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Dexter School Students Cross Ann Arbor Street With A New Traffic Signal, September 1950

Dexter School Students Cross Ann Arbor Street With A New Traffic Signal, September 1950 image
Year:
1950
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 20, 1950
Caption:
There is something new in traffic warning signals at a dangerous corner in front of the Dexter Agricultural Rural School and High School. A portable blinker light, activated by a large battery, gives approaching drivers warning that school children are crossing busy Ann Arbor St. Several of these blinker signs are trundled into place, four times daily, by youthful traffic "cops," under the direction of Jack Klingeberger, elementary school principal and director of traffic patrols.

Dexter Public School Second Graders In Hansel And Gretel, May 1937 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Dexter Public School Second Graders In Hansel And Gretel, May 1937 image
Year:
1937
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, May 13, 1937
Caption:
DEXTER PUPILS PRESENT PLAY: Above is shown a scene from the production of Hansel and Gretel by pupils of the second grade, Dexter public school of which Miss Thelma Sortor is teacher. Back row, left to right, are Jack Peterson, Jack Bell, Betty Van Natter, Alice Gregory and Ruth Lillie, gingerbread children; and Nancy Utsler, Ruthe Lillie, Dorothy Bauer, Betty Schedt, Mary Steptoe, Hazel Jameson and Enid Barbier, fairies. In the front row, left to right, are Joyce Herman as witch; Carol Shaw as Gretel; Tommy Bennett as Hansel; Betty Lou Moore as mother; Donald Stanbo as father; and John Widmayer as sandman.

Dexter Boys Drinking Cider At Otto Wagner Mill, October 1935 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Dexter Boys Drinking Cider At Otto Wagner Mill, October 1935 image
Year:
1935
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, October 23, 1935
Caption:
Above is a group of Dexter boys who are always on hand when free, sweet cider flows from a 50-gallon barrel at the Otto Wagner mill, along the Huron river. In one afternoon these boys, together with other groups, consumed 16 gallons of free cider. The proprietor says that the boys would be there yet, with upturned mugs, the facial as well as the glass varieties, if it hadn't been necessary to close up the mill for the night. The boys shown in the picture are, reading from left to right: Charles Mosher, Jack Wall, Alvin Kolander, Arthur Bell, James Bell, and Vincent La Rosa.