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Michigan State Trooper Richard Brantner Wins Shooting Competition At Ann Arbor Police Department Range, June 1965 Photographer: William B. Treml

Michigan State Trooper Richard Brantner Wins Shooting Competition At Ann Arbor Police Department Range, June 1965 image
Year:
1965
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 21, 1965
Caption:
State Trooper Wins Again: Richard Brantner (left) a crack pistol shot for the State Police post at Jackson, receives his first-place silver trophy from Giles Fox of Fox Sporting Goods who donated trophies for yesterday's National Rifle Association pistol match at the Ann Arbor Police Department range. Trooper Brantner, who last year at the local range established a new world's record for .45 caliber fire, yesterday compiled a score of 2,055 out of a possible 2,100.

Winners at the Ann Arbor Police Department Shooting Competition, June 1965 Photographer: William B. Treml

Winners at the Ann Arbor Police Department Shooting Competition, June 1965 image
Year:
1965
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 21, 1965
Caption:
These five men with trophies finished with top scores in an "open" accredited pistol match in which 44 persons participated. Left to right are Raymond Landis, a former city policeman now an officer at Gaylord, who had a 1,857 score; Ross Meyers, 1,903; Giles Fox who donated the trophies; Richard Brantner, 2,055; Roger Herman, 1,812, and Mike Adorjan, 1,912. The shooters fired .22, .38 and .45 caliber pistols. Ann Arbor officers were hosts for the match and did not participate.

Ann Arbor Police Examine Missing Plaques Recovered From Building, June 1965 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Examine Missing Plaques Recovered From Building, June 1965 image
Year:
1965
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 18, 1965
Caption:
Plaques Recovered: Patrolman Richard Anderson and Detective Lt. Eugene Staudenmaier examine two metal plaques recovered yesterday from a campus area building which is being remodeled. The smaller plaque has been missing for some time from the Broadway bridge where it marked the site where the Potawatomi "and other Indian tribes" crossed the Huron River. It also was a marker for the location of the old Washtenaw Hotel. The larger plaque which weights more than 200 pounds notes that the Society of Sigma XI purchased the tablet in 1936 for the 50th anniversary of the founding of the society at Cornell University. Police do not know where the large plaque belongs.

Ann Arbor Police With Confiscated Moonshine, June 1964 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police With Confiscated Moonshine, June 1964 image
Year:
1964
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, June 17, 1964
Caption:
Moonshine Leavings: Ann Arbor Police Detective Lt. Eugene L. Staudenmaier (kneeling, left) and Patrolman Raymond Winters (left) hold handfuls of raw wheat taken from one of 20 barrels found in the attic of a house at 717 McKinley yesterday. Detective Sgt. Norman Olmstead (center) holds the barrel while Patrolman Robert LeVanseler (right) checks a glass of white liquid police said was moonshine.

Ann Arbor Police Personnel With Stolen Merchandise, December 1964 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Personnel With Stolen Merchandise, December 1964 image
Year:
1964
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, December 9, 1964
Caption:
Loot Recovered: Detective Capt. Harold E. Olson and Chief Records Clerk Mrs. Dora Mae Mayer check over some of the $2,500 worth of merchandise stolen from the Arborland Montgomery Ward Co. store. A former stockman at the store has been charged with larceny in the theft of scores of items including television sets, a bed, sheets and radios. Recovered merchandise is still coming into city police headquarters.

Ann Arbor Police Officers Take Inventory Of Stolen Automobile Parts, February 1963 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Officers Take Inventory Of Stolen Automobile Parts, February 1963 image
Year:
1963
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, February 2, 1963
Caption:
Inventory Taken: Ann Arbor police officers are shown here taking an inventory of stolen automobile parts found in a raid Thursday night of a Burwood Ave. house and garage. Sgt. Robert C. Conn (left) lists items while Detective Sgt. Donald Carnahan holds a license plate of a car reported stolen in Ypsilanti last week. Patrolman Ronald Donaldson checks a cutting torch found in the garage.

Ann Arbor Police Patrolman Darwin K. Cullin With Suspect Wanted By FBI, November 1963 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Patrolman Darwin K. Cullin With Suspect Wanted By FBI, November 1963 image
Year:
1963
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, November 9, 1963
Caption:
Man On The Flyer: Orlin A. Wilder, jr., (left) and the Ann Arbor Policeman who picked him up yesterday, Patrolman Darwin K. Cullin, check over an FBI "wanted" flyer issued less than three weeks ago. The flyer bears Wilder's picture and description, and notes that federal authorities want him for transportation of a stolen car across a state line, while Mississippi police seek him on three felonies. Wilder said he saw this flyer in two different post offices in recent days.

Ann Arbor Police Cpl. Duane Weber With New Radar System, January 1964 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Cpl. Duane Weber With New Radar System, January 1964 image
Year:
1964
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 11, 1964
Caption:
Speeder Catcher: Ann Arbor Police Cpl. Duane Weber checks the recording unit of a new traffic radar system now in operation in the city. The parabolic antenna, which looks like a spotlight and picks up approaching traffic on its radar screen, is attached to the rear window of the patrol car. Radar warning signs, like the one seen with the city limit sign in the background, are posted at all city entrances.

Ann Arbor Police Motorcycle Patrolmen In New Jackets, February 1964 Photographer: William B. Treml

Ann Arbor Police Motorcycle Patrolmen In New Jackets, February 1964 image
Year:
1964
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, February 26, 1964
Caption:
The New Look: The eight motorcycle patrolmen in the Ann Arbor Police Department's Traffic Division have discarded their navy blue cloth "riding coats" worn in cold weather for the new, light blue nylon jackets. Police Chief Rolland J. Gainsley said the new jackets will be warmer and will give them easier movement. The officers are (left to right) Cpl. Alroy Vanderpool, Traffic Division command office, Patrolmen Walter DeDula, Robert Mueller, Arthur Hughes, Charles Fleming, Robert Robinson, William Miller, and Arvil Patton. Patrolman Robert O'Dell, also a motorcycle officer, was on University patrol duty at the time the picture was taken.