How to do something about it<br />

The STRESS STOPPERS program works Ask your neighbors<br />

and co-workers who've taken the program Or just ask the<br />

many companies and organizations who've chosen STRESS<br />

STOPPERS to help their employees with job-related stress<br />

When you've finished the STRESS STOPPERS program,<br />

you II have the skills you need to get a good gnp on your stress<br />

- and do ?omethmg about It. ~ -pr*<br />

All it takds is six sessions And the first one<br />

free.<br />

STRESS STOPPERS is sponsored in this area by the<br />

• Health and Lifestyle Center of<br />

For more information, call 876-2630<br />

FIND OUT MORE ABOUT STRESS STOPPERS<br />

AT A FREE INTRODUCTORY SESSION<br />

9900 ANN ARBOR ROAO<br />

7 MMm W*mt ot L275 • 7 WMt £ ot US 23<br />

NOW IN THE PLYMOUTH-CANTON AREA<br />

• 7 p.m., Thursday. June 9<br />

Plymouth Cultural Center<br />

525 Farmer (off Main Street)<br />

Attention Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong> residents Call our toll-free number<br />

1-900-482-2404 and ask for Extension 2630<br />

(STRESS STOPPERS Is a service of the FsirJane Health Services Corp.)<br />

Ybu've just been handed a prescription. You start to look<br />

forward to betier health. But what do you know about that<br />

drug? Do you understand what it is meant to do? Do you know<br />

how to take it? Medicines can have some side effects, and they<br />

have to be taken correctly. So, be sure to read instructions<br />

carefully, and don't hesitate to ask your doctor about:<br />

a When to take the medicine.<br />

Some drugs should be taken on full stomachs, some on empty<br />

stomachs, some in the morning, some before going to bed. "<br />

a How to take the medicine and how much.<br />

With water, with mflk or without anything? Should the dose be<br />

one or two spoonfuls or what?<br />

• What not to take with the medicine.<br />

Some medicines don't mix with alcohol! others shouldn't be<br />

nMxed with other drugs.<br />

a What side effects the drugs can<br />

„ . i cause.<br />

Medicines may produce a variety of other reactions. Not all •<br />

people will have the same side effects but you should know<br />

what the possibilities are. .<br />

There are many sources of information about prescription<br />

drugs. Ask your doctor or pharmacist.<br />

A mtssagi from the Food and Drug Adminutrahom For mon material about being an<br />

informed patient. urUe to: FDA. HFF.S8 RocknJIr. Md 208S7<br />

• KATHRYNJANUS<br />

Kathryn M. Janus, daughter of Patricia<br />

and Kenneth Janus of Provincial<br />

Court, <strong>Canton</strong>, was named to the dean's<br />

list for the fall semester at Eastern<br />

MichiganJUniversity. She is a freshman<br />

majoring in business.<br />

• ROBERT J. WILSON<br />

Airman<br />

Robert J.Wilson, son of<br />

Richard A. and Joan R. Wilson of Holbrook,-Plymouth,<br />

has been assigned to<br />

Keesler Air Force Base. Miss., after<br />

completing Air Force basic training.<br />

Wilson is a 1980 graduate of Plymouth<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> High School.<br />

• THERESE M. COONEY<br />

Pvt. Therese M. Cooney. daughter of<br />

James and Carole Cooney of Provincial<br />

Drive, <strong>Canton</strong>, has completed an Army<br />

administration course at Fort Jackson<br />

S.C.<br />

Students were trained in the preparation<br />

of military records and forms<br />

Instruction also was given in fundamentals<br />

of the Army filing system, typing<br />

and operation of office machines.<br />

Cflflnpy is a 19R1 grarinalp r>f Plymouth<br />

Salem High School.<br />

• KATHY J. MORROW<br />

Pvt. KathyvJ. Morrow, daughter of<br />

Charlie and D«-othy Morrow of Belleville<br />

Road, danton, has completed<br />

Army basic training at Fort Jackson.<br />

S.C. Morrow is a 1982 graduate of John<br />

Glenn High School in Westland.<br />

• JERI A. JAMES<br />

Airman Jeri A. James, daughter of<br />

Therese Kraft of Haggerty.,Plymout<br />

and Thomas Tomolak of Edmuntor^<br />

<strong>Canton</strong>, has graduated from the U.S.<br />

Air Force disbursement accounting/<br />

course at Sheppard Air Force Base.<br />

Texas.<br />

Graduates of the course received<br />

.{raiaing in. travel and military pay sys<br />

pletree, Plymouth, has completed<br />

training as an Army military police<br />

specialist under the one station unit<br />

training (OSUT) program at Fort Mc-<br />

Clellan, Ala.<br />

OS1JT is a 13-week course which<br />

combines basic training with advanced<br />

individual training in law, traffic conip<br />

reading and self-defense<br />

StoclC^ell is a 1982 graduate of Plymouth'<strong>Canton</strong><br />

High School.<br />

tems, and leave accounting procedures.<br />

James, a 1981 graduate of Plymouth<br />

Cant6n High School, is now serving at<br />

Little Rock Air Force Base, Ark.<br />

• DAVID G. STOCKWELL<br />

Pvt. David G Stockwell. son of Richard<br />

and Shirley Stockwell of<br />

Ma-<br />

• KELLY A. DALEY<br />

Air National Guard Airman Kelly A.<br />

Daley, daughter of Judith Daley of Arlington.<br />

<strong>Canton</strong>, has been assigned to<br />

Lowry Air Force Base. Colo., after<br />

completing Air Force basic training.<br />

Daley, a 1981 graduate of Plymouth<br />

Salem High School, is now receiving<br />

specialized training in the s<strong>up</strong>ply field.<br />

• DIAJVE ROUTSON<br />

Diane L. Routson, daughter of Mr.<br />

and Mrs. Donald Routson of Arthur,<br />

Plymouth, was named to the dean's list<br />

for the fall semester at North Texas<br />

State University. Denton. Tex.<br />

• 2 ARE INDUCTED<br />

Two Plymouth residents recently<br />

were inducted into Eta Chi, the Northern<br />

Michigan University chapter of Alpha<br />

Kappa Psi professional business<br />

fraternity.<br />

Laura Skrobecki, daughter of Jacquelyn<br />

and Richard Skrobecki of Sunset,<br />

Plymouth, is a junior<br />

majoring in marketing. Karen Koster,<br />

daughter of Marcia and Will<br />

Koster of 5 Mile, Plymouth, is a junior<br />

majoring in finance.<br />

• JEANNE CADY<br />

Jeanne M Cady of Plymouth is<br />

among those to earn associate degrees<br />

in spring commencement exercises at<br />

Ricks College, Rex burg, Idaho.<br />

• COURTNEY WARRICK<br />

Courtney B. Warrick, daughter of<br />

Mr. and Mrs. Woodward Warrick of W.<br />

Ann Arbor Trail, Plymouth, palced second<br />

in the 6th Singles of the Old Dominion<br />

Athletic Conference Women's Tennis<br />

Championships with an 11-5 record<br />

She also placed second in the 3rd Doubles<br />

with a 6-3 record. She is a<br />

freshamn at Sweet Briar College in<br />

Sweet Briar, Va., and a graduate of<br />

Greenhills School.<br />

• KAREN KOSTER<br />

Karen Koster. daughter of Marcia<br />

and Wilmer Koster of 5 Mile. Plymouth.<br />

nas been inducted into the Northern<br />

Michigan University chapter of the<br />

Financial Management Assoication<br />

Honor Society. She is a senior majoring<br />

in accounting and finance.<br />

• DAVID BURCON<br />

David Burcon of <strong>Canton</strong> is a member<br />

Please turn to Page 8B<br />

brevities<br />

Continued from Paoe 6<br />

'ANOREXIA SUPPORT GROUP<br />

An Anorexia "Nervosa/Bulimia and Associated<br />

Disorders S<strong>up</strong>port Gro<strong>up</strong> meets Mondays 7:30-9:30<br />

p.m. in Classroom 8 of St. Joseph Mercy Hospital<br />

EducaUon Center at 5301 E. Huron Drive, Ann Arbor.<br />

For informaUon, call 397-1986 or 973-9700.<br />

• YMCA AEROBIC FITNESS CLASSES<br />

Aerobic fitness classes are offered continuously<br />

at Starkweather Elementary School, Plymouth.<br />

The six-week program is sponsored by Plymouth<br />

Community Family YMCA. Price is $20 for members<br />

and $30 for non-members. For information,<br />

call 453-2904.<br />

• COLONY SWIM CLUB .<br />

Colony Swim Club is accepting application for<br />

new memberships. For more information, call the<br />

membership chairman at 455-3391.<br />

• PAID WORK EXPERIENCE<br />

Growth Works, a non-profit community service<br />

agency serving Plymouth and <strong>Canton</strong>, offers paid<br />

work experience opportunities and job search for<br />

those 18-21 living in western Wayne County (excluding<br />

the cities of Livonia, Detroit and Dearborn).<br />

For information on job enrollment, call 455-4093.<br />

• CHARITY COOKIE DRIVE<br />

The Western Wayne County Xlhapter of Michigan<br />

Leukemia Foundation is sponsoring a cookie drive<br />

to cover the cost of research and paUent financing<br />

in the cure and treatment of'allied blood diseases *<br />

The cookies, in a Currier and Ives container, are $6<br />

per tin. For information, call Jean Chakrabarty at<br />

455-1077 or Mary Dingeldey at 459-0509. The Western<br />

Wayne County Chapter is at 51140 Geddes, <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Township.<br />

• PARTY BRIDGE<br />

A party bridge gro<strong>up</strong> meets at 1 p.m. Thursdays<br />

in the Plymouth Cultural Center, 525 Farmer. Play<br />

usually ia rnmplpffri hy 4 p m ——<br />

• HAPPY HOUR ^<br />

The Senior Gro<strong>up</strong> meets noon to 4 p.m. Wednesdays<br />

In the Plymouth Cultural Center. 525 Farmer,<br />

for card playing. For information, contact Plymouth<br />

Recreation Department at 455-6620.<br />

^ Nothing Runs<br />

Like<br />

a Deere<br />

NEW REAR-TINE TILLER<br />

New 820 Til Id nas<br />

c0mrr*rc>al-tyc>« 8-lp<br />

eng.?* and 22nnch<br />

wioih Select sanda'O<br />

or ccurye'rwat.ng Im*<br />

aclo?„gepe-xi"V Q"<br />

to,i co'xj.i'ors Heavydot*<br />

pea'-iype wan«-<br />

fruss'Of wfi * to»w»'d<br />

speeds p-'us -everse<br />

R®0<br />

•1495 00<br />

Save<br />

MOO 00<br />

'1395-<br />

NEW DELUXE 21-INCH MOWERS<br />

8a va<br />

«35 M<br />

on<br />

Rear<br />

Baofler<br />

FOu« moM't — tXJtntype<br />

and sej


A<br />

Woman<br />

trimming<br />

shocked<br />

grms<br />

K year^ lym Uth woman was<br />

° senously injured Sunday after-<br />

311 eleclrical<br />

Wp",i r '<br />

sh «* { m a grass trimmer"<br />

y<br />

.1 " T 5 oecklace touched the trimmer s connector<br />

plug causing the electric shock, according to police.<br />

° iane HarriS ° f May* 10 Street was listed in stable<br />

condition at the intensive care unit of Oakwood HospitaL<br />

a JSEESSESf' u " at she * a,ert and ni | »"<br />

•JIS&zjesjzssis** m her<br />

a<br />

0,« AUdr^ Stur "P' neighbor, told police she heard the grass trimmer<br />

»] *<br />

453-4628<br />

-Refreshments<br />

348-3730<br />

•74 W Ann Arbor Rd<br />

PLYMOUTH<br />

7410<br />

Schoolcraft College district<br />

The Schoolcraft College District includes the K-12 districts of<br />

Clarenceville. Garden City, Livonia, Northville. Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong> and a<br />

small portion of Novi.<br />

- College board elections are held in odd-numbered years at the same<br />

time as local school board elections. The Schoolcraft board has seven<br />

members, all elected at large.<br />

Schoolcraft trustees regularly meet once a month and may hold special<br />

meetings, particularly during the budget season and during labor<br />

negotiations. They serve without pay.<br />

Regular meetings start at 8 p.m. the fourth Wednesday of the month in<br />

the board room of the G^ote Administration Building, 18600 Haggerty,<br />

Livonia.<br />

and lifelong learning." He addedthiT"!<br />

fully subscribe to the presintjedmiasion<br />

of Schoolcraft College — an educational,<br />

cultural and recreational center<br />

dedicated to meeting the challenges<br />

of a changing society."<br />

BRYAN GRAHAM, 20, of Livonia is<br />

a student at the University of Michigan-Dearborn<br />

majoring in international<br />

studies and systems engineering. He<br />

offers to bring a "student perspective"<br />

to the Schoolcraft board.<br />

1. "I have never been a student at<br />

Schoolcraft, and I have no conflict of<br />

interest. I have used the physical education<br />

building and library. Schoolcraft<br />

has a very good library."<br />

2. "I see Dr. Cox's point. I don't<br />

things will change . . . If people feel<br />

threatened<br />

Dy Livonia, that's a legftimate<br />

concern." '<br />

3. Forum leaders "were preocc<strong>up</strong>ied<br />

with economics" after striking in 1980.<br />

"They asked, 'What would you do for<br />

THtRZ<br />

SALCr<br />

GOING C~ M<br />

f**fvt*rfrZ:rriitrii<br />

ciassified<br />

ads<br />

•<br />

the faculty?' - along those lines."<br />

Graham also found them interested in<br />

a fine arts building and how Schoolcraft<br />

would coordinate its efforts with<br />

Livonia. "I don't hold out a lot of hope"<br />

for getting.their endorsement.<br />

HARRY GREENLEAF. 46. of Livonia<br />

has been chairman of the board for<br />

four years and is seeking his second<br />

six-year term. He is a s<strong>up</strong>ervisor in organization<br />

planning and salary administration<br />

for the central staffs of Ford<br />

Motor Co. Greenleaf is also a former<br />

two-chairman of the^End-Oohgressional<br />

District Republican organization.<br />

1. Greenleaf ran for the board in<br />

1975 and was elected in '77 but was not<br />

otherwise involved with the college. He<br />

taught math Dart-time in an npetntn<br />

New York College and more recently<br />

taught personnel management at Henry<br />

Ford Community College.<br />

2. He advocates the "Delta plan."<br />

whereby trustees would be nominated<br />

COUPON<br />

We'd like to get<br />

to know you. .<br />

INFLATION<br />

FIGHTING COUPON<br />

HAIRCUT. SHAMPOO AND BLOW DRY STYLE<br />

HUB<br />

P-ECTROLYsis]<br />

CONSULTATION<br />

ION YOUR FIRST VISIT»<br />

412 N MAIN ST PLYMOUTH 459-3,3 30<br />

A S&le Evmryonm Understand*<br />

1 /2 OFF<br />

Every Piece of Fine Furniture<br />

a! Tenpenny's<br />

Over stocked - Must move floor<br />

samples<br />

Otter limited to In alock furniture<br />

(no special orders)<br />

Offer good only on furniture pur<br />

chased days of sale<br />

Cannot apply to prior seles<br />

4 Days Only<br />

THurs., Fri., Sat. & Sun.<br />

JUNE 2-5<br />

Soiaa • Ch*u* • Lamp* • Tablaa<br />

Bedding • Lota Mora<br />

Many laawea M*aa • All lop quality funuture<br />

TENPENNY<br />

Interiors<br />

J<br />

42951 W 7 Mile<br />

(in Highland L^tee Shopping Genie<br />

miles W<br />

Northville • 34S-7174<br />

Rainbow<br />

By Mallin.<br />

Mesa<br />

5 PIECE DINING GROUP<br />

N O W<br />

$ 229<br />

Quantities Limited<br />

Mon. • Fri. 10-4:30. Set 10-S, Sun. 12-4<br />

"THE SUN IS ALWAYS SHMINO OVER CORN WELL POOL A PATIO<br />

N T<br />

3300 Pontiec Trail<br />

' ANN AMOR<br />

from equal-sized sub-districts but run<br />

at-large. "It's not ideal or perfect, but<br />

it is tested, and it has been <strong>up</strong>held by<br />

the S<strong>up</strong>reme Court." Greenleaf said the<br />

Schoolcraft board has been sensitive to<br />

the needs of Garden City and other<br />

communities. They have bad "input" if<br />

not direct representation. "If I had to<br />

depend on the Livonia vote, I wouldn't<br />

have been elected."<br />

3. The Faculty Forum seemed to<br />

have "a set of questions for each candidate."<br />

He sensed they wanted "a more<br />

participative style" of management.<br />

MYRON KASEY, Northville, has not<br />

appeared at a candidates' forum, s<strong>up</strong>plied<br />

a biography or picture.<br />

ROSINA RAYMOND, of Livonia has<br />

taught foreign languages and genealogy<br />

in a variety of educational institutions,<br />

has been active in the Livonia <strong>Library</strong><br />

Commission and Democratic politics,<br />

and is seeking her third six-year<br />

term.<br />

"I've known the college for 22<br />

years." she said. "We have added the<br />

wonderful Women's Resource Center.<br />

10% SENIOR<br />

CITIZEN DISCOUNT<br />

Bitt's<br />

Greenhouse<br />

Free Flash-CS201<br />

W/Yashica FXD Chrome<br />

W/50mm F2.0<br />

s 199.95<br />

FX3-5mm F2.0<br />

GSN-Range Finder w/case<br />

Auto Focus 5a w/case<br />

Contax 139 Winder<br />

Yashica FXD Winder<br />

MF2 35mm Camera w/case<br />

(P.C)®A<br />

We are going to the people — Garden<br />

City, Northville, Plymouth-<strong>Canton</strong>. We<br />

are growing; we are solvent; we have a<br />

balanced budget."<br />

1. Her work with Schoolcraft began<br />

with two campaigns for its founding<br />

and a millage campaign. "I was involved<br />

in all of those campaigns. I did<br />

not win my first one, either," she said<br />

of an unsuccessful bid before her 1971<br />

victory.<br />

2. "Livonia has not dominated"<br />

Schoolcraft, she said, noting that prior<br />

to reapportionment, the Plymouth<br />

school district had half the Schoolcraft<br />

seats. She s<strong>up</strong>ported a smaller district<br />

reapportionment plan.<br />

Raymond also strongly s<strong>up</strong>ported a<br />

nine-member board, a system whereby<br />

smaller K-12 districts would have a<br />

better chance of placing candidates on<br />

the Schoolcraft board. She added. "I<br />

am willing to look at the Delta plan<br />

again."<br />

3. She had not yet been interviewed<br />

by the Faculty Forum at the time the<br />

question was asked.<br />

BEDDING PLANTS<br />

SPECIAL<br />

PERENNIALS<br />

• Geraniums • Rose Bushes ..<br />

• GarcteFrseeas«Beading Plants<br />

• Vegetable Plants* Herbs<br />

• Hanging Baskets<br />

SUN LOVING ANNUALS<br />

SS-00 per flat<br />

SHADE LOVING ANNUALS<br />

$7-00 per flat<br />

DADS & GRADS<br />

N o r t h vllle Camera<br />

Presents<br />

CONTAX<br />

Factory<br />

46855 FIVE MILE ROAD<br />

(Between Sheldon & Beck Road)<br />

453-4712<br />

HOURS:<br />

Open 7 daya 9 am to 8 pm<br />

Demo<br />

Y2VSHICA<br />

^—Saturday, June 4,10 a.m. to ?<br />

Come in and See Full Product Line<br />

Free Flash TLA 20<br />

With any Com tax Body<br />

Contax 139 with Ziess 50mm F1.7<br />

s 349.95<br />

•139.95<br />

i 99.95<br />

*139.95<br />

>99.95<br />

>64.95<br />

>64.95<br />

Northville Camera<br />

105 E. Main St. • Northville<br />

Daily 9-6, Fridays 9-7<br />

OASIS<br />

FOLD<br />

BAG SALE<br />

Browning "Nylon"<br />

$25"<br />

Wilson jti^htweigtit<br />

Hot-Z lots of Pockets<br />

«37*» OUTS<br />

RAIN<br />

SUITS<br />

by Duckster<br />

$29"<br />

Men's "Pullover<br />

Jackets *18 95<br />

GOLF SHIRTS<br />

by E. Benedict • 1 2 "<br />

NOVELTY<br />

SWEATERS<br />

Reg.<br />

$ 33°°<br />

39500 FIVE MILE ROAD<br />

(Between I-27S end Hegperty)<br />

ANDY BEAN<br />

or<br />

BETH DANIELS<br />

349-0105<br />

GOLF CENTER<br />

3 PUTT PRO SHOP<br />

WILSON CLUB SALE<br />

3 Woods<br />

8 Irons<br />

GOLF SHOE<br />

SALE<br />

E. Johnson<br />

•39"<br />

Doxtef ^Lesther"<br />

$ggts<br />

Dexter "Leather* '36"<br />

Sizes 5-10:7-14 LADIES Narrow LI 4 Wida Widths<br />

JACKETS $21*9<br />

Reg.'30<br />

HOGANHATS *5 M<br />

MENS "ETONC SOCKS<br />

6Prfor*14"<br />

420-4653<br />

JoVt 420-GOLF


- I<br />

ft<br />

j :<br />

[UL<br />

GTanton ©bseruer<br />

461 S Mam<br />

Plymouth. Ml 48170<br />

(3-13) 459-2700<br />

Marybeth Di^on Ward editor<br />

Nick Sharkey managing editor<br />

Dick iaham general manager -<br />

Dan Chovanec advertising director<br />

Frad Wright circulation director<br />

a-dw^TCTTof<br />

Suburban Communications Corp.<br />

Philip Power chairman of the board<br />

Richard Aginian president<br />

opinion<br />

10A(C)<br />

. O&E Thursday. June 2. 1983<br />

Former leukemic patient brings hope to others<br />

Persons who donate blood Wednesday, June 11, at<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Township Hall may be a pint low temporarily.<br />

but they're likely to be high on life, if only for a<br />

while. That's if they meet blood drive organizer<br />

Mary Dingeldey. also co-chairwoman of <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Township's sesquicentennial committee and onetime<br />

candidate for township trustee.<br />

A long-time'<strong>Canton</strong> resident, Dingeldey recently<br />

hovered near death in a battle with leukemia, a<br />

cancer of the blood-forming tissues. The mother of<br />

three underwent a bone marrow transplant operation<br />

given only a 50-percent chance of success<br />

Without the operation, she would have-Jived three<br />

years, doctors predicted.<br />

The experimental procedure involved extracting<br />

marrow (blood-producing material) from her sister's<br />

hip bone and introducing it into Dingeldey's<br />

blood.<br />

THE TRANSPLANT worked<br />

Dingeldey is cured of leukemia — just as she'd<br />

planned to ber And the Minnesota native became a<br />

medical case study on overcoming the odds and<br />

maintaining a positive attitude.<br />

During the darkest of the 39 days Dingeldey spent<br />

hospitalized in an isolation ward.— when her husband<br />

Jake's heart rose and mostly sank along with<br />

Tim<br />

Richard<br />

As our parks<br />

Hose funding,<br />

we lose value<br />

I • "Do you ever have the urge to spend some time<br />

out-of-doors, maybe counting a few wolves, plant-<br />

' ing some trees or patrolling wilderness.<br />

I "If you have some free time, you may be able to<br />

do just that by volunteering to work on National<br />

Forests." Last year, says the handout. 821 volunteers<br />

performed work valued at nearly $722,000 in<br />

, the eastern National Forests.<br />

, They worked as campground hosts, s<strong>up</strong>plying information<br />

to campers and cleaning <strong>up</strong>; issuing<br />

j burning permits; assisting in archeological work;<br />

and maintaining trails. "Among those who cfonate<br />

their time are students, retirees, professionals,<br />

- teachers and the unemployed."<br />

ANOTHER ITEM from the mail: The state Department<br />

of Natural Resources is seeking volunteer<br />

state forest campground hosts.<br />

"Volunteer hosts receive a free campsite and are<br />

exected to stay at least three weeks at one forest<br />

campground . . . giving campers information about<br />

t the camp, rules and area, assisting in emergencies,<br />

notifying the forest manager of any problems and<br />

helping keep the grounds neat."<br />

Yet another item: The Oakland County Parks and<br />

Recreation Commission has helped set <strong>up</strong> a Parks<br />

Foundation It will accept gifts of money and land<br />

». for the expansion.of Oakland County's parks.<br />

TWO RELATED items from Wayne. County<br />

round out the sampling.<br />

The county executive's office sought and organized<br />

volunteers from the western suburbs to clean<br />

<strong>up</strong> Edward Hines Parkway, the 20-mile belt of<br />

• parkland along the Middle Rouge River That oper-<br />

| ation, the first of its kind since the birth of the envi-<br />

| ronmental movement in the early 1970s, was conj<br />

ducted last weekend.<br />

Meanwhile^ the Wayne County Road Commission,<br />

which operates the parks system wifh mnnty g? n -<br />

T" eraTTuhds, is complaining that it may have to close<br />

I down the parks after the Fourth of July. It's running<br />

out of money.<br />

Parks s<strong>up</strong>erintendent Ed Mika told a County<br />

Commission committee that only a few years ago<br />

the commission used to appropriate S3 million to $4<br />

million to operate the parks That was cut to 91 25<br />

million in 1981. The entire 1983 budget for Wayne<br />

County parks is $950,000, and that is the sum which<br />

- will be entirely spent by the Fourth of Jbly<br />

| VERY CLEARLY we can see some patterns.<br />

One pattern is that folks who make their livings<br />

running parks have all been attending the same<br />

seminars and are all looking to the public to volunj<br />

teer to make parks and campgrounds nice.<br />

The second pattern is that government at all levels<br />

is reducing its funding of recreation. The Na-"<br />

Uonal Forests are run by the U.S. Department of<br />

I Agriculture Just how the fellows lh Washington can<br />

afford a 10 percent real increase in the arms budget<br />

— and yet ask students and unemployed folks to<br />

volunteer for National Forest jobs — is quite beyond<br />

me.<br />

In Michigan, we know where bigger and<br />

are going<br />

to what is e<strong>up</strong>hemistically termed "social eervicea"<br />

Parks should be for everyone, rich or poor, young<br />

or old. We shouldn't have to pay ever increasing<br />

feea to enjoy them Nor should we ask students facing<br />

ever-higher tuitions and the jobless to work for<br />

nothing. • -<br />

Our governmental<br />

priorities screwed op<br />

budget makers have their<br />

Dingeldey's all-telling blood count — a sign hung in<br />

her room demanding that "pessimistic people<br />

leave."<br />

"I had to kick out a co<strong>up</strong>le of nurses," said the<br />

spirited Dingeldey, who owes less to luck than to<br />

pluck.<br />

"And when my parents and my father-in-law<br />

came to visit, I spent most of the time cheering<br />

them <strong>up</strong>."<br />

CONFRONTING DEATH has changed Dingeldey<br />

in one way, she said.<br />

"I think more of today than of tomorrow. I appreciate<br />

today more than the average person.<br />

Dingeldey's spunk is contagious.<br />

When she decided to "give something back" to a<br />

gro<strong>up</strong> that helped her throughout her battle with<br />

leukeumia — the Southfield-based Children's<br />

Leukemia Foundation, (CLF) — friends and family<br />

members rallied around her.<br />

They founded a CLF chapter in western Wayne<br />

County nearly two years ago. Thai chapter now has<br />

30 members. The CLF chapter recently added a<br />

new member, a 17-year-old <strong>Canton</strong> high school<br />

student who has leukemia.<br />

WHILE THE GROUP organizes garage sales and<br />

car washes to raise money, the bulk of its efforts<br />

goes towards staging the Red Cross blood drive.<br />

m /S<br />

r:<br />

jointly sponsored with the Dingeldey family and<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Township.<br />

