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Jerry Walden and Julia Tiplady-Walden, March 1995 Photographer: Lon Horwedel

Jerry Walden and Julia Tiplady-Walden, March 1995 image
Year:
1995
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, March 16, 1995
Caption:
Dr. Jerry Walden and his wife, [Julia], in their Ann Arbor home. They recently visited Chiapas, Mexico, to deliver medical supplies and care for refugees.
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AACHM Oral History: Lois Allen-Richardson

Lois Allen-Richardson

Lois Allen-Richardson was born in 1942 in Ypsilanti, where she remembers attending Harriet Street School and spending time at Parkridge Center. As a young adult, she worked briefly at Goodman’s Fashion Center in the heart of Ypsilanti’s Black business district. Allen-Richardson is an ordained minister and served as a missionary in Haiti and Trinidad. Since 2000 she has been a member of the Ypsilanti City Council, where she has been a strong advocate for the city’s south side. In June 2020, she became Ypsilanti’s first Black woman mayor after the resignation of her predecessor.

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Drops In After 34 Years

Drops In After 34 Years image
Parent Issue
Day
9
Month
October
Year
1962
Copyright
Copyright Protected

Mormon Elders Richard Roper and Bruce King Meet With Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Klumker, February 1974 Photographer: Jack Stubbs

Mormon Elders Richard Roper and Bruce King Meet With Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Klumker, February 1974 image
Year:
1974
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, January 26, 1974
Caption:
Missionaries To Ann Arbor Elders Richard Roper (from left) and Bruce King talk about the Family Home Evening Program with Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Klumker in the living room of the Klumker home at 509 Potter Ave. The Klumkers are looking over the Family Home Evening Program Journal. The Klumker children are in photos in the background. Klumker is director of the Institute of Religion, student branch of the local Mormon ward. (Ann Arbor News photo by Jack Stubbs)

Word Over World Missionaries Assigned to Ann Arbor Area, November 1972 Photographer: Eck Stanger

Word Over World Missionaries Assigned to Ann Arbor Area, November 1972 image
Year:
1972
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, December 16, 1972
Caption:
Their Mission: Ann Arbor John Radley (left to right), Curtis Box, Paula Johnson and Jo Ann Stafford are Word Over the World (WOW) Ambassadors who have been assigned as missionaries to Ann Arbor. (News photo by Eck Stanger)

Missionary Rev. Robert J. Miller Returns From Ethiopia, September 1974 Photographer: Robert Chase

Missionary Rev. Robert J. Miller Returns From Ethiopia, September 1974 image
Year:
1974
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 14, 1974
Caption:
Ethiopian Artifacts The Rev. Robert J. Miller at his home shows Ethiopian artifacts, including a basket used for decorative purpose and a painting of Christ with the apostles at a communion table. The Book of Psalms in front of the Rev. Mr. Miller is made from a special wood, wonza, which is used only for religious purposes. A Book of Psalms is usually carried by Orthodox priests, said the Rev. Mr. Miller. (News photo by Robert Chase)

Harold B. Curtis and Ross L. Anderson Present Book of Mormon to Mayor Wendell H. Hulcher, September 1967 Photographer: Doug Fulton

Harold B. Curtis and Ross L. Anderson Present Book of Mormon to Mayor Wendell H. Hulcher, September 1967 image
Year:
1967
Published In:
Ann Arbor News, September 22, 1967
Caption:
Mayor Greets Elders A copy of the Book of Mormon is presented to Mayor Wendell H. Hulcher by Elder Harold B. Curtis, Shelley, Idaho, and Elder Ross L. Anderson, Santa Ana, Calif. The elders are serving as missionaries in the Indiana-Michigan area for the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints (Mormon). At the age of 19, young men of the Mormon church may serve as missionaries at their own expense either in the United States or overseas. At present, these are 16,000 Mormon missionaries serving full-time.