Page 7 - The Eagle 04 26 12

Basic HTML Version

City garage sales planned
The ice will be removed from
the Plymouth Cultural Ice Arena
for two city-wide garage sales this
year.
The sales are planned for 9 a.m.
until 2 p.m. May 12 and June 9 but
reservations for seller spaces are
nowbeing accepted.
A 10 by 10 space can be rented
for $20, but the spaces are limited.
Buyers are admitted to the sales
at no cost.
For more information visit
www.ci.plymouth.mi.us/recreation-
specialevents, call the Recreation
Office at (734)455-6620, or register
online at https://www.plymouth-
webtrac.net."
HeadStart enrollment offered
The Guidance Center Head
Start and Van Buren Public
Schools early education preschool
programs will be having an Open
Enrollment Fair from 9 a.m. until 2
p.m. April 27 at Belleville Head
Start in St. Anthony Church, 373
West Columbia, Belleville (next to
BellevilleHighSchool).
For more information contact
Sumpter Head Start (734) 461-1648
or Belleville Head Start (734) 785-
7708.
Grief support groupmeets
New Hope Center for Grief
Support sponsors an ongoing sup-
port group for thosewho have lost a
loved one to suicide. This group
meets from 7-8:30 p.m. on the sec-
ond and fourth Thursday night of
each month at Life Church, 7001
HaggertyRoad inCanton.
No registration is necessary for
this drop-in support group. For fur-
ther information about this group
or about the many other free, age
and loss specific groups offered for
children, teens, and adults, call
New Hope Center for Grief
Support at (248) 348-0115 and visit
us at www.newhopecenter.net
Garden spots available
Reservations are being accepted
for spots in The Romulus
Community Gardens on Bibbins
Road, just west of the Romulus
Senior Center and across from the
Romulus Towers.
Applications will be accepted
through April 30 or until all 16 of
the raised garden boxes are
reserved. Applications are avail-
able in the Community
Development Department at
Romulus City Hall, 11111 Wayne
Road.
The 3-by-8-foot garden boxes are
made possible by the Romulus
Downtown Development Authority
(DDA), Boy Scout Troop 872 and
local volunteers.
Planting will take place at 1 p.m.
May 12 during the Clean Sweep
event. Residents can choose the
crops they want to plant. The appli-
cation provides some recommen-
dations.
Gardeners must provide their
own tools, soil preparation prod-
ucts and food for their crops. The
Boy Scouts will assist with planting
andwatering, if needed.
For more information on the
garden boxes, call the Romulus
Senior Center at (734) 955-4120 or
the Romulus DDA at (734) 955-4533.
The Senior Center is located at
36525BibbinsRoad.
Inkster women sponsor play
The Inkster Western Wayne
County production of The Vagina
Monologues will take place at the
Allen Park Community Theater
complex from4-7:30 p.m. April 27.
Inkster women are currently
selling wristbands imprinted with
Stop The Violence for $1 to help
fund the production which is an
effort to stop violence against
women and girls.
Tickets for the production are
$15.
More information is available
from Dr. Madie Searcy, (313) 980-
8808.
Annual Old Village Sale set
Historic Old Village in Plymouth
will be the site of the annual Yard
and Trunk Sale from 8 a.m. until 3
p.m. Saturday, April 28.
This event has become known as
the one of the best of the Detroit
area multi-family sales. More than
25 homes and businesses will par-
ticipate.
The event will start at Station
885 (885 Starkweather St, next to
the railroad) and get maps to all the
homes and sale locations. Coffee
and donuts will be for sale. Station
885 is also the site of the annual
Trunk Sale where car trunks
become sales area offering house-
hold goods, collectables, antiques
and surprises. Spaces are still for
rent at $10 for the day and are
available to the public.
The Trunk Sale is a fund raiser
for the Old Village Association
which promotes and helps beautify
Old Village. To reserve spaces,
email moppat@comcast.net [mail-
to:moppat@comcast.net].