The only such community wide effort in <strong>Canton</strong>,<br />

Dingeldey's enterprise has been surprisingly successful<br />

in just two years.<br />

"YOU GET the feeling that a failed Dingeldey<br />

project is the exception.<br />

Mary "believes in P.M.A. — that stands for posi-"<br />

tive mental .attitude," said Lori Chakrabarty, 20,<br />

who with Dingeldey's 17-year-old daughter Carol,<br />

has placed nearly 200 calls' to blood donors.<br />

fMl<br />

001*<br />

THERE'S A 7-percent chance of Dingeldey's disease<br />

recurring, and she's likely to suffer eventually<br />

from arthritis and cataracts.<br />

Stiff doses of radiation and chemotherapy damaged<br />

her sense of equilibrium — possibly a permanent<br />

condition — and temporarily destroyed her<br />

body's immune system.<br />

While Dingeldey builds <strong>up</strong> the anti bodies needed<br />

to fight infection, she'll be unable to return to her<br />

executive secretary's job at a local industrial firm<br />

or resume her regular attendance at township<br />

board meetings.<br />

t<br />

But the daughter-in-law of one former township<br />

s<strong>up</strong>ervisor. <strong>Canton</strong>'s Phillip Dingeldey, and the<br />

daughter of another, Victor Zeiher, Dingeldey's aspirations<br />

— political and otherwise — have hardly<br />

dimmed. • . -<br />

With Omnicom's Suzanne Skubick, Dingeldey is<br />

organizing <strong>Canton</strong>'s 1984 150th anniversary celebration.<br />

And you can look for her to declare her<br />

candidacy for public office-as soon as she's physically<br />

able.<br />

"I LIKE having input into new ordinances. I like<br />

this township, and 1*4 like to keep involved," said<br />

Dingeldey.<br />

For now, other activities command Dingeldey's<br />

attention.<br />

She and her friends are writing a book on how<br />

leukemia shattered their lives, and how they<br />

learned to cope with the specter of death, the painful<br />

stages of the disease, treatment and side effects.<br />

But still another project ranks at the top of<br />

Dingeldey's list. Dingeldey is working to establish<br />

Michigan's first bone marrow unit — a newly developed,<br />

lifesaving device for leukemia patients —<br />

and already has put key medical experts in touch<br />

with each other.<br />

Odds are thar Dingeldey's determination, contagious<br />

effervescence and "knack for overcoming obstacles<br />

will get the job done — and hundreds more<br />

will have been helped by Mary Dingeldev.<br />

M.B. Dillon Ward<br />

- Summer is challenging for teen-agers<br />

With the coming of June our collective attention<br />

shifts to youths — especially teen-agers. June is a<br />

time for graduations, parties and the search for<br />

summer jobs.<br />

Unfortunately, June also has a darker side. It's a<br />

time for teen-age pranks, unemployment and alcohol-related<br />

deaths.<br />

An example of a harmful prank was the recent<br />

defacing of Adat Shalom Synagogue in Farmington<br />

Hills. According to police, three teen-agers spray<br />

painted swastikas, racial epithets and obscenities<br />

on the synagogue's outer walls. Sidewalks and nearby<br />

street signs also were vandalized<br />

GRADUATION PARTIES also present some<br />

unique June problems. The most serious concern is<br />

the abuse of alcohol.<br />

Approximately 10,000 persons between 15-24<br />

years old die exery year after alcohol-related traffic<br />

accidea&^fl a recent survey, 50 percent of high<br />

school seniors admitted that they drink in cars. Obviously,<br />

the chance for a tragedy is great when alcohol<br />

and automobiles are combined.<br />

Teen-age parties result in other problems. Often<br />

they become too large and disorderly and result in<br />

trespassing in neighbors' yards, littering and excessive<br />

noise. , -<br />

Some help is being offered in the area of teen-age<br />

parties and drinking. For one thing, the legal age<br />

for drinking in Michigan has been raised to 21.<br />

Nick<br />

Sharkey<br />

Adults who permits teen-agers to drink at parties in<br />

their home assumes a liability risk for any tragedy<br />

that may-result.<br />

Several local organizations are conducting aggressive<br />

anti-drinking-and-driving programs.<br />

Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD) has active<br />

gro<strong>up</strong>s in both Oakland and Wayne counties.<br />

West Bloomfield Youth Assistance has sponsored<br />

several programs to alert adults to the dangers of<br />

teen-age substance abuse. The most recent was a<br />

"Let's Avoid an Epidemic" program which attracted<br />

400 persons.<br />

In addition, police agencies provide helpful advice<br />

for those planning parties.<br />

Among their suggestions are:<br />

1. An adult should be present during the entire<br />

party. Do not depend on a high school senior or college<br />

student to control hi* peers .<br />

2. The party should be by invitation only. Avoid<br />

"open houses" where anyone who hears of a party<br />

can drop in.<br />

3. Inform neighbors before the party.<br />

4. Make sure the party stays within the confines<br />

of your yard.<br />

ALONG WITH —summer comes teen-agers<br />

searching for jobs. With a state unemployment rate<br />

of 14.9 percent, not toe many jobs are available.<br />

The 25,000 jobs created through the state's new<br />

Youth Corps"plan will help only a limited number of<br />

teen-agers. Youth Corps will pay the minimum<br />

wage of $3.35 per hour for youths to clean roadsides<br />

and parks and 'work in land and conservation proj- -<br />

ects.<br />

But what about other teen-agers? Many local<br />

governmental units run job-referral centers. They<br />

should be contacted.<br />

Teens willing to u«e_a little creativity can often<br />

find their own jobs. There are usually neighborhood<br />

lawns that need to be cut and trees that* require<br />

trimming.<br />

Most golf courses iace a serious shortage in finding<br />

male and femalet^ddies.<br />

Jobs are available Jor teens willing to work to<br />

find them. — .<br />

ADIJLTS SHOULD not fear teen-agers as they<br />

contemplate June. Properly directed, teen-agers<br />

add zest and vitality to a community. They are one<br />

°f our greatest resources. I<br />

But that requires that each of us take a personal<br />

interest in the well-being 6f youngsters, even if<br />

they are not our own children.<br />

This June season should be a time for celebration,<br />

not regret.<br />

Stroller goes back to school for a day<br />

Every now and then as he travels along the journalistic<br />

highways The Stroller takes a side trip<br />

down Memory Lane to' recall some of the quirks of<br />

the editors for whom he has worked during the past<br />

half century — and they were colorful chaps.<br />

The first of these unusual characters was old<br />

Charlie Weiser, the last of the brown derby fraternity<br />

and the editor who started The Stroller on a<br />

career as a columnist.<br />

This was ba^fcjn the Pennsylvania Dutch country,<br />

and he didn't nfesitate to lay down some unusual<br />

rules. For instance, the first advice he gave the<br />

budding columnist was. "Forget there is a capital I<br />

on your typewriter Never use the perpendicular<br />

pronoun, and here's why. No one gives a damn about<br />

what you think. You. write about what others think."<br />

This sounded plausible. But be continued. "And<br />

always have someone<br />

your Mlumn<br />

By that I mean you should quote people But be sure<br />

you quote them correctly These quotes will give<br />

life to your column "<br />

From that day to.this, the Stroller has adhered<br />

strictly to that advice, and he has found it an ideal<br />

plan to follow.<br />

YEARS-LATER, when he arrived in Detroit*as a<br />

rookie on the metropolitan paper, he met head-on<br />

j the stroller<br />

L w,w.<br />

'*• Edgar<br />

with some other editors with unusual quirks<br />

The first of these "big-time" editors — M.F<br />

Drukenbrod — advised him that the rule on the<br />

Free Press, especially in the sports department,<br />

was never to use the word "over" when writing unless<br />

you are writing about someone jumping over an<br />

obstacle. Never use the word to write about a<br />

crowd, with an expression such as - over 3 ooo p*n.<br />

pie attended, etc " "You must write more than '<br />

That was a help But one of the real puzzlers<br />

came a bit later when a new sports editor, Ralston<br />

Goss, took charge. He was the only person the<br />

Stroller ever has met in a sports department who<br />

wore the old-fashioned pince-nez with a gold chain<br />

over his right ear<br />

"From now on, while I am here," be told the staff"<br />

"I don't want any paragraph, any place in a story,<br />

starting with the words 'the', 'a" or 'an.' Sounds peculiar,<br />

but it will stand our paper apart."<br />

Then along came Harry Bullion to head the department,<br />

and he ruled that when writing about a<br />

baseball game the writer had to put the size of the<br />

crowd in the first paragraph. He also ruled that if a<br />

game lasted more than an hour and a half, the writer<br />

fold to explain why in the lead paragraph (He<br />

would be wild if he had to cover the long, drawn-out<br />

games we have today.)<br />

NO ONE ever pressed his quirks more than Malcolm<br />

Bingay. who captured the love of the baseball<br />

fans with his "Iffy, the Dopester" columns. The expression<br />

whether or not" drove him mad When be<br />

spotted it in thr paper he would rush in to the writer<br />

'<br />

and X 0 " Wulri hpar h ' m a11 owar the room aa **<br />

r"? waste words, newsprint is costly enough<br />

without wasting it." •<br />

Then he would caution the writer to limit his<br />

words to to "whether" and leave the or not" alone.<br />

One had to admit that Bingay was right, and as<br />

The Stroller looks back now, each of these editors<br />

had reason to lay down these seemingly odd rules<br />

They were a colorfol lot. and The Stroller always<br />

has considered himself lucky that he had them as<br />

his guide<br />

roll call report<br />

House votes against Capitol expansion<br />

Here's how area members of Congress<br />

were recorded on major roll call<br />

votes May lt-».<br />

PRESERVE CAPITOL. The House<br />

voted, SiS for and 3« against, to repair<br />

the West Front of the Capitol rather<br />

than extend in with a new facade<br />

The West Front, which faces the<br />

Mall, is deteriorating as Its<br />

crumbles. It is the only side of the original<br />

Capitol that remains an exterior<br />

wall.<br />

At issue were perquisites as weU as<br />

historical preservation, -for a new facade<br />

would contain space eyed by senior<br />

members for personal "hideaway"<br />

offices and committee quarters.<br />

' The vote approving $49 million for<br />

West, Front preservation rather than<br />

|70 million for expansion occurred during<br />

debate on HR S069, an appropriation*<br />

bill later sent to the Senate.<br />

S<strong>up</strong>porter Samuel Stratton, D-N.Y.,<br />

said "this is the wrong timo for us to be<br />

spending millions . . for extra space<br />

in this Capitol or any building associated<br />

with work of Congress."<br />

Opponent Bob Traxler, D-Mich., said<br />

"the extension of the West Front is to<br />

fulfill the manifest destiny of the U.S.<br />

Capitol building."<br />

Members voting yes opposed extending<br />

the side of the Capitol that faces the<br />

Mall.<br />

Voting yes: Carl Pursell, R-Plymouth,<br />

Dennis Hertel, D-Detroit; Sander<br />

Levin, D-Southfield; and William<br />

Broomfield, R-Birmingham.<br />

Voting no: William Ford, D-Taylor.<br />

At issue were perquisites as weii as<br />

historical preservation, for a new facade<br />

would contain space eyed by senior<br />

members for personal "hideaway"<br />

offices and committee quarters.<br />

1,31 for and<br />

42 ! against, and sent to the White House<br />

a bill (HR 2990) raising the national<br />

debt ceiling by $98.8 billion to $139 trillion.<br />

The current limit will be reached by<br />

early June. The new ceiling is expected<br />

to suffice until Oct. 1.<br />

S<strong>up</strong>porter Russell Long, D-La., said<br />

that because the government must pay<br />

its bills "there is no room for politics"<br />

in debating the issue.<br />

Howard Metzenbaum, D-<br />

Ohio, was among Democrats who wanted<br />

to uae the bill as a vehicle to attack<br />

the third year of the administration's<br />

•<strong>up</strong>ply-side tax cut, which is to take effect<br />

July 1.<br />

Senators voting yes favored the higher<br />

debt ceiling. * .<br />

Levin voted yes. Riegle voted no.<br />

BUDGET. By a vote of SO for and 49<br />

against, the Senate approved a fiscal<br />

1984 budget blueprint calling for more<br />

taxes and domestic spending and less<br />

defense spending than President<br />

Reagan wants.<br />

The measure (S Con Res 27) recommends<br />

federal outlays of $849.7 billion<br />

in the year beginning next Oct 1. It<br />

must be blended with a House budget<br />

plan even more distasteful to the White<br />

House.<br />

Here are the major <strong>dispute</strong>s.<br />

In 1984 tax hikes, the Senate wants<br />

$9 billion, the House $30 billion, the<br />

president $2.7 billion. In domestic<br />

spending, the Senate wants to exceed<br />

the president's. 1984 request by $12.8<br />

billion and the House wants to go $33<br />

billion beyond the president.<br />

In inflation-adjusted defense hikes<br />

over 1983 levels, the Senate wants a six<br />

percent increase and the House wants<br />

four percent Reagan asked for 10 percent.<br />

Also, the Senate will accept a 1984<br />

deficit of $178.8 billion, the House<br />

$174.5 billion, and the White House<br />

$192.4 billion.<br />

Senators voting yes s<strong>up</strong>ported the<br />

Senate ' " '<br />

company with the White House<br />

Levin voted yes. Riegle voted yes<br />

(See story on the MX vote on<br />

Page 7 A) MX. The House voted, 239<br />

for and 186 against to release $625<br />

million in fiscal 1983 funds for speeding<br />

development of the MX missle.<br />

Projected to cost taxpayers $20 billion<br />

to $30 billion over the next several<br />

years, the 100-missile system, based In<br />

existing silos in Wyoming and Montana,<br />

would replace the Minuteman later<br />

this decade as the land leg of the<br />

Triad nuclear arsenal.<br />

Objecting to an administration plan<br />

to house the MX in a "dense pack" underground<br />

cluster. Congress last year<br />

refused to approve the $625 million<br />

The funding resolution (H Con Res<br />

113) was sent to the Senate.<br />

S<strong>up</strong>porter Robert Michel, R-Ill., said<br />

the MX will make the transition to<br />

meaningful arms control "easier to endure<br />

and survive by putting the Soviet<br />

Union on notice that it runs grave risks<br />

if it thinks the time has come to attack"—:<br />

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Opponent William Ratchford, D-<br />

Conn., said the MX "would present a<br />

high-value target in a vulnerable basing<br />

mode which would invite a first<br />

strike by the Soviets."<br />

Members voting yes wanted to release<br />

the MX mooey.<br />

Voting yes: Pursell and Broomfield<br />

Voting no: Hertel, Ford and Levin.<br />

MX (Senate). By a vote of 59 for and<br />

39 against the Senate followed the<br />

House and released $625 million for a<br />

test flight and other development of the<br />

MX missile.<br />

While this was a significant administration<br />

victory, many senators said<br />

they will vote for future MX funding<br />

only if President Reagan continues to<br />

be flexible with his arms policies.<br />

S<strong>up</strong>porter John Danforth, R-Mo.,<br />

said "U.S. negotiators in Geneva would<br />

be placed in a weaker position if the<br />

Congress refrained from deploying the<br />

MX while the Soviets maintained their<br />

large SS-18 missiles."<br />

Opponent John Glenn, D-Ohio, said<br />

he favors mobile basing of new U.S.<br />

missile He added that the Soviet ambassadorto<br />

the Upited States told him<br />

MX deployment win scuttle the Salt II<br />

arms control agreement between the<br />

s<strong>up</strong>erpowers. —<br />

Senators voting yes favored continued<br />

development of the MX.<br />

fori Levin. D. and Dramlri Biegle. n.<br />

voted no.<br />

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(The O^bsrrurr<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 OAE<br />

the<br />

view<br />

suburban life<br />

Ellie Graham editor/459-2700<br />

(P. C>1B<br />

Ellie<br />

Graham<br />

JOE SEDLACEK has been<br />

elected president of the Plymouth -<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Civitan Club for the 1983-84<br />

season. Lou Mair is president-elect;<br />

Eleanor Shevlin is vicepresident,funds;<br />

Stan Socha. vicepresident.<br />

service; and Joe<br />

Henshaw, vice-president,<br />

administration. Sam Detrich is *<br />

secretary-treasurer.<br />

Look for Lou Mair and crew June<br />

11. Tbey will be out selling flags.<br />

Flag Day is Tuesday, June 14.<br />

The club will have its annual<br />

birthday celebration and dinner at<br />

its June 16 dinner meeting. Folk<br />

singer Robert Fritz will entertain<br />

the Civitans and their spouses.<br />

EYELYN BECK had high<br />

score at last Thursday's party<br />

bridge games in the Plymouth<br />

Cultural Center."Congratulations<br />

are in order. She has been playing<br />

with the gro<strong>up</strong> for seven years and<br />

this is the first time she came in<br />

first. Carl Peters was second high.<br />

There were eight tables in play.<br />

BILL HEtNEY, magician<br />

and illusionist, will be entertaining<br />

Saturday at the Westland Center<br />

Kids Fun Factory. He will present<br />

two 40-minute shows in the<br />

auditorium of the Emporium. Shows<br />

are scheduled for 1 and 4 p.m.<br />

Bill's shows are non-stop magic,<br />

featuring a four-second escape. He<br />

will cut his assistant in three pieces<br />

and his specialty is magic with<br />

animals.<br />

Bill graduated from Plymouth<br />

Salem High School in 1979 and now<br />

attends Eastern Michigan<br />

University, where he is majoring in<br />

marketing. He began his career in<br />

magic 13 years ago, when he was 8.<br />

His parents gave him a magic kit<br />

for his birthday. He practiced on<br />

relatives, friends, the dog — anyone<br />

who would watch. His interest and<br />

Jffoficiency grew to the point where<br />

he attended a magicians'<br />

convention. He is now well down the<br />

road to being a professional<br />

magician.<br />

He is from Plymouth. His<br />

assistants are Clare Osterberg of<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> Township and Lisa Bryl of<br />

Plymouth.<br />

IN THE EXCITEMENT of<br />

telling about Evelyn Beck coming in<br />

first in party bridge games, I forgot<br />

to mention that Ernie Tracy and<br />

Rene iaCombe tied for first place<br />

the week before.<br />

CHBIS DAVIO opened<br />

Tuesday night at the Road House on<br />

Ann Arbor Road. He will be<br />

performing 8:30 p.m. to 1 a.m.<br />

Tuesdays through Saturdays until<br />

the end of June. He has a single act,<br />

plays acoustic guitar and sings both<br />

country and contemporary music.<br />

Chris is a 1978 graduate of<br />

Plymouth <strong>Canton</strong> High School. He<br />

once worked with the gro<strong>up</strong>.<br />

Phoenix. This is the first time he has<br />

performed professionally in his<br />

hometown and he says he is excited<br />

about seeing some of his old friends.<br />

PAM BUBTON brought<br />

home a trophy from the state<br />

forensic finals in Lansing. She was<br />

awarded sixth place in the dramatic<br />

interpretation division. Pam<br />

Pavilisack was eighth in radio<br />

broadcasting.<br />

EVEB WONDEB about the -<br />

occ<strong>up</strong>ations or professions of the<br />

women who are members of the<br />

' business and professional women's<br />

cluba? The <strong>Canton</strong> BPW is one of the<br />

newest and most active gro<strong>up</strong>s in<br />

the state. Nineteen new members ~<br />

were installed at the May meeting.<br />

Tbey ranged in age from 19 to 50-<br />

plus. Enthusiasm was a common<br />

denominator for each. The dinner<br />

meeting programs focus on selfdevelopment.<br />

personal health,<br />

financial know-how, dressing for<br />

success, team work, motivation and<br />

the ever-present need to balance<br />

multiple roles with work, home and<br />

family.<br />

The new members are: Tricia<br />

Ahern, CPA, Eleanor Akerliad,<br />

owner of The Bookkeeper; Carol<br />

Baker, real estate sales associate;<br />

Terry Bennett, special education;<br />

Maria Broad, real estate agent and<br />

broker. Shirley Cameron, owner of<br />

Croas on the Green, Mary<br />

Denglebrook, executive secretary<br />

for Federal Pipe and Steel; Carol<br />

Dugan. secretary; Ginny Eades,<br />

owner of the Letter Writer, Bhanu<br />

Hajratwala, physical therapist;<br />

Donica Keogh; Carol Perrin; Mario<br />

m \<br />

M,<br />

Watt Middle School Band prepares for the <strong>Artfest</strong>. Debbie Metzner (left) plays alto clarinet.<br />

L<br />

f<br />

BILL BRESLER/staff photographer<br />

Kim Fortman is busy in the home economics room sewing a fine<br />

sesm in preparation for the <strong>Artfest</strong>.<br />

Arts council celebrates 14th birthday<br />

OTk^* What i- is «A 14 years old. u occ<strong>up</strong>ies - rooms ....<br />

children to art, music and theater at a<br />

over a drugstore and comes in 325 different<br />

shapes and sizes? It's the Plymciate.<br />

Professional theater and ama-<br />

level they could understand and appreouth<br />

Community Arts Council (PCAC). teur programs were sponsored in the<br />

This is PCAC Week and displays elementary schools.<br />

have been set in store windows Art ladies appeared monthly at 15<br />

throughout Plymouth. Each display area schools to discuss paintings and<br />

depicts one of the many services offered<br />

to the community by the arts schools to be enjoyed until the next vis-<br />

sc<strong>up</strong>ture. They left reproductions in the<br />

council. Restaurants have cards on it. Music and art presentations were<br />

their tables describing-PCAC activities. made regularly in the high schools.<br />

Council members will meet at noon Teacher assistance grants are made<br />

Friday for the annual spring luncheon through the arts council and a series of<br />

Janet Campbell, president for the 1982- continuing awards are given on all<br />

83 season, will turn over the gavel to grade levels.<br />

the new president, Judy Morgan.<br />

The art rental gallery on the second<br />

The week will culminate with the floor of the Plymouth <strong>Library</strong> offers<br />

