Portrait of Philip Power with Inuit Print as Eskimo Arts Gallery Closes, April 1994 Photographer: John M. Galloway
Year:
1994
Portrait of Philip Power with Inuit Sculpture as Eskimo Arts Gallery Closes, April 1994 Photographer: John M. Galloway
Year:
1994
Ann Arbor News, May 1, 1994
Caption:
Philip Power, co-founder of the Eskimo Arts Gallery, studies an Inuit sculpture at the gallery's Domino's Farms location.
Era ends with Eskimo art gallery closing
- Read more about Era ends with Eskimo art gallery closing
- Log in or register to post comments
Marion Jackson Discusses Inuit Art, September 1979 Photographer: Jack Stubbs
Year:
1979
- Read more about Marion Jackson Discusses Inuit Art, September 1979
- Log in or register to post comments
Mame Jackson
- Read more about Mame Jackson
- Log in or register to post comments
The Dominlon And Its Rebellion
- Read more about The Dominlon And Its Rebellion
- Log in or register to post comments
Canada Sorrows
- Read more about Canada Sorrows
- Log in or register to post comments
AADL Talks To Veteran Ann Arbor News Reporter Bill Treml
Bill Treml spent forty years at the Ann Arbor News working the police beat--"chasing cops and robbers," as he puts it. In that time he saw and reported on many of the stories we remember: the Coed Murders of John Norman Collins, UFO sightings, a bank robbery in Ypsilanti that left one police officer dead. Much of what we remember we remember from what he wrote. We got a chance to talk to Bill about some of those stories and what kept him at it through all those years. Treml's self-effacing manner cannot hide the fact that he went places most of us have never gone and witnessed things most of us never want to see. He stood in mud in his pajamas at murder scenes. He chased down paddy wagons. He took a front row seat to riots. He sat across the table from one of the worst serial killers in Michigan's history. Treml shared his stories of years as a reporter and told us what it takes to be a great reporter in any age of news reporting.