Annette and Luis Stacey Become U.S. Citizens, May 1965 Photographer: Duane Scheel

Year:
1965
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, March 27, 1965
Caption:
They Say 'Thank You' - Six-year-old Annette Marie Stacey has a special "thank you" -- a hug and a kiss -- for Circuit Judge William F. Ager Jr. following yesterday's ceremony in which she and her brother, Luis Michel, 4, became U.S. citizens. Judge Ager, who is 6 1/2 feet tall and the father of four children, had just bent down to congratulate the youngest of the new citizens when Annette, followed by Michel (Mike), spontaneously decided to thank him in their own way. Annette, born in Saigon, South Viet Nam, and Michel, a native of Guatemala, are the adopted children of Mr. and Mrs. William Stacey of 934 Loyola Drive. Stacey is a lecturer at the University's English Language Institute.
Ann Arbor News, March 27, 1965
Caption:
They Say 'Thank You' - Six-year-old Annette Marie Stacey has a special "thank you" -- a hug and a kiss -- for Circuit Judge William F. Ager Jr. following yesterday's ceremony in which she and her brother, Luis Michel, 4, became U.S. citizens. Judge Ager, who is 6 1/2 feet tall and the father of four children, had just bent down to congratulate the youngest of the new citizens when Annette, followed by Michel (Mike), spontaneously decided to thank him in their own way. Annette, born in Saigon, South Viet Nam, and Michel, a native of Guatemala, are the adopted children of Mr. and Mrs. William Stacey of 934 Loyola Drive. Stacey is a lecturer at the University's English Language Institute.
Copyright
Copyright Protected
- Read more about Annette and Luis Stacey Become U.S. Citizens, May 1965
- Log in or register to post comments