‘Best Dearborn Stories’ excerpt: The Day Orvie Cut Governmental Waste

November 19th, 2011

The Dearborn Historical Museum’s book compiling the best Dearborn stories from residents and former residents will soon go on sale, a perfect gift for the holidays.

The book, the first of its kind ever compiled by the museum, is titled Best Dearborn Stories: Voices From Henry Ford’s Hometown. The book will be sold at the museum’s gift shop at the McFadden-Ross House, 915 Brady.

Profits from sales of the book will go to the museum, which has begun a membership drive to help keep its doors open after city funds run out during the current fiscal year ending June 30, 2012.

David Good

We will feature excerpts from the new book over the next couple of weeks. This first one is by David Good, a longtime Dearborn resident who I had the pleasure to work with at The Detroit News when Good was editor of the features section. Good authored the book, Orvie, The Dictator of Dearborn, a story about Dearborn’s longest serving mayor, the late Orville Hubbard. Good’s story below is one of more than 100 that appears in the Best Dearborn Stories: Voices From Henry Ford’s Hometown.

 

By David L. Good

Orville Hubbard wasn’t what you’d call bashful about letting people know how much he hated it when he felt they were wasting his time. You could tell by the “Please Take a Number” sign and the “Now Serving” numerical display in the mayor’s outer office at Dearborn City Hall. That was just in case you missed the sign above his front entryway, an inspirational saying he had cribbed from old Henry Ford, “People get ahead during the time that others waste.”

So how, exactly, was I going to tell him that, through no fault of my own, I had wasted approximately three hours of his precious time the day before — as we started a series of tape-recorded interviews I hoped would eventually become a book. I had already thought of the title: Orvie. Of course I didn’t have a publisher, but that could wait till later.

The late Dearborn Mayor Orville Hubbard stands defiantly in the center of Michigan Ave. outside the Dearborn City Hall.

It was a fine mid-September day in 1972. I was 30, had been married to Janet for almost a year, and had recently wrapped up a three-year stint covering Dearborn and environs as a reporter for The Detroit News. Now I had been transferred to a beat covering the Detroit City Council, and I fancied I had quickly developed a good relationship with the likes of Carl Levin, Tony Wierzbicki and David Eberhard.

I also fancied I’d done a pretty good job of making it through those three years with Hubbard, who, as anyone who picked up a piece of embossed city stationery would immediately know, had been “mayor of Dearborn since January 6, 1942.”

True enough, Dearborn Heights Mayor John Canfield had bellowed at me when I greeted him a day after writing a story I knew would anger him. “Here’s your most unfavorite newspaper reporter,” I chirped as I entered his office. “You’re goddamned right you are,” he exploded.

But somehow I’d managed not to tick off Hubbard, at least not that I knew of. (He probably didn’t remember that 10 years earlier, when I was a journalism major at Michigan, he phoned my home to complain that a nerdy-looking young man driving a car registered to my father had been photographing the mayor’s home on Mead. I was impressed with Hubbard’s quick response to a perceived threat, but I went ahead anyway with plans to write a negative editorial on him for a student publication in Ann Arbor.)

So here I was, taking a few days’ vacation from the News, waiting to go in for our second day of interviews. The day before, I remembered, he had vented about a local attorney who had once sued him successfully for libel (“Christ, it helped his business”), the Wayne circuit judge who had ruled against the mayor in the libel suit (“If I could find the cemetery, I’ll go out and piss on his grave”), and a former city appointee who had gone over to the opposition (“The son of a bitch — I should have been fired for ever giving him a job in the first place”).

After a few minutes, the mayor summoned me. Still an imposing figure at a diet-assisted weight of about 280, Hubbard was dressed in a white starched shirt, navy slacks and his trademark white-on-navy polka-dot bow tie; his navy suit coat was hanging up. As I sat down, he wheeled around in his chair to face me.

“Well, let’s get started,” he said briskly.

I clicked on my tape recorder and said what I had been fretting about saying since the night before, when I discovered that every word I thought I was taping had somehow been transmuted into an annoying hum.

“Mayor,” I said, “I have some bad news. My tape recorder seems to be working fine now, but it didn’t pick up anything from yesterday’s session. We’ll have to go back over all the stuff we covered yesterday.”

There it was. Three hours of his time yesterday – totally wasted.

“We’re not going to go back over anything,” he snapped.

Great, I thought, he’s going to call the whole project off after we’ve barely started. His publicist, Doyne Jackson, had warned me initially that the mayor would never cooperate with this book project. Miraculously, however, he agreed to make himself fully available for interviews, with no preconditions whatsoever.

