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The Minneapolis Star from Minneapolis, Minnesota • Page 64

Location:
Minneapolis, Minnesota
Issue Date:
Page:
64
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

1 i 1 v. 8 i' 11 1 THE MINNEAPOLIS STAR 2B Stpt. 22, 1966 Burnsville Hall May Be Nucleus of Center I 1 I I MM 'if "'U i z-ts Burnsville may have a new village hall that will form the nucleus for a village BURNSVILLE -7 v. 1 Hill uv iVWtK' center by early 1967; Mayor Al Hall said. The Village Council is considering leasing a 10,000 -f i I n- Li ir ''tiit i W.NSVHU I 1 I II A I square -feet building to be built by Ryan Construction Co.

on Hwy. 13 near County Road 11, Hall said. A letter of intent to do business, subject to approval of building plans, has been sent to Ryan, Hall said. The proposed hall would be leased for 97 cents per square foot, Hall said, for a period of 10 years. The council would have the option of terminating the lease after seven years, Hall added.

The building would be con by Victor Fink. Plans call for retail stores and a restaurant on the ground floor. Each parking space is to have an electrical outlet for heater systems. There will be a pedestrian mall between the ramp and the NSP building. Contractor for the structure is the Standard Construction Co.

The building was designed by the firm of Richard E. Rich and Associates, Detroit. CORKSCREW? It gives the appearance of a corkscrew, but it's a new six-level 610-car parking ramp being built between 4th and 5th Sts. and next to the new Northern States Power Co. (NSP) building.

Construction was started last February and completion is expected by Christmas. The ramp will be owned and operated by Mid-Town Park, headed structed on either a 2V2- itf(, Orion Uniil 4-acre site about 1,500 feet west of County Road 11, Peace Corps Woman Hall said. Its size would per "POOR GOV" SWEATERS Back in Danger Area 87 By ARNOLD ZEITLIN Widc-ribbcil b.its sott Orion acrylic with icw collarbone-civvvmvk- lincl Of t-white, pink, bli n. beige, black. Sizes 34-10.

mit housing both village offices and the police department in one building. The present village hall is on County Road 5 near the intersection of County Road 42 and the police department is in rented space at the intersection of County Roads 5 and 34. The site for the proposed hall would form the "nucleus Wi Suit Steand V.VJ 1 (imel accent TtS 17- I li 5Kt 12 III VMajrva -to chooje 425 Enroll at College in Osseo North Hennepin State Junior College in Osseo opened this week with an enrollment of 425 students. The students, all freshmen, are nearly all from the north Hennepin County area, said Dale Lorenz, dean of the college. The college is the newest of three state junior colleges in the Twin Cities metropolitan area.

It has 24 instruc for the center of the village and attract other businesses to locate in the area," Hall said. The site is adjacent to Hausa, the local language. Her skin is lighter than most northerners and light-skinned Ibos are not rare. The crowd chasing the five Ibos stopped by her house. Steve Tilney, a Hausa-speak-ing Peace Corpsman from southern California, persuaded them -she was an American.

Miss Frazier moved in with Tilney and his bride, Dorothy. Several days later, three other northerners came to the door, carrying a cutlass, a piece of pipe and a arrow slotted in a cocked bow. "That one," they said, pointing at Miss Frazier. Again Tilney persuaded them she was an American. one proposed for a shopping center, and a post office to serve the Burnsville area could also be built there, Hall teaid.

Building plans may be ready for council approval in two weeks, Hall said. tors and five administrators and is in the old Osseo High School building. Girls' trnrtnfii t-rance- nvc. o. The school originally had planned for more than 700 corduroy STBEICHPIIHIS BOXER 10N6IES Telephone lines to Kaduna 77 2 97 were down, and it was a week before a Peace Corps official arrived to take Miss ZARIA, Nigeria If) A Negro Peace Corps worker has returned to the northern Nigerian school where her life was threatened.

"I wanted to come back," said Dorothy Frazier, 22, of Little Rock, Ark. "I didn't want to leave in the first place." Until another Peace Corps teacher arrived to help, Miss Frazier was the head and lone member of the biology department of the government teacher training college in Zaria. The Peace Corps pulled her from her post in June after hundreds were killed in riots in the- north. Northerners hunted Ibos, blaming these eastern tribesmen for the Jan. 15 military coup.

The Sunday the riots erupted, Miss Frazier was scouting Zaria ponds for biology specimens. She had arrived from the United States two weeks before. Her first hint of trouble was a crowd of northerners besieging a house into which they had chased five terrified Ibos. "I didn't think anything of it," said Miss Frazier. She started for town on her Peace Corps motorbike.

When she came across a burning service station and an overturned car, she turned back. Bystanders called to her, "Ibo, She said they probably believed she was Ibo because she was new in town, wore Western clothes and a short hairdo and spoke with an accent her few words of Church Mission Fund Drive Head to Speak in Edina The Rev. Dr. William H. Hudnut national chairman of the $50-million "capital needs for missions" fund of the United Presbyterian Church, will speak at the 8:45, 10 and 11:45 a.m.

services Sundav at Christ Presbyterian Church, 70th St. I students during its first school year, but Lorenz said the smaller enrollment has caused no problems. "Classes are smaller than they ordinarily would be, but this gives us a chance to give the students more indi Mar 2-way stretch nylon, flwee back. Elastic waivt Rl wai; Wck, roy.l. 7 Washable col i i ait.

tap- Frazier to the regional capital, Kadunac. When the new school term i6312 MINNETONKA BLVD. AT DAKOTA unions in ions 1-4. En AVE. pm.

Rrmi, toast For Your Convenience started this month, the vidual attention," Lorenz north's Ministry of Education asked for her return OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 8 OPEN SUNDAYS ALWAYS THE FRESHEST MEATS and PRODUCE All The Brands You Know and Trust in Groceries said. Plans call for the college and Normandale Road, Edina. The Peace Corps arranged to have Miss Frazier share a cottage on the campus with a Funds collected in the ap white volunteer. She also to remain in the old building for three years and then move in the fall of 1969 to a new campus. Enjoy the color comics each Sunday has let her hair grow long er.

She believes the longer peal, headed by former President Dwight Eisenhower as honorary chairman, will be used to expand mission facilities in this country and abroad. she is in Zaria the more peo pie will know she is an Amer Tha riihar txrf ilininr rnl- 1 111. IHU juiliui visa leoes Anoka-Ramsev and ican and the safer she will Metropolitan will begin be. Dr. Hudnut is father of classes Monday.

"In Kaduna the first two weeks," she said, "they Fall enrollment figures for called me "Ibo, Then the two schools have not yet the Rev. Robert Hudnut, pastor of St. Luke Presbyterian Church, Minnetonka. The Rev. Roger Anderson, pastor of Christ Presbyterian they switched to "Peace been compiled.

Anoka-Ram Corps, Peace Corps. sey- is in Centennial High School, Circle Pines, and Metropolitan is in the old Church, served three years as associate to Dr. Hudnut when he was pastor of a Warrington elementary school in Minneapolis Rochester, N.Y., church. i a I 9 0 STRETCH SLACKS Sale! I ifepHiA comingupBUCKLES 1 L'' T'ie fashion iS A this season is none-other- 1 I but The Bucklel 1 aAid.itions 1 I A Natural Bridge Shoe 0U 1 Little or no iron SlliniWAISTS o)97 :f.99 1 value 87 ii i in. IK nnrt Stockings fit 3 DAYS ONLY REG.

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Pages Available:
910,732
Years Available:
1920-1982