March 8, 1951: Instructions On Business Are Praised - Local Teachers Find Plant Tour Is Educational

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 8, 1951.

Instructions On Business Are Praised

Local Teachers Find Plant Tour Is Educational

Valparaiso’s public and elementary grade teachers had high praise today for “instructions” in business and industry they received Wednesday afternoon from representatives of various factory and business establishments in the community.

And businessmen said they are looking forward to the time when they will sit in on academic proceedings at the local schools.

The whole program was initiated by the educational committee of the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce, with the cooperation of the Valparaiso city, St. Paul’s Catholic and Immanuel Lutheran school administrators. It is planned to hold similar meetings, either at business houses or in the schools, in each of the next two years.

Some 80 teachers of the community toured, in small units, five industrial plants, Continental Diamond Fibre company, McGill Manufacturing company, Indiana Steel Products company. The Robert L. Miller Laboratory and Urschel Laboratories; three stores, J. Lowenstine and Sons, Stambaugh Farm Equipment company and J.C. Penney company; two financial institutions, Farmers’ State and First State banks; Hotel Lembke; and The Vidette-Messenger, Indiana Associated Telephone company and Northern Indiana Public Service company plants.


Spends Entire Afternoon

The teachers reported at their assigned tour place at one o’clock and spent the entire afternoon inspecting the facilities and learning of some of the problems of conducting the particular business that they were visiting.

Climax of the day came when 120 teachers and businessmen attended a banquet at Hotel Lembke sponsored by the C of C. Lester Milne, chairman of the education committee, served as master of ceremonies.

Representatives of the 14 firms who acted as hosts during the afternoon were introduced, as were members of the city school board, committee members who arranged details for the day and James Patricn[sic], C of C secretary-manager.

Featured speaker of the evening was Dr. Virgil M. Rogers, superintendent of schools, Battle Creek, Mich. He was introduced by G. Warren Phillips, superintendent of the local city schools.


Stake In Schools

In his address, Rogers reminded the businessmen that they have a stake in the public schools, which he labeled as the nation’s greatest enterprise today. He said all people in a community have a direct or indirect part in the school, and he warned that if America permits public education to die, democracy will die with it.

He pointed out that the growth of education has aided America to build more cars, more homes, more radios and similar advantages than exists in any other nation.

Rogers advised that the schools should furnish their pupils with a more dramatic meaning of American citizenship, that they must appeal to community leaders to help keep the academic standards on a high level.

As a closing warning the speaker asserted that if totalitarianism ever strangles the American way of life it will because education has lost its objective.

TWO OF THE PLANTS toured Wednesday afternoon by local teacher groups during the Business-Industry-Education event sponsored by the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce were that of The Vidette-Messenger and the Continental Diamond Fibre company. In the up…

TWO OF THE PLANTS toured Wednesday afternoon by local teacher groups during the Business-Industry-Education event sponsored by the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce were that of The Vidette-Messenger and the Continental Diamond Fibre company. In the upper photo teachers are viewing the teletype and morgue operations in the editorial department. In this group were the following teachers: Emma R. Food, Mary Miller, Mary Stoner, Mary Phillips, Francis May and Verna Randert. Shown in the mica press room Burton Conklin, Glen Gierke, Milton Marten, Sister Miriam Loretto and Sister M. Juliette. George Nelson and D.K. Appleby were in charge of the tour there.

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March 8, 1931: University’s Bell-Ringer Has a Scare

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 8, 1946.

University’s Bell-Ringer Has a Scare

Rolland Lindberg, maintenance man at Valparaiso University, knows today how Joshua must have felt when Jerico’s walls came tumbling down at the blast of a trumpet.

Lindberg’s experience wasn’t quite as spectacular as the biblical character’s, but he got quite a scare Thursday morning when a big bell located on the roof of Music Hall decided to give up the ghost while Lindberg was ringing it.

The bell is mounted on a platform right at the edge of the Music Hall roof and Lindberg rings it for class call by tugging at a rope. He was tugging mightily yesterday when supports holding the heavy bell gave way with an ominous crash.

