February 22, 2007_S

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THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 22, 2007

VOL. 11 NO. 44

50 cents

NEWS HEADLINES

Personal Finance Inside this edition CHURCH REVIVAL - More than three decades after it closed, Bethesda Church is being restored to its original appearance. Page 2 SENIOR CENTER - Nanticoke Senior Center will hire a consultant to help it in its drive to raise money for a new building. Page 4 STATE MEET - Seaford’s Derek Page and Sussex Tech’s Brandon Krauss placed first in the state indoor track and field meet. See Henlopen Conference and state tournament stories starting on page 39. FIRST PLACE - Sussex Tech’s Alex Thomas of Seaford placed first in the Henlopen Conference wrestling tournament last weekend. See tournament stories on pages 39 and 44 STARS OF THE WEEK - A Sussex Tech wrestler and a Seaford high jumper are this week’s Seaford Stars of the Week. Page 41

Train & Toy show Saturday, Feb. 24 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Seaford Vol. Fire Dept. Cannon Street, Seaford Admission $3 for adults Children under 12 free with paying adult

INSIDE THE STAR AUTO ALLEY BUSINESS BULLETIN BOARD CHURCH CLASSIFIEDS EDUCATION GENE BLEILE GOURMET GROWING HEALTHY HEALTH LETTERS

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24 20 30 19 42 48 17 16 29

LYNN PARKS MOVIES OBITUARIES OPINION PAT MURPHY PEOPLE POLICE JOURNAL SNAPSHOTS SPORTS TIDES/WEATHER TODD CROFFORD

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STUDENT EXCELLENCE EQUALS DEGREE - Delaware Governor Ruth Ann Minner presents Seaford Middle School Principal Stephanie Smith with a framed color poster entitled, “If College Were Free Would You Go? Start Packin’!” The Governor met with Seaford Middle School students interested in attending college and their parents this past week. She informed them about the SEED Scholarship Program. The Delaware SEED (Student Excellence Equals Degree) scholarship program provides tuition for full-time students enrolled in an associate degree program at Delaware Technical & Community College or the Associate of Arts program at the University of Delaware. The program is for students who maintain a 2.5 grade-point average, stay in school, work hard and stay out of trouble. For details go to: http://seedscholarship.delaware.gov/ Photo by Gene Bleile

Homeowners must wait for full reassessment to appeal By Lynn R. Parks Following the advice of the city solicitor, the Seaford City Council Tuesday, Feb 13, voted to stay all pending tax appeals until after a full reassessment of the city is complete. The unanimous vote was over the objections of Seaford resident Ted Gruwell. Twenty-eight appeals, including one filed by Gruwell, are still pending after a 2004 “audit” of the city’s tax rolls that resulted in increased bills for near-

ly 900 property owners. A suit filed over the audit procedure was decided in favor of the city, but only on procedural matters and only after the judge commended the plaintiffs for trying to have the audit overturned. In his ruling, Vice Chancellor John Noble advised property owners Larry Moynihan and Harry Freedman to pursue appeals of the audit with the city. As a result of that ruling, the city council voted last month solicit proposals from certified appraisers to do the reassessment. “It appears that if the

city would move forward with getting the whole city reassessed, it would solve where we are right now,” city manager Dolores Slatcher said then. After that Jan. 23 vote, Slatcher recommended that the pending appeals be stayed until the reassessment is complete. When Gruwell objected, Councilman Mike Vincent asked that the city obtain a letter from its attorney, James Fuqua, recommending the stay. Slatcher had that letter at Tuesday’s meeting. Continued to page 4

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