April 12, 2007_S

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THURSDAY, APRIL 12, 2007

VOL. 11 NO. 51

Seaford Council Meeting Highlights

NEWS HEADLINES SHAWLS FOR VICTIMS - Denise Rogers and her cadre of volunteers make shawls for victims of abuse who seek treatment at Nanticoke Memorial Hospital. Page 2

Lawrence property vote is scheduled for May 2

DINNER AUCTION - Nanticoke’s Dinner Auction promises to be an evening of fun, spirited bidding, and an experience as guests travel through the borders to Mexico. Page 3

By Lynn R. Parks A public vote on the annexation into the city of Seaford of the historic Lawrence property will be Monday, May 7, 2 p.m. to 6 p.m. This is the final step in the annexation process of the five-acre parcel on alternate U.S. 13, across from the Seaford Post Office. Owners Gary and Joy Hill have put the property, home to a dilapidated 19th-century mansion that is one of only two examples of Greek architecture in the state and is on the National Register of Historic Places, up for sale. Asking price is $995,000. If annexed, the property will be zoned for light commercial development. For information about the upcoming vote, call city hall, 629-9173.

NEW TOWN HALL? - The Bridgeviile Commission authorized a study into the possibility of renovating town hall or building a new one. Page 5 ELEGANT DESIGNS - Groundbreaking for Elegant Designs, the latest venture for the Penco Corporation, Seaford, was held last week. Page 6 ENDOSCOPY CENTER - Construction has begun on what will be the new Seaford Endoscopy Center located on Fallon Avenue. Page 11 BOARD RACE - Three candidates remain in the race for the Seaford School Board. Page 17 BEDROOM FARCE - Possum Point Players' spring musical has been replaced by the British comedy "Bedroom Farce." Page 30 GIRLS’ TENNIS - The Seaford girls’ tennis team moved to 3-1 with a win over Polytech last week. Page 41

Seaford is planning for a thorough reassessment

STARS OF WEEK - A Seaford girls’ tennis player and a Seaford baseball player are this week’s Seaford Stars of the Week. Page 45 STACKING COMPETITION - Four area students are competing in the World Sport Stacking Association. Page 50 Mother’s Day Contest What Makes Your Mother Special? Enter the Star’s Mother’s Day Tribute and you could give her these great gifts. Page 12

INSIDE THE STAR BUSINESS BULLETIN BOARD CHURCH CLASSIFIEDS EDUCATION ENTERTAINMENT GENE BLEILE GOURMET HEALTH LETTERS LYNN PARKS MOVIES

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26 22 32-39 54 30 44 21 10 53 9 7

OBITUARIES ON THE RECORD OPEN HOUSES OPINION PAT MURPHY PEOPLE POLICE JOURNAL SNAPSHOTS SPORTS TIDES/WEATHER TODD CROFFORD TONY WINDSOR

24 18 14-15 58 20 40 39 56 41-48 59 23 53

50 cents

Allen Family Foods’ CEO Charles C. Allen shares his umbrella with Gov. Ruth Ann Minner as they tour the research facility near Laurel. Photo by Daniel Richardson

Solar power research project under way By Daniel Richardson Is solar power an economically viable option for poultry farms? Research is under way in Laurel to answer this question. Allen Family Foods’ CEO Charles C. Allen has opened up one of the company’s chicken houses to a team of researchers who will determine the economic impact on farmers of using solar energy to power heat, air

conditioning and lights. Over the next three years, University of Delaware researchers will monitor the farm and record data. Government officials and representatives of the University of Delaware, local environmental agencies and the poultry industry gathered in the pouring rain at the farm for a ribbon cutting on Wednesday, April 4. Speakers, including UD Continued on page 4

The city of Seaford is getting a thorough reassessment. Tuesday night, the Seaford City Council hired a Rehoboth Beach firm to assess all properties in its boundaries, effectively ending a two-year battle over property values in the city. The city will pay PTA/DELVAL Inc. about $140,000 for the reassessment. That firm was one of two that put in bids for the job. The other firm, Tyler Technologies in Tolland, Conn., had a bid price of $253,900. The bids were based on 2,800 properties in the city. The prices include three years of updating the assessments. Cost of the reassessment will be recouped by the city through property tax bills. City manager Dolores Slatcher told the city council that the assessment process would start in late spring and would take six to eight months to complete. Any tax changes would first be seen in the July 2008 bills. Slatcher said that arranging for all Seaford properties to be assessed is in keeping with a court decision in a lawsuit filed against the city. That lawsuit, filed in May 2005 by property owners Larry Moynihan and Harry Freedman, was in protest of a 2004 city-wide “audit” of Continued on page 16

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