Except that he didn’t want to retape yesterday’s session. The reason soon became clear. Bending down, he pulled a tape recorder from a desk drawer. “Here,” he said, “take my tape and return it when you’re done.”

“You made your own recording?” I asked, restating the obvious.

“Well, you can’t be too careful, can you?” he said, chuckling. “I figured I might need it someday.”

That was Orville Hubbard – always thinking ahead, never allowing himself to be blindsided. It was a microcosm of his 36-year mayoral career.

As for the book, Wayne State University Press published Orvie, The Dictator of Dearborn in 1989, almost exactly 15 years after a massive stroke silenced the mayor and cut short our interviews. Had he not died seven years before publication, I believe Hubbard would say he got what he expected from me: an adequate platform for explaining his views, along with an accurate — albeit “warts and all” — recounting of his life and career.

At least I hope he wouldn’t figure I’d wasted his time.

 

Dearborn Street Leaf Pickup Ends Dec. 2

November 18th, 2011

We’ve received numerous comments here from residents wondering why leaves they’ve raked into the street aren’t picked up each week. Well, the simple answer is that leaves in street are picked up every other week. And that ends Dec. 2.

We’re still not sure why this service continues to be offered given the city’s current budget crisis, but that’s a discussion for another day.

Dearborn's curbside yard waste collection ends Dec. 16.

To guarantee pickup, Dearborn officials are reminding residents that they can put them in 32 gallon containers marked “Yard Waste” or in paper landscape bags and set them on the curb. This curbside service ends Dec. 16.

In addition, collection of loose leaves raked into the streets in Dearborn neighborhoods is scheduled to continue until Friday, Dec. 2, depending on the weather.  For those of you who still have leaves in the street after Dec. 2, be courteous to your neighbor and bag them so they don’t end up in your neighbor’s yard the first time the snow plows come through.

Loose leaves raked into the street will be picked up on Public Service Days/trash days during non-recycling weeks.

Note that crews may not be able to pick up leaves from an entire Public Service Day district in one day and will return during the next non-recycling week to start where they left off.

For a weekly leaf collection schedule, call the Leaf Hotline at 943-2444.

East Dearborn DDA’s Open House

November 18th, 2011

The East Dearborn Downtown Development Authority (EDDDA) Board of Directors and staff Melissa Kania and Mike Bewick invite you to their 3rd annual Holiday Open House on Wednesday December 14, 2011 from 4-8pm at the EDDDA office, 13750 Michigan Ave., two blocks west of Schaefer.

Join them and casually network with district merchants and residents, business partners, stakeholders and City of Dearborn officials.

It’s a great opportunity to connect with the EDDDA and learn what they do and what they can do to help support and promote their district businesses and the East Dearborn downtown area.

As always, guests will enjoy tasting “the world in a mile” with fabulous food from several of the diverse restaurants in the neighborhood. Beverages will also be served.

No reservations necessary, and all are welcome to attend.

Speaking of the holidays, the EDDDA also paid for holiday decorations of garland, lights and red bows that are merrily strung upon streetlight poles along Michigan Avenue and Schaefer Road.

For more on events and businesses in east Dearborn, visit the EDDDA website and sign up for their newsletter at www.EastDowntownDearborn.com. Also find them on Facebook –just search East Dearborn Downtown Development Authority.

New Life for Vacant Dearborn Hotel?

November 16th, 2011

A new, never opened hotel on Michigan Avenue that has sat vacant for months for lack of financing could soon get thrown a lifeline.

The property, just west of Telegraph on Michigan Avenue adjacent to Toys R Us,  is currently in the hands of a bank. The bank took possession of the property when the original developer simply ran out of money and couldn’t finish the project.

Now a second developer is in talks with the bank to purchase the property at a “bargain” price. The deal could close as soon as this month, a person familiar with the ongoing negotiations tells Deepsaidwhat.com.

The out-state potential buyer intends to open the building as a hotel. But it isn’t clear whether the hotel would open as a Holiday Inn Express, as was originally intended, or fly the flag of a different chain.

We’re hopeful a deal will be finalized soon.

Steven Bernard Jewelers Collecting Coats for Needy

November 14th, 2011

For the third consecutive year, Dearborn’s Steven Bernard Jewelers is ramping up for its annual collection of warm coats for the needy in and around our community.

Last year through Bernard’s “Coupons for Coats” campaign, more than 400 coats, along with gloves and scarves, were distributed to the needy, Steven tells DeepsaidWhat.com. The number of donations was nearly double Steven’s first year of donations.

“Naturally, my goal this year is to again increase those numbers,” said Steven, whose jewelry store has been serving Dearborn with many one-of-a-kind items for more than three decades.

