The Mail-Journal, Volume 27, Number 6, Milford, Kosciusko County, 23 March 1988 — Page 20
20
THE MAIL-JOURNAL — Wed., March 23,1988
Milford's Main Street
AS SPRING comes so do thoughts of alumni banquets and class reunions. The annual Milford High School reunion was held at the Highlands Hammock State Park near Sebring, Fla., on Sunday, March 13. A potluck dinner was enjoyed by those present. Attending the event, which was started about 1975 by former MHS teacher Ollie Shambaugh, were Jerry and Kathryn Bushong, Norma (Kline) and John Chambers and Joe and Marie Brookins, all of Frostproof; June (Coy) and Robert Laudeman of Avon Park; Edna (Hollar) and Tom Barbour of Lakeland; and Joy (Biller Rumfelt) and Dan Mishler; Also, Dorothy and Floyd Hollar of Palmetto; Rosetta (Chupp) and Ralph Miller of Sarasota; Bernice Egolf, Lois and Cornelius Reuter and Esther and Harold Gawthrop of Sebring ; Phyllis and Stanley Custer of Bonita Springs; and Evelyn and Darrell Orn of Bradenton.
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The Custers and the Orns camped at Nieberts Fishing Camp on Friday and Saturday. Mrs. Niebert is the former Judy Godshalk of Leesburg. They went to the reunion on Sunday and then went to the Passion Play at Lake Wales and sat in the rain the entire performance. The report from the “sunny south” is they covered themselves with garbage bags and umbrella! IF YOU are a MHS graduate who lives closer to the old school grounds than Florida, you might want to attend the Milford High School Alumni Association’s banquet on Saturday, June 4. Plans for the annual event are well underway. Randall Dewart will act as master of ceremonies and chairman of the event. Bob Beer will serve as treasurer. Other members of the committee are Neal Cory, Margie Brooks, Gwendolyn Dewart and Berniece H. Dwyer.
The classes of ’3B and ’63 will be honored. The Melloaires, a senior citizen’s singing group, will be singing as a part of the program. This year, in addition to graduates, all persons who have at any time attended Milford High School are encouraged to attend. Faculty are also invited. The event will be held in the Milford Junior High School with a social hour at 5 p.m., the dinner at 6 p.m. and the program at 7:30 p.m. —o— THE MILFORD Large Animal Clinic staff will host its second annual Animal Health Care Clinic on Friday, March 25, from 11:30 to 5:30 p.m. at the clinic on SR 15 at the north edge of Milford. There will be drug company exhibits, seminars on current animal health care topics and products, agriculture industry representatives and Purdue faculty members.
Special guest for the day will be George Morton, deputy commissioner of agriculture in Indiana. WINNERS OF the 1988 Goshen College “Concerto-Aria Competition” will be featured in the Goshen College Orchestra concert at 8 p.m. Friday, March 25, in the college’s Union Auditorium. Among the students selected to perform on the basis of competitive auditions last December is sophomore Anthony Beer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Levi J. Beer of Milford. A pianist, he will play Ludwig Beethoven’s Piano Concerto No. 2 in B-flat Major. There is no admission charge. The public is invited. —O'JENNIFER STUMP, granddaughter of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce McClintic of Milford will serve as an attendant princess for the 35th Annual International Azalea Festival.
Every year, when the azaleas are in full bloom, Norfolk, Va., honors the allied forces of the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. The City of Norfolk and the Hampton Roads Chamber of Commerce invite one of the 16 NATO countries to be represented by a queen. Princesses representing the other 15 NATO countries and attendants from the United States complete the Royal Court. Queen Azalea XXXV will be crowed by the president of her country in coronation ceremonies at the beautiful botanical gardens. Jennifer was selected by the Supreme Allied Commander Atlantic, Admiral Lee Baggett, Jr., USN, to serve as attendant princess for the daughter of Vice Admiral Sir Richard and Lady Thomas, Jemima Patricia Thomas, princess of the United Kingdom. Jennifer is an 18-year-old senior at Green Run High School
and plans to attend Old Dominion University in the fall. She and her parents, Lieutenant and Mrs. Jack Stump, look forward to Bruce and Eva visiting them at their Virginia Beach home for the April 19-24 festival. Milford residents Dan and Mary Helene Levernier were recent guests of the Stump family. Dan and Jack toured the aircraft carrier USS John F. Kennedy, the nuclear-powered attack submarine USS Bluefish, and headquarters of the Supreme Allied Command Atlantic. Mary
Mr*• ~ I SeKEf ■ir wM » 11 ■ ■Ls" fl Byl vjr aHMRI Ml < J ' ■ * .AbmiM " 4 / Ml Zr i flaMI M| "Tjgfc ! ■. wM fl W3L> a W W 3 * iflH^^F^^fl/' fl ; fl w \ w fl ■i E I ♦■ fl Isl ■' 4 ', ■ a * Ir* ■•.«.' «I wHHHBBBHiIr I HHfliflH I I ROTARIANS LEARN ABOUT WIDOWED TO WIDOWED — The Kosciusko County Mental Health Association has formed a group to help persons who have been widowed. Philip K. Fawley and Helen Alderfer spoke to the Syracuse/Wawasee Rotarians Tuesday, March 22, concerning the activities of this group. The problems of each widowed individual are unique and the needs of these persons are varied. Anyone finding himself or herself dealing with these circumstances is asked to call either of the above persons or the County Mental Health Association. Pictured left to right are Dr. Logan Love, program chairman; Fawley; Alderfer; and Dick Conroy, president-elect. (Photo by Lewis Immel)
Sewer easements needed now for Lake Wawasee