Old Village is located north of
Plymouth Road, west of Haggerty
Road, centered on Mill Street and
Starkweather Street. r restaurants.
Historic characters visit park
The Plymouth Historical
Museum is planning to host a
"Plymouth Characters at Kellogg
Park" walk.
The walks will begin at 2 p.m.
April 28 with small groups depart-
ing every 15 minutes. The walk cir-
cles Kellogg Park in downtown
Plymouth and lasts about 90 min-
utes. For ticket information follow:
http://www.plymouthhistory.org/eve
nts/Plymouth-Characters-at-
Ke l l og g - Pa r k _ET3 8 . h tml ?
SortBox=201204
Philharmonic presentsNatural Gas
Enjoy awine tasting whilemem-
bers of the Michigan Philharmonic
perform the music of the 60s and
A
SSOCIATED
N
EWSPAPERS OF
M
ICHIGAN
P
AGE
7
April 26, 2012
01. Obituaries
02. In Memoriam
03. Cards of Thanks
04. Monuments
& Cemetery Plots
05. Personals/Announcements
06. Legal Notices
07. Attorneys
08. Entertainment
09. Lost & Found
10. Coming Events
30. Help Wanted
31. Help Wanted Sales
32. Help Wanted Drivers
33. Child Care
34. Specialized Services
35. Situations Wanted
40. Business Opportunity
42. Health and Fitness
43. Money to Loan
44. Music/Art Lessons
45. Adult Care
46. Private Schools/Instruction
47. Riding/Horses/Stables
50. Pets & Supplies
54. Rummage Sales
55. Estate Sales
56. Flea Markets
57. Antiques
58. Garage and Yard Sales
59. Auctions
60. Misc. Sales
61. Misc. Items
62. Building Supplies
63. Business and
OfficeEquipment
64. Lawn & Garden Supplies
65. Tree Service
66. Landscape / Nurseries
67. Garden Plant / Supplies
68. Garden / Produce
70. Masonry / Brickwork
72. Cleaning Services
73. Musical Merchandise
74. Sporting Goods
75. Boats / Accessories
76. Remodeling & Renovations
77. Recreation Vehicles
78. Hunting / Fishing
82. Wanted to Buy
87. Room for Rent
88. Duplexes for Rent
89. Apartments for Rent
90. Condos/Townhouses for Rent
92. Business Places for Rent
93. Banquet Halls
94. Farm Land for Rent
95. Real Estate
96. Houses for Rent
97. Cottages for Rent
98. Manufactured/Mobile Homes
99. Flats for Rent
100. Will Share
101. Wanted to Rent
102. Storage
103. Business Property for Sale
104. Farms & Acreage for Sale
105. Mobile Homes for Sale
106. Houses for Sale
107. Condos/Townhouses for Sale
108. Lake and Resort
109. Income Property
110. Lots for Sale
111. Out of State Property
112. Commercial Lease
113. Real Estate Wanted
114. Auto Accessories
115. Autos for Sale
116. Antique & Classic Cars
117. Trucks & Vans for Sale
118. Freebies
119. Auto Repairs
120. Motorcycles
121. Autos Wanted
Louise Grimes
Sunrise: Oct. 13, 1924
Sunset: April 15, 2012
Louise Grimes died April 15,
2012.
Among those left to cherish
her memory are her two
sons, Minister Earl W.
Grimes, Jr. of Westland and
Darryl C. Grimes of Belleville;
a brother, Theodore (Bob)
Summers of Detroit; 10
grandchildren, Darryl (B.J.)
