The Eagle 08 16 18 - page 4

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AUG. 22, 2018
11:00 AM
AT J&M TOWING
8964 INKSTER RD
ROMULUS, MI 48174
2003 CHEV
1GNDX03E93D109517
2000 DODGE
2B4GP243XYR815007
2001 BMW
WBABN53461JU32140
1990 MERC
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WBAGD4325PDE60278
2002 JEEP
1J4GL58K52W157462
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1996 FORD
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2006 BUICK
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VEHICLE
PUBLIC AUCTION
THE FOLLOWING
VEHICLES HAVE BEEN
DEEMED ABANDONED
AND WILL BE SOLD AT
PUBLIC AUCTION,
AUG. 22, 2018
11:00 AM
J&M TOWING/HURON
8964 INKSTER RD
ROMULUS, MI 48174
2006 MERC
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4
August 16, 2018
B
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ORTHVILLE
TO PLACE YOUR CLASSIFIED AD CALL 734-467-1900
Classified
New principal named at Thornton Creek school
Belleville man charged in hit-and-run incident
Deagon M. Jewett is the new
principal at Thornton Creek
Elementary School inNorthville.
Members of the Northville
Board of Education unanimously
approved Jewett's appointment
at their Aug. 7 meeting. He suc-
ceeds Jennifer Bennett who in
late-June accepted a position as
a literacy coach with another
school district.
Jewett comes to Northville
Public Schools from Plymouth-
Canton Community schools
where he served for the past two
years in the position of Student
Support Coordinator at Eriksson
Elementary School, which serves
students from preschool through
fifth grade.
Prior to his role as Student
Support Coordinator, Jewett was
a classroom teacher at Plymouth-
Canton Eriksson and Isbister
Elementary schools for nine
years teaching first through third
grades. During that time he also
chaired
the
School
Improvement, Building Equity
Leadership, and Culturally
Proficient Instruction teams,
including working with col-
leagues and administration to
realign curriculum with the
Common Core Standards and
modify instruction to prepare
students to be college, career and
culture ready. In addition, from
2013-15 he served as site coordi-
nator for the Plymouth-Canton
elementary and middle school
summer program.
“Mr. Jewett is well-versed in
instruction, curriculum, data-
driven decision-making and con-
tinuous improvement, while also
sharing a passion for The Leader
in Me framework and a positive
school culture,” said Northville
School Superintendent Mary
Kay Gallagher. “He is committed
to working collaboratively with
teachers, students and families to
build on Thornton Creek's tradi-
tion of excellence and foster
opportunities for continued
growth. We are excited to have
Mr. Jewett as part of the
Thornton Creek and Northville
Public Schools team.”
Jewett has his bachelor of sci-
ence in elementary education
from Michigan State University
(MSU); his Master in the Art of
Teaching from Wayne State
University; and most recently
completed
his
School
Administrator's Certificate at
MSU.
“I was first attracted to
Northville because of its public
school system, which is why my
wife and I moved to Northville
eight years ago,” Jewett said. “We
wanted our children to have
access to an excellent education,
and be raised in a community
that shares our values and
beliefs.”
“Beyond the district's commit-
ment to excellence, The Leader
in Me model, and its dedication
to integrating technology, it is evi-
dent that Thornton Creek and its
community have a shared vision
to educate the whole child - not
just academically, but socially
and emotionally as well,” Jewett
added. “While visiting the school
as part of the interview process,
student leaders shared what is
most important to them and how
proud they are of their school. I
was impressed with the students
and how excited eachwas to be a
leader at ThorntonCreek.”
Jewett lives in Northville with
his wife, Adrienne, and their two
daughters, Lucille, going into
fourth grade andRose, going into
first grade, at Moraine
Elementary School.
A Belleville man is facing
criminal charges in a hit and
run accident that injured a
Detroit Police officer.
Wayne County Prosecutor
Kym Worthy has charged
Jonathan David Cole, 19, of
Belleville,in connection with
the hit-and-run pedestrian car
crash that severely injured
Detroit Police Ofc. Fadi Shukur,
30.
Prosecutors allege that at
about 2:40 a.m. Aug. 4 while
Detroit police officers were
assisting with crowd control in
the 18800 block of West
McNichols near Stahelin
Street, Cole struck Shukur as
he was walking back to his
patrol car.
Cole was allegedly driving
his vehicle at a high rate of
speed when he struck the offi-
cer. Prosecutors allege that Cole
fled the scene but later turned
himself in at a Detroit Police
precinct. It is alleged that while
Ofc. Shukur was walking to his
scout car, the defendant struck
him with his vehicle which was
traveling at ahigh rate of speed.
Cole has been charged with
reckless driving causing serious
impairment to a bodily function
and failure to stop at the scene
of an accident resulting in seri-
ous impairment. He was
arraigned last week in 36th
District Court beforeMagistrate
Millicent Sherman who
required a $150,000/cash or
surety bond and ordered no
contact with any witnesses
including his mother and
father.
A preliminary examination
is scheduled for Aug. 21 before
Judge Kenneth King in 36th
District Court.
walk around the library, espe-
cially to observe the children.
The library is an early litera-
cy hub for preschoolers and tod-
dlers, who are “getting excited
about having a book,” she said.
That's both personal and profes-
sional for Mannisto, who's a new
grandma to a granddaughter
about 4 months old and “long-
awaited.”
“So important to get their lit-
tle brains going. We're a source
for that,” saidMannisto, who has
twomarrieddaughters.
She's proud of library pro-
grams
ranging
from
Detroit/Northville history, archi-
tecture, support for those with
low vision and more. She's able
to buy some books for the collec-
tion, too, as hers is a smaller
library where directors do some
of that.
ABooks &Brews Book Group
is drawing in readers in their 20s
and 30s, with “Crazy Rich
Asians” by Kevin Kwan among
the book titles. Mannisto is
pleased her library had a discus-
sion on “Hidden Figures” by
Margot Lee Shetterly telling of
the black women mathemati-
cians who worked for NASA in
its early days and overcame
muchdiscrimination.
“Reading about other cul-
tures? Absolutely. That's criti-
cal,” said Mannisto, who's also
proud of public library trans-
parency, including an annual
August budget review, on Aug. 23
this year.
She tips her hat to Karen
Fehl, a librarian now Mannisto's
assistant. “I work with an
absolutely wonderful and dedi-
cated teamof librarians and sup-
port staff. That will be one of the
hardest things to leave behind,
my colleagues,” saidMannisto.
She likes to garden and travel
in her free time, and looks for-
ward to seeing extended family
in her retirement. Mannisto
reads fiction and nonfiction, gen-
erally one of each simultaneous-
ly.
“It's such an interesting time
we're living in,” added Mannisto,
who keeps up with major news
developments, too.
The building on Main Street
is 22 years old, and aging. It had
to close for four days this past
April due to extensive water
damage.
“So it's been an interesting
year. Challenging but fun,” she
said.
Deagon M. Jewett
Library
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