The third annual Coupons for Coats campaign is an incentive promotion to help encourage participation. Coat donations given will receive a 20 percent discount coupon from Steven Bernard Jewelers.

This year’s Coupons for Coats begins today, Nov. 14, and continues through Dec. 31.

Steven Bernard Jewelers will be collecting new and clean, gently used coats along with hats, gloves, and scarves. These items will be distributed by the First United Methodist Church of Dearborn. Donations will be accepted during holiday business hours at Steven Bernard Jewelers, located at 22266 Michigan Ave. in Dearborn in the 222 Shops.

For more information, call 313-562-8484.

Dearborn Glass Academy Holiday Show and Sale

November 13th, 2011

Don’t miss this year’s Holiday Show and Sale at Dearborn’s Glass Academy on Saturday, 12/3 and Sunday, 12/4 from 10:00am-6:00pm.

The Glass Academy will have beautiful hand blown glass ornaments, icicles, snowmen, candy canes and much more to make your holiday shopping experience unique and fun. Enjoy live glassblowing demonstrations while you shop for that perfect one-of-a-kind gift made in Michigan. Admission is free.

The Glass Academy also is hosting a Holiday Show Preview Party on Thursday, 12/1/11 from 6:00-8:00pm. Tickets are $50 and can be purchased on-line by clicking on the icon below or by calling the studio at 313-561-4527.

Two Stores Leave Dearborn’s West Village Commons

November 13th, 2011

Two more businesses this week have left the unfinished Burton-Katzman development in Dearborn known as West Village Commons.

New Hookah Bar Coming

Two more tenants in Dearborn’s West Village Commons -– the Burton-Katzman development on Michigan Avenue that has failed to live up to all it promised since opening  in 2005 -– are packing their bags and leaving.

Another “business” is coming to the development but more on that shortly.

The UPS Store and Cold Stone Creamery, two of the first stores to move into the once-promising development, closed their doors this week.

The UPS Store is moving to 23636 Michigan Ave.

The good news is that the UPS Store is moving a few blocks west on Michigan Avenue, adjacent to Miller’s Bar. The UPS Store moved because the owner apparently was unable to renegotiate a lower monthly lease rate. The current rate is about $20 per sq.-ft., a far cry from the $33 per sq.-ft. West Village Commons was charging when it first opened six years ago. But it still is uncompetitive when you compare it to Ford Land properties, which have a lease rate as low as $10 per sq.-ft. in some buildings.

Cold Stone closed because it simply wasn’t doing enough business. This is the second time this Cold Stone has closed. Longtime readers of this site will recall that the original owner of Cold Stone, a Ford retiree, closed this same Dearborn location and Allen Park store for lack of business several years ago. The two stores were repurchased by another entrepreneur and reopened. A sign on the Dearborn store directs customers to the still-open Allen Park location.

The West Village Commons development, sans Tom Clark’s little gem, the Village Picture Framing and Art Gallery, is now turning into a bar and food destination, rather than the retail our elected officials hoped for when it entered into this development. The portion of the building facing Michigan Avenue houses Sattva Yoga and the Kabuki restaurant. Those businesses, thankfully, seem to be holding on.

Other former tenants include, the Rocky Mountain Chocolate Factory, Moe’s Southwest Grill, Caribou Coffee, Supercuts, Au Bon Pain Bakery and American Home Fitness. All closed their doors for good several years ago.

As for the new business coming to the West Village Commons, it isn’t retail. The owner of Le Cigar, one of the first tenants of the development, is opening a new hookah bar called La Hookah.

Let us count the ways we miss the former Jacobson’s and Price’s . . .

Dearborn Christmas Tree Lighting Nov. 22

November 11th, 2011

The City of Dearborn’s annual Tree-Lighting Ceremony and Sing-Along at the Ford Community and Performing Arts Center is 6-9 p.m. on Tuesday, November 22.

As an added attraction, the festivities are being held in conjunction with the Festival of Trees, which is a fundraiser for the Children’s Hospital of Michigan Foundation. There is no admission to this holiday fundraiser for those attending the tree-lighting on Nov. 22.

The schedule of events on Nov. 22 is as follows:

• 6 p.m. Dearborn Community Bell Choir (Michal A. Guido Theater Lobby)

• 6:30 p.m. Christmas Tree Lighting Ceremony with Mayor John B. O’Reilly, Jr. (outside, in the Theater Circular Drive)

• 6:45 p.m. Everyone enters the Michal A. Guido Theater

• 7 p.m. Holiday-Themed Performance featuring the Dearborn Youth Symphony Flute Choir and the Dearborn Public School’s Honors Choir

• 7:30 p.m. Christmas Sing-Along with Mayor John B. O’Reilly, Jr.