Grimes, Melody Grimes,
Reuben (Denita) Murphy, Jr.,
Earl W. Grimes, III, Ahmande
Grimes, Derrick Murphy,
Carle Grimes, Jr., David
Grimes, Ta-Tanisha Crockette
and Juta Crockette;16 great-
grandchildren; one great-
great-grandchild; a daughter-
in-law, Janice Grimes; a son-
in-law, Reuben Murphy, Sr.;
nieces, Adrian (Bim) Wiffen;
Laura Williams, Lonnie
Wiffen, Rhonda Summers,
Rosalind
Neal,
Terrea
Summers
and
Carla
Summers; nephews, Russell
Summers, Jr., and Darrius
Summers; Bessie Van Buren,
whom she regarded as her
god-daughter, a devoted
cousin, Dorothy L. Williams;
former
daughters-in-law,
Terry Ann (Sean) Pita, Vivian
(Bill) Weaver, and Rosalind
Grimes; sisters-in-law, Izora
Williams, Shirley Melson,
Mary Anderson, Zenobia
Carrie, Lola Gasco and Joan
Grimes; brothers-in-law, Bill
(Marcella) Grimes and the
Rev. Howard Grimes; a host
of other nieces and
nephews;
many
other
cousins and in-laws; several
friends, and many church
members.
Funeral services took place
at United Christian Church of
Detroit with the Rev. Gregory
E. Bryant officiating.
Final arrangements were
entrusted to the Penn
Funeral Home on Inkster
Road in Inkster.
Interment was at United
Memorial
Gardens
in
Plymouth.
Robert Humphries, Jr.
Sunrise: Nov. 3, 1940
Sunset: April 12, 2012
Robert Humphries, Jr. died
April 12, 2012.
Among those left to cherish
his memory are his wife of
almost 51 years, Ruby; his
daughters, Keena (Ron)
Wilson and Krista (George)
Roberson; his grandchildren,
Jalen Humphries, Brittany,
Brandy, Arielle and George
Roberson; siblings, Rose
Underwood,
Tommie
(Shirley) Humphries, Sabirin
(Jabar) Raheem; Leon
(Denise) Humphries, Lillie
Parker, Loretta Hannah and
Albert (Val) Humphries; six
sisters-in-law; five brothers-
in-law; a host of uncles,
aunts, nieces, nephews and
cousins, and many friends
who affectionately knew him
as Jr., Slim, Uncle Slim,
Duba, Rob and Long Slim.
Mr. Humphries was preceded
in death by his parents,
Robert and Willie Humphries,
Sr.
Funeral services took place
at Cathedral of Faith in
Detroit with the Rev. Lee
Jackson officiating
Final arrangements were
entrusted to the Penn
Funeral Home on Inkster
Road in Inkster.
Interment was at Knollwood
Memorial Park on Ridge
Road in Canton Township.
CHEESEMAN LLC
TRUCKING
NOW HIRING
FOR SHUTTLE RUN
AND LOCAL PICK AND
DELIVERY DRIVER
HOME DAILY
MUST HAVE SIX MONTHS
OTR EXPERIENCE
WITH CDL CLASS A
ABLE TO GET HAZMAT
ENDORSEMENT
P&D DRIVER MUST BE
ABLE TO RUN CANADA
WWW.CHEESEMAN.COM
800.762.5793
DRIVERS
Local Transportation co look-
ing for professional inde-
pendent contract drivers to
drive sedans, vans and taxi
cabs. Must have 2 years
verifiable commercial driving
exp. A valid MI Chauffeur
license is required along with
an excellent driving record.
Must be able to pass a crim-
inal background check. Must
have exc customer service
skills. Apply in person any-
time ABC Transportation
13420 Wayne Rd. Livonia MI,
48150. No phone calls
please.
ESTATE & GARAGE SALE
3864 Niagara, Wayne MI
27-28-29
TAYLOR
St. Paul Church
24158 Goddard Rd
(West of Telegraph)
May 3 9am-5pm
M4 9am-4pm
May 5 9am-11am
Furn-tools-hshld items
VERY GOOD
clothing & misc items
SPRING METAL BUILDINGS
CLEARANCE - Thousands off
Factory Direct Pricing.
