Weather Worse Than Japs, Says Gunnery Officer
Parent Issue
Day
16
Month
November
Year
1945
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Lieutenant Ralph G. Coulter, US Army, November 1945 Photographer: Attributed to Eck Stanger
Year:
1945
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U-M at War: ROTC Moves Into New Headquarters, December 1942
Year:
1942
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, December 10, 1942
Caption:
Army and University trucks worked yesterday moving files and furniture for the department of Military Science and Tactics, as officers and men moved the ROTC headquarters from the old boiler house on campus into the former Zeta Psi house on State St. The first floor will be given over to ROTC rooms, while officers and instructors in the department will have offices on the second and third floors. The same house was used for a unit of the SATC during the first World war.
Ann Arbor News, December 10, 1942
Caption:
Army and University trucks worked yesterday moving files and furniture for the department of Military Science and Tactics, as officers and men moved the ROTC headquarters from the old boiler house on campus into the former Zeta Psi house on State St. The first floor will be given over to ROTC rooms, while officers and instructors in the department will have offices on the second and third floors. The same house was used for a unit of the SATC during the first World war.
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U-M at War: ROTC Moves Into New Headquarters, December 1942
Year:
1942
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Platt School Children Haul A Car Body For Scrap Drive, October 1942 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1942
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 13, 1942
Caption:
Ignominy is no longer the fate of old, worn-out automobiles and the Platt school children, shown above toting an ancient car body on their small express wagon, are proving the point by getting the scrapped machine to the pile whence it will be transported to the smelters, remoulded into vital war machinery and dispatched on its last journey to the war-torn corners of the world. Platt pupils shown bringing in the car (they've already brought in a great deal of other scrap material) are, left to right, Ralph Terry, Ronald Daugherty, Frank Michelfelder, Eleanor Daugherty, Guy Blachman and Donald Adams.
Ann Arbor News, October 13, 1942
Caption:
Ignominy is no longer the fate of old, worn-out automobiles and the Platt school children, shown above toting an ancient car body on their small express wagon, are proving the point by getting the scrapped machine to the pile whence it will be transported to the smelters, remoulded into vital war machinery and dispatched on its last journey to the war-torn corners of the world. Platt pupils shown bringing in the car (they've already brought in a great deal of other scrap material) are, left to right, Ralph Terry, Ronald Daugherty, Frank Michelfelder, Eleanor Daugherty, Guy Blachman and Donald Adams.
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Scrap Drive: Paper Collection at Tappan School, November 1943 Photographer: Eck Stanger
Year:
1943
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, November 17, 1943
Caption:
STUDENTS COLLECT SCRAP PAPER: Members of the Victory Committee at Tappan school spent a lot of time last week collecting paper for a scrap drive, and at the end of the week discovered they had accumulated 50,862 pounds of paper. Here some of the committee members and their advisor are shown with part of the haul. In front from left to right are Miss Marie Bloomfield, teacher in charge, and Nancy Townsend. In the rear, sitting on the pile of papers are Jim Ueberhorst, Wesley Pennington and Bill Slawson. The boy sitting directly behind Nancy at the right is Virgil Fairbanks.
Ann Arbor News, November 17, 1943
Caption:
STUDENTS COLLECT SCRAP PAPER: Members of the Victory Committee at Tappan school spent a lot of time last week collecting paper for a scrap drive, and at the end of the week discovered they had accumulated 50,862 pounds of paper. Here some of the committee members and their advisor are shown with part of the haul. In front from left to right are Miss Marie Bloomfield, teacher in charge, and Nancy Townsend. In the rear, sitting on the pile of papers are Jim Ueberhorst, Wesley Pennington and Bill Slawson. The boy sitting directly behind Nancy at the right is Virgil Fairbanks.
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Jill Stiede Receives An Air Medal On Behalf Of Her Deceased Husband, December 1946
Year:
1946
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, December 24, 1946
Caption:
Mrs. Jill Agnes Stiede, 2524 N. Main St., widow of Second Lt. Charles Stiede, a B-24 pilot who was killed in Europe, is shown receiving the Air Medal awarded her husband posthumously, at ceremonies in the Armory last night. The presentation was made by Capt. Roman J. Wojciehowski, commanding officer of Ann Arbor's National Guard unit, Company K. With Mrs. Stiede is her four-year-old daughter, Carol.
Ann Arbor News, December 24, 1946
Caption:
Mrs. Jill Agnes Stiede, 2524 N. Main St., widow of Second Lt. Charles Stiede, a B-24 pilot who was killed in Europe, is shown receiving the Air Medal awarded her husband posthumously, at ceremonies in the Armory last night. The presentation was made by Capt. Roman J. Wojciehowski, commanding officer of Ann Arbor's National Guard unit, Company K. With Mrs. Stiede is her four-year-old daughter, Carol.
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Air Medal Given To Mrs. Stiede
Parent Issue
Day
24
Month
December
Year
1946
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Jack Gurd Killed On Sicilian Front
Parent Issue
Day
10
Month
November
Year
1943
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With The Men In Service: July 1, 1943
Parent Issue
Day
1
Month
July
Year
1943
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