<strong>Artfest</strong> in Kellogg Park on Saturday, original paintings and reproductions at<br />

when many of the works by local students<br />

will be on display.<br />

Arts and crafts classes are offered<br />

a minimal monthly fee.<br />

ARTS COUNCIL volunteers contributed<br />

more than 28,000 hours last year and performances are part of the arts<br />

for children and adults. Lectures, tours<br />

promoting the arts and introducing council agenda.<br />

12-year<br />

By Sherry Kahan<br />

staff writer<br />

IT TAKES a fat book to absorb all<br />

the facts about a family whose<br />

members arrived in this country<br />

in 1625, just five years after the<br />

Pilgrims came ashore at Plymouth<br />

Rock. And Elizabeth Conover Kelley of<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> has written a 454-pager in<br />

"Conover, Pioneers and Pilgrims."<br />

A social worker for the Livonia<br />

school district, Kelley picks <strong>up</strong> the story<br />

of her ancestors when Wolfert and<br />

Neeltje Van Couwenhoven left Holland<br />

to become two of the first settlers of<br />

Nieuw Amsterdam, later to achieve<br />

fame as New York City.<br />

It follows the family through a gradual<br />

altering of its name to Conover,<br />

through 12 generations and through a<br />

movement west to New Jersey, Ohio,<br />

Illinois and other midwest states.<br />

The book is a one- pound- 10-ounce<br />

demonstration of the flow of writing.<br />

THE FALL Festival arts and crafts<br />

show has gained a very favorable reputation<br />

among Michigan artists. The<br />

two-day fair in Central Middle School<br />

attracts thousands of visitors each<br />

—<br />

year.<br />

On alternate years, the PCAC presents<br />

a musical revue with a professional<br />

director. The stars of the production<br />

are the residents of the community,<br />

who dance and sing like show business<br />

professionals doing a two-night<br />

stand. It is a fundraiser for the PCAC<br />

and a fun raiser for the participants<br />

and audiences as well.<br />

Each year the council presents<br />

Joanne Winkleman Hulce scholarships<br />

in honor of its founder, Jo Hulce. This<br />

year's winners of - the prestigious<br />

awards are Richard Roman, artist, and<br />

Cathy Bom back, cellist. Each will<br />

receive a monetary award to further<br />

their studies in their fields.<br />

Richard Roman (left), artiat, and Kathy JBomback, cellist, were<br />

winers of the JWH awarda presented by the arts council.<br />

research revells 12. generations<br />

the willingness to pour over documents,<br />

and the skill at marshalling<br />

facts that has seized the country since<br />

the TV program "Roots."<br />

The flyleaf of Bibles are being studied<br />

as never before. (Vital family<br />

statistics were often written in this<br />

mainstay of early American life.)<br />

Courthouses and libraries have been<br />

searched in unprecedented numbers.<br />

•IN THE MIDWEST it wasn't required<br />

that vital statistics be recorded<br />

until 1875," said Kelley, giving an example<br />

of the kind of history that<br />

genealogists must soak <strong>up</strong>. "Federal<br />

census records in the east started in<br />

1790. But early New Jersey records<br />

were lost, probably through fire.<br />

"The oldest Bible I found in my family<br />

was filled in by people who obviously<br />

could not write well. It was hard to decipher<br />

what they put down. But a fact I<br />

found helped an architect in St. Louis in<br />

his effort to get his mother in the<br />

Daughters of the American Revolution.<br />

The page proved her lineage."<br />

Kelley, who before her move to <strong>Canton</strong><br />

lived in Plymouth for 18 years, believes<br />

there is little snobbery left in the<br />

quest for ancestors.<br />

"People did it once to get into the<br />

DAR or on the Mayflower list," she<br />

said. "But the interest in genealogy<br />

broadened after 'Roots' came out and<br />

caused a huge <strong>up</strong>surge.<br />

"I started before then, 12 years ago,<br />

but wasn't interested in getting into the<br />

DAR. I wanted to find my family background.<br />

For a co<strong>up</strong>le of years I really<br />

didn't get very far because the only<br />

time I did research was on vacations."<br />

In 1971, she took her notebook and<br />

pen to Adams County, 111. to talk to relatives<br />

and drop in on the courthouse.<br />

She also visited New Jersey, at which<br />

time she became a member of the Van<br />

Couwenhoven-Conover Family Association.<br />

The person who set Kelley running<br />

down the genealogy paper trail was her<br />

father, Guy L. Conover. who died in<br />

1881- 1<br />

"He always said his family was an<br />

early pioneer family," she said. "He<br />

knew his grandfather's name, Jonas<br />

Conover, and Jonas' brothers, Robert<br />

and John. Their father was also John<br />

and they settled in Lima Township in<br />

Illinois."<br />

JONAS, ROBERT and John were as<br />

far back as she was able to go at first<br />

in her ancestor digging. For two or<br />

three years she struggled to link the father,<br />

John, to a certain line.<br />

"One day in a courthouse in Woodbury,<br />

N.J., I found a deed which indicated<br />

that the John I was following had<br />

died without issue, so I knew he<br />

couldn't be my ancestor. That summer<br />

I found deeds that pushed me back further<br />

to another generation. I found the<br />

John I was looking for.<br />

The way of the genealogist is filled<br />

%<br />

' S!<br />

with failures and successes nice this.<br />

But Kelley thinks it all adds <strong>up</strong> to fun.<br />

"The hunt is great." she asserted with<br />

a smile. "You get so absorbed in it, you<br />

lose track of time. You read old deeds<br />

and wills that take you back to that period."<br />

•<br />

Editor of her college yearbook, Kelley<br />

also enjoyed the writing of her<br />

book, though not the proofreading of<br />

galleys. It can be obtained at a cost of<br />

$24.50 by writing to Kelley at Apt. 104,<br />

42272 Addison Drive, <strong>Canton</strong> 48187. It<br />

is also on sale at Plymouth Book World<br />

in Forest Mall, the Book Break in New<br />

Towne Plaza in <strong>Canton</strong>, B. Dalton in<br />

the Livonia Mall and the Open Book in<br />

the Wonderland Shopping Center, Livonia.<br />

Is she exhausted and ready to-rest on<br />

her laurels?<br />

"Starting next year I'm going to start<br />

working on my mother's family."<br />

Betty Kettey says a<br />

gist's life is full of papers, filling<br />

boxes and resource books. But<br />

the reward came in the publication<br />

of her book on her Dutch<br />

ancestors.<br />

judge. Terry Ponkey. branch officer.<br />

Bank of the Common wealth,<br />

Catherine Provost, corporate<br />

employment specialist, Owens<br />

Corning Glass; Cynthee Russell,<br />

Cableviskm, and Emily<br />

systems analyst.


I*<br />

28


• •<br />

mmamm<br />

Q&£ Thursday. Jur>e,2. 1983<br />

clubs in action<br />

• STAMP CLUB<br />

The West Suburban Stamp Club will<br />

meet 8 p.m. Friday in the Plymouth<br />

Cultural Center. 525 Farmer, Plymouth.<br />

Juniors meet at 7:30 and program<br />

begins at 8 30 p.m. Guest speaker Rob-"<br />

ert Ferrett of Enteck Corp., Ann Arbor<br />

will present "Adaptation of the Computer<br />

to Stamp Collecting " A'demonstratioaof<br />

the equipment wilj be given<br />

• K-C AUXILIARY CARD PAR-<br />

TY<br />

The Women's Auxiliary of the P)ymouth-<strong>Canton</strong><br />

Knights of Columbus. Father<br />

Renaud Council 3292 will sponsor<br />

a card party at 7:30 p.m. Friday in the<br />

hall. Mill Street between Ann Art>or-<br />

Road and Ann Arbor Trail. Plymouth •<br />

The public is invited. Admission is $4<br />

A lunch wiH be-served, beverages<br />

available, and there will be table and<br />

door prizes<br />

No<br />

parking<br />

• WISER MEETING<br />

WISER, a s<strong>up</strong>port gro<strong>up</strong> for widowed<br />

people, will meet at 8 p.m Tuesday.<br />

. June 7. on the lower level of the Plymouth<br />

Historical Museum. Main Street at<br />

Church Speaker will be accountant Joe<br />

O'Brien who will discuss "Sound Financial<br />

Management and Tax Planning "<br />

Therp will be a question and answer<br />

session. All widowed persons may attend.<br />

For information or reservations,<br />

call Irene Miller. 981-2612.<br />

• NOW MEETING<br />

The Northwest Wayne County chapter<br />

of the National Organization for<br />

Women will meet at 7 30 p.m Wednesday.<br />

June 8. in Hoover Elementary<br />

School, 15900 Levan. Livonia, between<br />

Five and Six Mile. A general business<br />

meeting, induction of new officers, and<br />

presentation of NOW's high school feminist<br />

scholarship award, are planned<br />

Save places for handicapped<br />

A handicapped parking place is not a special<br />

privelege for a disabled persons, says the national<br />

commander of Disabled American Veterans "It is<br />

not even a convenience." he adds. "It is a necessity."<br />

Edward Galian points out that DAV is not asking<br />

for sympathy. It is asking for understanding about<br />

things like handicapped parking zones marked with<br />

the international handicapped access symbol Others<br />

should not park there<br />

He explains that spots cfose to stores are what<br />

handicapped people need "It may be a pain in the<br />

neck for an able-bodied person to walk a much<br />

longer distance with a loaded shopping bag in each<br />

hand." he notes.<br />

"But think of someone carrying a heavy load<br />

over that same distance on artificial legs It can<br />

cause serious pain, perhaps even bleeding And the<br />

person wearing prosthetic legs is more susceptible<br />

to falling than an able-bodied person "<br />

The disabled also need ramped curbs near their<br />

parking place, and space between their car and 1<br />

other cars It's hard to pull a wheelchair out of the<br />

< I.EAR THE air iii your !>«ihroon»<br />

instanth l>\ striking a muti-h >>r two. The<br />

>ulphur will Cn-shrn th«- air. SrHImjr suntfihmtr.<br />

Try an Observer & K«'rt»nt rir I'la.ssifiehr at Ko,<br />

tween April 9 and June 9 are eligible,"<br />

Legislative<br />

Drive-in<br />

Three members of the <strong>Canton</strong> Business<br />

and Professional Women's Club went to<br />

Lansing for the Legislstive Drive-in,<br />

"sponsored by the State BPW. Teresa Solak<br />

(leftj^ assisant vice president and<br />

branch manager of Bank of the Commonwealth;<br />

Bonnie Mallory-Liscombe,<br />

public health nurse for the Detroit Visiting<br />

Nurse Association; and Deborah<br />

O'Connor, director of the <strong>Canton</strong> <strong>Public</strong><br />

<strong>Library</strong>, met with State Rep. Gerald Law.<br />

They had lunch with Sen. Robert Geake.<br />

said Alfred R Glancy III of MichCon<br />

"But anyone who gets a home energy<br />

analysis is a winner." Glancy said.<br />

"Households receiving a Anorgy<br />

analysis do twice as much to save energy<br />

and conserve roughly twice as much<br />

as those without audits."<br />

Ten people's awards could include<br />

insulation, storm windows, or even a<br />

furnace, depending on the specific recommendations<br />

from the home energy<br />

analysis. Twenty others will receive <strong>up</strong><br />

to $250 worth of conservation improvements.<br />

An additional 20 will receive<br />

friiiaitrln<br />

MichCon employees are not eligible.<br />

Twenty-five winners, will be randomly<br />

selected in May. and 25 additional<br />

winners will be chosen in June.<br />

MichCon's Home Energy Analysis<br />

Program has inspected more than<br />

80,000 Michigan houses since June<br />

1981. For a $10 fee (which is waived in<br />

low-income households)^ a trained analyst<br />

inspects the energy efficiency of a<br />

house — checking insulation and furnace<br />

operation, for example — and recommends<br />

energy-saving improvements.<br />

—Muie information- arm app<strong>up</strong>anan<br />

cards are included in April's .gas bills.<br />

FREE WEIGHT LOSS CLINIC<br />

sponsored by<br />

General Nutrition Centers<br />

TREE Blood Pressure<br />

check & private consultation<br />

available.<br />

For further Information &<br />

Reservations Please Call:<br />

421-9399<br />

Westland Center<br />

Mon-Sat between 10 am - 9 pm<br />

Sun between 12-5 pm<br />

Sale<br />

Semi-Annual<br />

10 Day<br />

Floor Sample Clearance<br />

Twico every year wc reduce our<br />

already low prices to make room for<br />

our new market purchases.<br />

This year we have taken extra<br />

deep discounts on:<br />

Sofas —<br />

Dining Rooms<br />

Recliners<br />

Sleepers<br />

Hurry! This is a 10 Day Sale - Merchancise left over will be removed<br />

from store & used in our model homes throughout the area.<br />

^ X . . —<br />

Schrader's as<br />

111 N Center St.<br />

Northville<br />

349-1838<br />

Home Furnishings<br />

Family ouwd and operated since 1907' Mon .Tues. Sat<br />

Thurs & Fri. 9-9<br />

Closed Wed


w r r r<br />

581 OA£ Thursday, June 2. 1965<br />

B BiF CFN'FBED<br />

' ./NDAMFN'A;<br />

SOUL winning<br />

Cmu"C"<br />

BAPTIST<br />

BETHEL BAPTIST TEMPLE<br />

29475.W. Six Mile, Livonia<br />

Sunday School<br />

Morning Worship<br />

Evening Service<br />

Wed Family Hour<br />

H L Petty<br />

.525**3664<br />

261 9276<br />

uuw<br />

REE TRANSPORTATION<br />

Youv Invitation to Worship<br />

Mail C o p y To; OBSERVER & ECCENTRIC NEWSPAPERS ..<br />

3625 1 Schoolcraft, Livonia, 48150<br />

Church Page: 591-2300 extension 259 Mondays—9:00 a.m.-12:00 noon<br />

INDEPENDENT<br />

BAPTIST BIBLE<br />

FELLOWSHIP<br />

10 00 a m CHURCH<br />

1100am<br />

6:00 p.m<br />

7:30 pm<br />

Bible Study - A wane Clubs<br />

NEW RELEASE-<br />

JUNE 5<br />

11:00 A.M. "THE LORD'S WILL 1 ' .<br />

6:00 P.M. "THE LORD'S SUPPER-<br />

JUNE 20-23 V.B.S. 7-8:30 P.M.<br />

i p» at f a lete« Ca<br />

HARDIN PARK UNITED<br />

ME THODIST CHURCH<br />

Wttl SltvtA Mil* AOM)<br />

H*.<br />

"THE STATE OF THE CHURCH"<br />

ft«*1l*SAJl<br />

CATHOLIC<br />

~z CHURCHES<br />

ST. JOHN<br />

NEUMANN<br />

Parish<br />

44300 Warren Road<br />

<strong>Canton</strong><br />

455-5910<br />

Fr. Edward J. Baldwin<br />

Patter<br />

Sat. SOO and 8:30 pm<br />

Sun. I am.fcSOam<br />

11:00 am end 1230 pm<br />

ST. THOMAS A BECKET<br />

Parish<br />

555 L1LLEY RD . CANTON<br />

981-1333<br />

Fr Ernest M Porcari<br />

Pastor<br />

Masses<br />

S3! 6'W PM<br />

Sun 8 00 am<br />

10:00 am<br />

12 00 DOOO<br />

UNITED METHODIST<br />

CHURCH<br />

36SOO Anr A Bor TraM<br />

' 422-0149<br />

Jack C Otgumn<br />

Rey O Fereyth<br />

" Dave Gladstone<br />

C*'eci or of Youth<br />

Terry Gledstone<br />

D"ector of Education<br />

MltMIUL<br />

ST. MATTHEWS<br />

UMITEO METHODIST<br />

30900 S M4e Rd<br />

Oewd T Strong Mmsier<br />

422-6038<br />

• WOO * M Wortfap Servtce<br />

1000 A M Owe* School<br />

0*r» - Mh Grade)<br />

WOOAM * t$r •V.Qeea<br />

11 IS A M AdtflSluJyClMi<br />

-urter, Rrov-oec<br />

FIK5T<br />

UNITED METHODIST<br />

CHURCH<br />

Of Garden City<br />

S443 Merriman Hoed<br />

421-8628<br />

Or. Robert Gr^eren "<br />

WorsMo Service10 45 A M<br />

dWCHJCNOOl Ml AM<br />

LUTHER AN MISSOURI SYNOD<br />

CHRIST OUR SAVIOR "LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

MISSOURI SYNOD<br />

14175 frm.nfllon Rd M.I.N of Schoolcraft .<br />

REV RALPH G SCHMIDT PASTOR<br />

WORSHIP SERVICES EVERY SUNDAY 6:30 A 11:00 A.M.<br />

SUNDAY SCHOOL A BIBLE 9:45 A.M.<br />

WEEK-DAY SCHOOL. WED. 4:30-6:00 P.M.<br />

PRE-SCHOOL. MON.-FRI. MORNINGS<br />

464-65S4 NURSERY PROVIDED 4<br />

St. > .ill's Lutheran<br />

Missouri Synod<br />

20805 MiddleDeit at 8 Mile<br />

Farmington Hills - 474-0675<br />

The Rev. Ralph. E Unger Pastor<br />

SUNOAY WORSHIP 8 30 S 11 AM<br />

SUNOAY SCHOOL, AND ADULT<br />

BIBLE CLASSES 10 AM<br />

CHRISTIAN SCHOOL<br />

Grades K-8<br />

Wayne C Berkesch. Principal<br />

474.8468<br />

HOSANNA TABOR<br />

LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

9%0C L»«e"»e• So Red'ord<br />

937-2424<br />

Res hoy PromcMte<br />

Rev G»*nn KopfMf<br />

Sunday Worship<br />

8:00 & 11:00 A.M.<br />

•-ics, Scoc i-c B'CeC<br />

9:30 A.M.<br />

E vening " 00 p M<br />

""•shan Scnooi G'ades k fi<br />

BobeM Scnutt P •nc.pai<br />

937-2233<br />

Christ The Good<br />

Shepherd<br />

42690 Cherry Hill<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> 981-0286<br />

Sunday School a<br />

• dull Bible »15 A M<br />

Worship Service 1030 A M<br />

GRACE LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

MISSOURI SYNOD<br />

25630 GRAND RIVER at BEECH DALY<br />

532-2266 REDFORD TWP.<br />

SUNDAY SERVICES<br />

9:15 4 11:00 A.M.<br />

SUNDAY SCHOOL<br />

9:15 4 11:00 A.M.<br />

Rev. V. F. Halboth, Jr., Pastor<br />

Rev. Victor F. Halboth. Sr., Pastor Emeritus<br />

Nursery Provided Mr James Mol. Parish Ass't.<br />

LUTHERAN CHURCH<br />

?HE RISEN CHRIST<br />

Missouri Synod<br />

46250 ANN ARBOR ROAD<br />

PLYMOUTH<br />

Kenneth Zielke Pastor<br />

453-5252 453-1099<br />

EARLY SERVICE 8 30 A M<br />

Sun. Sch & Bible Classes<br />

9 45 to 10:45 AM<br />

LATE SERVICE 1V00 A M<br />

ST. MATTHEW<br />

LUTHERAN<br />

. Church & School<br />

5885 Venoy<br />

I BJk. N. of Ford Rd., West land<br />

425-0260 r<br />

Ralph Fischer. Pastor<br />

Charles F. Buckhahn<br />

Asst. Pastor<br />

Divine Wore hop 8 A 11 e.m.<br />

Bible Claaa A SS 9:30 a.m.<br />

Monday Evening Seme* 7JO pJn.<br />

IU n 1ERAN (EnglishSynod A E L C<br />

FAITH<br />

10000 '•>» M.ie Road<br />

E asi i >»on>a<br />

421-7249<br />

Worship - «;15 and 10:45 a.m.<br />

Bible Claaaea 9:30 a m<br />

Hurse't A.aiiabf<br />

Education Office 421-7359<br />

Out<br />

HOLY<br />

TRINITY<br />

39020 Five Mile Road<br />

West Livoma<br />

464-0211<br />

June 5 Worship<br />

11:00 A.M.<br />

(Anniversary Service)<br />

Dr. Sittler, Lecturer<br />

Nuraery Available<br />

SUMO AT SCHOOL • ALL AGES<br />

9:45 A.M.<br />

NON-DENOMINATIONAL<br />

S<br />

GERALD 0YK3TRA. Paetor<br />

4S*-10e2<br />

SALVATlQh ARMY<br />

27500 Shiawassee<br />

. a t inksler Road<br />

^ S U N 0 A Y<br />

SCHEDULE<br />

••"Sunday School tOAM<br />

Mornv^g Worship 11AM<br />

E nwrnj Worsr<strong>up</strong> 6PM<br />

T«ur» Prayar Un*l 8PM<br />

k Camam John Cramotoc<br />

THE LORD'S HOUSE<br />

A Cwll Geapel GHurch<br />

36924 Ann Arbor Trail<br />

& Newburgh<br />

522-8463<br />

Pastor Jack Forsyth<br />

Sunday School 1000 am<br />

Morning Worship 1100 am<br />

Evening Service 700 pm<br />

Wednesday Service 7 00 pm<br />

Open Every Day 900 am<br />

Until 11:00 pm<br />

Children's Ministry at<br />

Every Sarvtce<br />

24 Hour Prayer Line 522-0410<br />

LUTHERAN-AALC<br />

_Tff5PT<br />

LAESTADIAN<br />

CONGREGATION<br />

290 Fairground at Ann<br />

Arbor TraM - Ptymouth<br />

Donald W Lahtl, Pastor<br />

471-1316<br />

Sunday School - 930 am.<br />

Sunday Worship- 1100 un.<br />

Alao Firat Sunday Monthly at<br />

BOO p.m.<br />

Aa achetMed aervioae m<br />

English Finnish language<br />

thtrd Sunday at IIOO a.i<br />

UNITY<br />

UNITY<br />

OF LIVONIA<br />

431-17(0<br />

SUNDAY to OO A<br />

11 30 A M<br />

Otef-e-ThowgM Mi Mao<br />

PRESBYTERIAN<br />

H\KI> PKI:SBVTI:RIW CHIKCH OF I.I\OM\<br />

Farmington and Six Mile Rd + 422-1150<br />

Worship and Sunday School<br />

8:30, 10:00 & 11:30 A.M.<br />

HOLY COMMUNION<br />

"SUFFER AS A CHRISTIAN"<br />

Dr. Bartlett L. Hess<br />

- 7:00 p.m.<br />

M'<br />

Ordination of Dr. Robert O. Woodburn<br />

JJFL<br />

I<br />

"THE TRANSFORMING VISION"<br />

Dr. Bartlett L. Heaa<br />

Ordination and Installation of Newly Elected Deacons<br />

M B I Wed.. 7:00 P.M. Summer School of Christian Education<br />

JE<br />

Sunday Seme* Broadcast<br />

MO am., WMUZ-FM103^<br />

(Activities lor Ail Age*)<br />

Nursery Provided it All Services<br />

>AWS see to it<br />

•hat kids<br />

lymouth Seventh-day Adven Lists<br />

pledged to s<strong>up</strong>port 10 children in<br />

ral America for the rest of the<br />

The commitment was nuii» at a<br />

ip service and was in conjunction<br />

the Adventists' annual disastert<br />

relief offering.<br />

year's gifts made possible a<br />

•ther-and-child health-care proas<br />

of food, clothing and medicine<br />

ibution as well as nutrition intion<br />

on every needy continent.<br />

Food s<strong>up</strong>plements providied to<br />

1,000 daily in Chile, Bolivia, Peru,<br />

iiti and Rwanda during 1982 were<br />

' jed at )5 million. Nearly $1 million<br />

i spent in Haiti alone.<br />

are fed<br />

NATIONWIDE church gift*<br />

earmarked for doubling that num-<br />

• of people fed," said Irene Peterson.<br />

• of the local Adventist Community<br />

Services Center. Plans are being<br />

finalized to start the child feeding programs<br />

in Chad, the Sudan. Madagascar<br />

fi 1 "*" 8 *<br />

Last year s gifts also provi(^%(iKipment,<br />

medicines and mobile clinics<br />

with assistance valued at $1.8 million.<br />

"Distribution is made through SAWS,<br />

our Seventh-day Adventist World Service,"<br />

Peterson said. .<br />

"In some countries, U. S. aid has<br />

asked that SAWS do the distributing for<br />

the help because 98 cents of every dollar<br />

goes to the project," said Pastor<br />

Royce Snyman, pastor of the local congregation.<br />

"Thinking it might help us to be even<br />

more liberal, we took on this specified<br />

project of the kids in Central America,"<br />

Snyman said. "Wo rp»n y have so<br />

much for our children, we just wanted<br />

to share with those who have not.<br />

ST. PAUL'S UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH o m e n f o r J e s u s hosts B a p t i s t minister<br />

