Winners of the Northwood/Terrace Association Garden Contest On North Campus: Mr. & Mrs. William Stephany and Mr. & Mrs. Paul Burton, October 1969 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1969
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 2, 1969
Caption:
North Campus Winners The corner got sunlight for only a few hours each day, so the couples who produced this first prize entry in the recent Northwood/Terrace Association garden contest on North Campus chose only shade dwellers: moss roses, geraniums, coleas, begonias- lots of color woven into a rock garden and gold fish pond. Mr. and Mrs. William P. Stephany (left) and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bulton, with daughter Alicia, residents of Apts. 10 and 11 Cram Circle, tied with two other couples for first among 161 entries.
Ann Arbor News, October 2, 1969
Caption:
North Campus Winners The corner got sunlight for only a few hours each day, so the couples who produced this first prize entry in the recent Northwood/Terrace Association garden contest on North Campus chose only shade dwellers: moss roses, geraniums, coleas, begonias- lots of color woven into a rock garden and gold fish pond. Mr. and Mrs. William P. Stephany (left) and Mr. and Mrs. Paul Bulton, with daughter Alicia, residents of Apts. 10 and 11 Cram Circle, tied with two other couples for first among 161 entries.
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Gardens at Northwood Terrace, Beal St., June 1968 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
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Gardens at Northwood Terrace, Beal St., June 1968 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
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Gardens at Northwood Terrace, Beal St., June 1968 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1968
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
Ann Arbor News, June 13, 1968
Caption:
Truckin' On Beal St. For the first time, students at North Campus are being encouraged to plant gardens, and the little brown patches of ground are "cropping up" all over the neighborhood. "One tenant starts it, and soon there's a continuous row in front of the apartments," said Mrs. Harold J. Burroughs, a representative on the Northwood Terrace Association which approached the University for the permission. To perk up the 20 inches in front of the buildings where grass doesn't grow anyway, Director of Married Student Housing Gilbert Lutz readily approved the idea. Its acceptance of the idea is evidenced by the middle photo. At left, Mary Bargeron, 3, watches 18-month-old brother Ara stab at the ground around a tree which held food for the birds last winter. Their parents are Mr. and Mrs. Walter N. Bargeron of 1647 Beal. At right, Alex, the son of next-door neighbors Mr. and Mrs. Duffield White, plants the marigolds he started as seeds in eggshells. The bottom of the half shell is crushed for drainage, plunged into the soil when the green sprout appears.
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Car Abandoned On North Campus After Record-Breaking Snow Storm, February 1965 Photographer: Doug Fulton
Year:
1965
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Legislators Study Area's Research Field
Parent Issue
Day
18
Month
December
Year
1962
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Thousands Expected At Blues Event
Parent Issue
Day
1
Month
August
Year
1969
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Fans Trek To Blues Festival
Parent Issue
Day
7
Month
August
Year
1970
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U-M Rockets Fired In Atmosphere Study
Parent Issue
Day
27
Month
November
Year
1963
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