Bad Moment

Lindberg didn’t know for sure what was happening, but he had a bad moment, fearing the device might topple over on him. According to reports the bell-ringer was slightly indisposed yesterday, anyhow, and wasn’t in a bell-ringing mood.

After recovering from the initial shock, Lindberg decided that maybe the incident had a silver lining and that, since there was no bell to ring, he might get a vacation. But the Valparaiso fire department came to the rescue of students and faculty members by furnishing a gong bell from one of the fire trucks.

Fire Chief Wilbur Cowdrey when advised of the school predicament and informed by university officials that some kind of a bell would be required immediately, filled the need by removing a gong bell from a fire truck.

Vital Service

School authorities pointed out that with so many new students on the campus some sort of alarm was necessary to apprise the newcomers when class periods began and ended. That the bell filled the breach was apparent when it was reported its peals could be heard in the downtown business district.

The old bell is being repaired and will be placed back in use as soon as welding operations are completed.

According to Fire Chief Cowdrey the device was formerly used at the College Hill fire station on Freeman street, now occupied by the Law building.

At one time it was given by the Valparaiso department to the town of Wanatah. It was returned here when Wanatah adopted the siren system.

Later when the university lost one bell in the old College building fire the other was turned over to the school.

March 7, 1956: Four Cars Jump Tracks At Chesterton

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 7, 1956.

Four Cars Jump Tracks At Chesterton

DAMAGED FREIGHT CARS block westbound route of New York Central railroad at Calumet crossing in Chesterton. Four cars jumped tracks Tuesday noon as it was slowing down for a stop-over in the Westchester township community. No one was injured. The cro…

DAMAGED FREIGHT CARS block westbound route of New York Central railroad at Calumet crossing in Chesterton. Four cars jumped tracks Tuesday noon as it was slowing down for a stop-over in the Westchester township community. No one was injured. The crossing was reopened to traffic one hour and 15 minutes after the accident occured. It was closed again at 3:30 p.m. until early evening to permit wrecker crews to remove the damaged cars. Traffic was re-routed over the Fourth avenue crossing.

March 7, 1931: UNIVERSITY PAYS FORMAL TRIBUTE TO NEW COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND HEAD

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 7, 1931.

UNIVERSITY PAYS FORMAL TRIBUTE TO NEW COLLEGE OF ENGINEERING AND HEAD

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With the above telegraph greetings from the world’s foremost engineerーHerbert Hoover, president of the United Statesーthe transition of the department of engineering of Valparaiso university into full accreditation as the College of Engineeringーanother epoch-marking milestone in the march of progress of the local educational institution, was formally celebrated last evening.

The affair was in the nature of a greeting to Dr. H. W. Moody, dean of the new department which will start functioning with the opening of the fall term. It was attended by upwards of one hundred student engineers and members of the faculty. Hotel Lembke banquet hall was the setting.

Greetings from President Hoover came as a complete surpriseーeven to President O. C. Kreinheder. They came as the result of the initiative of John Kreinheder, son of the president, and student engineer, who wrote the nation’s chief executive who first gained world fame because of his achievements as a mining engineer, informing him of the new honors that have come to Valparaiso university.

W. S. Johns of Chicago, maintenance engineer of the Pennsylvania railroad, graduate of Lehigh university, was the principal speaker. He told of the improvements advanced engineering is bringing to railroad operations.

President Kreinheder, taking a broader theme, stressed the fact that every young man must be the engineer of design of his own future. He pointed out that the qualities of application, perseverance, absolute honesty that characterize the successful engineer, are the foundations for any career.

J. S. McFarlen, of this city, an alumnus of the Valparaiso Department of Engineering, now on the engineering staff of the Youngstown Sheet and Tube company, East Chicago, spoke impromptu, on the practical aspects of an engineering education.

LeRoy Thede, president of the university Engineering Society, gave the address of welcome. Dean Moody in response to the many testimonials paid him, stressed the future growth of the College of Engineering, with its widely broadened courses which will include training in civil, mechanical, electrical, industrial engineering and industrial arts.

John Kreinheder presided as toastmaster. John Bauer, business manager of the university, was a guest of honor as were Dr. F.V. Lofgren, dean of the College of Pharmacy; John W. Moreland, dean of the School of Law; Dr. F.W. Kroencke, dean of the College of Liberal Arts and Prof. A.J. Lynn, head of the School of Commerce.

