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City says cruise was a success

By Barbara Ziemba, Heritage Newspapers

WYANDOTTE — From most accounts, residents and officials in this city would welcome back car cruisers next year to do it all again.

Mayor Lawrence Stec, who had a hectic day officiating at a sculpture dedication at BASF Waterfront Park as well as the cruise, thought the car cruise was worth doing again.

"I think it went really well … next year, we’ll put the proper time to it," he said.

Stec was alluding to the conflict between the sculpture dedication, which took two years to plan, with the car cruise.

Not surprisingly, the crowds were thin when the cruise got under way at about 9 a.m.

But Stec said that changed as the day progressed.

"It was fun to watch how the crowd steadily grew during the day … by 7 or 8 p.m. it was really packed," he said.

One last-minute snafu was solved when BASF Corp. in Wyandotte donated some portable toilets for Wyandotte’s portion of the cruise.

Stec blamed the snag on liability problems because the city doesn’t own any property along Fort Street. But several business owners along the strip agreed to station the temporary toilets on their properties, he said.

BASF spokesman Randy Hicks said the company’s engineering department stepped in and found the portable toilets after an SOS went out from the Wyandotte Business Association.

Police Chief William Lilienthal agreed that everything in Wyandotte’s part of the cruise went swimmingly.

"It went very well … The spectators were there to watch and have a good time," he said.

Traffic along Fort slowed to a crawl just north of Goddard in Lincoln Park and south of Eureka because it narrowed from four lanes to three, but Lilienthal said those were just about the only problems that surfaced in Wyandotte.

Wyandotte police wrote 32 citations during the cruise, ranging from speeding and excessive noise to tire violations and excited cruisers riding on the outside of their vehicles.

The only cruise-related accident occurred when one vehicle rammed into the back of another. No injuries were reported, the police chief said.

Lilienthal estimated Wyandotte’s cruise crowd at about 40,000 during the course of the day.

And the party at Yack Arena that capped off the event for many cruisers went off very well, according to party Chairwoman Debby Paducha.

"Moose and Da Sharks (the featured band) were absolutely fabulous," she said. "They had three costume changes throughout the evening."

Many partiers donned 50s dress to get into the 50s mood, Paducha said.

And the Wyandotte Business Association twice sold out of T-shirts promoting the cruise.

"We got a few more cases from the chamber (the Southern Wayne County Chamber of Commerce) and sold those during the party," she said.

Perhaps one of the biggest compliments came from radio station WOMC personality Gene Taylor, who hosted the Yack bash.

"He told us we are way ahead of the game and that we did really well for our first cruise," Paducha said. "In a couple of years, we’ll be on a par with the Dream Cruise."

 
 

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