Village Buys 5.73-Acre Pared for Site of New

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Village Buys 5.73-Acre Pared for Site of New ; r mi»» i;/^|>jt',i;''pv.''.'''*.'«*** ,o '•,<'« \ - *j<i''»' |r - ••' * ""«fc *S3 I i • '" W» '•*' • .','<••'•» fctw IS!feM-i QUOTE "If only God would give me a clear sign! Like mak 25 ing a large deposit in my per copy name at a Swiss bank." —Woody Allen €htUm imtfati ONE HUNDRED-FIFTEENTH YEAR—No. 25 CHELSEA, ^CHI^AN^yyjPNESDAY, NOVEMBER 20, 1985 20 Pages This Week Walter Prater Dies Friday Village Buys 5.73-Acre While Hunting Walter Prater, 39, owner of Pared for Site of New Walt's Barber Shop on Main St. in Chelsea, died Friday afternoon of an apparent heart attack while trying to move a deer he hadshot, according to police. Sewage Treatment Plant ; J Police said Prater, and a com­ panion, William Rhines, had been The Village of Chelsea's offer Environmental Protection Agen-i been ordered by the Michigan jiunting that morning just north­ of $26,000 for slightly more than cy grant that should ultlmatelyi Department of Natural west of Stockbridge. While try­ five acres of farmland to be used cover 55 percent of the project. \ Resources, is estimated to cost ing to take a deer out of the for the site of the new wastewater That works out to about $11,700 as l about $4.35 million. woods, Prater collapsed just treatment plant has been ac­ the village's share, plus inciden-i The land, which is now being before nopn.i Rhines immediately cepted by owners Henry and tal expenses. used as farm land, is zoned for performed' cardiopulmonary Martin Merkel. The entire project, which has' residential development. resuscitation^ then notified the That's the word from coun­ Iiigham County Sheriff's office. cilman Joe Merkel, who has been ^Prater, a resident of handling the negotiations for the Stockbridge, was dead on arrival village. Merkel said that only at Poote Hospital in Jackson. legal details remain, but there United Way • Prater wa^ a member of the "shouldn't be any problem." He Chelsea Civ||<F6undation. said the village should take - :Funeral services were held on possession by the end of the year, Monday at Caskey Funeral Home The price of $26,000 was the ap­ in Stockbridge. praisal value of the land. Swisher Fund Exceeds Realty Co. of Ann Arbor handled the appraisal this fall. The initial asking price for the High School 5.73 acre parcel had been $5,000 per acre before the appraisal, Campaign Goal Bond Issue Merkel said. That worked out to $28,650. Chelsea United Way has ex-1 was what really counted! We did The land is adjacent to the cur­ ceeded its 1985-86 goal of $68,000. i it with everyone's help, and I do in Full rent plant, located off McKinley Dave McAllister, president of the I mean everyone." Your school taxes have drop- St. Chelsea United Way board of' - Prohaska concluded, "We hope The purchase price of the land directors, announced that as of' 1 : P&- that those people who planned to is one of the items covered by the Nov. 15, contributions totaled' give but have not yet contributed Chelsea school district resi­ $69,535 representing 102% of this i will follow through. We certain­ dents are now paying .45 mills Village Seeking year's campaign objective. ly have more needs than we have less due to a drop in the debt "Last minute increases in vir­ money. Our allocation committee retirement levy, which was Full-Time Assistant tually every division pushed the disburses the funds we collect ac­ issued in 1956 to pay off the high total over the top during the past; cording to funds we receive and school building. Administrator week," commented McAllister.; the needs of our member agen­ The 1984- debt retirement levy The Village of Chelsea is look­ "The community response has' cies. There is no doubt that there Was 3.25 mills.The 1985 levy is 2.8 been absolutely tremendous. This; are many fine agencies that can mills, which is paying for Beach ing for a full-time assistant village administrator. is the first time in a number of use an extra boost. In addition, Middle school and the various years that we actually reached we may be called upon to assist in building additions at all four Village administrator 1 our goal this early in the camf such emergencies as disaster aid schools, and the bus garage. Frederick Weber has reviewed resumes from 19 applicants. He paign year. We didn't hit th£ for the victims of the recent A resident with property with a 100% mark in last year's cam­ volcano eruption in Colombia or state equalized value of $30,000 said the assistant will have a background in either public ad­ paign until early in 1985." ,: other such humanitarian causes. will now be paying $13.50 less in The need never ceases, and for­ school taxes. MATT KOENN, 17, shot this big buck last Fri­ ted the nine-pointer at about 7:30 that morning. He ministration or engineering. Lang Ramsey and Dave Prp- haska, 1985 campaign chairmen, tunately, neither does the giving. Total operating millage re­ day on the family farm in Sylvan township. It was had to chase the animal into a swamp to retrieve Weber said the salary of the f( r his first deer eyer,.M*tt; was out hunting with position is "negotiable." along with Chuck and,J$elen Lan,-. Thanks to you... it worits,;_! > mains at 35.62 mills, The next ,1(..., \ .;,. („ ../, ,- 1 : 1 caster; bonb^y^hlfeiCS^, •%rt&%fe Vjg ••* *'; *$£$*• • • ^M** «sr. - TV .?