They all paid tribute to the new College of Engineering. A feature of the banquet were the programsーspecimens of the art of the engineer’s blue-prints, executed by Student Engineer John Bauer, son of the business manager.

Several musical numbers were enjoyed with the entire gathering joining in Bucci’s Valparaiso University Victory March, as the final. Student Engineers Huth, Kreinheder, Aherne and Hartmeister, served on the banquet committee.

March 6, 1976: Indiana Port History Exemplifies Clash Conservation-Industry Forces Engage In Tug-Of-War Over Use Of Dunal Area

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 6, 1976.

Indiana Port History Exemplifies Clash

Conservation-Industry Forces Engage In Tug-Of-War Over Use Of Dunal Area

By MARTIN ZIMMERMAN


PORTER COUNTY’S 15 miles of Lake Michigan shoreline has long been a battleground for the traditional struggle between environmental and industrial interests. By being blessed both with the beautiful and valuable duneland and an ideal location for heavy industrial development, the county has often found itself cursed with the dilemma of having one or the other, but not both.

Perhaps no other chapter in the colorful history of the dune-covered shoreline better illustrates this dilemma than the 150-year battle to establish a deep-water port in the area. First envisioned early in the 19th century, the port and its proponents suffered through 100 years of government inertia until, with progress finally being made, conservationists marshaled their forces and put up such bitter opposition that it appeared for a while that the century-and-a-half old dream would never become a reality.

The story of what was eventually to become the Burns Waterway Harbor began even before Indiana was admitted to the Union in 1816. In 1805, what is now Porter County’s northern boundary was purchased from the state of Michigan by the territorial government so Indiana would have an outlet to the Great Lakes. The first white settler in the area, French trapper Joseph Bailly, recognized the potential of Indiana’s lake Michigan shoreline and as early as 1822 he made plans for establishing a port at the mouth of the Grand Calumet River.

Although nothing ever came of Bailly’s dream, in 1832 Congress sent Sen. Daniel Webster to northern Indiana to inspect prospective sites for a major Great lake port. Webster was in favor of City Westーlocated near present day Tremontーas the site for the port, but Michigan City and Chicagoー then a town of under 300ーreceived the approval and the appropriations for harbor development. By-passed by Congress, City West lost its reason for existence and soon died out, and Porter County would wait more than a century for another chance at a port.

FOR THE NEXT 50 years, northern Indiana sat idly by as Chicago boomed. Without sufficient port facilities, Porter County could not persuade industry to settle within its boundaries. When Standard Oil and United States Steel finally opened plants in Lake County early in the 20th Century, they built private ports for their own use rather than fight for a public harbor.

In 1906, however, dreams of an Indiana port were revived when Randall Burns, a leading farmer and landowner in the area, proposed the digging of a channel to drain the marshy land around Gary. because of legal entanglements, the waterway was not completed until 1926, but it was a milestone in the history of the future port. Lawrence Preston of Indiana University, in his book on the harbor, said, “It gave the future harbor the name ‘Burns’ ...and made the project appear more plausible by delineating the locale for its fulfillment.”

In 1928, supporters of the port received a shot in the arm when the National Steel Corporation purchased 750 acres of duneland for eventual construction of a complete steel mill. National’s proposal to build a port at the mouth of Burns Ditch was found unacceptable, however, as it was thought the mills would make the port inaccessible to the general public.

In 1935, harbor proponents were brought together by the Valparaiso Chamber of Commerce to form the Northern Industrial Development Association (NIDA), which consisted of members from Porter, LaPorte and Lake counties. Later the same year, U.S. Rep. Charles A. Halleck pushed a resolution through the House committee on Rivers and Harbors authorizing the Army Corps of Engineers to hold a hearing on a possible harbor. The hearing brought together many Indiana officials and concerned citizens, including Gov. Paul McNutt, but the harbor proposal was turned down on the grounds of insufficient public benefit. An appeal to the decision was also turned down, this time with a recommendation from the federal government that a site other than the Burns Ditch location under consideration be tried.