27475 Five Mile Rd. (at Inksler) 422-1470<br />

SUMMER HOURS:<br />

8;30 A.M. Continental Breakfast<br />

8:45 A.M. Bible Study<br />

10:00 A.M. WorshiD and Church School<br />

"IT'S MEDDLING WITH MENDELSSOHN"<br />

Dr. Whitledge, Preaching<br />

Rev R Armstrong Dr W. Whitledge Rev S. Simons<br />

si. TimoTHy<br />

16700 Newburg Rd.-Livonia<br />

Rev. E. Dickson Forsyth 464-8844<br />

WORSHIP<br />

9:00 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.<br />

CHURCH SCHOOL 11:00 a.m.<br />

Nursery-High School<br />

"People Caring for People"<br />

TRINITY<br />

PflESBYTERIAN<br />

CHURCH<br />

10101 W. Ann Arbor Rd.. Plymouth<br />

at Gotfredson & Ann Arbor Rd.<br />

Sunday School for all ages 9:30 a.m.<br />

Worship Services<br />

and Junior Church - 11:00 a.m.<br />

"FAMJLY REBELLION"<br />

II Chronicles<br />

Rev. William C. Moore - Pastor<br />

Nursery Provided Phone 459-9550<br />

ROSEDALE GARDENS<br />

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH<br />

Hubbard at W Chicago • 422-0494<br />

Gerald R Cobieiah & David W Good. Ministers<br />

WORSHIP 9 30* T100AM<br />

Church School 11:00 A.M.<br />

VILLAGE UNITED PRESBYTERIAN<br />

2S350 W Six Mile Rd<br />

Rev Robert M. Bercua 534-7730<br />

Worship 10:00 A.M.<br />

"HOLY COMMUNION RICHES"<br />

^ - Church School 11:15 A.M.<br />

BIBLE STUDY 1Ch00 A.M. Wed., Thura. 7:00 P.M.<br />

HOLY SPIRIT<br />

LIVONIA ,<br />

L*vOn,a<br />

591-02 11 522-082'<br />

8 30AM<br />

HOLY EUCMAMST<br />

10 30 AM<br />

HOI* EUCMAMST<br />

81<br />

The Rev Emery Gravelle<br />

CHRISTIAN<br />

SCIENCE<br />

FOURTH CHURCH<br />

OF CHRIST SCIENTIST<br />

24400 W Seven M«e<br />

(near Telegraph)<br />

HOURS Of SERVICE -<br />

11 00 AM.<br />

SUNOAY SCHOOL<br />

10:00 AM.<br />

Huraery Care Provided<br />

WEDNESDAY<br />

TESTIMONIAL<br />

MEETINGS 8 pm<br />

EPISCOPAL<br />

• St. Mark's<br />

Presbyterian<br />

26701 JOY RD<br />

Dearborn HgtS<br />

. Pastor John Je'frey<br />

278-9340<br />

9 30AM<br />

Sun Sch & Adult Bib'e<br />

11 0C A M<br />

WORSHIP SERVICE<br />

D.al-a-'.oe 278-9340<br />

GENEVA<br />

UNITED PRESBYTERIAN<br />

S83S Sheldon Rd..<br />

CANTON<br />

WORSHIP « CHURCH SCHOOL<br />

10:00a.m.<br />

Konnoth F Qru0bo». Pmat or<br />

459-0013<br />

SAINT ANDREW S EPISCOPAL CHURCH<br />

16360 Hubbard Road Livonia. Michigan *aisa<br />

|VI I 624JJS1 SU<br />

I J -Jtoednesoav 9 30 a rvi - HoV Eucharist<br />

Saturday 5 00pm . Holy Euchar.st<br />

\ I / « Sunday 7 45am - Holy Euchar.st<br />

9 003m -Christian Education for all ages<br />

10 00 a m - Holy Eucharist<br />

Sunday Morning - Nursery Care Available<br />

The Rev. Kenneth 4. Oevta.<br />

The Rev. Gary A Seymour,<br />

The Rev Edwerd A. King. Peecon<br />

LUTHER AN WISCONSIN<br />

Wisconsin Evangelical<br />

Lutheran Churches<br />

WISCONSIN LUTHERAH<br />

RADIO HOUR<br />

WCAR 1090 SUNDAY 10 30 A M<br />

In Livonia — Sl Paul Ev Lutheran Church<br />

17610 Farmington Rd<br />

Pastor Winfred Koeipm • 261-6759<br />

Worship Services - 8 30 A 11 00 am<br />

In Ptymouth - St Pater Ev Lutheran Church.<br />

1343 Penmman Ave<br />

Pastor Leonard Krummy. .<br />

Worsh.c 5er, 8 4 10 30 am . Sunday School 9 15 8 m<br />

M<br />

TOWIMMB - Lola Pan.<br />

Ev. I^itharan Church,<br />

14750 KMoch<br />

Wor«« S^vvi'KZ E ^ a 2# * * 532-««55<br />

worynp Seoices 6 30 8 m in<br />

. Sunday Schom 9 4S a m<br />

)<br />

Nursery Available<br />

r. James Reid and his wife Dr. Dia-<br />

[Reid will speak at a 7:30 p.m. meetof<br />

Women for Jesus Monday, June<br />

Roma's of Garden City on Cherry<br />

between Venoy and Merriman.<br />

Reid family worked in New Zealand<br />

as bring Pentacostal missionaries.<br />

Dr. James Reid pastored Baptist<br />

churches for 50 years, headed the international<br />

leprosy mission and worked<br />

with drug addicts in the New Life Center.<br />

to Worship<br />

SUNDAY SERVICES<br />

Christian Education 10 00 am<br />

Morning Worship 1 1 00 am<br />

Evening Service 6 30 pm<br />

OTHER ACTIVITIES<br />

Ladies Bible Study<br />

Children* Brigades<br />

Youth Program<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 Q4.E<br />

Rev, Seltz is honored on 25th anniversary<br />

Holy Trinity Lutheran Church of<br />

Livonia plans a festive service of Holy<br />

Communion at 11 a.m. Sunday to celebrate<br />

the 25th anniversary of the ordination<br />

of its pastor, the Rev. Robert C.<br />

Seltz.<br />

Seltz will preside at the communion.<br />

The guest speaker will be Dr. Bert win<br />

Frey, past president of the English District-Lutheran<br />

Church Missouri Synod<br />

and former associate of Seltz.<br />

The adult voice and handbell choirs<br />

will perform several musical selections<br />

under the direction of Ernest Brandon,<br />

music director. Barbara Crute, church<br />

organist, will accompany the service.<br />

Participating also will be Donna Borgert,<br />

Kim Borgert and Beverly<br />

Being<br />

hospitable<br />

Tha Pope John 23rd Hospitality<br />

$500 donation from the Redford<br />

Suburban League. The<br />

Hospitality House, at Alexandrine<br />

and Second avenues, Detroit,<br />

provides free housing for<br />

out-patients and families of<br />

patients being treated at the<br />

Detroit Medical Center. An<br />

open house for the public at<br />

the facility will be held from 4-<br />

7 p.m. Friday. Shown are the<br />

Hun KiwiiiBr iiutt) of tne<br />

Hospitality House staff and<br />

RSL members Enid Dobbert<br />

and Alice Glueck.<br />

Wednesday Bible Study 7 00 om church bulletin<br />

6 Nursery is Provided For All Services<br />

DETROIT FIRST CHURCH of tha NAZARENE<br />

Pawor-James Conner. *outh-Rofeert Anderson Muuc-Rod Bushey<br />

Located ai 1-2 75 S 8 Mils with snuence at 21260 Haggen, Road<br />

Church Office 348-7600<br />

ASSEMBLIES OF GOD<br />

CHRISTIAN<br />

COMMUNITY<br />

CHURCH<br />

41355 Six Mil* Rd.<br />

Northville<br />

348-9030<br />

11:00 A.M..-.. ::<br />

Installation Service For<br />

REV. LARRY FRICK<br />

Speaker Irving M. Mitchell<br />

6:30 pm<br />

Pastor Larry Frick Will Minister<br />

. Communion Service<br />

All Church Fellowship<br />

Larry Frlck, Sr. Pastor<br />

Richard Easlick, Youth Pastor<br />

Dan R. Sluka, Director of Music<br />

Briybtn^oor Tabcrpacl<br />

— - 26555 Franklin Rd • Southfield Ml<br />

II 696 A Telegraph Just Wast -/ Holiday Inn/<br />

Sunday School 9:45 AM. - Morning Worship 11*0 A.M<br />

Celebration ot Praiae - 6:30 PJM.<br />

Wed. Adult Prayerft Praise - Youth Service 7:30 P<br />

Nursery provided a I ai. ti emcea<br />

fr<br />

A Charismatic Church-where people ot many denominations worship together<br />

Thomas E. Traak, Pastor<br />

w\<br />

EVANGELICAI COVENANT CHURCH OF AMERICA<br />

_».<br />

Pastor<br />

V CAITU Michael A. Halleen<br />

" M l 1 I I Associate Pastor<br />

COVENANT —<br />

• v/ 1 CHURCH<br />

SUNDAY SCHOOL: 9:30 AM<br />

MORNING WORSHIP: 10:45 AM 354is W. i4M.ieRoad<br />

SUNOAY EVENING: 7:00 PM - at Drake<br />

WEDNESDAY FAMILY NIGHT: 6:15 PM 661-9191<br />

"A Caring 4 Sharing Church'<br />

LIVONIA<br />

15431 Merriman Rd.<br />

SUNDAY WORSHIP<br />

11:00 AM & 6:00 PM<br />

Rob Robinson Minister<br />

Robert Dutton<br />

Youth Minister<br />

427-6743<br />

CHURCHES OF CHRIST<br />

GAR0EN CITY<br />

165' M**»ebett Rd<br />

SUWOAV WORSHIP<br />

H a m<br />

A 6 p m<br />

B*bie School 10 a m<br />

WVed 7 30 p m Worshtp<br />

WOgMIIDIIMDi<br />

MOM EtfmGS'4'M<br />

in Church Buildino .<br />

*****0<br />

See Mera»d ot Truth<br />

TV Oennei 20 Saturdey * 30 a m<br />

Can v Writ® k>r F»ee Co"spe**r Cou-se<br />

'<br />

CHURCH OF CMMST<br />

35475 Five Mae Rd<br />

464-8722<br />

MARK McGJLVRCY. Minister<br />

CHUCK EMMERT<br />

Youth MMeter<br />

BALE SCHOOL<br />

(AS ageel # 30 a m<br />

Morning Worship 10 45 a m<br />

Evening WoraNp<br />

• -4 Youth Meeange<br />

8:30 p.m.<br />

• MEMORIAL CHURCH OF<br />

CHRIST,<br />

A concert performed by musical<br />

gro<strong>up</strong>s of the tfhurch will be presented<br />

at 6:30 p.m. Sunday, June 5, in Memorial<br />

Church of Christ, 35475 Five Mile,<br />

Livonia. The theme is "Sing Unto the<br />

Lord." The concert will feature the<br />

adult choir under the direction of Janet<br />

Goudie and the Ring's Kids directed by<br />

Pat Gossard. Also performing will be<br />

soloists, duets, trios and quartets.<br />

• HOLY TRINITY LUTHERAN<br />

—Dr. Joseph Sittler will speak on the<br />

"Cross Foundations of Ministry" at an<br />

anniversary lecture at 9:45 a.m. Sunday,<br />

June 5, in Holy Trinity Lutheran<br />

Church, 39020 Five Mile, Livonia. The<br />

event will honor the Rev. Robert C.<br />

Seltz, pastor of the church, on the occasion<br />

of his 25th ordination ceremony.<br />

Professor Emeritus of the Divinity<br />

Ifchool.At.tbe University of Chicago.<br />

Sittler will emphasize the value of the<br />

life and ministry of Christ. He is author<br />

Woodburn installed<br />

Dr. Robert 0. Woodburn will be ordained<br />

into the gospel ministry at the<br />

Ward Presbyterian Church at the 7<br />

p.m. Sunday service.<br />

Participants will include the Rev. L.<br />

Edward Davis, stated clerk of the<br />

Evangelical Presbyterian Church<br />

(EPC); Dr. William Shoemaker, director<br />

of the Billy Graham Center, Wheaton<br />

College, Wheaton, 111.; Dr Wendell<br />

Tohnston, president, William Tyndale<br />

Jollege; the Rev. William C. Moore.<br />

Schellhase on the piano, cello and flute.<br />

PRIOR TO HIS installation at Holy<br />

Trinity, Seltz served as associate pastor<br />

of Messiah Lutheran Church, Pairview<br />

Park, Ohio. Before that, he helped<br />

begin a new congregation in Ann Arbor,<br />

St. Luke Lutheran Church.<br />

He and his wife, Janet, have four<br />

children. Randt, 14; Mike, 22; Ted, 20;<br />

and Kim, 16; and a foster daughter,<br />

Karen Habel, 24.<br />

Seltz's special interest is in the mission<br />

of the church and the immunity<br />

at large. From 1974-76, he served on<br />

the Mission Board of the English District.<br />

LCMS. While in the Cleveland<br />

area, he helped originate the Lutheran<br />

of seven books including "The Doctrine<br />

of the Word" and "The Ecology of<br />

Faith."<br />

• LIVONIA ASSEMBLY OF GOD<br />

In preparation for the Summer<br />

Street Rally, the David Wilkerson film,<br />

"Road to Armageddon," will be shown<br />

at 6 p.m. Sunday, June 5, in Livonia Assembly<br />

of God Church, 33015 Seven<br />

Mile, Livonia.<br />

• MORMON CHAPEL<br />

Jeff Day will be honored at an Eagle<br />

Scout Court of Honor at 5 p.m. Sunday,<br />

June 5, in the Livonia Chapel of the<br />

Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day<br />

Saints. The son of Paul and Linda Day,<br />

Jeff is 14 and one of the youngest boys<br />

in his troop. His Eagle Scout project <<br />

was bar coding books at the Carl Sandburg<br />

<strong>Library</strong>.<br />

• FAITH LUTHERAN<br />

A paper drive will be held FYiday<br />

and Saturday, June 3 and 4. in Faith<br />

chairman of the Candidates Care Committee<br />

of the EPC and pastor of Trinity<br />

Presbyterian Church, Plymouth; the<br />

Rev. Harold K.. Polk, pastor of Calvary<br />

Presbyterian Church, Flint; the Rev. W<br />

Wallace Hostetter, minister of evangelism<br />

at Ward; and John Baird. Ward<br />

church elder.<br />

Ward pastor Dr. Bartlett Hess will<br />

deliver the message. A reception<br />

honoring Woodburn will follow the service.<br />

PTL in Company at Memorial<br />

PTL in Company, a contemporary<br />

gospel sing-out gro<strong>up</strong> from the Academy<br />

Christian Church in Colorado<br />

Springs, Colo., will perform at 7:30<br />

p.m. Tuesday. June 1'4, at Memorial<br />

Church of Christ, 35475 Five Mile,<br />

Livonia.<br />

Organized in 1976, the 2»-voice<br />

gro<strong>up</strong> of high school and college students<br />

is using "High Country Discovery"<br />

as its theme, featuring the music<br />

of several musicals such as "Believer,"<br />

"Breakfast in Gallilee," "And There<br />

Was LighL" and "Backpacker's Suite."<br />

Color lighting and choreography<br />

strengthens the visual images of the<br />

lyrics. The use of slides on a rear<br />

screen projector shows scenes of the<br />

Rocky Mountains during several of the<br />

numbers.<br />

Council of Greater Cleveland, and<br />

served oo the board of the Lutheran<br />

Metropolitan Ministry Association,<br />

where be worked especially with the<br />

Probation Friend Program and the Desegregation<br />

Task Force.<br />

Since coming to Livonia, he has<br />

served as president of the Livonia Ministerial<br />

Association. He is the current<br />

president of the Greater Detroit Area<br />

Pastoral Conference of the English Synod.<br />

In addition, he has represented the<br />

church conference on numerous occasions.<br />

The schedule for the day of<br />

thanksgiving will include an anniversary<br />

lecture from 9:4&-10:4S a.m. and<br />

an anniversary banquet at 1 p.m.<br />

Lutheran Church, 30000 Five Mile,<br />

Livonia.<br />

• CHRIST OUR SAVIOR<br />

Craig Smith, a performing and recording<br />

artist of Christian music, will<br />

highlight the annual Youth Rally hosted<br />

by Christ Our Savior Church, Five<br />

Mile and Farmington, Livonia, from 9<br />

a.m. to 7 p.m. Saturday. June 4. "Sharing<br />

Light" will be the theme of the<br />

event.<br />

Smith will perform music from his<br />

new album, "Hymns," as well as from<br />

his other albums, "Maker" and "Grand<br />

Arrival." Appearing with him will be<br />

Kol-Timbrel of Concordia College in<br />

Ann Arbor and the Bell Choir of Lutheran<br />

High School Northwest. Also<br />

performing will be singer Wendy Scarlett<br />

Leeds and Kerwin Stover presenting<br />

"Rock Music and You."<br />

A festive Choral Vespers will begin<br />

at 6 p.m. Cost is $5 per person.<br />

• NEWBURG UNITED METH-<br />

ODIST<br />

A meeting for area churches in- '<br />

volved in a program to help the hungrywill<br />

be held at 7:30 p.m. Monday, June<br />

6, at Newburg United Methodist<br />

Church, 36500 Ann Arbor Trail, Livonia.<br />

• ALDERSGATE METHODIST<br />

CHURCH<br />

"New Light on An Old Story — Evidence<br />

on Jesus and Christianity Outside<br />

the Bible" will be presented by Dr<br />

Paul L. Maier, professor of ancient history<br />

at Western Michigan University,<br />

at Aldersgate Methodist Church, 10000<br />

Beech Daly, in Redford. His talk will be<br />

given at 7:30 p.m. Tuesday, June 7.<br />

Two of Maier's books are "Pontius<br />

Pilate - and Firai CHrwiam. HIS latest<br />

book, "The Flame of Rome." is a<br />

documentary novel on how Christianity<br />

first reached Rome.<br />

A graduate of Harvard University<br />

and Concordia Seminary in St. Louis,<br />

Maier is a Fulbright scholar. He did<br />

post-graduate work at the University<br />

of Heidelberg, Germany, and the University<br />

of Basel in Switzerland. He has<br />

studied with theologians Karl Barth<br />

and Oscar Cullman.<br />

Rev. Robert Settz<br />

marks unnluoraiin/<br />

W7B<br />

• FAIRLANE ASSEMBLY<br />

The Hillcrest Children's Choir and<br />

the Rev. H.W. Thiemann, administrator<br />

of the Hillcrest Children's Home of Hot<br />

Springs. Ark, will be guests at 7 p.m.<br />

Tuesday, June 7, at Fair lane Assembly,<br />

22575 Ann Arbor Trail, Dearborn<br />

Heights.<br />

Hillcrest provides long-term care for<br />

<strong>up</strong> to 95 neglected children who cannot<br />

be adopted. The choir includes 10 children<br />

between the ages of 8 and 13.<br />

They are directed and accompanied by<br />

Mrs. Thiemann. They will present a<br />

number of songs in sign language.<br />

• ST. AGATHA CATHOLIC<br />

The annual rummage sale will be<br />

held from 2-8 p.m. Thursday, June 9, at<br />

St Agatha Catholic Church, 19650<br />

Beech Daly, Redford.<br />

Nativity welcomes<br />

its new minister<br />

The Rev. Michael Carman, who became<br />

pastor of Nativity United Church<br />

of Christ in Livonia May 15. is "happy<br />

to be back in this area and excited to be<br />

a pastor again."<br />

In his previous position he was interim<br />

pastor for three years at First Congregational<br />

Church in Sarasota. Fla.<br />

Carman was born in Ypsilanti and<br />

lived in Ann Arbor until he was 8 and<br />

his family moved to Garden City, N.Y. *<br />

He earned a bachelor's degree at Davis<br />

and Elkin College in Elkin, W. Va. He<br />

became a master of divinity at Andover<br />

Newton Seminary in Newton Center,<br />

Mass , and a doctor of ministry at<br />

interdenominational Seminary m Atlanta,<br />

Ga.<br />

He continued his travels around the<br />

country with his first church, 1969-72,<br />

the First Congregational Church of<br />

-Hooksett. N.H. His next assignment<br />

was Bushnell Congregational Church in<br />

Detroit followed by First Congregational<br />

Church in Fargo, N.D.<br />

His sermon at the 10 a.m. service<br />

Sunday at Nativity is titled "The God<br />

We Know - the Forgiving God."<br />

No quick fixes for our human vulnerability<br />

There is an ancient story about a<br />

godlike hero, Achilles, who could not be<br />

killed or wounded except on the heel of<br />

his foot The secret finally is discovered,<br />

and he is killed by a- weapon<br />

aimed at his heel.<br />

The story points out the fact that we<br />

^alL vulnerable^ It<br />

also suggests oar human desire to<br />

evade this vulnerability. No age beside<br />

omr own has tried harder to avoid vulnerability<br />

to disease, war, hunger and<br />

natural disaster<br />

Our leaders talked about a window<br />

of vulnerablity to Russian weapons.<br />

The search for a way to have the MX<br />

misale less vulnerable has lead<br />

nowhere. As time passes the goal of<br />

making us leas vulnerable slips further<br />

sad farther oat of sight<br />

For all of oar armed forces, electronic<br />

weapons, medical advances, psychology<br />

and clergy, we are even more<br />

acutely aware of oar vulnerability than<br />

^<br />

A RECENT SURVEY indicates that<br />

the issue people have the greatest difficulty<br />

dealing with is their own vulnerability<br />

Henri Houwen. in his book The<br />

Wotraded Healer." invites us to affirm<br />

oar vulnerability. He believes that it is<br />

s means of discovering the deeper<br />

meanings in life.<br />

Recognizing oar human condition<br />

can be an invitation to greater understanding<br />

and healing. It is In the midst<br />

of oar vulnerability that we can learn<br />

of compassion, caring and forgiveness<br />

moral perspectives<br />

Rev. David Strong<br />

Through our wounds we explore the<br />

depths of our own loneliness In oar<br />

vulnerability we search for the deeper<br />

maaWags at love and posh oar spirit to<br />

consider the very borders of life itself<br />

and the mystery of the beyeod.<br />

A phrase keeps running through my<br />

mind — there is nothing more holy<br />

than being human. The scriptarsl definition<br />

of being human is that we are<br />

limited creatures in relation to God.<br />

The Garden of Eden story is one which<br />

i to daay oar kmita-<br />

THE TRUE HEALER in our society<br />

will oppose the idea that we can or<br />

should escape our vulnerability. As<br />

human beings, we should not s<strong>up</strong>pose<br />

that there should be no fear, loneliness,<br />

doubt confusion or pain in life. To suggest<br />

otherwise is to encourage persons<br />

to find quick fixes to what is really oar<br />

basic human condition.<br />

The true healer will teach others that<br />

acknowledging and exploring oar vulnerability<br />

can be a pathway to peace.<br />

Justice and community. It is in oar<br />

common condition that we find the basis<br />

for community and cause for hope.<br />

The Psalms presents all oar human<br />

condition, including oar vulnerability,<br />

as it may be wrprtesed before God.<br />

Many suggest that praying the Psalms<br />

as though they were our lives bet]<br />

deepen our life and hope Tfcia can<br />

lead to discovering another truth, that<br />

ultimately, oar<br />

soarce of our healiaft.


