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published by The Arden Association <br />No. 91 <br />October 1975 <br />Good News! The Town Crier is Alive and Well <br />and (still) Living in Arden Hills! <br />In August of this year officers of the Arden Association approached the <br />Arden Hills City Council and said, Look, we think Arden Hills news should <br />reach all its 5,994 residents, not just a percentage of them. .The Council <br />agreed, and thanks to its unanimous decision to underwrite the costs of <br />printing and mailing, this publication will be sent monthly to all homes <br />and businesses in Arden Hills. <br />On August 11, 1975 Council appointed a Newsletter Committee to be responsi- <br />ble for the Town Crier: Chairman, Dave Locey; Members, Liz Bieger, Karen <br />Berke, Katharine Crichton, Trude Harmon and Carmen Koshiol; Secretary/Edi- <br />tort Janet Hollenhorst; Council Liaison, Jim Wingert and Bob Woodburn. <br />The purpose and goals of the Town Crier remain the same: To provide Arden <br />Hills residents with news of civic interest and to serve as a means of com- <br />munication. We will watch what's happening in Council and Committees and <br />tell you about it. We will try to keep you informed about what is coming <br />up and what is under discussion. The news and views you read will not rep <br />present "Officialdom". Council members and village Hall staff have not <br />merely agreed to a hands-off, no censorship policy, they insisted it is a <br />necessity if the Crier is to be effective in its public service role. <br />In May 1966 the first issue of thw Town Crier <br />was mailed to Arden Hills' residents. The <br />newsletter was published by the newly formed <br />R <br />citizens group, The Arden Association, for <br />the purpose of providing news of civic in- <br />terest to subscribers. The subscription cost <br />cost was $2.00 per year, raised to $3.00 per <br />year in late 1974. For nine years a faithful <br />• <br />army of volunteers collected the news (by at- <br />tending village meetings), putting it together <br />• . <br />• <br />(on borrowed typewriters and mimeograph mach- <br />ines), and sent it out. (via living room as- <br />sembly lines - a big coffee pot at the,start- <br />ing gate,. <br />the finish <br />line a trip to the post Office with -the bundled copies <br />addressed <br />and ready <br />to go. And in between - bruised and bloodied fingers, <br />the result <br />of paper <br />cuts and mis-directed staples.) <br />Village residents <br />and <br />government alike valued the newsletter, but that did <br />not change reality: <br />The modest subscription rates were not covering ex- <br />penses. <br />Nor was the <br />Crier reaching all residents, always the hope of its <br />founders, <br />but only those who subscribed, and although this was a substan- <br />tial 35/0 <br />of homes and businesses, it was not good enough. <br />In August of this year officers of the Arden Association approached the <br />Arden Hills City Council and said, Look, we think Arden Hills news should <br />reach all its 5,994 residents, not just a percentage of them. .The Council <br />agreed, and thanks to its unanimous decision to underwrite the costs of <br />printing and mailing, this publication will be sent monthly to all homes <br />and businesses in Arden Hills. <br />On August 11, 1975 Council appointed a Newsletter Committee to be responsi- <br />ble for the Town Crier: Chairman, Dave Locey; Members, Liz Bieger, Karen <br />Berke, Katharine Crichton, Trude Harmon and Carmen Koshiol; Secretary/Edi- <br />tort Janet Hollenhorst; Council Liaison, Jim Wingert and Bob Woodburn. <br />The purpose and goals of the Town Crier remain the same: To provide Arden <br />Hills residents with news of civic interest and to serve as a means of com- <br />munication. We will watch what's happening in Council and Committees and <br />tell you about it. We will try to keep you informed about what is coming <br />up and what is under discussion. The news and views you read will not rep <br />present "Officialdom". Council members and village Hall staff have not <br />merely agreed to a hands-off, no censorship policy, they insisted it is a <br />necessity if the Crier is to be effective in its public service role. <br />