• 7:50 p.m. Refreshments in the Main Lobby and a visit with Santa Claus in Studio A

• 7:50 p.m. Festival of the Trees Holiday Season Exhibit inside the Hubbard Ballroom (Free Admission)

All are welcome. For more information, call 943-2354.

The Festival of Trees runs Nov. 21-Nov. 28. There is a small admission charge during all times except following the tree-lighting on Nov. 22.

Dearborn Millages Pass, Civil Service Stays

November 9th, 2011

Dearborn residents voted Tuesday to raise the city tax rate by 4.5 mills and defeated a proposal to eliminate the Civil Service Commission.

On the Public School Board side, a new board member was elected and another long-time member kept his position for another term.

Voter turnout was a pathetic 21 percent with just 12,493 of the 59,160 registered voters in our city casting ballots. A lot more work has to be done by our elected officials but yesterday’s results were a big step in the right direction.

 

The results are below:

 

Proposal 1: 3.5-mill operating millage
YES . . . . . . . . . . . . 7,420 (60.42 percent)

NO. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,860  (39.58)

Total . . . . . . . ….12,280

 

Proposal 2: 1-mill dedicated library millage

YES . . . . . . . . . . . . 7,379 (59.81 percent)

NO. . . . . . . . . . . . . 4,959  (40.19)

Total . . . . . . . . . 12,338

Proposal 3: Should the city eliminate the Civil Service Commission? 

NO. . . . . . . . . . . . . 6,158  (51.11 percent)

YES . . . . . . . . . . . . 5,891  (48.89)

Total . . . . . . . . . 12,049

 

Dearborn Public Schools Board Member 

Joseph A. Guido . . . . . . . . 5,988  (31.09 percent)

Roxanne McDonald . . . . .  5,922 (30.75)

Mary K. Petlichkoff . . . . . .  4,784 (24.84)

Stephen Stanley Dobkowski, Jr. . . . 2,528  (13.12)

WRITE-IN. . . . . . . . . . . 39 (.20)

Total . . . . . . . . . 19,261

 

Dearborn Inn Book Signing, Reception Today

November 8th, 2011

An early postcard photo of the Dearborn Inn.

On July 1, 1931, Henry and Edsel Ford hosted many noted dignitaries at the opening of the Dearborn Inn, located directly across the street from the Ford Airport on Oakwood Blvd.

Now 80 years later, a book about the history of Dearborn Inn has been written by Dearborn native Jennifer (Czerwick) Ganem, and published by Arcadia as part of their Images of America Series.

To celebrate, Dearborn Inn is hosting a champagne reception and book-signing event in the hotel lobby on Thursday, Nov. 10 between 5-8 p.m. The inn is anxious to show off the completion of a multi-year renovation throughout the hotel, including the introduction of a new restaurant, Edison’s, as well as the conversion of the popular Ten Eyck Tavern restaurant to the hotel lounge.

Dearborn author Jennifer (Czerwick) Ganem will sign copies of her book on Thursday 5-8pm at the Dearborn Inn.

Ganem began collecting Dearborn Inn memorabilia many years ago, and attributes a bed she owns from Dearborn Inn, a photo she found in the attic of her West Dearborn home and some Dearborn Inn dinner plates that a friend purchased, as the three intersecting reasons that she began researching the inn’s rich history.

“I was born and raised in Dearborn, and already had a life-long interest in both Ford and local history, writing this book seems to have been my destiny … my way of helping to preserve a small piece of history and telling this important part of the Ford story,” Ganem says, as she is anxious to continue gathering memories and important pieces of history from those with information to share. “The book is written, but the story is just beginning. I look forward to meeting everyone who attends the book signing event.”

Most recently, the Dearborn Inn lobby and adjacent sun porch were completely refurbished. The classic black and white checkerboard marble floor was restored to its original luster, and new hand-tufted area rugs and furnishings were installed. Paint colors were selected to highlight the Albert Kahn – designed architectural features such as pilasters, crown moldings, and the decorative ceiling filigrees that surround the original chandeliers. While all of the lobby seating consists of new, traditional furnishings, many of the desks and side tables have been carefully refinished to retain a sense of the past.

For more information about the inn visit www.dearborninnmarriott.com or call (313) 271-2700. Books will be available for purchase and to be signed by the author at the reception on Nov. 10. Ganem will also be signing books at Barnes and Noble in Allen Park on Saturday, Nov. 26, from 2-4 p.m. For more details about the newly released book, visit HERE or HERE.