The Eagle 01 26 17 - page 4

A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
4
January 26, 2017
B
ELLEVILLE
- N
ORTHVILLE
Classified
NOTICE OF AUCTION AT
J&T CROVA TOWING
36573 GRANT,
ROMULUS, MI 48174
(734) 941-1520
FEBRUARY 1, 2017
@ 9:00 AM
2002 BUICK LESABRE
1G4HP54K724188983
1999 LEXUS GS400
JT8BH68X9X0017541
1997 CHEVROLET
CAVALIER
1G1JC1240VM142455
2002 FORD F-250
1FTNF21L32EA27899
2003 CHEVROLET
IMPALA
2G1WF52E039286000
2005
CHEVROLET COBALT
1G1AK52FX57669249
1995 FORD ASPIRE
KNJLT06H5S6124425
2002 FORD TAURUS
1FAFP53U72G113137
1998 HONDA ACCORD
1HGCG5651WA009612
2002 DODGE DURANGO
1B4HS48NX2F120535
2002 FORD TAURUS
1FAFP53U72G260302
These vehicles were towed
by Romulus Police.
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After a high-speed vehicle
and short foot chase, Van Buren
Township Police officers arrest-
ed aman caught stealing a utility
trailer earlier thismonth.
According to a prepared
release from Director of Public
Safety Gregory Laurain, police
were notified at about 8:11 a.m.
Jan. 7 that a utility trailer was
being stolen from a storage lot at
Haggerty andVanBorn roads.
Employees at the lot alerted
police that a white male subject
was in the process of stealing
their work trailer and that they
were chasing the suspect who
had driven from the lot in a red
pickup truck, pulling their trail-
er.
The employees followed the
red pickup, according to
Laurain, down Haggerty to
Ecorse Road eastbound, at
which time the suspect crashed
the pickup truck with the trailer
in tow into a guardrail. The colli-
sion disconnected the trailer
from the truck at the entrance
ramp onto southbound I-275.
The suspect continued to
drive the pickup truck south-
bound on I-275 and then onto
eastbound I-94 where a Van
Buren police cruiser attempted
to stop the driver. The truck the
suspect was driving, according to
the release from Laurain, was
reported as stolen and the driver
failed to stop for the officer but
continued at a high rate of speed
eastbound on I-94.
Near Merriman Road, the
driver of the pickup left the east-
bound lane of I-94, crossed the
median and drove eastbound in
the westbound lanes of the
expressway in an apparent effort
to elude police. The driver of the
pickup then crossed all lanes of
westbound traffic and jumped
from the vehiclewhile it was still
in motion, fleeing on foot from
pursuing police.
The pickup truck continued
to roll several hundred feet,
Laurain said, before striking a
cement freeway wall and coming
to rest.
Officers observed the driver
of the vehicle running into a
nearby wooded area and gave
pursuit. Police apprehended
Timothy Komendera, 50, of
Detroit, at the scene.
Komendera was arraigned in
34th District Court on two counts
of larceny over $20,000 and one
count of third degree fleeing and
eluding.
Bond was set at $50,000 or 10
percent. He was scheduled to
appear for a preliminary court
hearing at 35th District Court
yesterday.
Students at Silver Springs
Elementary School in Northville
had the opportunity recently to
learn about Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr.'s life and legacy during a
presentation by puppeteer
Richard Paul focused on promot-
ing respect and understanding
for all people. The school-wide
assembly was followed by grade-
level and classroom activities
reinforcing Dr. King's messages
of peace, equality and service to
others.
Northville Public Schools stu-
dents from kindergarten through
high school honored Dr. King's
contributions to the world and
the Civil Rights Movement as
part of the Martin Luther King,
Jr., holiday Jan. 16.
District-wide themes for stu-
dent activities and initiatives this
yearwereDr. King quotes:
"If I cannot do great things, I
can do small things in a great
way."
"Whatever your life's work is,
do it well."
"The function of education is
to teach one to think intensively
and to think critically.
Intelligence plus character -
that is the goal of true education."
In classrooms across the 10
Northville school buildings, stu-
dents took time to reflect on Dr.
King's messages of peaceful
problem solving and strengthen-
ing communities through service
with teacher-led activities that
offer a range of experiences
aligned with curriculum stan-
dards that included book talks;
reading and listening to selected
Dr. King speeches; writing reflec-
tions; making flip books; creating
art projects; sharing poetry and
music and classroom discussions
about the impact of Dr. King's
messages on theworld.
Along with classroom lessons,
several buildings also had
school-wide and grade-level
activities planned to reinforce
Dr. King's vision for our country
and ourworld
"These activities that our stu-
dents and staff take part in
focused on Dr. King's legacy, go
hand-in-hand with Northville
Public Schools' vision for all
Northville students to become
compassionate, quality contribu-
tors in our global society," said
Northville
Assistant
Superintendent for Instructional
Services Deanna Barash. "In
light of recent events in our coun-
try and around the world, it is
more important than ever that
our community and our schools
take the time to reflect on the
principles Dr. King modeled dur-
ing his life of unity, acceptance,
nonviolence, peaceful protest,
and service to others."
Northville students from
across the district take part in a
robust network of service learn-
ing and community services
experiences throughout the
school year, including the Kids
Against Hunger and Kids
Helping Kids initiatives each
year, a spokesman noted. The
food packing events bring togeth-
er elementary school students
from Northville and inner-city
Detroit to work side-by-side to
learn more about world hunger,
and, more importantly, do some-
thing about it. The opportunity
for students to take part in these
experiences is made possible
through the generous support of
local business and community
sponsors, together with grant
funds, contributions by school
families, and the fundraising
efforts of students, she added.
"The meaningful ways in
which students, teachers and
staff have given thought to the
principles taught by Dr. King are
important," said Northville
Superintendent Mary Kay
Gallagher. "It is our hope that
these experiences will resonate
with our students beyond this
one day and beyond their class-
rooms, and serve as a reminder
to all of us in the Northville com-
munity that the journey toward
greater understanding and
respect for one another is both
ongoing andworthwhile."
Officers observed
the driver of the vehicle
running into a nearby
wooded area and gave pursuit.
Trailer theft ends in collision, chase, arrest
Northville students honor memory of Dr. King
The late Dr. martin Luther King Jr. speak to followers.
1,2,3 5,6
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