HALLECK TRIED AGAIN in 1937 by sponsoring a bill to authorize the Secretary of War to survey the northern Indiana area for possible harbor sites. The Corps of Engineers made the survey in 1938, but returned an unfavorable report, citing the lack of definite need and economic justification as their reasons.

Stymied on the federal level, the NIDA next turned to the state legislature, where a bill was passed in 1938 creating the Indiana Board of Public Harbors and Terminals. The same legislation also provided for a token appropriation for harbor development to show the Corps of Engineers that Indiana was indeed serious in its desire for a port. In 1940, however, a state of national emergency was declared and the engineers shelved all civil works until after the war.

During the war little progress was made in the campaign for a port, although the harbor board did initiate studies to collect data on the feasibility of a Lake Michigan outlet. The collected data was utilized in 1948 when Gov. Ralph Gates arranged a meeting between the board and the Indiana Economic Council to study the potential value of a port.

In July, 1949, a public meeting was held in Gary at which the harbor board set forth a nine-point argument in favor of a port. For the first time, however, conservationists who saw the port as a threat to the dunes surfaced as a very vocal opposition force. Despite criticism from the dune-lovers, a favorable report was issued and the Corps of Engineers was asked to perform yet another survey of proposed port sites. The Korean War interrupted, however, and in desperation Gov. George Craig asked the state to pay for its own survey. The state assembly did not appropriate the necessary funds and again the port was put on the shelf.

IN LATE 1955 and early 1956, two more economic feasibility studies were made and both returned favorable reports. Also included in one report was an estimate of the cost for building the port, which at this time was projected to be $18 million.

As 1956 progressed, however, it became clear that Indiana’s hopes for a port were heavily reliant on whether National Steel would build a steel mill near the site. Otherwise, the Corps of Engineers would not approve the project as economically feasible. National refused to make any sort of commitment, but in August, Bethlehem Steel Corporation bought several thousand acres of land near the National holdings and announced plans not only to build a mill but also to make part of the acreage available for a public harbor.

Further impetus was received the same year when both houses of Congress authorized theor Public Works committees to study all Great Lakes harbors in preparation for the opening of the St. Lawrence Seaway. The chief engineer of the Army agreed to combine the study of the Burns Waterway Harbor originally proposed in 1951 with the larger study, and this interim report resulted four years later in the first official approval of a deep-water port in the waterway area.

Meanwhile, in January, 1957, Indiana appropriated $2 million for land purchase for the harbor, and Gov. Harold Handley continued to push the steel companies for a definite commitment. At the same time, another economic feasibility study was performed by Joseph Hartley of Indiana University which would take into account the St. Lawrence Seaway.

The Hartley Report, completed in mid-1959, pointed out in great detail the possib;e benefits of a port to the state and estimated the cost of such a port at $36 million.

WHEN THE HARTLEY report was made public, Gov. Handley also announced a new site for the port between the holdings of National and Bethlehem. The state also received a definite commitment from National to build a steel mill at the site, a decision which prompted the district Army engineer to finally approve the port and to reaffirm the economic benefits of such a venture. Shortly thereafter, the division engineer also approved the project.

With the approval of the Corps of Engineers, harbor proponents began to feel that success was near. But as the 1960s dawned, it became obvious that the real fight was just beginning. Rallying behind the leadership of Illinois Sen. Paul Douglas, the Save the Dunes Council began agitating to have the site of the port shifted away from the dunes area, and succeeded in having the favorable report channelled back to the district engineer.

To escape opposition from the dunelovers, the Indiana Port Commission, formed in 1961, recommended that the state build the port itself, thereby bypassing the federal government, where the dunes council had planned to fight the port. In an attempt to bring the two sides together, Indiana Sen. Vance Hartke introduced legislation that provided for both a port and a national park in Porter County. Douglas, however, introduced a bill which called for a park only, and action on the two bills soon became impossible.

Bogged down again on the federal level, the Indiana Port Commission took the initiative and began to buy land for the port. At the same time, Bethlehem announced plans for a complete mill near the harbor site, which became important in 1963 when the Chief of Army Engineers recommended that the port not be approved unless the adjacent areas were industrialized. The Bureau of the Budget studied the recommendation and Bethlehem’s commitment and then gave its approval for the port. Sens. Birch Bayh and Hartke introduced a bill for federal participation in the building of the port, but it was not passed in 1963 or 1964.