8B(P.C)<br />

campus news<br />

Continued from Page 7 "<br />

of the Student Economic Leadership<br />

Forum (SELF) team at Lawrence Institute<br />

of Technology, Southfield. He is a<br />

Junior In the school of management at<br />

LIT.<br />

• DAVE MACKENZIE<br />

David Mackenzie, son of Jane and<br />

Donald Mackenzie of Plymouth, is a<br />

•ports correspondent on News Central,<br />

s cable telev'toc program telecast four<br />

times a week is Mount Pleasant. Mackenzie<br />

is a senior at Central Michigan<br />

University,<br />

• IN INTERN PROGRAMS<br />

Three Plymouth residents are among<br />

some 164 Kalamazoo College students<br />

participating in a variety of off-campus<br />

career development internships.<br />

Denise Hopkins, daughter of Mr. and<br />

Mrs. John Hopkins of N. Harvey, is in a<br />

physical therapy internship at Borgess<br />

Hospital, Kalamazoo; John Retting, son<br />

of Mr. and Mrs. Hoy Retting of Southworth,<br />

is in the processing department<br />

of the <strong>Library</strong> of Congress, Washington,<br />

D.C.; and Jean Timlin, daughter of Mr!<br />

and Mrs James Timlin of Ivywood<br />

Lane, is interning in United Methodist<br />

Community House in Grand Rapids.<br />

• CHERI NEAL<br />

Chert Neal, daughter of Mr and Mrs.<br />

Richard Neal of Aspen Drive, Plymouth,<br />

has graduated from Wayne State<br />

University with a BS degree in biological<br />

science.<br />

She also has been initiated Into the<br />

Gamma chapterof Phi Beta Kappa<br />

hooor<br />

—• ttyhi foftftr, A a* 1878 ...graduate • & auiirtir ui nf<br />

Plymouth Salem High, she was a violinist,<br />

violist, and pianist for the Salem<br />

Orchestra and for Livonia Youth Symphony.<br />

She attended the New England<br />

Conservatory of Music in Boston and<br />

Schoolcraft College before completing<br />

her degree at Wayne State Following a<br />

summer of travel in Germany, she will<br />

return to WSU to begin her studies in<br />

the Medical School.<br />

• KEVIN KELLIHER<br />

Kevin Kelliher of Plymouth has<br />

graduated with a BBA degree from Nazareth<br />

College, Nazareth, Mich<br />

• LINDA VINCENT Linda S. Vincent<br />

of Plymouth has graduated from<br />

the University of Michigan with a BA<br />

in EngH«h<br />

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QAE Thursday. June 2, 1983<br />

LWV delegates<br />

will attend<br />

state confab<br />

Six local residents will be among<br />

some 225 delegates attending the 1983<br />

state convention of th» nf w nm .<br />

en Voters (LWV) of Michigan.<br />

The siz will represent the League of<br />

Women Voters of Northville. Plymouth,<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> and Novi at the state convention<br />

when it meets tomorrow, Saturday<br />

and Sunday at the Kellogg Center,<br />

Michigan State University, East<br />

Lansing. _ ~ r -<br />

Billie Whitely, Janet CorreU, Gloria<br />

Hammonds, Deanna Huff, Claudia Day<br />

and Nancy White will participate in the<br />

LWVs decision making, on program<br />

budget and bylaws. They will also help<br />

elect officers for the state LWV for the<br />

next two years.<br />

White will serve as state board representative.<br />

Beverly McAninch of<br />

Plymouth is president of the state organization<br />

and, in that capacity, will<br />

preside over the three-day convention<br />

Agnes Mary Mansour, director of the<br />

Michigan Department of Social Services,<br />

will speak at the noon meeting<br />

Julia Holmes, action chair of the<br />

LWV of the U.S., will deliver the keynote<br />

address at the banquet tomorrow<br />

night<br />

League members also will participate<br />

in workshops and informal meet-<br />

MUO- "<br />

bership-related issues. Of special interest<br />

will be workshops on the League's<br />

position on natural resources, the handling<br />

of toxic wastes and its current<br />

study of national security and arms<br />

control.<br />

The LWV, founded in 1920, is a nonpartisan,<br />

non-profit volunteer organization<br />

whose main purposes are to encourage<br />

political responsibility through<br />

active and informed participation of<br />

citizens in their government, and to act<br />

on selected issues studied by the membership.<br />

The League never s<strong>up</strong>ports or opposes<br />

any candidate or political party.<br />

The LWV of Michigan represents 150<br />

Michigan communities. Membership is<br />

open to all citizens 18 and older.<br />

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5Il?e ©bseruer<br />

Brad Emona, C.J. RiaaK editors<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 O&E<br />

'Prix' challenge:<br />

power vs. finesse<br />

POWER<br />

Not the ultimate goal in auto racing.<br />

But it can be a pivotal ally.<br />

The goal is to win- More power results<br />

in more speed. More speed means a faster car<br />

And the fastest car will quite often streak to<br />

victory.<br />

Quite often. But not always.<br />

Sunday's Detroit Grand Prix will allow a good<br />

look at power vs. finesse. It may be the last look<br />

Detroit gets with these factors as such opposites.<br />

TURBO AND FORD Cosworth - these are the<br />

two powerplants used to propel the sleek Formula<br />

One autos. The Cosworth engine has been in use for<br />

15 years, and has dominated the Grand Prix racing<br />

scene much of that time.<br />

Turbos, however, have emerged as the engine of<br />

the future, because, in simplest terms, a turbo<br />

engine can provide more power.<br />

A lot more. The V-8 Cosworth engine now in use<br />

cranks out, at tops, 540 horsepower (hp). A fourcylinder<br />

turbo engine is capable of 700 hp.<br />

That's an incredible power advantage. But, even<br />

though now a rriaJOtnty of the Formula One teams<br />

race turbos, the powerful engine has not<br />

dominated.<br />

Why? There are many reasons. Turbos have been<br />

around since the HOs, but Renault is credited with<br />

its recent development. Still, the Renault team has<br />

been working and refining the engine for eight<br />

years and reliability problems remain. And a car<br />

can't win if it doesn't finish.<br />

Reliability may be the No. 1 reason Keke<br />

Rosberg won the World Dri'ver's title last year in a<br />

Cosworth-powered Williams. Rosberg didn't win a<br />

race, but placed high enough in his races to outpoint<br />

his turbo competitors.<br />

RELIABILITY ISNT as big a problem for turbos<br />

as it was, according to Wylie McCoy, general<br />

manager of Livonia's McLaren Motors. McLaren<br />

and Williams are the two major Formula One<br />

racing teams using Cosworth engines.<br />

"Ferrari iathe most reliable (of the turbos),"<br />

McCoy said. "Renault and BMW have a certain<br />

amount of trouble, and the others have degrees of<br />

problems.<br />

"But, yeah, they are getting better."<br />

Still, the Cosworth cars hang tough, especially on<br />

tight, city-street courses — like Detroit's. And<br />

McCoy thinks its because of tires.<br />

"People look at the turbo vs. Cosworth, but they<br />

don't realize there's a tire war going on between<br />

Michelin and Goodyear," he said. "Rosberg's win at<br />

Monaco (May 15) was entirely because of his choice<br />

of tires."<br />

What Rosberg did was use Goodyear tires suited<br />

for a dry track, even though the circuit through the<br />

streets of Monte Carlo was wet. The track dried<br />

after a few laps and Rosberg had a big advantage<br />

over the turbo cars.<br />

THE COSWORTH powerplant is lighter than the<br />

turbo package and more fuel efficient. That means<br />

the turbos must carry a heavier load. And a heavier<br />

car wears out tires more rapidly<br />

So does a course with an abundance of tight<br />

turns. So far this season, there have been two<br />

Grand Prix races on city streets: at Monaco, where<br />

Rosberg reigned, and at Long Beach, in which<br />

McLaren got its only victory of the season with<br />

John Watson finishing first.<br />

Turbos have won the other Grand Prix events,<br />

with Renault's Alain Frost winning the Belgian and<br />

French races, Nelson Piquet capturing the<br />

Brazilian in his Brabham-BMW and Patrick<br />

Tambay driving his Ferrari to triumph<br />

Marino. All three courses are more wide open, with<br />

longer straightaways suited to the faster turbos.<br />

What can be expected in Detroit this weekend?<br />

"There are so many variables, it's hard to predict."<br />

said McCoy.<br />

INDEED IT IS. One of those variables is the<br />

course itself, which has been altered. Last year,<br />

Watson won In his McLaren at an average speed of<br />

78 2 miles per hour This year's course is promised<br />

to be much faster, with some of the tighter turns<br />

absent. And faster favors turbos.<br />

Weather, too, could have an affect. And don't<br />

forget the tire war McCoy mentioned.<br />

Certainly, fans will see two different races over<br />

the weekend: the qualifying lap* and the race itself<br />

The swift turbos should dominate the qualifying.<br />

They have at every race this season<br />

But if there is a Cosworth within the first three<br />

rows, beware The tight turns could take a toll on<br />

the turbos on race day.<br />

HOW MUCH turbo-powered engines will<br />

dominate Formula One racing remains a question<br />

because of rules changes for next year. The<br />

minimum weight is being lowered and pit stops for<br />

fuel will be disallowed<br />

That means the less efficient turbos will have to<br />

cut their horsepower to save fuel and weight. Still,<br />

McCoy figures that soon all Formula One teams<br />

will race turbos McLaren already has a Porsche- •<br />

turbo powerplant on order. II could arrive by year*!<br />

end.<br />

"They'll probably be more development oo the<br />

turbos," McCoy said "They'll have to cut back to a<br />

lower horsepower level.<br />

*(TW changes) will take away some of the<br />

turbos' advantage It'll even things out."<br />

But that's next year At Jhls year's Detroit Grand<br />

Prix, ItH be^jmer r*. finesse.<br />

By Brad Emons<br />

staff writer<br />

The Livonia Collegiate Baseball League is<br />

alive and well with another summer of baseball<br />

beginning Friday.<br />

The league, for the area's top players 19<br />

years and under, has been known for years as<br />

the Livonia Adray League. Livonia Parks and<br />

Recreation commissioners, however,<br />

changed the name of the circuit -this winter,<br />

removing Mike Adray. the area appliance<br />

dealer's name, from the six-team league.<br />

But Adray's name will still be prevalent.<br />

Livonia Adray, the regular season and<br />

playoff champion, appears to have another<br />

The <strong>Canton</strong> Cowboys' Rick Morris helped<br />

his team reach the boys' under-14 finals<br />

baseball<br />

strong team under manager Ron Hellier despite<br />

the fact that only two veterans return.<br />

Hellier's team reached the final four in last<br />

year's prestigious AU-American Amateur<br />

Baseball Association tournament in Johns-,<br />

town. Pa.<br />

"This is the youngest team we've ever<br />

had." said Hellier. "I don't know what type of<br />

league it will be."<br />

Area drivers test<br />

Grand Prix course<br />

By C J. Riaak<br />

On Sunday afternoon, the eyes of motorsport<br />

enthusiasts from around the<br />

globe will be focused on a 2.56-mile circuit<br />

of Detroit's city streets.<br />

Those eyes will be riveted oo the<br />

gro<strong>up</strong> of drivers behind the wheels of<br />

the Formula One race cars. Grand Prix<br />

racing is the cream of International<br />

auto sports, and Detroit is the sole remaining<br />

site of a Grand Prix race in<br />

th> United States.<br />

1 jut local-drivers will be on the Detrr<br />

track this weekend — not competing<br />

with the world's best. These drivers<br />

will be battling in the four s<strong>up</strong>porting<br />

races accompanying the prestigious<br />

Grand Prix.<br />

These races — the Kroger 100 Formula<br />

Mondial. Renault Le Car C<strong>up</strong>.<br />

Champion Spark Plug Challenge and<br />

Kelly American Challenge — are not<br />

the reaaoo 100,000 people will jam the<br />

grandstands around the Detroit circuit<br />

this weekend. These drivers know that.<br />

But to them, the competition is just<br />

as Intense in their race. Winning is a<br />

single unifying reason for both s<strong>up</strong>port<br />

race drivers and Formula One competitors<br />

to-climb behind the wheel.<br />

DAVE MROZ of Livonia has no allusloos<br />

of grandeur when it cornea l<br />

Taring.<br />

"Tve always raced cloasd canopy<br />

cars, so I never thought about racing<br />

them." Mroi said when asked about<br />

dreams of driving a Formula One car.<br />

Mroi will compete in the Kelly<br />

American Challenge, the last race Sunday<br />

afternoon. His Ford Mustang will<br />

be making iU initial appearance<br />

' "This Is the first time the car will be<br />

Dave Mroz<br />

challenges Prix course<br />

VTa<br />

BILL BRESLEB/«I»« photograph*<br />

of the first <strong>Canton</strong> Soccer Invitational laat<br />

weekend.<br />

><br />

out this year," Mroz said. "Last year<br />

was the first time we had a car in this<br />

series In five races, we finished in the<br />

top 10 three times<br />

That gave us an idea of what it<br />

takes In these races, and we took that<br />

and built a whole new car."<br />

THE RESULT of his efforts will be<br />

oo the track Sunday. Mroz Isn't expecting<br />

too much — "basically, it'll be our<br />

test session" - but figures that If be<br />

can finish in the top 10, he'll have a car<br />

capable of top five performance once<br />

Mroz. who works at Ford's Engine<br />

Design Engineering and Research Center<br />

in Dearborn, has been racing for 12<br />

years. He started with the SCCA<br />

(Sports Car Club of America) Amateur<br />

National circuit and worked <strong>up</strong> to the<br />

IMSA (International Motor Sports Association)<br />

GT:<br />

turn to Paoe3<br />

L<br />

LIVONIA ADRAY returns shortstop Pete<br />

Rose and fireballing reliever J?hrr Recker<br />

from Oakland Community College.<br />

Rose, a Livonia Stevenson senior, will be<br />

joined by prep teammates Rick Rozman, Brian<br />

Porter and Scott Miller.<br />

Greg Everson, who plays hockey at U-M-<br />

Dearborn, and Jim Lasota represent Bentley<br />

High.<br />

Hellier also has Catholic Central graduates<br />

Dave Rodriguez, a pitcher, John Judge,<br />

catcher, Mike MacDonald, pitcher; and Randy<br />

Baringer, second base.<br />

Ed Groves, recently released as a 17-yearold<br />

by the New York Mets, should also help<br />

the pitching staff.-<br />

SUNDIAL<br />

S0LARIAN<br />

toss<strong>up</strong><br />

(P.C)IC<br />

Plymouth <strong>Canton</strong> senior Don Dombey will<br />

play either third or short, while Jim St. John,<br />

a senior from Milford Lakeland bound for<br />

Eastern Michigan, will handle the catching.<br />

WESTLAND-REDFORD ADRAY, which<br />

tied for second, place last season, is expected<br />

to make a serious run "for the title<br />

Manager Rodger George, head coach at<br />

Henry Ford Community College, brings with<br />

him his entire infield which includes the<br />

team's leading hitter, second baseman Tony<br />

DeMare<br />

Please turn to Page 3<br />

<strong>Canton</strong> crowns<br />

tourney champs<br />

By Kan McDonald<br />

special writer<br />

Tl was nnf a rarafrflf. rplatwl Mamn.<br />

rial Day weekend for 98 youth soccer<br />

teams in <strong>Canton</strong> Township.<br />

In fact, it was a fierce, competitive<br />

holiday as squads from Canada. Ohio<br />

and Michigan battled for top honors in<br />

the first-ever <strong>Canton</strong> Soccer Invitation-<br />

al-<br />

The tournament, marking the dedication<br />

of <strong>Canton</strong>'s Philip S. Dingelday<br />

soccer fields, concluded Sunday as<br />

championship matches were decided in<br />

10 divisions.<br />

In Girls Under 12 action, the Plymouth<br />

Stingers gave the <strong>Canton</strong> Wildcats<br />

a well they'll never forget, administering<br />

a 9-0 beating in the championship<br />

match. Plymouth advanced to the final<br />

with a 1-0 victory over the Columbus,<br />

Ohio Cheetahs, while the Wildcats<br />

nipped rival <strong>Canton</strong> Goldiggers, 3-2.<br />

Two Canadian teams proved the<br />

Great White North is not only a hockey<br />

powerhouse, but a force to be reckoned<br />

with in the world of soccer.<br />

IN BOYS UNDER 16 play, Windsor<br />

United dumped Grove City, Ohio 8-0<br />

for the championship. Windsor advanced<br />

by tripping the <strong>Canton</strong> Red<br />

Devils, 5-1, while Grove City squeaked<br />

by the Livonia Spartans, 2-1, in the<br />

other semifinal.<br />

Another Windsor United team<br />

proved s<strong>up</strong>erior in the Boys Under 10<br />

flight with a 9-0 triumph in the final<br />

over the <strong>Canton</strong> Raiders. The Raiders<br />

made the final with a 5-0 shellacking of<br />

the <strong>Canton</strong> Shamrocks, while United<br />

had little difficulty with the <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Red Devils, 5-1.<br />

The Columbus Ravens gained a title<br />

for Ohio in the Girls Under 10 division<br />

with a pair of shutout wins.<br />

The Ravens blanked the <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Raiders, 4-0, for the title, and the Van<br />

Buren Tigers, 3-0, in the semifinals.<br />

The Raiders, meanwhile, booted tha<br />

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<strong>Canton</strong> Chargers in'the other semifinal,<br />

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VAN BUREN. however, gained revenge<br />

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zapping the Westland Astros, 2-1, in the<br />

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Westland advanced with a hardfought<br />

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The <strong>Canton</strong> Cowboys had a rough<br />

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Heights Strikers, 4-0. The Cowboys corralled<br />

Redford United in the semifinal,<br />

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Clawing their way to the Girls Under<br />

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who nipped the Livonia Avengers for<br />

the championship. 2-1. The Wildcats<br />

qualified for the finals, tripping Columbus,<br />

2-1, and Livonia advanced by<br />

knocking off another Livonia team, the<br />

Choice, 4-2.<br />

IN THE OLDEST division of play,<br />

the Warren Lancers, a Boys Under 19<br />

squad, got by the Redford Marauders,<br />

2-1. The Lancers received a bye in the<br />

semifinals when Petoskey failed to<br />

show, while Redford delivered the<br />

Dearborn Heights Rangers a crushing<br />

5-2 defeat.<br />

Two select club age gro<strong>up</strong>s? the Boys<br />

Under 12 and Under 14 divisions, were<br />

won by the Birmingham Blazers, 8-1<br />

victor over Livonia Arsenal, and by the<br />

Ann Arbor Tyrants, who defeated the<br />

Livonia Raiders.<br />

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O&EThufSday, June 2. 1963<br />

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CarroUloo<br />

Oty. Tim Reed, Battle Creek Central. K**a<br />

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4C*(R-5C) O&E Thursday. June 2. 1983<br />

Observer sports statistics<br />

girls track<br />

Livonia Franklin coach Steve Dolloway<br />

will compile the Observer's best<br />

girls' track times in the coming weeks<br />

Coaches are urged to call Dolloway<br />

from 7-9 p.m. Mondays and Wednesdays<br />

at 422-6124 to report their team's<br />

best performances<br />

The listings will appear in Thursday's<br />

editions of the Observer.<br />

Long Jimp<br />

Dawn Johnson (PS)<br />

Kelly Bemiss (PS) •<br />

Amy Rozman iLS)<br />

. Menu Clor ISA)<br />

Kaltie Roesner iLS)<br />

Nikki Wilson (BS)<br />

Ann Glomski iPS)<br />

Colleen Conrad (LC)<br />

Kim Relyea iLS)<br />

Ruth Arney (RT)<br />

High Jump<br />

Cathy McBnde (Cville)<br />

Kallie Roesner (LS)<br />

Cindy McSurely (PS)<br />

Gambia Shivers iBB)<br />

KimFleek(GC)<br />

Emily Emenck (Bfi i<br />

Pam Griffin iLS)<br />

Deborah Unverzagt i LSi<br />

Jeanme Ginnard iRTi<br />

Sue Willey (LL)<br />

Chris Vedder iRU)<br />

Ruth Stoder (BB)<br />

Chris Neslund iGC)<br />

Diane Cranston (JG)<br />

Anna Pamsh iJGl<br />

Ann Bisc<strong>up</strong> (BB)<br />

Sue Niemiec (LP)<br />

Cberi Muneio IPS)<br />

Cheryl Fenton (LC)<br />

Chen MuneiO PS)<br />

Sue Hollman {LSI -<br />

Chris "Vedder (RU)<br />

Ann Bisc<strong>up</strong> (BB)<br />

Sherrie Evans (LS)<br />

Lisa Zaborowski (LC)<br />

Ruth Stoder i BBi<br />

' Fran Whitlaker (PS)<br />

Julie Marc hand (RU)<br />

Diane Cranston (JG><br />

Shot P«t<br />

100-meter dash<br />

Mary Pollard (LF)<br />

Londreanne Washington (BB)<br />

Sue Johnson (LF)<br />

17-4<br />

16-61,<br />

I6-2W<br />

16-2<br />

15-10**<br />

15-10<br />

1V9<br />

15-4*.<br />

1V4W<br />

15-4H<br />

5-6<br />

5-3<br />

5-2<br />

V2<br />

5-0<br />

5-0<br />

5-0<br />

5-0<br />

4-11<br />

4-11<br />

38-6<br />

31-8<br />

33-9<br />

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12 6<br />

12 6<br />

12 6<br />

Sucy Slojeba (PS)<br />

Kim Brown (PC) .<br />

Kim Bennett iPC)<br />

Debbie Bozeman f JG)<br />

Tammy Ethndge (JG)<br />

Sucy Wood (LF)<br />

Sue Long (GC)<br />

Lea one McCarthy (LC)<br />

200 dash<br />

Dawn Johnson (PS)<br />

Londreanne Washington (BB)<br />

Leanne McCarthy (LCT<br />

Sue Tankersley (GO<br />

Angela Dugas (LL)<br />

Darlerie Delonis (LL)<br />

Kim Bennett (PC).<br />

Sue Johnson (LF)<br />

Barb Gross (BB)<br />

Denise Durrer (RU)<br />

Lisa Rice (BP)<br />

Andrea Bowman (LC)<br />

MonaCTor (SA)<br />

Kathy Newton (LL)<br />

Carolyn Nagy (PCU<br />

Angle Mogielski (RU)<br />

Leanne McCarthy (LC)<br />

Sue-Johnson (LF)<br />

Michelle Wolfe (LS)<br />

Sharon Bowman (RT)<br />

baseball rankings<br />

The Observer will print the prep baseball leaders<br />

in hitting and pitching in Thursday's editions<br />

Coaches are encouraged to call in their team's top<br />

statistics to either Chris Pnebe or Mike George.<br />

Redford Bishop Borgess assistant coaches, at 255-<br />

1100, 8-10pm Sunday evenings -<br />

OBSERVER BASEBALL<br />

" RANKINGS<br />

Hitting (30 at bats;<br />

Name AB H Avg.<br />

Dave Slavin (PS) 60 34 .567<br />

Paul Krol (GC) 53 24 453<br />

Don Taylor (RU) 52 23 .442<br />

Bob Copciac (LF) 36 15 417<br />

Joe Taraskavage (GC) 44 18 409<br />

"Todd Rtedel (PS) 62 25 403<br />

Mick Madsen (PS) 48 19 386<br />

Tom Kelley (GC) 56 22 393<br />

Bob Milligan (GC) 50 19 380<br />

Brett Emery (GC) 53 20 .377<br />

Mike Cindrich (PS) 53 19 358<br />

Bob Rousseau (RT) 54 19 352<br />

Home runs — Slavin (PS) 5: Krol (GO. Schwanz<br />

i RW) 4. Miller (LF) 3<br />

Rana batted In — Slavin (PS). 36; Summers (CO.<br />

17. Taraskavage (GO 16, Krol (GO, Miller (LF),<br />

Haot (PS), 15; Michalik (CO. Carlson (PS). 14<br />

Pitching (4 decisions:<br />

Naa>e ERA IP. SO - W-L<br />

David Kress (RT) 0.82 25 W 25 4-1<br />

John Nissen (CO 0 88 47H 60 7-0<br />

12 f<br />

128<br />

129<br />

129<br />

130<br />

1ST<br />

13 I<br />

13 I<br />

26 2<br />

26 3<br />

26 6<br />

26 6<br />

26 6<br />

26 9<br />

27 0<br />

27 1<br />

17 1<br />

27 1<br />

1 00:1<br />

1 00 7<br />

1 00 9<br />

101 6<br />

101.7<br />

1 02 0<br />

1 02 1<br />

1 02 9<br />

1 02 6<br />

1 03 0<br />

Cathy Kdski (RU)<br />

Laura GrazuLs(JG) .<br />

Kami Laird (RU)<br />

Pam Eldridge (JG)<br />

Amy Masternak (LC)<br />

Charon Mellas (GO . .<br />

100 hardies<br />

Cindy McSurely |PS)<br />

Dana Maguran (LFf<br />

Lisa Dominate (LF)<br />

Emily Emenck (BB)<br />

Kallie Roesner (LS).<br />

Mane 0 Connell (RT)<br />

Beth Mier (LS)<br />

Pat Brennan (PC)<br />

Toni Grzelak (LF)<br />

Ami English (BB)<br />

300 hardies<br />

Carol Lindsay (PS)<br />

Lisa Dominato itS*")<br />

Beth Mier (LSi 1.<br />

Barb Gross (BB)<br />

Dana Maguran (LF)<br />

Mane O'Connell (RT)<br />

Cindy McSurely (PS)<br />

Kathy Newton(LL) . x<br />

Ingrid Miller (RU)<br />

Micbele Adams (PC)<br />

Franklin<br />

Lady-wood<br />

800 run Salem r. . .<br />

Andrea Bowman (LCI . 2181 Bishop Borgess<br />

Shelly Simons IPS) . 2 20 6 <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Angie Mogielskj RU) 2 20 7 Redford Union<br />

Charon Mellas (GC) 2 22 0 Stevenson<br />

Sue Willey (LL) 2 24 S Churchill<br />

Julie Recta (LC) 2 28 0 Garden City<br />

Maggie Karr (LS) 2 28 I Redford Thurston<br />

Teresa Halkow |JG) 2302<br />

Lisa Adamic (RU). 2 30 S Bishop Borgess<br />

Sue Tatigian (LS) 2:31.0 Stevenson<br />

Churchill<br />

1.600 nua Salem<br />

Kelly Champagne (LL) VOl 0 Ladywood<br />

Angte Mogielski (RU) . 5 05 0 <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Julie Recla (LC) 5 18 1 Garden City<br />

Louise Shaheen (BB) 5 23 0 Franklin<br />

Kathv Curtiss fLC) 5 23 1 Thurston<br />

Sue Taugian l LSj 5 23 1 John Glenn<br />

Charon Mellas (GC) 529 9<br />

Stafy Champagne i LL. 5:32.4<br />

Erica Ba.shar (PS) 534 5 Churchill<br />

Cathv Koski (RU) 5 36.0 <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Laura Grazulis (JG.) 5 388 Ladywood<br />

