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A·1
P r ent
In En Ie'r bro dc t public
forum, h . d that orne vote will
w t i in t propo for them.
"But the better que tion i :
Wh l' in it for kid ,w t' in it for
Michi ," En ler aid.
lthou h h If of the volin
public m y currently be in f vor
of the propo ,Ed StUpoI ,8
partner in tb polling gency, aid
Propo i n't tartln off t the
level of upport needed to p the
propo 81.
Sarpolu aid an pproval rate of
65 percent .at thi time i what i
needed and it will now take a lot of
wor to have the propo al pas .
He added that in pecial
election , undecided voters usually
vote against a proposal or dont vote
at all.
Romeo would get more than a 50
percent reduction in school
.operatin ntillage as th millage
rate would go from almo t 38 mills
to 18 mill. Per pupil
expenditure would increase by
. almost $200
try to get voter approval, mainly
through local, gras root efforts.
Leaflets and oth r printed mat rial
will be di tributed by school boards,
busin s groups, and, it is hoped,
teachers' unions
said Ted Shield, president of
Marketing Re ource Group--the •
consul ting firm working on support
for th ballot propo al. .
Pat McAvoy, legislative
a s i tan t for the Michigan
Town hip As ociation, said that
through district meetings in May
and monthly publication and
newsletters th MTA will get the
word out to communities that the
MT A board of directors upports
the propo a1. However, winning
approval for this proposal may be an
uphill battle.
In a p 11 conducted by Michigan
R earch As ociates commissioned
by the Detroit Free Pres ,more than
50 percent of likely voters were in
BOARD
I continued from page 84
Commissioner George Wy inger
ast the lone vote against the appoint
m nt of Duane O'Neill, president of
Cornerstone Alliance. He said he
couldn t support the appointment of
Mr. 0' eill because, he as being
president of Cornerstone Alliance
has never laid their agenda on the
table for the commission to look at.
"I think Cornerstone has done
enough damage to the City. O'Neill,
himself has done enough damage to
this 'city," he aid.
BUDGE
contlnu •. st !rom page AS
this year.
-Money for Rodent Control will
be increased to $5,000 from $3,700.
-No money was allocated for
board-up.
-Parks and Boulevards spending
will be cut nearly in half, dropping
from $23,450 in the current fiscal
year, to $12,350 for the next year.
-Money for Recreation will also
be cut by 3,000. The current year
bud et called for ,$284,405 for rec
reation; the proposed budget calls for
.$2 ,3.
- or will readers and tudents
be pared: McGregor Library budget
will drop to $160,338, down $55,000
over the urrent year appropriation of
$204,79 .
I H RIN on the
bud et i h dilled for May 10 at
City Hall at 7 p.m. at which time
. citizens can k questions or make
ug e nons .
. 0
conti nued from page AS
law a deliberative b dy, she aid. .
"If v get wrong information, we
et wron de I ion," . he aid. "If we
ha c ' n idcn c that we are getting
the truth It will go ar [in creating a
o d rclati nship with'the Mayor)".
h added F rri al 0 failed to fill
out n c � aryf rm for tate aid .u�
dcr A t 51. ut fat ely told council In
th p t that everything was taken
ar of.
Franklin cmph ized that contra�
t \ hat \ me. aid, "Our relationship
[w ith th Mayor)w n t one of abo
ta or III Will. Th r w dl agree
m nt, hut J II st e au e there is
d: sa zr .mcnt d n't mean our rel -
"uc n. hip I zo ."
(
p r tud nt omeo ould hi t
the b ic grant level.
Three Rive would hool
operatin mill g Heed over
45 p r nt th mill e rat
ould drop from mill to 1
mill . E ch tudent ould I 0
receive more than $400 in funding
for ne t year.
However, ew Bu alo may not
fare well oth under
low
nd
igned by King in 1964 in which he
named th chool the repo itory
of hi papers.
THE LEITE D BU would
receive full ownership of th papers
upon King' death. King, lain in
Memphi , Tenn., in 1968, died
without a will.
On Monday, Mrs. King told the
judge and jury that King previou ly
had been ubjected to death threats,
a eros burning in Atlanta and a
house-bombing in Montgomery,
Ala.
King wanted the papers afe
from "fires and bombs," Mrs. King
said.
"Essentially, my memory i
Martin still felt his papers should be
returned to the South at some point
when there was a suitable facility,"
she said.
"ULTI i not to
get the officer fired or dump om
ra e from Col in the cl ty w rd
Dearbom, " aid Sheffield, who
also runnin for Detroit City Coun
cil. "I j t want to work out with th
City of Dearborn that we wouldn't
have to endure that kind of urveil
lane or constant police t n
tion ... We've got to co-exi t. We've
go t to get along. It
Dearborn , historically, been
charged wi th raci In, leading b c to
th ban of outside resid nts in Dear
born parks three years ago, a move
Bl ks viewed mod rn-day egre
gation. The ban ca ed Blac Of
ganizatio to prot t giving Detroit
rl
BEST CHANCE:
tch
APRil 24, 1993
lotto Ticket
IY''":'·' .4
I.'," .
She w peaking and "before I
could fini h, he interrupted me and
aid, 'I have thi letter here." The
letter w the 1964 letter that King
igned tating the papers would be
owned by the university if he died.
Mrs. King said Silber also told
her she should send the remaining
King papers to Boston University.
"He was very hostile. It was in an
angry tone," she said. Silber ran for
governor of Mas achusetts in 1990,
losing in a close vote to Republican
William Weld. .-
Boston University, where King
earned his doctoral degree, has
introduced into evidence the letter
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