^*'**' -*•'"' ^m'rt!a£«*vc*fewill benext June. father Charlie and brother Charlie when he spot­ c :. .-1 .-..-.,--.1.^/. ''.-V--^;..^! ' '.\„;.\ ... - .- /ij^-'."yW">' - • - ..,. ..-*.vf-' -..- • •''v-y',* for the 1985-86 United Way fund- The Chelsea United Way is still km^^y..-..>\ raising effort, expressed their accepting contributions which thanks'-to everyone who helped may be sent to P.O. Box 176, Two Hunters make this year's drive si/ch a Chelsea 48118. success. Ramsay commented, 'It's a mutually complementary effort. Our volunteer campaign Cassidy Lake workers pounded the pavement, Walkaway Nabbed in knocked on many doors, and met Shot with numerous industrial, bus­ iness, commercial, educational, Returning to Camp and professional folks. Our mail Chelsea police apprehended a campaign workers sent out lots of Cassidy Lake walkaway on Sun­ letters, and The Chelsea Stan­ day who was reportedly being Waterloo Area driven back to the camp by his dard gave us front-page billing On the third day of Michigan's The case was to be reviewed by for the entire campaign. But the family. 1985 firearm deer season, two the Washtenaw County Prose­ response from the community Gary Chapman, 29, had walked hunters were injured, one of them cutor early this week. (Continued on page six) seriously, when they were shot in an open field near the intersec­ tion of M-52 and Waterloo Rd. near Chelsea. With darkness prevailing in the area designated as state-owned land in the Waterloo Recreation Area, the two hunters were hit by a single blast from a 16-gauge shotgun allegedly fired by a near­ by hunter, who had come to the hunting area accompanied by his son. During an impromptu inter­ view with one of the victims, he related that both he and his brother were clothed in bright orange garments. "My brother even had orange gloves on," the man noted. Jerry Alan Petrie, 32, and his brother, Fred Thompson, both of CHELSEA CIVIC FOUNDATION officers were Dave McAllister, vice-president for 1986. Not pic- Dearborn, were apparently installed last Thursday. Seated are John Mitchell, tured is Jerry Ashby, treasurer for 1985-86. wounded by the same shot. The left, president for 1986, and Walter Hamilton, the Trustees who were re-elected include Arthur Dils, two were treated at the emergen­ out-going president. Standing, from left, are Ray Howard Holmes, Willard Johnson, and George cy room of Chelsea Community Van Meer, the 1984 president and trustee who was Palmer. Sheridan Springer was elected for his Hospital following the incident re-elected, Ann Feeney, secretary for 1986, and first term. early Sunday morning, Nov. 17, before Petrie was transported to the University of Michigan Hospital, Ann Arbor. Civic Foundation meets Petrie's injuries included a skull fracture and injuries to his left arm, his brother explained in a chance meeting with a reporter from The Dexter Leader/The Chelsea Standard* The reporter New Officers, Board viewed six stitches put in by Dr. Pat Munson at the CCH emergen­ At the 1985 annual meeting of son of the U-M Institute of Geron­ Nurses and other staff cy room to close a scalp lacera­ the Civic Foundation of Chelsea, tology presented an audiovisual members coalesce with the tion. John W. Mitchell was elected report of their experimental proj­ residents In a new dimension of president and succeeds Walter F. ect aiding victims of Alzheimer's tender and loving care which is a After the men were wounded, Hamilton, Jr. disease in Wesley Hall of the vital part of the therapy. they apparently went with the Elected vice-president was Chelsea Methodist Retirement Through an audiovisual presen­ man suspected of firing the shot tfustee Dave McAllister and re­ Home. tation intended for national TV and his son to the Chelsea Com­ elected were Ann Feeney, Among the most valuable . networks, financed in part by a munity Hospital, stopping first at secretary, and Jerry Ashby, aspects of the U-M-Chelsea ap­ grant from the Civic Foundation, the Chelsea Police Department treasurer.
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