Discount Shipping Available -
Available sizes include
24x20, 20x30, More! Limited
Availability Call Today 877-
280-7456
Willow Acres
Motel,
Low daily and
weekly rates.
Refrigerator, microwave,
Cable TV, High Speed
Internet.
Call 734-721-1220
Fairlane in Novi
248-347-9999
Duplex for Rent Wayne, 2 BR,
dining, basement, shed. No
Pets, $695/mo 734-427-7545.
WAYNE
Near Wayne Rd.,
Quiet, Clean, 1 BR,
Heat & Water included,
No Pets, $450 & Up with
approved credit.
Ideal for Seniors
313-247-2075 or
313-561-9818
SPRING
SPECIAL
Oakland Manor, Inkster.
$450 for first 3 months, $475
for second 3 months, $500
next 6 months, $200 mini-
mum or 0 deposit if qualified.
Newly redecorated: Large 1
BR, Central Air / Carpet /
Coin Laundry / Drapes
(Blinds) / Garb Disposal /
Laundry Connect / Lawn
Care / No Dogs / No Cats /
Stove & Refrigerator
734-718-8409
313-920-5966
-HELP WANTED-
DRIVERS OWNER OPERA-
TORS CLASS-A,
1 Year
Regional – Midwest – Home
Weekly. $2,800 to $3,300
weekly average. 100% O/Op
Company. Call Faye @ 855-
258-2001 or go to www.sun-
cocarriers.com.
LIFE AGENTS •
Earn $500 a
Day • Great Agent Benefits •
Commissions Paid Daily •
Liveral Underwriting • Leads,
Leads, Leads Life Insurance,
License Required. Call 1-888-
713-6020.
OWNERS /OPERATORS
NEEDED ASAP!
Tractors &
Straight trucks. $1,000 Sign
On Bonus. Great Pay, up to
$.10/mile with FSC. Great
Program. Call Now 800-831-
8737.
ANNUAL BONUS UP TO
$5,000! EARN $$$ DELIV-
ERING RV’S
with your ¾ or
one ton pickup; Competitive
rates & sign-on bonus. 1-
866-764-1601
or
ForemostTransport.com.
COMPANY DRIVERS /
RECENT
TRUCKING
SCHOOL
GRADUATES.
YOUR CAREER STARTS
NOW!
•Up to $4,800 tuition
reimbursement (for a limited
time only) • Great Pay &
Benefits • Excellent Training
Program • Industry-leading
safety program. New to
trucking? Call us for opportu-
nities. Call: 866-482-7027
www.joinCRST.com.
DRIVERS & OWNER OPER-
ATORS! OTR
Positions
Available As a professional
Tank Driver for Transport
Service Co., you will enjoy
the financial security and
respect of being associated
with the largest liquid bulk
carriers in the nation.
Industry leading pay scale:
Weekly Pay-Direct Deposit,
Me d i c a l / D e n t a l / V i s i o n
Program, Safety Bonus,
Mentor Referral Program And
so much more! We require 1
year of recent, verifiable
Tractor-Trailer experience,
Tank and Hazmat endorse-
ments (or the ability to
obtain) and a safe driving
record. 800-871-4581. Apply
Online www.thekag.com
-ADOPTION-
ADOPT: WE PROMISE TO
GIVE YOUR BABY
a life filled
with love, happiness & secu-
rity. Expenses paid. Lori & Art
1-877-292-1755.
ADOPT: A HAPPY COUPLE
PROMISE YOUR NEW-
BORN A LIFE OF LOVE,
laughter, security and large
extended family. Expenses
paid. Please call Brian and
Jennifer. 888-262-0237.
-SCHOOLS / CAREERS
TRAINING-
ATTEND
COLLEGE
ONLINE FROM HOME.
*Medical,
*Business,
*Criminal
Justice,
*Hospitality. Job placement
assistance. Computer avail-
able. Financial Aid if quali-
fied. SCHEV certified. Call
8 7 7 - 8 9 5 - 1 8 2 8
www.CenturaOnline.com.