Pam Eldndge iJG) 5 38 8 Salem<br />

Stevenson<br />

3.200 run St Agatha<br />

Kelly Champagne i LL) 10 59 2 Redford Union<br />

Angie Mogielski (RU) 1L12 5 Franklin<br />

Kathy CurtisSTtC) 11 33 5 Bishop Borgess<br />

Louise Shaheen iBBi 1154 6 John Glenn<br />

Taraskavage (GC) 1.03 34 55 4-1<br />

Ed Dumas iRT) 1 12 43«6 38 4-1<br />

Dan Michaels (CC) - 1 22 23 28 5-0<br />

Mark Coburn (BB) 1 42 39 V, 56 VI<br />

John Rogers (CO 1 75 44 51 5-2<br />

Fred .Portillo (BB) 2 87 44 56 4-3<br />

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20%<br />

to<br />

50% OFF<br />

COAS- C.<br />

apppovp:<br />

NAVY ANCHOR M©**<br />

VEST<br />

NYLON LIW€R 11* ft. An'iots<br />

tate*S M<br />

NYLON LINER<br />

IUTI<br />

Boat Mart -"Sg"-<br />

WESTERN LAKES<br />

ACTIVITIES ASSOCIATION<br />

GIRLS SOCCER STANDINGS<br />

Wester* Division<br />

W L<br />

9<br />

' 8<br />

3<br />

2<br />

1<br />

Lakes Divlsioa<br />

W<br />

10<br />

9<br />

7<br />

1<br />

0<br />

I<br />

I<br />

l<br />

l<br />

I<br />

I<br />

L ,<br />

Pis.<br />

21<br />

20<br />

15<br />

2<br />

0<br />

400 relay<br />

1.600 relay<br />

irorr-<br />

12072<br />

12 14 3<br />

12 262<br />

12 27 0<br />

12 27 1<br />

155<br />

158<br />

161<br />

.16.1<br />

.16 1<br />

162<br />

.170<br />

.17 I<br />

172<br />

172<br />

48 3<br />

48 9<br />

49 0<br />

49 0<br />

495<br />

50 6<br />

50 9<br />

513<br />

519<br />

.51 9<br />

52 1<br />

528<br />

530<br />

53 3<br />

535<br />

53.6<br />

538<br />

54 0<br />

54 1<br />

56 1<br />

I 49 8<br />

1 49 9<br />

I 50 2<br />

f<br />

1.50.5<br />

1 50.9<br />

1:51.3<br />

1 52.4<br />

1:518.<br />

1 55 1<br />

1 57 4<br />

4 07 4<br />

4 13 6<br />

.4 136<br />

.4:14 5<br />

4:16.1<br />

4 182<br />

4 19 7<br />

4:21 8<br />

4:22 8<br />

4 28 2<br />

Cosmos 2d<br />

at Buckeye<br />

The Michigan Cosmos under-16 state soccer<br />

team put on a scoring exhibition at the Cincinnati<br />

Buckeye Invitational during the weekend,<br />

as the area all-stars scored 36 goals in five<br />

games en route to a second-place finish.<br />

The Cosmos defeated teams from Cleveland,<br />

St. Louis, Columbus, Ind., and Indianapolis before<br />

they were shut down in the finals.<br />

The Cosmos ran into national power St. Louis<br />

Busch Garden in the .championship tilt but fell 2-<br />

0. Busch rose to the occasion and took advantage<br />

of a tired Cosmo team which played 120 minutes<br />

and two overtimes in the semifinal game.<br />

After a scoreless tie in the first half, Busch<br />

took a 1-0 lead, then iced It with two seconds to<br />

play on another goal.<br />

The select team is made <strong>up</strong> of area players,<br />

including Adam Cermak and Craig Ciccone of<br />

Birmingham, Matt Banks of : Bloomfield Hills,<br />

Bill Buerger of Rochester, Jeff Howell of Troy,<br />

Chris Gembis, Brent Murphy, Dennis Patchett,<br />

Pat Stocker and Chris Wiegel of Livonia, Mark<br />

Flowers, Andy Rama and Steve Moran of Plymouth,<br />

and Bob Guldberg, Matt Lotarski and Doug<br />

May of Northville.<br />

BEST WARRANTY<br />

BEST INSTALLATION<br />

BEST EXHAUST<br />

WORK IN TOWN<br />

CHECK US OUT<br />

4-WHBEL BRAKES • $89*95 -<br />

New Pads. Shoes, Turn Rotors & Drums'<br />

Metallic Pads Extra .. .<br />

American made cars and many imports.<br />

Tuffy Livonia<br />

featuring computer print out<br />

of your engine before & after<br />

Tune Up • $39"<br />

featuring<br />

Niehoff Ignition Products<br />

Includes plugs and<br />

minor adjustments<br />

LIVONIA<br />

30451 Plymoul+i<br />

522 3240<br />

Tuffy<br />

mufflers<br />

Tuffy Livonia &<br />

Westland Specials<br />

$89"<br />

most cars<br />

The cure for sagging cars<br />

10% off<br />

WfSTUND<br />

' 803 N. Woyne Rd<br />

324-3340<br />

boys track<br />

Livonia Churchill track coach Fred<br />

Price is compiling the area's top boys'<br />

track listings,<br />

"Price ean be reached-during most<br />

weeknights or on the weekends at 425-<br />

1848. Times should be converted tometric<br />

distances.<br />

AREA'S TOP BOYS".<br />

SHOT PUT<br />

Tim Luch (Churchill)<br />

Jim Holdsclaw (Borgess)<br />

Dave Mue (Churchill)<br />

Jeff Dempsey (Garden City)<br />

Mark Juodawlkis (Churchill)<br />

Jim MacDooald (Borgess)<br />

John Schhchter (John Glenn)<br />

Tim Walton (Borgess)<br />

Dave Houle (Salem)<br />

Anton Ivezaj (<strong>Canton</strong>)<br />

DISCUS<br />

Mark Juodawlkis I Churchill)<br />

Tim Luch (Churchill) .<br />

Dave Mize (Churchill)<br />

Tom Brzezinski (Stevenson).<br />

Jim MacDonald (Borgess)<br />

Tim Wilton (Borgessi<br />

Keith Urban (Salem)<br />

Don Page (<strong>Canton</strong>)<br />

Dave Dempsey (Garden City)<br />

Mike Leon (Churchill)<br />

HIGH JUMP<br />

Jeff Felts (Garden City).<br />

Mike Meehan (Churchill)<br />

Jim KowaUki (CO - , - . .<br />

Matt Btais (Churchill)<br />

John Rakoczy (CO .<br />

Steve Potok (Stevenson) . .<br />

Steve O'Hara (Churchill) .<br />

Brian Gustafsoo ( R U ) . . .<br />

Marv Zurek (Salem)<br />

Scott Filipiak (Thurston)<br />

Mike White (Salem)<br />

LONG JUMP<br />

Keith Percin (Bentley 1<br />

Dan Lingg (Salem)<br />

Tim Hanks (Borgess)<br />

Mike White (Salem).<br />

i! u n i<br />

Greg Lapsham (Churchill). . . .<br />

Jeff Arnold (Salem)<br />

Rick Paler (CO<br />

Jeff Meixner (John Glenn)<br />

Mike Giannettj (CO<br />

POLE VAULT<br />

Bob Johnson (RtT)<br />

Dan Lingg (Salem)<br />

John Lock (Churchill)<br />

Barrett Strong (CC)<br />

Chris Kindred (CO.^<br />

Mike Harwood (Salem)<br />

Stu Jones (Churchill)<br />

51-4<br />

48-9<br />

48-SW<br />

. 46-7<br />

46-1H<br />

45-9<br />

. 45-6<br />

45-4<br />

45-2<br />

44-9<br />

155-9<br />

. 154-5<br />

. 151-1<br />

145-5<br />

142-10<br />

139-2<br />

138-0<br />

136-10<br />

135-7<br />

, 135-1,<br />

6.-4*4<br />

6-4<br />

6-4<br />

. 6-4<br />

. 6-3<br />

. 6-2<br />

6-2<br />

. . 6-2<br />

6-2<br />

6-1<br />

. 6-1<br />

21-7l»<br />

21-7V*<br />

20-8"*<br />

20-5 W<br />

4<br />

20-m<br />

20-1<br />

20- W<br />

19-11*<br />

19-7<br />

14-6<br />

14-0<br />

13-1<br />

13-0<br />

13-0<br />

12-7<br />

12-6<br />

Matt Jurcryszyn (Stevenson)<br />

Steve McCormack (CO . -<br />

110-METER HURDLES<br />

Rick Paler (CO<br />

Glenn Medalle (Salem)<br />

Matt Wllciewski (CO<br />

Keith Opalach (Churchill)<br />

Marv Zurek (Salem)<br />

AU1)<br />

Greg Page (CO<br />

Arander Sooch (Salem ><br />

Sieve O'Hara (Churchill)<br />

Charles Key [Borgess)<br />

Craig Dimaya (Garden City)<br />

306 HURDLES<br />

Paul DeFlono (Churchill)<br />

Greg Page (CO<br />

Brian Grassel (John Glenn)<br />

Tim Potoniec (Stevenson)<br />

John Enright (Thurston).<br />

Marlon Montgomery (Borgess)<br />

Marv Zurek (Salem)<br />

Arvinder Sooch (Salem)<br />

Dan AUinger (Salem)<br />

Dave Lee (Garden City)<br />

100 DASH<br />

Enk Hansen (Churchill).<br />

John Patten (Borgess)<br />

Fred Owens (Borgess)<br />

Marlon Montgomery (Borgess)<br />

Marion Pittman (Borgess). . . .<br />

John Ennght (Thurston)<br />

Keith Percin (Bentley) . .<br />

Srol Selamet (Garden City)<br />

Bryan Dye (John Glenn)<br />

200 DASH<br />

Erik Hansen (Churchill)<br />

Marc Tindall (Salem)<br />

Fred Owens (Borgess)<br />

Bill Crawford (Churchill)<br />

Gary Demirijian (ClarencevUle).<br />

Pat Mulcahy (Garden City)<br />

Jim Holdsclaw (Borgess) . . . .<br />

John Patten (Borgess)<br />

Craig Crawford (Franklin)<br />

Marlon Montgomery (Borgess)<br />

Jeff Krishano (Garden Oty)<br />

Frank Dudek [Franklin)<br />

IIW 1)ASH<br />

Erik Hansen (CBurchill)<br />

Mike Milligan (Stevenson). . .<br />

Jeff Behard (CO<br />

Jim Thompson (Borgess)<br />

Bob Thomas (Churchill). . .<br />

Elijah Rogers (<strong>Canton</strong>)<br />

Larry Blais (Churchill) . .<br />

Dave Basaeit (Borgess)<br />

Pat Mulcahy (Garden City)<br />

Tom Evanoff (John Glenn)<br />

800 RUN<br />

Paul Buchanan (CC)<br />

Mike Milligan (Stevenson)<br />

SALEM<br />

LUMBER<br />

no. 1 stockade<br />

5' x 8' fence<br />

$ 15 88<br />

see our other<br />

types of<br />

6' x 8' fences<br />

7" peeled cedar posts @ *2'* ea.<br />

treated 8' timbers<br />

peeler cores<br />

4" x 6" s.e.<br />

6" x 8" s.e.<br />

pre-formed<br />

counter tops<br />

choice of:<br />

butcher Nock hght<br />

butch* Nock dark<br />

Clank ad map*a<br />

oak frame<br />

medicine<br />

cabinet<br />

y<br />

12-6<br />

12-6<br />

148<br />

150<br />

15.0<br />

15 1<br />

151<br />

0,<br />

15.3<br />

.HA<br />

155<br />

15.5<br />

15.5<br />

36.8<br />

368<br />

39.6<br />

39 7<br />

398<br />

400<br />

402<br />

405<br />

40 6<br />

40 6<br />

108<br />

109<br />

11.0<br />

11.1<br />

.11.2<br />

112<br />

.11.2<br />

11.2<br />

.11.2<br />

.218<br />

22 5<br />

22.6<br />

22 9<br />

23.0<br />

23.1<br />

23 1<br />

233<br />

23.4<br />

23.5<br />

23 5<br />

235<br />

49 3<br />

51.1<br />

51 5<br />

51 6<br />

51 7<br />

51.7<br />

51.9<br />

52 1<br />

525<br />

52 7<br />

1 58 6<br />

1:58 6<br />

Larry Blais (Churchill) .<br />

John McElwee (RU)<br />

Ken Dubois (Stevensooi<br />

Phi! Kamm (Garden Qty)<br />

Mike Huebl (CO<br />

Rick Williams (CvtUe)<br />

Paul Schwartz (Churchill)<br />

Steve Shaver (CO<br />

Keith Scbwanx (RU)<br />

1.600 RUN<br />

Paul Buchanan (CO<br />

Ken Dubois (Stevenson) ~<br />

Keith Schwam (RU)<br />

Steve Shaver (CO<br />

Paul Schwartz (Churchill)<br />

Tom Zakrzewski (CO<br />

Ray Brennan (Borgess)<br />

Don Miller (Churchill)<br />

Kevin Sari (Bentley)<br />

A1 Clemens (Churchill)<br />

_ 3,200 RUN<br />

Ken Dubois (Stevenson)<br />

Paul Buchanan (CO<br />

Marty Hegarty (CC)<br />

Mark St Aubin (RU)<br />

Dave Homann (Garden City) .<br />

Bnan Boston (Churchill) .<br />

Craig Sickmiller (RU)<br />

Tom Zakrzewski (CO ...<br />

Frank Brosnan (Salem) : .<br />

Pat laorn (CO<br />

400 RELAY<br />

Bishop Borgess<br />

Plymouth Salem<br />

Livonia Franklin<br />

Livonia Churchill<br />

Catholic Central . . . . . . .<br />

Plymouth <strong>Canton</strong><br />

Garden Oty<br />

John Glenn . . . . . . . . . .<br />

Clarenceville<br />

Livonia Stevenson<br />

Bishop Borgess<br />

Livonia Churchill.<br />

Livonia Stevenson<br />

Livonia Franklin .<br />

Catholic Central<br />

-John Glenn . . . .<br />

Hymouth t>alem<br />

Garden City<br />

Plymouth <strong>Canton</strong><br />

1.600 RELAY<br />

Livonia Churchill<br />

Bishop Borgess<br />

Catholic Central<br />

John Glenn . . . .<br />

Livonia Stevenson<br />

Garden City<br />

Livonia Franklin<br />

Plymouth <strong>Canton</strong><br />

ClareocevlUe. . .<br />

Plymouth Salem<br />

150,1<br />

159 1<br />

1 59 S<br />

1 59 6<br />

159.7<br />

1 59 8<br />

2010<br />

2 01T<br />

2 018<br />

4 18 3<br />

4:26 0<br />

4265<br />

429 1<br />

4:30 C<br />

4 34 4<br />

4 35 2<br />

4:36 3<br />

4 36 3<br />

9:29 1<br />

9 38 3<br />

.9 39.5<br />

9 46 2<br />

.9:47 0<br />

9:47 7<br />

9 55 0<br />

9:551<br />

9 556<br />

9 58 0<br />

436<br />

44 1<br />

444<br />

451<br />

.453<br />

. 46 1<br />

46 1<br />

462<br />

464<br />

469<br />

1:30.0<br />

.130.2<br />

132 3<br />

1 32 5<br />

1 32 9<br />

133 2<br />

TJTT<br />

1 35.8<br />

1~S65<br />

3 218<br />

3:26 8<br />

3296<br />

3 30 2<br />

3 30 4<br />

3:32 0<br />

3:32 6<br />

3 331<br />

3 34 4<br />

3 35 6<br />

30650 plymouth road<br />

livonia<br />

422-1000<br />

Moow<br />

OL >0<br />

outdoor fun<br />

begins<br />

with<br />

a...<br />

glider<br />

on,y $ 64 88<br />

hardware<br />

kit<br />

treated lumber 2"<br />

picnic table<br />

hardware<br />

only S 27 88<br />

m o<br />

other hardware kits also in stock<br />

• porch swing* benches<br />

' 'awn chairs • rocking chairs<br />

»tyCroft<br />

vanity<br />

20"x17"<br />

special pecan<br />

rog. *59**<br />

*39


l<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 O&E<br />

(R.W.G-7A)*7C<br />

STI|e © b s e r u e r<br />

6C *(R.W.G-6A)<br />

S a v i n g s p l u s t a x b e n e f i t s<br />

i n t a x - d e f e r r e d a n n u i t i e s<br />

By Sid Mittra<br />

special writer<br />

Many people believe that savings<br />

certificates are the best choice for<br />

their investment program. An alternative<br />

that has many of the same features<br />

yet pays tax-deferred income is<br />

called a tax-deferred annuity.<br />

Assume you have a few thousand dollars<br />

to invest. Assume further that:<br />

• You don't want to pay current income<br />

tax on the interest earned.<br />

• You don't need that interest now<br />

so you would like to leave it to compound.<br />

• You want your capital to be immediately<br />

available (liquid, in case of<br />

emergency).<br />

a If the need occurs, you would like<br />

to use it as collateral, and<br />

• You don't want to take the risk of<br />

getting back less than what you originally<br />

llll'W.U'U A tajmli-Iiimd cinwwU<br />

finances<br />

and<br />

Sid<br />

Mittra<br />

you<br />

might be your best investment choice.<br />

These annuities are in reality loans<br />

you make to insurance companies<br />

They earn interest that is credited to<br />

you but not taxable until it is withdrawn.<br />

Thus your investment compounds<br />

itself without being reduced by<br />

taxes.<br />

This means that your savings dollar<br />

will grow much faster than in most<br />

other programs. The stability of principal<br />

and liquidity of investment are<br />

»d b¥ tha lift* inrnnnrm rnm<br />

pany. which, by law. must maintain<br />

cash reserves to cover withdrawals.<br />

THE MAJOR advantage of an investment<br />

in a tax-deferred annuity is<br />

your ability to compound interest before<br />

the IRS gels its share. The power<br />

of compound interest is almost unbelievable.<br />

For example, if you are able<br />

to invest a little under $9,300 every<br />

year at 10 percent interest, in 25 years<br />

ytni lirill harnrfiB i n<br />

business<br />

briefs<br />

Edwin A. Schrader of the Schrader<br />

Funeral Home Inc. in Plymouth was<br />

honored at a luncheon for funeral directors<br />

who have been licensed for 50<br />

years. Schrader has been active in his<br />

profession and community for 52 years.<br />

His activities have included: district director.<br />

president and secretary of the<br />

Michigan Funeral Directors Association.<br />

district governor of the National<br />

Funeral Directors Association, president<br />

of the Plymouth Kiwanis Club,<br />

lieutenant governor of the Michigan<br />

Kiwanis. Worshipful Master of the<br />

Plymouth Masonic Lodge. Life Member<br />

of the Elks and-trustee of Plymouth<br />

Presbyterian Church.<br />

Melvin G. Hatt of John N. Santeiu &<br />

Son Funeral Home in Garden City was<br />

honored at a lunchen for funeral directors<br />

who have been licensed for 40<br />

years. ..Twenty-five funeral directors<br />

received awards for 40 years of service.<br />

Two area women have passed their<br />

Certified <strong>Public</strong> Accountant examinations<br />

and received their CPA licenses<br />

frnm the Michigan state Board qf<br />

countancy. Donna M. Bishop lives in<br />

Westland. and Maureen M. Buehrer<br />

lives in Livonia.<br />

Robert J. Siegmund III of Livonia<br />

celebrates this 30th anniversary next<br />

month as an agent for New York Life<br />

Insurance Co. Siegmund joined New<br />

York Life as an agent in Detroit in<br />

1953, and he beamed his Chartered<br />

Life Underwriter designation in 1959.<br />

He has served as president of the Livonia<br />

Historical Society. A 1950 graduate<br />

of Michigan State University, he<br />

earned his master's degree from the<br />

University of Michigan.<br />

Larry Oldford of Plymouth, local<br />

agent for Farm Bureau Insurance<br />

Gro<strong>up</strong>, has been named one of the company's<br />

top agents of 1982, based on his<br />

record of sales and service for the<br />

year. As one of the year's top agents,<br />

Oldford received Farm Bureau Insurance<br />

Gro<strong>up</strong>'s "All American" award.<br />

He also earned membership in the 1982<br />

Executives Club, an honor reserved for<br />

the company's top 23 agents and agency<br />

managers for their s<strong>up</strong>eiror insurance<br />

sales and service<br />

business<br />

Barry J*ni«n coordinator/591-2300<br />

O&E Thursday. June 2.1983<br />

David Irvine of Livonia has been<br />

named a vice president at D'Arey-Mac-<br />

Manus & Masius/Bloomfield Hills. Irvine<br />

is responsible for media direction<br />

of the Pontiac, General T>re and GM<br />

Continuous Protestion Plan accounts.<br />

He has worked for DM&M since 1976<br />

and has held the positions of media<br />

planner and media s<strong>up</strong>ervisor. Previously,<br />

Irvine was a media analyst with<br />

Cambell-Ewald.<br />

Ron Ochala of Livonia, chairman of<br />

the political affiars committee of the<br />

Western Wayne Oakland County Board<br />

of Realtors, was one for more than<br />

4,000 Realtors who attended the National<br />

Association of Realtors 1983<br />

Mid-Year/Legislative Meetings last<br />

month in Washington, D.C.<br />

John P. Woods of <strong>Canton</strong> was recently<br />

honored by Caloric Corp. for being<br />

one of 14 salesmen to achieve the highest<br />

percentage of quota for electric<br />

range sales. Woodswill received a trophy<br />

Pepsi, overcoming taint,<br />

could rebound strongly<br />

I have owned shares of Pepsi for<br />

many years, and the stock has anally<br />

done very well. However, with so many<br />

stocks doubling or better these days,<br />

Pepsi is only <strong>up</strong> a few dollars. Can yoa<br />

tell me why this stock hasn't done better?<br />

PepsiCo. Inc. had a problem last<br />

year that cost it a lot of confidence<br />

among professional investors. It was<br />

discovered that fraud had been taking<br />

place for several years in one of Pepsi's<br />

foreign divisions, and that a lot of<br />

profit had been reported that hadn't actually<br />

been earned.<br />

This caused two problems: One was<br />

that confidence in the management<br />

was reduced because it had failed to<br />

discover the fraud over a period of<br />

years. There also was some concern<br />

that the discovered loss would be "just<br />

the tip of the iceberg." and further<br />

lossses would be turned <strong>up</strong>.<br />

A SECOND PROBLEM was that the<br />

losses now discovered meant the company<br />

had been less profitable than previously<br />

calculated.<br />

Quite a bit of time has now passed,<br />

and no additional problems have been<br />

discovered. However, the company's<br />

business has been weak overseas, and<br />

the devaluation of the Mexican peso<br />

has caused a decline of profits in that<br />

country.<br />

today's investor<br />

It has been anticipated that the company's<br />

earnings would not start <strong>up</strong><br />

again until the second half of this year.<br />

The recently released earnings for the<br />

March quarter were 40 cents a share as<br />

compared with 69 cents a year ago.<br />

MY GUESS IS that as soon as earnings<br />

start to move <strong>up</strong> again, you will<br />

see the price of the stock respond nicely.<br />

The losses resulting from the fraud<br />

have been written off, and the company<br />

is a strong competitor with a good<br />

record of growth.<br />

Soft drinks are the largest of Pepsi's<br />

businesses, accounting for 39 percent<br />

of sales. The Fri to-Lay division makes<br />

the company a leader in snack foods.<br />

Pizza Hut and Taco Bell are the company's<br />

entries in the restaurant business.<br />

North American Van Lines, Lee-<br />

Way Motor Freight and Wilson Sporting<br />

Goods are smaller but important<br />

parts of the company.<br />

IF THE SIGNIFICANT recovery in<br />

earnings predicted by chief executive<br />

Thomas E. O'Hara<br />

of the National Association of Investment Clubs<br />

Donald M. Kendall for the second half<br />

of 1983 occurs, I would expect the price<br />

of your stock to catch <strong>up</strong> with the rest<br />

of the market.<br />

Thomas E. O'Hara is chairman of<br />

the board of trustees of the National<br />

Association of Investment Clubs<br />

and editor of Better Investing magazine.<br />

O'Hara welcomes questions<br />

and comments but unJI answer them<br />

only through this column. Readers<br />

who send in questions on a general<br />

investment subject or on a corporation<br />

with broad investor interest<br />

and whose questions are used will<br />

receive a free one-year subscription<br />

to the investment magazine Better<br />

Investing. O'Hara will send a free<br />

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or information about investment<br />

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• dents in the aluminum siding<br />

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• dented gutters<br />

• damages to neighboring homes<br />

If any of these signs are present, a professional<br />

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In most cases, your homeowners insurance<br />

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For a<br />

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consultation call<br />

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Pick <strong>up</strong> your special family<br />

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and see exciting Detroit<br />

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Don't miss the excitement<br />

Friday, June 3, 7:30 p.m. at<br />

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Dodge dealers and the Express —<br />