IN 1965, after lengthy debate, the U.S. House and Senate both passed bills authorizing the harbor, but differences in the bills had to be reconciled before they could be signed into law. The Senate bill contained a proviso that stated no money could be spent on the harbor until a national lakeshore was established to protect the surrounding dune areas. The House version merely provided that steps be taken to insure that the dunes were not harmed by the port. A compromise was worked out in October which provided only that a vote be taken on the national park proposal, thereby making federal appropriations for the harbors no longer contingent upon passage of the park bill.

With this roadblock removed, the port bill was quickly passed by Congress, thereby conferring official authorization on the Burns Harbor project. In May, 1966, the Army Corps of Engineers gave the final confirmation of federal support for the harbor, and ground was broken in October of that year.

On Sept. 11, 1969, a Bethlehem ore boar discharged its load of iron ore at the steel company’s dock and thereby became the first vessel to use the port. After a century and a half of frustration, disappointment and perseverance, Indiana’s dream of a water outlet to the trade of the world was a reality.

March 6, 1931: CELEBRATE ENGINEER’S DAY

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 6, 1931.

CELEBRATE ENGINEER’S DAY

(BY ROBERT ALLETT)

Special convocation was held at the university this morning to commemorate the annual Engineer’s Day, President O.C. Kreinheder announced that due to the exceptionally large enrollment in the department of engineering this year, the administrative authorities have decided to establish a separate college of engineering with the advent of the fall term.

Dr. H. W. Moody, head of the present department of engineering was the principal speaker at the gathering. The subject of his address was “The Engineer and Society”. He traced the history of engineering, described some of its outstanding achievements and discussed the problems confronting the modern engineer.

“Engineering is as old as mankind,” said Dr. Moody. “This evidence is found in structures built with the crudest tools for the purpose of the protection of life, tombs for the dead, and monuments for the worship of deities.” he cited the construction of Roosevelt Dam in Arizona, a project undertaken by the government, as an example of the magnitude of the engineer’s work.

Courses in civil engineering were offered for the first time at Valparaiso in 1873. Higher mathematics, surveying, and civil engineering, taught by Prof. M. E. Bogarte, constituted the chief courses on the engineering curriculum in 1903, a department of Manual Training, now that of Industrial Arts, was established. Prof. R. C. Yeoman, in 1909, changed the course of study to a three-year offering in civil engineering. From time to time other divisions of engineering were included until finally in 1917, the School of Engineering, henceforth the College of Engineering, was organized. The new college will offer the degree of Bachelor of Science in all the curricula offered.

The university enjoys a location very favorable for work in engineering, being situated about forty-five miles from Chicago, and in the heart of the Calumet region, throughout which field trips may easily be arranged.

Officials from manufacturing concerns of Gary, Hammond, Whiting, Michigan City, South Bend, LaPorte, and Valparaiso attended the convocation.

As a celebration befitting the occasion of the establishing the new college the Engineering Society of the University will hold a banquet tonight in the Lembke hotel at which W. S. Johns, engineer of the maintenance of way of the northwest region of the Pennsylvania railroad, will speak.

March 5, 1971: Honor Tilton, 93

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 5, 1971.

Honor Tilton, 93

By ROLLIE BERNHART

Ira C. Tilton, 93, lawyer, author, lecturer and teacher, was honored by the Porter County Bar Association Thursday for 57 years of dedicated service to the legal profession.

Atty. Herb Douglas, member of the association’s honors committee, presented the dean of Porter County lawyers with a gavel plaque in his study at 405 Garfield.

Tilton fought back tears of gratitude as Douglas read the inscription, “In recognition of 57 years of service to the citizens of Porter County in active practice of law and Jurisprudence in Porter County in active practice of law and Jurisprudence in Porter County, Ind., by Ira C. Tilton. Presented by the Porter County Bar Association, March 4, 1971.”
Douglas made the presentation on behalf of Honors Committee chairman Quentin Blachly, who was out of the city.