(By GLEN LONG Staff Writer The Turkey Creek Regional Sewer District project to construct a sewer system in several areas around Lake Wawasee is at a point ,at which interest and information from affected property owners are extremely important, according to Richard A. Green, Syracuse attorney who represents the district. “The sewer project is presently at a very critical stage,” said Green, as he recently spoke of progress made on the sewer project since last fall. He stated that support for the system as indicated by the number of easement donations has been overwhelming. About 90 percent of the property owners he has heard from have indicated enthusiastic support for the project. “Hopefully, those people who indicated they were undecided and the extremely small number of negative responders will ultimately see fit to donate their easements,” he said. Green said that the purpose of the sewer project is to eliminate the general decline in water quality of Lake Wawasee, the state’s largest natural lake, which has been occurring for several years. The lake will thus be preserved for the safe enjoyment of present owners and summer visitors as well as future generations. The project is in its design phase, which must be completed by April 30, 1988, according to Green. The process of acquiring easements for each property to be served has also begun. Green stated several times that this easement acquisition process is particularly critical and requires the awareness and cooperation of all affected property owners. The acquisition process must be completed soon after the design phase is completed. Therefore, property owners should become involved and be prepared to sign easements relating to their individual properties in the very near future. The sewer system, which has been approved by USEPA and the Indiana Department of Environmental Management, includes small diameter sewer mains which will carry the effluent, or liquid overflow, from a holding tank located on each property. It is these tanks for which easements are being acquired. The purpose of the tanks is to retain solids so they can be pre-
Helene, Chris and Jennifer enjoyed sight-seeing at the many stores in the Green Run Mall. PHYLLIS ROY is feeling better and has her restaurant on Main Street open. —o— THE Kosciusko, Elkhart and Marshall Association for the Education of Young Children held an appreciation brunch recently in the fellowship hall of the Apostolic Christian Church.
treated. The tanks will be pumped periodically by the sewer district. Green emphasized that because the sewer project has been pending for approximately 10 years, property owners may have a tendency to think that any action required by them will be “some time in the future” rather than now. He cautioned against this and said property owners should not delay in taking the action needed for their individual properties as such delays can only have the effect of increasing costs to the individual customers. Properties for which easements are not obtained now will be passed by during the construction phase and a “Y” will be placed in the line for later connection. Both existing county ordinances and the ordinance to be passed by the sewer district will require the property owner to connect and install a tank at the owner’s expense. The first areas to be served by this large project are Sunrise Beach, Venetian Isles, Ogden Island, Nordyke Park, Johnson’s Bay Subdivision (Kanata Manayunk), Rainey’s Court, Harborside Condominiums, Willow Grove, Pleasant Grove, Pickwick Park and Kale Island (including off-water and channel areas). These areas will be connected to the soon-to-be-expanded Syracuse sewage system. Other areas to be served are Highland View Gardens, Leeland Addition, Hess Addition, Marineland Gardens, Bayshore Beach, Cottingham Beach, Morrison Island, Yacht Harbor, Jarrett’s Addition and Natti Crow Beach. These latter areas will be served by what is now known as the Enchanted Hills Sewer System, which will be acquired by the district and modernized. In recapping the recent history of activities involving the sewer project, Green indicated that notices relating to easements were mailed to approximately 700 individual property owners in October and two public meetings were held. He said the public meetings were very informative for the over 300 people who attended them. Green stated that about 250 additional notices are mailed this week to property owners who were not in the original group that received notices. All notice mailings include a questionnaire which is very important to the completion of the project. Close to 500 of these original questionnaires have been returned. Green urges all property
The association’s theme is “We Care for America’s Children.” The guest speaker was Dr. Karen Doudt, associate professor of education at Manchester College. Preparing and serving the brunch was the staff of the Lakeland Day Care Center at Syracuse. The welcoming and closing remarks were given by KEM-AEYC President Carol Hurd of Milford. Gloria Frew of Elkhart, formerly of Syracuse, introduced the speaker and gave the invocation.
owners who received one of the original notices to complete and return their questionnaires immediately. Green’s office at 116 E. Main St. in Syracuse can be contacted to obtain a new questionnaire if the first one has been misplaced. His office telephone number is 457-3222. The property owners who will receive their questionnaires this week are urged to complete and return them immediately. Descriptions for the individual easements are currently being prepared by surveyors. Therefore, property owners should not be surprised should they see Surveyors on or near their property. Surveying work in the next 30 to 45 days will be for individual tank easement sites. Green requests that property owners who have questions relating to the location of their easement should contact him immediately so their wishes can be considered in the preparation of easement descriptions. After the actual easement documents are prepared, the district will hold public meetings on weekends so property owners can be present to review their easement documents and execute them. Dates of these meetings will be published in area newspapers. Green said the reason for the easement donation request is that if it is not donated, an appraisal and negotiation procedure must be undertaken. He stated that this procedure would still very likely result in little or no value being assigned to the easement being acquired. This is because the benefit to each property by being served by the sewer system far exceeds the value of the easement being acquired. The attorney also noted that expenses saved by the district will result in lower monthly user charges for sewer customers. Gold ring and 7 other jewelry is taken from home The Kosciusko County Sheriff’s Department received a report of the theft of a gold ring, necklace and cash from the home of Millie Hawn, r 5 box 473, Syracuse, on March 14. Police were told the theft occurred prior to March 10 and the value of the items stolen has been listed at $750. In a separate incident, Melvin Greenfield, r 5 box 375A, Syracuse, reported to police on March 12, that the left front tire on his 1977 Mercury Marquis had been slashed the evening before. Damage to the tire was estimated up to SSO.