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Another star m the Dodge line<strong>up</strong><br />

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8B{B.TXWt>-14C.Ro-9A,8C*.R.W.G-6Q).<br />

T h e past r e s t o r e d ^ — .<br />

Old South comes alive in Savannah<br />

SAVANNAH. GEORGIA - When I<br />

walked into the Ballastone Inn. I felt like I<br />

was coming home, even though I have never<br />

stayed there before. It was more than<br />

just the stormy weather 1 had struggled<br />

through on my way from Detroit. It was the<br />

welcome and the rich comfortable surroundings<br />

of this lovely, old Savannah<br />

home.<br />

The Ballastone is one of 17 *""268<br />

CALL us ReoARomc<br />

ALL TRAVCL!<br />

No Service Charges<br />

425-5834<br />

32911 Warrsn<br />

(at Venoy)<br />

' Wee Hand<br />

DENVER — Amtrak has rerouted its<br />

IThicago-San Francisco train so that it goes<br />

through the Rockies ... not around<br />

.hem," as the Denver & Rio Grande Westjrn<br />

Railroad once advertised. The new<br />

xain is called the California Zephyr.<br />

Recently the D&RGW made the last of<br />

ts thrice-weekly runs between Denver and<br />

>alt Lake City on what it long called the<br />

Scenic Line of the World."<br />

At the same time,' Amtrak changed from<br />

lie present routing of its daily San Francisx><br />

Zephyr through Wyoming to the<br />

)&RGW route through Colorado that was<br />

n Amtrak's original plan when it began<br />

ervice on May I, 1971. This was held <strong>up</strong><br />

or more than 12 years because the<br />

iltRGW elected not to join the Amtrak sysem,<br />

continuing its own service.<br />

The original California Zephyr, whic^op^<br />

•rated from March 20, 1949, to March 22,<br />

970, was considered one of the truly great<br />

rains of America s past. Its schedule between<br />

Chicago and San Francisco was<br />

planned so that the trip through the Colorado<br />

Rockies and the California Sierra would<br />

occur in daylight year-around.<br />

HEADING WEST from Denver, the Amtrak<br />

double-deck S<strong>up</strong>erliner equipment using<br />

the new route will ascend some of the<br />

steeper, rail grades in North America and<br />

go through 28 tunnels before crossing the<br />

continental divide in the 6.2-mile Moffat<br />

Tunnel The tunnel is 9,239 feet above sea<br />

level and will be the highest point in the<br />

entire Amtrak system.<br />

Continuing west to Glenwood Springs,<br />

Rifle and Grand Junction, the routing follows<br />

the Colorado River for 238 scenic<br />

miles. The grandeur of the scenery in Glenwood,<br />

Canyon is said to have inspired construction<br />

of the first Vistadome trains. En<br />

route to Salt Lake City, the route crosses<br />

Utah's Wasatch Range at 7,440 feet before<br />

dropping into the Great Salt Lake Valley<br />

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West of Salt Lake City, Amtrak's Zephyr<br />

will remain on its present route through<br />

Reno and across the Donner Pass intp California.<br />

although the original California<br />

Zephyr used a different route.<br />

Passengers .traveling on Amtrak's The<br />

Pioneer between Chicago and the Pacific<br />

Northwest, as well as on The Desert Wind<br />

between Chicago and Las Vegas/Los Angeles,<br />

will also view the spectacular scenery<br />

of the new route while traveling between<br />

Denver and Utah.<br />

Amtrak will honor all reservations made<br />

for travel on the D&RGW Zephyr. Howev-<br />

' er, you should contact Amtrak to reconfirm.<br />

The California Zephyr's departure time<br />

daily from Chicago will be at 2:S0 p.m.,<br />

four hours and five minutes earlier than<br />

former schedules; from Oakland at 12:25<br />

p.m., 40 minutes earlier than previously.<br />

— Iris Sudcrm Jooea<br />

VM<br />

accommodations with private courtyard<br />

and private street entrance.<br />

It is this privacy, personal at-home feeling<br />

and the sense that you can be part of<br />

the family if you want to, that makes all of<br />

these spacious, attractively furnished inns<br />

and guest houses so popular. In many cases<br />

they cost more than an hotel room. The<br />

two- and three-room suites at the Liberty<br />

House rent for $80 for two, $110 for four,<br />

but the China Trade suite in the Ballastone<br />

Inn costs $160 a night.<br />

YOU CAN RESERVE space in most of<br />

Savannah's historic inns and guest houses<br />

by dialing the area code (912) and then<br />

BED-ROOM, which translates numerically<br />

to 233-7666. To be sure, call several weeks<br />

in advance. Otherwise, take a chance that<br />

. one of the rooms will be available last-minute.<br />

The rates for two are: (most are suites)<br />

Under$40: Bed and Breakfast 117 Gordon.<br />

$40 to $60: Mary Lee's Guest Accommodations.<br />

E. Jones; Oglethorpe Manor Inn.<br />

224 E. Oglethorpe; Perry Corner. 105 W.<br />

Perry; Remshart-Brooks House, 106 W.<br />

Jones.<br />

$60 ancQjp: Stoddard-Cooper House, IS<br />

W. Perry; Remshart Inn, 112 W. Jones; Liberty<br />

Inn, 128 W. Liberty; Harris House. 106<br />

W Harris; Gatshaus Gunkel, 409 E. Charlton;<br />

Charlton Court, 403 E. Charlton Court;<br />

Barrister House. 25 W. Perry, Four Seventeen.<br />

417 E. Charlton.<br />

Rates for two at the four larger inns are:<br />

Ballastone Inn, 14 E. Oglethorpe, from $80<br />

to $160.<br />

Foley House Inn, 14 W. Hulls; from $85<br />

to $135.<br />

17 Hundred 90 Inn. 307 E. President;<br />

from $60.<br />

Eliza Thompson House, 5 W. Jones; $68<br />

to $88; less, July-August and November-December.<br />

If you like the historic feeling but prefer<br />

a regular hotel, you might like the lovely<br />

polished wood and brass look amid Savannah<br />

colors in the Mulberry Inn, opened this<br />

year at 601 East Bay St. Rooms start at<br />

$60; suites start at $90.<br />

THE HOLT TEAR<br />

October 23 - November 6<br />

15 Days - Rome & Northern Italy<br />

Itinery: Rome, Florence, Venice,<br />

Stresa, Siena & Sorrento<br />

Film<br />

Presentation<br />

June 13 • 7:30 p.m.<br />

Machus Sly Fox, Birmingham<br />

Reservations Necessary<br />

b o o k<br />

couaerts<br />

travel ol<br />

rochesler<br />

Bay Valley<br />

2470 Old Bridge Road • Bay City, Ml 48706 • (517)686-3500<br />

WEEKEND PACKAGES<br />

1 GOLF WEEKEND, Two Nighta for Two Persona $345.<br />

MINI VACATION, Two Nights for Two Pmom $230.<br />

TENNIS WEEKEND, Two Nights for Two Psrsons $260.<br />

U packages Mud* Comforta*te Room. Welcome ONI aI<br />

Sfewter*. Ltrah. Srwicfc ant<br />

i (Veen Fees and Can tor 2a tS Kolas of I<br />

tS ii alirtioln Tenma We^erd n<br />

»and tree on erne on B V.'s Clay Courts.<br />

For Reservations or more information call<br />

ToWfree In Michigan 1-800-299-5058<br />

^ In Detroit ca> 313-963-3548<br />

meadowbrook village mall<br />

74 n. adams<br />

375-0900<br />

travel<br />

OAE Thursday. June 2. 1983<br />

MICKY JONES<br />

The Ballastone Inn (pictured above) ia one of 17<br />

inns and guest houaes in Savannah'a historic district.<br />

Most of these historic lodgings date from the<br />

mid-to-late 19th century.<br />

A DIFFERENT WORLD<br />

OF CRUISING<br />

Enjoy o glorious, refreshingly different 7-day sum mer<br />

cruise to CanodaS mighry St Lawrence, i^ova Scoha<br />

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^eAuvte S e t ~7*uu*el<br />

IF G O L F i S Y O U R B A G . . .<br />

STOP PUTTERING AROUND,<br />

A GOLFER'S PARADISE AWAITSI<br />

At Boyne Mountain and Boyne Highlands in scenic<br />

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championship 18-hole courses are waiting for you.<br />

Pius two Executive Par-3 courses, and driving<br />

ranges and putting greens too numerous to<br />

mention. Choose from three gort packages. They all<br />

include unlimited green fees on all throe course*,<br />

and goH cart for your first 18 holes.<br />

presents<br />

a Special Offer For "Over 60" Cruisers<br />

Sail from MONTREAL - AUGUST 27,1983<br />

"957 Per Person/Double Occ<strong>up</strong>ancy<br />

Includes Air/Cruise/Meals<br />

2 Lower Bed*, Outside Cabin<br />

Quebec - Saguenay Fjord - Halifax - Cape Cod<br />

Canal - Fall River, Mass. and New York<br />

*Early B i r d D i s c o u n t<br />

Payment in full by<br />

JUNE 15, 1983<br />

Space is Limited!<br />

Call for Detaila — Aak for Nance<br />

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Sponsored by Mar Con Tour», Inc., Troy. Ml ' -<br />

THE MOUNTAIN PACKAGE<br />

includes ovemght accommodate a<br />

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TME mOHLAMDS PACKAGE<br />

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THE DEE* LAKE PACKAGE,<br />

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IOOX3 7077 lout ot star* or write<br />

Borne USA Reeont. Boyne fe+ V/ 4»7fJ<br />

Sllje ©bseruer<br />

Thursday. June 2,1983 OS.E<br />

entertainment<br />

Ethel Simmons editor/591-2300<br />

Street dancing duo has got 'Dance Fever 9 (R.W.Q-7C)*9C<br />

By Ethel Simmons<br />

staff writer<br />

TERRY DYE. 35. has been a<br />

street dancer for five years.<br />

He and his 20-year-old dance<br />

partner, who has the unlikely<br />

but real name of Barbie Daul, have<br />

only beep dancing together a short<br />

time but already their tough street<br />

style has landed them on "Dance Fever."<br />

Dye, a resident of Commerce, works<br />

for the West Bloomfield School District<br />

in the maintenance department. Daul,<br />

a one-time Birmingham resident who<br />

now lives in Milford, is a hair stylist at<br />

Heidi's Salon at the Twelve Oaks Mall<br />

in Novi, where she works with Dye's<br />

wife Juanita. „<br />

Dye and Daul won the Michigan<br />

finals for the recent "Dance Fever"<br />

competition held at the Main Act in<br />

Roseville. They will be going to Holly-<br />

High-energy street dancers Daul and Dye will be on nationwide<br />

television this tall, aa Michigan finalists going for $31,000 in prizes<br />

on the frenetic "Dance Fever."<br />

CANTONESe<br />

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Complete Dinners start at *5**<br />

Fri. - Sat. 11:30 - 2 a.m.<br />

Mon. - Thur*. 11:30 - 11:00 Sun. 12 - 10<br />

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Juat SovMt ol Plymouth M<br />

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WONDERLAND<br />

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Businessmen's<br />

Lunch<br />

TNe Offer Good Every Might Through June 12. 1SS3 -<br />

* J • Present this «d when<br />

^ a I l b p buywg^arnnsrit J<br />

m m I I regular price and get a<br />

| M W • dinner of i equal'<br />

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value at V4 price<br />

! c »<br />

We Feature:<br />

Munchies to Mexican<br />

Hamburger to Full Course Dinners<br />

Pizza. Ribs. Salads, etc and<br />

Deity Specials<br />

On the<br />

?/ Seventh Day<br />

I<br />

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HOUR<br />

11 am-7 pm<br />

10 pm-1 am<br />

Our Brunch<br />

Experience a Feast of fresh pastries and fruits, hand<br />

carved roast beef and ham. traditional breakfast dishes<br />

and hot entrees, garden fresh salads and luscious desserts!<br />

Complimentary Champagne served from noon to 2 p.m.<br />

- -


i 10C*(R.W,G-8C) O&E Thursday. Jurx> 2. 1983<br />

A dozen years later, actress plays role of Maine<br />

By Ethel Simmons<br />

staff writer<br />

T<br />

HE ROLE OF "Mame" is one<br />

thai Jo Anne Meurer has always<br />

wanted to play When<br />

she last tried out, for a Birmingham<br />

Village Players production.<br />

she was told she was too young.<br />

This time, some dozen years later,<br />

she has got the role in the St Dunstan's<br />

Guild of Cranbrook production-of the<br />

Broadway musical hit She beamed. "I<br />

was just hoping they wouldn't tell me<br />

this time that I was too old!"<br />

"Mame" will be presented as the annual<br />

outdoor show in June which is traditionally<br />

a musical. Performances<br />

will be at 9 p.m. Friday-Saturday and<br />

June 9-11 in the classicLgreek Theatre<br />

pavilion just behind the guild's play-<br />

• house on Lone Pine Road in Bloomfield<br />

Hills. Tickets at |5 and $4 for students<br />

are available by reservation, phone<br />

644-0527.<br />

NANCY BR ASSERT, who directs the<br />

show, said, "Twelve of our most talented<br />

ladies tried out for Mame.' Fifty-six<br />

auditions were held for all the roles,<br />

and there were eight Veras and four<br />

Gooches"<br />

Betsy Todd won the pari of Vera<br />

Charles. Mame's best friend<br />

Ten-year-old Thom Cochill. whose<br />

mother Jtidy is an active member of St.<br />

D's. wrapped <strong>up</strong> the part of Young Pa-'<br />

trick, who develops a strong bond with<br />

his Auntie Mame.<br />

Thorn's mother, who had the lead in<br />

last year's production of "Bells Are<br />

Ringing" at St D's. helped him study<br />

his lines after school.<br />

"He had his lines down before anybody<br />

else." the director saitf<br />

A fourth grader at Hickory Groves<br />

Elementary School, Thom has had a<br />

few roles in school productions, but<br />

"Mame" is his first appearance in community<br />

theater<br />

"THE BIGGEST school play that I<br />

did, I was a rat in 'The Pied Piper of<br />

Hamlin." I was one of the two that had<br />

a line " he said "I was Humpty-Dump-<br />

•ty in a Christmas play, and I was a<br />

pumpkin in The Littlest Pumpkin.' I<br />

i/nc/e<br />

44W)FordWd<br />

W<br />

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G e r m a n<br />

Restaurant<br />

Fine German and American food<br />

Imported and Local Beer<br />

Wine and Liquors<br />

I JO Ml 1 VI jshingion<br />

Downtown Ann Arbor J-<br />

Thursday, June 2. 1063 06£ (R.W.G-9C) * 110<br />

Drama will open<br />

at world premiere<br />

The premiere of a new play by Bonnie<br />

Lee Moss Rattner, a native Detroiter<br />

now living in Franklin, will be<br />

presented next Wednesday through Saturday,<br />

June 25, at the Hilberry Theatre<br />

in Detroit.<br />

Wayne State University's world<br />

premiere production of "To Gleam It<br />

Around" opens officially Thursday,<br />

June 9, following a preview Wednesday.<br />

Performances are at 8 p.m.<br />

Wednesdays-Saturdays. For ticket information,<br />

call 577-2972.<br />

The play is a stage version of Zora<br />

Neale Hurston's "Their Eyes Were<br />

Watching God." a novel of the 1930s.<br />

The book uses the rural Southern setting,<br />

dialect and folklore, and the romantic<br />

theme characteristic of that period.<br />

A controversial black author of the<br />

'30s and '40s, Hurston is now being<br />

hailed as one of the most important<br />

women writers in the nation's history.<br />

Bonnie Rattner was bom in Detroit<br />

and attended public schools in Detroit<br />

and Berkley. She studied at the University<br />

of Michigan, the Sorbonne and<br />

Wayne State, where she earned bachelor<br />

and master of arts degrees in English.<br />

IT WAS AT Wayne State, in a graduate<br />

seminar on American women writers,<br />

that she first read "Their Eyes<br />

Were Watching God." "It changed the<br />

course of my life," she said.<br />

For the last eight years she has been<br />

involved with the life and work of Zora<br />

AND ENTERTAINMENT GUIDE<br />

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Serving dally breakfasts<br />

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Bonnie Lee Moss Rattner of<br />

Franklin is the' playwright<br />

whose stage version of the novel<br />

will have ita world premiere.<br />

Neale Hurston. At her suggestion,<br />

Harper & Row, Publishers, became<br />

agent of the Hurston estate. It took the<br />

publishers six years to trace the heirs<br />

and conclude negotiations necessary<br />

for Rattner to acquire three of the<br />

Hurston properties, including "Their<br />

Eyes Were Watching God."<br />

The production will be directed by<br />

Von H. Washington, director of WSU's<br />

black theater program. It will open the<br />

1983 HilbeiTy Summer Theatre Festival.<br />

which continues Wednesday. July<br />

6. through Saturday, Aug. 6. with five<br />

productions.<br />

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O&EThureday, June2. 1983<br />

"t<br />

'Amadeus' due at the Fisher<br />

The Fisher Theatre's current season<br />

will close with "Amadeus," Peter<br />

Shaffer's theatrical version of the reallife<br />

musical rivalry between Mozart<br />

and Antonio Salieri<br />

A five-week engagement begins<br />

Tuesday, June 21, and continues<br />

_ Saturday.~July~»: Tickets are<br />

on sale at the Fisher Thetre box office<br />

and at CTC outlets<br />

"Amadeus" is now in its third year on<br />

Broadway and there are two touring<br />

companies of the play on the road. The<br />

Fisher is getting the first National<br />

Company, starring John Wood and<br />

John Pankow.<br />

Performances the first week will be<br />

Tuesday-Sunday matinee schedule. The<br />

Mondays-Saturdays, with Wednesday<br />

matinees at 1 p.m. and Saturday matinees<br />

at 2 p.m.<br />

OUR FAMOUS BUFFET<br />

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=<br />

©bseruer Newspapers<br />

including real estate advertising<br />

Thureday June 2, 1983 O&E<br />

~1<br />

creative living<br />

Sandra Armbruster editor/ 591-2300<br />

(P.C.W.G)IE<br />

Designers, builder<br />

offer modern version<br />

} C<br />

of Old World grandeur<br />

By Corinn* Abatt<br />

start writer<br />

Opulent fits. So does elegant and<br />

impressive and any number of the<br />

other s<strong>up</strong>erlatives.<br />

The Detroit Symphony ASID<br />

(American Society of Interior Designers)<br />

Showhouse which opened last<br />

Tuesday is a brand-new $1.5 million<br />

25-room house in Bloomfield Township,<br />

built by the Malcolm Leventen<br />

Corporation of Southfield. <<br />

The 26 interior designers added<br />

some $ 1 million in furnishings. • •<br />

Landscape architecture students<br />

from Lawrence Institute of Technology<br />

did the landscape plan and another<br />

gro<strong>up</strong> of LIT interior design students<br />

did one of the hallways.<br />

The project, a fund-raiser. for the<br />

Detroit Symphony Orchestra, is sponsored<br />

by the Detroit Symphony<br />

League, the Women's Association for<br />

the orchestra and the Michigan Chapter<br />

of ASID.<br />

Loretta Miles. ASID, coordinated<br />

the work of the designers That, in itself,<br />

is a demanding job which she<br />

handled with great success.<br />

The continuity from room to room<br />

is a triumph, for too easily, each<br />

room can become a showplace for an<br />

individual designer without regard to<br />

surroundings. It can and does happen,<br />

even in homes done by a single interior<br />

designer. But, the flow of color and<br />

style here is exemplary.<br />

THE COLORS the designers were<br />

given to work with were neutrals,<br />

ta<strong>up</strong>e, teal and black, and various accent<br />

colors. Miles kept close tabs on<br />

the plans for each room, approving<br />

color swatches and design. She may<br />

have made a few people unhappy for<br />

a moment or so as she rejected things<br />

she felt wouldn't fit, but the end product<br />

is highly pleasing.<br />

Visitors will nnte tho<br />

the two-story foyer with a classic<br />

winding staircase, but in the master<br />

bathroom and family room and master<br />

bedroom suite fireplaces. All the<br />

marble was carefully matched on site<br />

by European craftsmen.<br />

The use of crown moulding is extensive.<br />

giving an old world look to<br />

these new surroundings. The oak<br />

trim, sometimes natural, sometimes<br />

painted and treated to achieve a pickled<br />

oak look, warms the atmosphere,<br />

which by dint of size alone, could be<br />

cold.<br />

The Georgian fixtures, wealth of<br />

textures and soft accent colors also<br />

help make a hospitable atmosphere.<br />

A soft teal shows <strong>up</strong> frequently as<br />

does rose, for instance, in the charm-<br />

ing <strong>up</strong>stairs Bitting room by Ural Dcsigns<br />

& Interiors of Livonia.<br />

Turquoise, sometimes considered<br />

hard to work with, is one of the dominant<br />

colors in the living room by Gorman's<br />

Gallery of Southfield.<br />

Here it reaches an exciting level<br />

used as a wall color and repeated in<br />

the elaborate crown moulding.<br />

Against a honey-colored carpet,<br />

muted tones of sea foam green and<br />

mauve for accents give a sophisticated,<br />

continental ambiance to the living<br />

room.<br />

At the far end, on a carpeted dais,<br />

is a Louis XVI harpsichord in bright<br />

blue.<br />

mix of periods<br />

and colors, antiques interspersed<br />

with late Art Nouveau,. country<br />

French, Oriental and American. With<br />

this it becomes more like a family<br />

home in which treasures have been<br />

collected over the years, rather than<br />

a newly created showhouse.<br />

The house lends itself'to elegant,<br />

expensive treatment. There is a lavish<br />

use of Italian marble, not only in<br />

The bathroom of guest suite is done in earth tone tile. The three<br />

imported boxes are leather covered. The effect ia a tailored, but<br />

hospitable look.<br />

THE ETCHED pattern on the glass<br />

coffee table matches the small, over-<br />

. all <strong>up</strong>holstery print on matching<br />

chairs.<br />

The family room, about the same<br />

size as the living room, with pickeled<br />

oak paneling, was done by Walter<br />

Herz Interiors Inc. of Southfield.<br />

Because, as expected, it is less formal<br />

than the living room, the colors<br />

of the family room are bolder and the<br />

wicker and contemporary French<br />

furnishings more casual. But even<br />

this casual is in keeping with the formality<br />

of the home.<br />

The kitchen and adjoining solarium<br />

(a passive solar energy room), designed<br />

by Pastor Interiors Inc. of<br />

Bloomfield Hills with cabinetry<br />

planned and designed by Kitchens by<br />

Lenore of Birmingham, is a wonderful<br />

combination of sunshine and artistry.<br />

The pickeled oak look continues<br />

throughout. The wall treatment is a<br />

laminated, large print, navy blue fabric<br />

with tangerine and neutrals.<br />

The shaded teal, tile floor, a color<br />

to fall in love ^ith. has pale peach<br />

grouting.<br />

In fact, the color of the grouting in<br />

all of the tile Installations is something<br />

to pay attention to. along with a<br />

myriad of other details which add so<br />

much to the overall look.<br />

Staff photos by Mindy Saunders<br />

The graceful drama of the circular stairway is enhanced by the five-part skylight and a sweeping<br />

curve of molding on the inner wall.<br />

NOT TO BE missed is the $30,000<br />

19th century French needlepoint nig<br />

in the French bedroom (hardly a detail)<br />

by Perlmutter Freiwald Inc. of<br />

Franklin, and the coffee table with a<br />

19th century gas lantern from a Belgian<br />

bake shop in the grand guest<br />

suite by John Mitchell Interiors of<br />

Birmingham.<br />

For the $5 fee at the door, visitors<br />

will have a chance to see what's happening<br />

in the home furnishings field<br />

(which often leads the apparel field),<br />

the new colors and trends.<br />

It is more than a visit to a 10,000-<br />

square-foot house with a rather<br />

staggering price tag, it's a delightful<br />

learning experience. -<br />

Helen Peterson of Bloomfield Hills<br />

is the . symphony chairman of the<br />

showhouse and Brian Collins represents<br />

the local chapter of the American<br />

Society of Interior Designers.<br />

There's a boutique with lots of<br />

greenery and hand-crafted items by<br />

Mchigan artisans on the premises<br />

along with a tea room.<br />

Hours are 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Tuesday-Saturday,<br />