A letter was read from Porter Superior Court Judge Russell Nixon, also unable to attend because of business reasons, who went back a “respectable distance” in local history to reminisce about Tilton and other members of the legal profession.

“My happy memories of those days,” Nixon wrote, “include many conversations and discussions with you, and down through the years that followed, my contact with you was always pleasant, even when adversary. We are members of a great profession. To have performed well in it is indeed an honor, and worthy of any tribute. I add my good wishes to those of your many friends.”

Tilton also received a congratulatory telegram from 2nd District Congressman Earl F. Landgrebe.

On hand to honor Tilton and listen to him reminisce about his family tree and the county legal profession after he was admitted to practice on Jan. 14, 1914 were Bar Association members George Douglas, Eng Zimmerman Jr., Circuit Court Judge Alfred J. Pvarnik, Superior Court Judge Russell Willis, James W. Chester, Raymond Kickbush; Mrs. Avery Weaver, Tilton’s daughter and law partner, Mr. Weaver, and Rollie Bernhart (who also goes back a respectable distance) of The Vidette-Messenger.

The hour spent with Tilton resulted in a remarkable demonstration of a keen and analytical mind despite advanced years. Tilton will have a 94th birthday in December.

Coming to Valparaiso from Kansas, Tilton graduated from Valparaiso University in 1909. In the years following admittance to practice law, Tilton served as city attorney, county attorney, deputy prosecutor, Circuit Court Judge, Democratic county chairman for 10 years, member of the Valparaiso School Board, and was the organizer of the PTA in Porter County.

For ServiceAtty. Ira C. Tilton holds gavel plaque presented him Thursday by Atty. Herb Douglas on behalf of Porter County Bar Association in tribute to 93-year-old lawyer’s 57 years of legal service to citizens if Porter County

For Service

Atty. Ira C. Tilton holds gavel plaque presented him Thursday by Atty. Herb Douglas on behalf of Porter County Bar Association in tribute to 93-year-old lawyer’s 57 years of legal service to citizens if Porter County

March 5, 1946: Kouts Music Boosters Run Into Man-Power Problem

Originally published in The Vidette-Messenger of Porter County on March 5, 1946.

Kouts Music Boosters Run Into Man-Power Problem

By HERB STEINBACH

KOUTSーThe Kouts Music Boosters continue to function on behalf of improved musical education for the school pupils of their community, but the groups are not in as high a gear as they visioned when they organized early this winter.

This lack of an overall spark has been quite noticeable in recent meetings, and became more apparent than ever Monday night when the March meeting was held in the school building, with only 12 people present.

“It seems as though there are only a minority who are carrying on the work of the Music Boosters here in Kouts,” President Walter Newsom reported. “Our fund raising programs have been well patronized, but there are not enough people in the community who are taking an active interest in our business meetings.”

Junior Band to Play

In order to provide additional stimulus for a better turnout at the April 1 meeting, the Boosters have announced that the junior band, under the direction of Miss Muriel Wood, will make its public debut that night with a ½-hour concert.

Newsom states that a program by the junior band will help boost the youngsters’ musical enthusiasm, and at the same time it should attract more parents to the meeting.

The Boosters have approximately $300 in the treasury now, it was announced at Monday’s meeting, but the final report in the recent public dance proceeds was not complete.

This coming thursday, Mar. 7, another Booster project, showing of moving pictures to the public once a week, gets underway. The initial movie, starting at 7:30, will be “Pecks Bad Boy at the Circus.” a matinee for school children will be held that noon.

Sub for PTA

Pictures are to be shown at the school during five successive weeks. They are to be held on successive Thursdays, with the exception of the second show, “Adventures of Tom Sawyer,” which will be shown Friday, Mar. 15, because the Farm Bureau has a meeting scheduled at the school for Thursday, Mar. 14.

Not only are the Boosters helping spread musical education in the community, but it is becoming apparent that they are being looked upon as a P.T.A. pinch-hitter, inasmuch as the town has no Parent-Teacher association.

During the latter part of April the club will be called on to furnish a committee to help doctors and nurses who will make a physical checkup of children of preschool age who are to enter the first grade in September. President Newsom as yet has not appointed this committee.