AIRLINES ARE HIRING
-
Train for high paying Aviation
Career. FAA approved pro-
gram. Financial aid if quali-
fied - Job placement assis-
tance. Call Aviation Institute
of Maintenance 877-891-
2281.
-FOR SALE-
BUY/SELL AN RV ONLINE.
Best Deals and Selection.
Visit RVT.com Classifieds.
Thousands of RVs for Sale by
Owner and Dealer Listings
www.RVT.com
.
Call 888-260-
2043.
PIONEER POLE BUILD-
INGS -
Free Estimates-
Licensed and insured-2x6
Trusses-45 Year Warranty
Galvalume Steel-19 Colors-
Since 1976-#1 in Michigan-
Call Today 1-800-292-0679.
SAWMILLS FROM ONLY
$3997.00 – MAKE & SAVE
MONEY
with your own band-
mill. Cut lumber any dimen-
sion. In stock ready to ship.
FREE
Info/DVD:
www.NorwoodSawmills.com
1-800-578-1363.
-WANTED-
CORVETTES
WANTED
1953-1972
Any Condition.
Courteous,
Fast,
Professional Buyer. In the
Corvette business for 26
ears. Licensed and Bonded.
Vince
Conn
Corvette
www.corvettebuyer.com 1-
800-850-3656.
-MISCELLANEOUS-
PLACE YOUR STATEWIDE
AD HERE!
$299 buys a 25-
word classified ad offering
over 1.6 million circulation
and 3.6 million readers.
Contact
jim@michigan-
press.org.
Mich-CAN Statewide
Classified Ads
To
advertise in
The Eagle,
call 734-467-1900.
BOLD
TYPE
ATTRACTS
MORE
READERS
equality. We cannot help but
remember the horrors that
many, like Dr. Martin Luther
King, Jr., faced attempting to
fight to be accorded the rights
guaranteed to everyone in our
country. Many young African-
Americans have no idea of the
incredible struggle many
endured or the lives that were
lost for the rights they take for
granted today.
There is certainly more to
be done. The fight against
racism is far from over and we
cheer the YMCA for this effort
to recognize the distance we
still need to travel to complete
andunquestioned equality.
This is an effort we should
all appreciate and support.
ing, swearing and evicting of one
questioner seemed somewhat of
an overreaction. We were also
surprised when he and his vice-
president confronted one 35-
year resident demanding his
video camera so that no taped
record of the meeting or the
shouting match could leave the
building. They were thwarted in
that attempt at controlling the
facts, too.
We were really surprised by
Reaume discussing a fire in a
second story office on Main
Street above Kilwins' Fudge
Shop. We couldn't, and still can't
figure out how a candle fire, put
out by a cop with a fire extin-
guisher, before 24 volunteer fire-
fighters with three trucks
arrived on the scene, was an
example of a good use of
resources and public service
management. What we really
can't fathom is why he would be
discussing the city procedures
when his domain is the town-
ship.
To us, when that many volun-
teer firefighters, who are paid
about $26 an hour, show up and
stand around with nothing to do,
taxpayers' money isn't being
used wisely. And why on earth is
this an exemplar in a talk by the
township supervisor?
But as in all campaign rheto-
ric, it doesn't have to make
sense, be logical or often, even
be coherent. It just has to make
voters think the speaker has
done orwill do a good job.
Just a note of caution, then, to
voters. The onslaught has begun.
You are about to be bombarded
with propaganda, literature,
claims, counterclaims and argu-
ments. It will be more than diffi-
cult, particularly in this cam-
paign, to sort truth fromfiction.
Our advice is pretty simple,
it's like Scully and Muldar
always said: The truth is out
there.
We hope we can help you
find it.
Racism
FROM PAGE 6
Campaign
FROM PAGE 6
Calendar of events
See
Calendar,
page 8