noon to 6 p.m. Sunday<br />

and 6-9 p.m. Thursdays. Closed Monday.<br />

The house will be open through<br />

June 22 at 1711 Morningside Way,<br />

Wabeek North, north of Long Lake,<br />

between Franklin and Middlebelt,<br />

Bloomfield Township<br />

For information, call 446-0950<br />

weekdays.<br />

Designers give talks<br />

A series of Thursday lectures, "An<br />

Evening with the Designer* " K-g.nc<br />

at 7:30 p.m. Uus evening at the betroit<br />

Symphony/ASID showhouse and<br />

continues on June2, 9, 16.<br />

able at the door. 1711 Morningside<br />

Way. North Wabeek. Bloomfield<br />

Township, north of Long Lake between<br />

Franklin and Middlebelt.<br />

All of the speakers are members of<br />

the Michigan Chapter of the American<br />

Society of Interior Designers.<br />

The nrotn-am* are Mav 26. "Eclecticism'How<br />

to Mix Periods." DanieF<br />

E. Clancey; June 2; "Accessories and<br />

Lighting," Brian Clay Collins; June 9,<br />

"Color/Does Red Really Make Von<br />

Rage?;" and "Window Treatments."<br />

by Margie Cockle Cunningham<br />

Each program will include a slide<br />

presentation followed by a question<br />

and answer period<br />

For information, call 569-3212.<br />

Blues, greens, shadee of mauve and neutrals<br />

give the living room which ia designed to funcmusic<br />

room a sophisticated The eheded teal tile floor and the light oak cabia<br />

the kitchon a note work together to gh<br />

bright,<br />

sunny country French<br />

are contoured.<br />

The<br />

cabin*ta


2E*<br />

O&E Thufday. Jun® 2. '983<br />

Thursday. June 2. 1983 OAE *3E<br />

Honored for artistry<br />

Professor masters metal, wood and stone<br />

By Carmina Brook®<br />

special writer<br />

Wayne State University's professor Phillip G.<br />

stone. A ooybood friend's father owned a monument<br />

works in his hometown of Reedsburg, Wis.,<br />

that beacame a place of great fascination for young<br />

Phillip.<br />

One day a master stone cutter employed at the<br />

stone works noted Phillip's interest. He handed him<br />

some tools, a small slab of marble, and showed him<br />

how to chisel his name into the stone. Today, his<br />

mother uses Phillip's first work as a bookend.<br />

"My first experience of making things with my<br />

hands began right there," Fike said.<br />

Since that first experience excited his imagination,<br />

Fike has become a metalsmith, sculptor,<br />

printmaker and one of the nation's leading<br />

goldsmiths whose work has been exhibited both nationally<br />

and internationally. He continues to create<br />

original pieces in metals, wood and stone, including<br />

pins, rings, necklaces and body adornments. He has<br />

become widely known as an artist, scholar, craftsman<br />

and teacher.<br />

WAYNE STATE University honored Fike recently<br />

by awarding him the 1983 President's Award for<br />

Excellence in Teaching. Fike, professor in the WSU<br />

department of art and art history, in the Liberal<br />

Arts College, has been mentor, friend and inspiration<br />

to Wayne State students for 30 years.<br />

"1 am pleased to get the award because I am a<br />

studio artist and metalsmith selected among Ph.D.s<br />

who publish extensively, and some"6ody thought<br />

what I am doing is valuable." Fike said.<br />

Fike's professional objective is to be involved in<br />

the mainstream of contemporary arts and crafts as<br />

an artist, craftsman and teacher. He has succeeded.<br />

He considers university life and teaching central to<br />

his career<br />

"When I came to WSU I was in the right place in<br />

my life and I have been in the right place ever<br />

since." he said,<br />

THIS YEAR Fike will complete work on an official<br />

mace for-the university.<br />

"The mace is a symbo'l of authority and high<br />

human endeavor that will add enormous dram*to<br />

important academic ceremonies," he explained<br />

Fike's mace is 46 inches long, made of 168 layers<br />

of ebony On the handle 10 discs fitted together will<br />

route, interrelating to a continuous pattern At the<br />

head is a pentagon holding the WSU medallion Affixed<br />

to the bottom is an ebony earth globe with<br />

meridians designed into a symbolic code that can<br />

be lined <strong>up</strong> to become a map of the planet<br />

"Professor Fike is recognized for his inventiveness<br />

with which he has producad-genuine original<br />

works. All are created with integrity towards ancient<br />

processes and a masterv with metals," the<br />

citation states «<br />

FIKE IS an avid researcher. He has written a<br />

paper on primitive lenses and early magnification<br />

which explores the history of the use of magnifying<br />

'glasses to aid in the decoration process.<br />

TfeTias researchfsLthe art and history of niello.<br />

-Niello is a method of decorating silver and gold by<br />

filling incisions with a black composition consisting<br />

of silver, copper, lead, sulphur, and borax to produce<br />

an ornamental effect.<br />

"Generally, the scale of my forms is small and<br />

often intricate, and I prefer to make objects which<br />

are readily functional and harmonious with human<br />

use and spirit," he said.<br />

His impassioned study of ancient historic and<br />

contemporary fibulae (a clasp) is a lifetime pursuit.<br />

It began in Rome in 1965 where he became interested<br />

in the bronze and gold pins of the Etruscans,<br />

who gave them the name "fibula."<br />

Fike calls his study of the fibulae "researching<br />

the anatomy of the safety pin."<br />

THE BASIC pin clasp is a prime form in human,<br />

existence. Fike teaches.<br />

"Keeping warm is a primate problem and the<br />

development of clasping devices capable of holding<br />

heavy skins and furs to the body became as natural<br />

as any other shelter and comfort,"" he writes.<br />

"The modern safety pin as we know it in the<br />

American culture is an object manufactured in the<br />

billions every year and used for domestic emergen^<br />

cies. This is an example of our packaged environment.<br />

The safety pin once had a very important<br />

aesthetic spiritual function in the life of other cultures.<br />

The fibula was not only a spiritual object<br />

which reflected a culture, but was also an artistic<br />

sculpture which solved the problem a clasp does.<br />

People needed safety pins 2,000 B.C. just as much<br />

as we need them now."<br />

"The modern safety pin reflects our distance<br />

from potential variety and meaning inherent in the<br />

ancient clasp. It functions automatically without<br />

concern nor pride of display.<br />

"Place the ends of your thumb and forefinger together<br />

and press them very hard against each<br />

other. The space between is an eternal dimension.<br />

The pressure integrity is strong and controlled by<br />

will, yielding by choice."<br />

FIKE IS called "extraordinary" by his peers.<br />

'His charisma, humanism, and generosity is inspiring,"<br />

they write.<br />

"Professor Fike lends his patience, his skill, and<br />

his concern, not only to his materials, but also to his<br />

students, who find his concise and articulate presentations<br />

unforgettable," the citation continues.<br />

"He works on his pieces directly before his students<br />

and reveals to them his personal mechanisms of<br />

learning"<br />

Fike likes to teach by selecting an object that is<br />

taken for granted — a safety pin, a comb, or a pair<br />

of shoes He asks his students to make this article<br />

out of anything they like.<br />

'The safety pin once had<br />

an important<br />

spiritual<br />

function<br />

in the life of other<br />

cultures.'<br />

— Phillip Fike<br />

Wayne honoree<br />

A comb, he says, can be made from toothpicks<br />

and string, wood, metal, fine wire, or fibres The<br />

Yucca plant has needles and fibres strong enough<br />

for combing and sewing, he notes.<br />

"This not only teaches how to work with various<br />

materials and simple tools, but they have to deal<br />

with something they have always taken for granted,"<br />

he said.<br />

"Our students are brought into a packed world<br />

we don't guide them into disaster. We help them<br />

understand how important the disaster is."<br />

Last year a thief stole $50,000 worth of gold pins<br />

from Fike's university studio by burning a door<br />

open with a jeweler s torch. Five Fibula, his variations<br />

on the ancient Roman safety pin, an antique<br />

jewelry collection, and some office equipment were<br />

taken. The fibulae were not insured and the loss<br />

was a low point in his career.<br />

The 1983 WSU President's Award for Excellence<br />

in Teaching was a high point.<br />

A<br />

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'The mace (pictured<br />

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and<br />

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endeavor<br />

that will<br />

add enormous<br />

drama to important<br />

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ataff photographer<br />

it<br />

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entertainment warmtti 4 bedrooms includes master bedroom<br />

suite<br />

Professionally decorated! desirable location<br />

$119,900 559-2300<br />

FARMINGTON HILLS<br />

STILL TIME to pick fixtures and flooring In this 3000 square<br />

foot Tudor Colonial. Ocular staircase<br />

Ceramic foyer<br />

$169,900 851-1900<br />

NICELY DECORATED 4 bedroom colonial with extra large<br />

family room Finished rec room with kitchen faciHtiea. patio<br />

wtth barbeque. and mora Perfect family home $99,900<br />

477-1111.<br />

PLEASANT VALLEY FARMS Four bedroom. 3 bath, possible<br />

2nd famity room or game room or fifth bedroom. Could<br />

be in-law suHe Community park and swimming pond Perfect<br />

for large family $97,900. 477-1111.<br />

IMMACULATE large 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch on oversize<br />

lot. Country kitchen, generoua storage space, 2 ftrepiecea.<br />

wet bar off family room Vary desirable country type area.<br />

$84.900 477-1111. - —<br />

LYON<br />

A FOUR bedroom, two and a half bath Cape Cod Beautiful<br />

inside and out. All on over § half acre. $88 900 348-8430<br />

Farmington<br />

477-1111<br />

Northville<br />

348-6430<br />

fit<br />

OUTSTANDING RESULTS<br />

Because of the great success of our Blue Tag Special<br />

Marketing Program, we have extended thia special<br />

opportunity. All Blue Tag Special Homes have been *<br />

reduced in price by 5% or more until June 30,1983.<br />

We are distributing Discount Certificatee at our<br />

3200 Open Houses and our Sales Office. Thia Diacount<br />

Certificate entitles you to purchase any Real Estate One<br />

Blue Tag Special Home at the reduced price.<br />

OUR HOMES ARE NOT ONLY FOR SALE—<br />

THEY'RE ON SALEf<br />

LIVONIA<br />

WINDRIDGE VILLAGE Wedgewood tudor style Colonial on<br />

corner lot Four bedrooms. 2% baths, den, first floor laundry.<br />

formal dining room. Family room with natural fireplace<br />

$119,500 455-7000<br />

FAMILY ROOM with gas log fireplace. buNt In dishwasher<br />

and range In beautiful kitchen with dinette balcony. Attached<br />

garage has roll-<strong>up</strong> door for van Large patio wtth<br />

gas grW. 2 baths $54 900 528-0900<br />

WESTLAND<br />

WELL CARED FOR brick three bedroom ranch with large<br />

country kitchen Livonia schools, easy assumption low interest<br />

$43,900 525-0990<br />

WELL MAINTAINED 3 bedroom brick ranch with Livonia<br />

schools Beautiful rec room with bar. Large country kitchen<br />

includes all appUancea Aluminum trim, large 2 car garage<br />

has work room additional for the handyman. $48,500 525-<br />

0990<br />

LARGE COLONIAL<br />

25 ETSSWr TJsdSks 2s<br />

two car garage on ,ar 9elot<br />

r aS«I^Cto, R f L E^ *** fanch on nicely<br />

landscapedtotLarge cheery kitchen, two car aaraoe has<br />

storage loft and work area $47,500 261-0700<br />

is -<br />

o, * °**ement. built-in oven range and microwave<br />

muCh -<br />

mor#<br />

Original owner $44,500 328-2000<br />

PLYMOUTH<br />

piace. formal dining room. Three baths<br />

encio«uwt<br />

porch, finished basement, deck. 3 car garaoe areat famitv<br />

room $75,900 455-7000<br />

great family<br />

GARDEN CITY<br />

S3! VA Separate dining room Garage<br />

£HA. VA welcomed end simple assumption $37,900 525-<br />

REDFORD<br />

r - : r " • ** basement. 2 car aaraoe and 2<br />

hm baths Priced to sen. $38,900 281-0700<br />

A Big Opportunity<br />

Livonia ftrfllnn area 1 tv I bed<br />

i «>m brirlL i anrh. nuinlnurf<br />

free,<br />

basement. J car bra* Irom (a<br />

A landscaping in move-in<br />

•nditinn Asking S5? »00 Seller,<br />

Call today<br />

a«k lor<br />

JIM CM AVER<br />

422-6030<br />

— RE/MAX FOREMOST. INC<br />

>TTKAuS«s lor Sale<br />

330 Aparlmants lor Sate<br />

332 Mobile Home* lor Sale<br />

333 No'me"r> Property<br />

3J4 Out ot I own PrutMty<br />

335 1 tme Snare<br />

336 s,or«ja property lor<br />

Saw<br />

337 farms rot Sale<br />

338 C,,ont'y Homes<br />

339 tuts a Acreage<br />

340 la» River Resort<br />

. Property lor Sale<br />

342 Lake Proper t (<br />

348 Cemetery Lois<br />

351 Business 6 Pi atamonn<br />

Bun lor Sale<br />

352 "C.immerciBllrwJusli'al<br />

354 income Property<br />

lor Sale<br />

356 investment Property<br />

lor Sale<br />

358 htongeges'<br />

Land Contracts<br />

360 Business Opportunity<br />

36/ Real Estate Wanted<br />

36« I tst.ngs Wanted<br />

BiRMi<br />

LIVONIA<br />

VISA*<br />

ptYMOUTM<br />

CANTON<br />

REAL ESTATE<br />

FOR RENT<br />

400 Apartments to Rent<br />

401 Furniture Rantai<br />

402 Furnnnea<br />

Apartments<br />

403 Rental<br />

'<br />

Agency<br />

*04 Houses to Rent<br />

406 FurrvsKed Houses *<br />

407 Mobile Homes<br />

408 O<strong>up</strong>le.es to Rant<br />

410 Ftats to Rent<br />

412 townhouses'<br />

Condominiums<br />

41] Time Share<br />

414 FlornSa Rentals<br />

415 vacation Ben tais<br />

416 Mans for Rant<br />

419 Mobile Home Space<br />

420 Rooms to Bant<br />

421 L lying Ouarter s Id Share<br />

422 Wanted to Rent<br />

423 Wanted to Rent<br />

Resort Properly<br />

House Siting Service<br />

425 Convalescent Nursing<br />

Homes<br />

428 Garages Mini Storage<br />

432 Commercial Industrie<br />

436 OHice Business Space<br />

Place your Classified Real Estate<br />

Advertisement in more than 150.000<br />

affluent Suburban Detroit Homes<br />

5910900<br />

EQUAL HOUSING OPPORTUNITY<br />

*> rm aeuie mt—rtm)nQ « ma n—nfmp*r • tu0*ct fo «n» 'romm Fmr<br />

Hwang Act ol IS66 «r»Ci makes » mtgai to ac^mny<br />

ration or amamnanon based on -ace color, rmkgon, sea or mltnnor><br />

to make any tucfi pnHtfncm. arabort or (Mcrmnaiion ' tha newsemoer<br />

Wilnoit -wnryy mcctp' vy scherr»«T t r la ce» es.'ele -»>o m n «Mef«>-'<br />

*"»•* Our reeders are here6y mJom*c mar an c>»e*rys ageertiaeiJ n<br />

fftis newspaper Are avaaiaMe on an aoua' opportunity easts<br />

condmons slated m the appocable rale cam. copes ol wMch are aveasbw<br />

'rom the Aduarttsetg Department. Ooeerver 4 Eccentric Newtpapars.<br />

362SI Schoolcraft Roea Ltvoc»a. Ml 48150. (313) 5912300 The<br />

Observer & Eccentric reserves the rignt not to accept an advertiser's<br />

order Ooeerver S Eecenmc Ad-Takers have no euthonty lo bmd rNs<br />

newspeper and only puencation of an sdverisement slal conantute Imai<br />

acceptance ol the adven iser's order<br />

312 Livonia 312 Livonia 312 Livonia<br />

* Livonia & Area<br />

Ssper Starter-Lworna So boob '<br />

Beautifully deoor*Ud J tedroom 1<br />

tvalh bnck-frocM ranch, iramaculai*<br />

condition, dccoratrd to perfection<br />

SU.SOO<br />

IMMACULATE-Garden<br />

move in Everything has been <strong>up</strong>dated<br />

ta this lovely 3 bedroom bungalow with<br />

finished base menl and garage for.<br />

(47 900<br />

ASSUME 8Va%-Livonia<br />

Land contract also available - lovely 3<br />

bedroom brick ranch features nice<br />

large kitchen with step-dowo<br />

area and doorwall to pa IK)<br />

basement with woodburning stove 1<br />

rfar garage, and more $5$>00<br />

y. OF AN ACRE-Ltvonla<br />

Country living us the City - huge lot<br />

loaded with trees This spacious 5 bedroom<br />

ranch offers formal dining room,<br />

lamily rgom natural fireplace full<br />

basemen), 2 car attached garage<br />

All<br />

this plus land contract financing Asking<br />

$62,900<br />

QUALITY BUILT-LiVonia<br />

Wet-plaster walls and hardwood floors<br />

enhance this well built 3 bedroom 2^<br />

hath bnck ranch, huge gathering room<br />

with dining area and doomsII to patio,<br />

fall fims*ied basement<br />

2 car attached<br />

garage and more $65,900<br />

COLONIAL CHARM-Livonia<br />

Beautiful 4 bedroom T^s bath brick colonial.<br />

formal dining room, family<br />

room with natural fireplace, bay-window.<br />

marble sills, ceramic ule. full<br />

basement. 2 .car attached garage<br />

$79 900<br />

CENTURY 21<br />

Hartford South Inc.<br />

261-4200 464-6400<br />

SUPER SETTING<br />

plus a brick ranch with 3 bedrooms and<br />

1H baths Large dinette with doorwall<br />

to Florida room overlooking park-like<br />

setting WOW $59,900 Call<br />

JUNE KARRES<br />

CENTURY 21<br />

Gold House Realtors<br />

478-4660 261-4700<br />

Schweitzer<br />

LIVONIA & AREA<br />

NOTTINGHAM WOODS<br />

lull<br />

sugious neighborhood has<br />

bath .huge living-dining area, ctis<br />

kitchen, and large family room oo<br />

torn kitchen, and large family<br />

main floor basement with lavatory and<br />

an oversized garage<br />

Oualitv value at<br />

$142,000<br />

WOODED AREA<br />

Mint Condition' 4 bedrooms.. 2W baths,<br />

first floor laundry formal dining room,<br />

beamed ceiling and full wall brick lireplace<br />

in family room Asking $104.900<br />

GOLF COURSE VIEW<br />

From the front of tjus attractive 3 bed<br />

room brick ranch Large country kitch<br />

en. 18 a l-l bedroom in basement, sun<br />

deck, great Westland neighborhood.<br />

$39,900<br />

LOTS DONE MORE TO OO<br />

On this Early ajnerican farm house oe<br />

2 44 acres 19 s 212 gathering room, 3<br />

bedrooms. 2 baths, and dining room A<br />

special buy at $69,900<br />

FIRST OFFERING<br />

On this charmsng and very covv 3 bedhome<br />

in one ol<br />

Redforf! s most<br />

popular areas Formal dining room. !in<br />

ish«d recreation room, garage, eitra insulaton<br />

many extras $3.9 900 Won ',<br />

last at this pice'<br />

SUMMER SPECIAL<br />

bedroom brick colonial featuring<br />

central air anda celing Ian forsumrner<br />

camfot m baths, first floor laundry<br />

family rom. fireplace attached garage<br />

wth opener Flexible financing $'S,»00<br />

'<br />

SPLIT LEVEL<br />

Offers 3 bedroms.<br />

baths, lamily<br />

den. 2 car garage plus al aluminum<br />

tnrnon this brick home Buy down<br />

10*. % 5 year mortgage or VA FHA.<br />

Cat for details Only $49,900<br />

Schweitzer Real Estate<br />

BETTER HOMES<br />

& GARDENS<br />

312 Livonia 312 Livonia 312 Livonia<br />

LIVONIA<br />

Burton Hollow Large 4 bed<br />

2^» bath home with attached ga-<br />

_ Family room * fire "<br />

lent terms available Only I<br />

The most meticulous buyer will love<br />

this home' This Colonial offers 4 bed<br />

rooms plus den or 5 bedrooma. first<br />

HOOT laundry, 2 k i baths, family room,<br />

fireplace, attached garage set off by a<br />

nice lot $119900<br />

ERA<br />

FIRST FEDERAL<br />

478-3400<br />

OPEN HOUSE Sun June 5. 2-5PM<br />

15427 Oakdale. Livoma 5 bedroom colonial.<br />

3500 sq ft In ground pool, near<br />

go! I course Bo Land Real Estate<br />

879-8372 or T72-9568<br />

Real Doll House<br />

on large treed lot 60 x 363 3 bedrooms,<br />

dining room with bay. living room with<br />

natural fireplace, kitchen and sun<br />

room Land contract, VA. FHA terms<br />

*5t.*W<br />

CENTURY 21<br />

Gold House Realtors<br />

464-8881 420-2100<br />

OWNER LEAVING STATE<br />

Immaculate 4 bedroom. 2 hath Ranch,<br />

huge lamily room, spacious kitchen-all<br />

appliances included<br />

Gorgeous finished<br />

basement with 11x36 lounge area t<br />

12' wet bar. central air. electronic<br />

cleaner, carpeting thru-out gas grill !•<br />

many extra* Private backyard, metic<br />

ulously maintained in 4 out Low $60 s<br />

Appointment Otrty 422-1050<br />

ticker, realtors'<br />

fuHt<br />

appot<br />

670 S. MAIN<br />

PLYMOUTH<br />

STREET<br />

455-8400<br />

CUSTOM<br />

built, architect d«aign*d contemporary In<br />

"Hough Park" faaturas dramatic and spacious<br />

living areas, lour bedrooms, 2Vi<br />

baths and quality in svsry aspect. EX-<br />

CEPTIONAL!<br />

UNIQUE<br />

four bedroom ranch in favored Walnut<br />

Creek affords two family rooms, two fireplaces<br />

and a totally developed walk out<br />

lower level including a aauna. Asking<br />

$155,000.<br />

*<br />

SPACIOUS<br />

four bedroom split l«vel has a gracious<br />

formal dining room with French doors<br />

overlooking the gorgeous rear yard, family<br />

room that opena to a huge patio and a<br />

price that reflects motivation of seller.<br />

$114,000.<br />

WALK TO TOWN<br />

and love thia tidy brick three bedroom<br />

with wet plaater construction, hardwood<br />

floors,<br />

wood windows, and a lovely lot.<br />

Aeking $85,900.<br />

NICELY PRICED<br />

three bedroom in a popular town location<br />

could 4»aeily be youra with a good aesumption<br />

or sellor would carry a second<br />

mortgage If necessary. Young buyers<br />

take notice! Only $51,400.<br />

Il<br />

EARLY AMERICAN<br />

decor enhances thia mint condition four<br />

bedroom home. Hardwood floors, family<br />

room with fireplace, and a nicely secluded<br />

yard. ASSUMPTION. $72,»00.<br />

ASSUME<br />

ALL BRICK<br />

BRADBURY PARK<br />

a thirty year loan and move Into thie ia a favorite area for thoee who Nke a ranch wtth two bedrooms and<br />

pampered loor bedroom split level In ranch style condominium. Two bed- A-one condition. Sited on a m lot M<br />

Lakepointe area. Features crown moldings.<br />

stained woodwork, lovely decor and ment finished tor further living area.<br />

a deep, weH landscaped yard. $M>00. $57000.<br />

proudly boosts Central air,<br />

aluminum trim on the extort<br />

construction. $07,500.<br />

OOLF COURSE VKW FAMILY OIMCNTED EXCELLENT<br />

ranch with thn<br />

ranch on rteerty an acre. Juat minutes<br />

baths, family room with Areplee*, eounfrom<br />

town. Open flowing floor pton, two by kitchen, and a IMehed hassmsnt<br />

fireplaces and unlimited potential. "recreetton" room. MCE private yard.<br />

$100,500 «79.$00.<br />

1% I<br />

RARE FIND<br />

Caique country-style brick n<br />

featuring 3 bedrooms<br />

family roor<br />

natural fireplaces<br />

full basement, and<br />

2H car garage A best buy and mair<br />

li-nance Tree too' Asking $79 900 Call<br />

BOB CRAVER<br />

422-6030<br />

RE/MAX FOREMOST, INC<br />

OPEN SAT. 1-4<br />

19360 ST FR ANCIS N of 7 Mile E 61<br />

Middlebelt 3 bedroom brick ranch,<br />

large country kitchen witii dishwasher,<br />

finished basement, plus much more<br />

As* for<br />

SYBIL TAODIA<br />

CENTURY 21<br />

Gold House Realtors<br />

I478-4660 261-4700<br />

LIVONIA & AREA<br />

A CROWD PLEASER' Extellent home<br />

for entertaining Large 4 bedroom<br />

Brick Tri with J full baths large modern<br />

kitchen, dining room den fireplace<br />

family room. 100x190 Jt lot with large<br />

mground pool t covered patio • 2 car<br />

garage $119,900 Terms'<br />

SHOWPLACE- Gorgeous 1 bedroom<br />

Brick Ranch home perfect for the<br />

Newiyweds' With modern kitchen. 1 *•»<br />

baths beautiful finished basement rov<br />

ered patio aluminum trim aluminum<br />

sided 2 car garage & a whole lot more'<br />

$49 .M<<br />

AFFORDABLE 3 bedroom aluminum<br />

sided I >-> Story home' Featuring beautiful<br />

remodeled kitchen, beairtilul finished<br />

basement<br />

with bath

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