VOL. 12 NO. 37
THURSDAY, APRIL 10, 2008
50 cents
NEWS HEADLINES REZONING - Laurel Town Council is one step closer to changing lots from residential to commercial properties . Page 3 NEW 911 CENTER - Just opened $13 million facility in Georgetown can accommodate 16 dispatchers, and has room to grow for another six dispatchers. Page 10 HEARING ON LAND-USE PLAN - County has one hearing on its plan, and schedules another for April 22. The plan has to be complete by April 30. Page 13 UP-TO-DATE CRIME SOLVING - More and more, state police are relying on new technology to capture criminals. Page 15 TRASH CAN DEBATE - Town could rethink its garbage receptacle policy. Page 16 FUNDRAISER PLANNED - Lions Club will hold annual fishing tournament to benefit its vision programs. The tourney will be held on Broad Creek. Page 16 DREAMING OF SPACE - Elementary school children have a chance to go to space camp, thanks to a state grant found by treasurer. Page 17 WWII VETS - His training prepared him for the physical aspects of war, but nothing could prepare him for the mental anguish to come. Page 8 NON-CONFERENCE WIN - The Laurel varsity baseball team earns its third non-conference win of the season with a victory at home last Friday. Page 41 STARS OF THE WEEK - A Laurel baseball player and a Delmar girls’ soccer player are this week’s Laurel Stars of the Week. Page 43
INSIDE THE STAR BUSINESS BULLETIN BOARD CHURCH CLASSIFIEDS EDUCATION ENTERTAINMENT FINAL WORD FRANK CALIO GOURMET HEALTH LETTERS LYNN PARKS MIKE BARTON MOVIES OBITUARIES
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22 26 32- 40 50 30 59 58 21 54 53 18 57 7 28
ON THE RECORD 40 PAT MURPHY 25 20 PEOPLE POLICE JOURNAL 14 PUZZLES 18 SNAPSHOTS 56 SOCIALS 57 SPORTS 41 - 48 TIDES 7 27 TODD CROFFORD 45 TOMMY YOUNG VETERANS OF WWII 8
STACKING PROS - Stacking champs from North Laurel head to Colorado for the World Sport Stacking Championships. Front, from left: Zane Ball, Jeremey Creppon, Hannah Lydic, Dylan Eskridge, Quentin Wilkerson Jr., Foster Haynes, Darrin Mills, Sharon Hadde and, Brittany Woods. Back: teacher Garrett Lydic and his wife, Leslie. The students brought home 18 medals and seven of them made the final round.
Steel joints for concrete pilings will be made in Laurel, sent across the nation By Lynn R. Parks Michael Jahnigen is always on the lookout for a better way to drive pilings. The Baltimore native and son of the owner of a pile driving business grew up around men who had to put all
their muscle into getting a pile driving into the ground, using a technique that, Jahnigen said, has not changed much in 100 years. “At the end of the day, they would have gotten eight pilings in, and that was with four men working,” said
Jahnigen, 54, who opened Sun Marine, a pile-driving business in Bethany Beach, in 1974. “It was 100 percent manual labor.” Jahnigen’s search for a better way Continued to page 4
Delmar girl is state rep for Children’s Miracle Network By Lynn R. Parks Delaware’s 2008 representative for the Children’s Miracle Network is only 2 years old. But she has already been through three open heart surgeries, and faces another two or three before she is grown. Jessica Wilson, daughter of Janice and Paul Wilson, Delmar, was born April 5, 2006, with tetralogy of Fallot, a heart abnormality characterized by
no walls between the chambers of the heart, a displaced aorta and a narrow pulmonary valve, the valve through which blood travels to the lungs. Her illness was discovered when she was 1 day old, after a heart murmur that she had at birth grew louder. Doctors wanted to wait on surgery until Jessica was 6 months old, Janice Wilson said. “They wanted her to get Continued to page five
Jessica Wilson