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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 18

Location:
Lansing, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
18
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE STATE JOURNAL B-2 Nov. 18, 1971 Law School Chances Discussed Concluded From Page B-1 area, and because the new school could benefit from the proximity of a major university. In answer to questions, Cantlon said MSU's law school would initially have a class of about 100 full and parttime students. He said those planning the curriculum have a chance to pioneer in new areas, such as 1 environmental law and other areas that are developing in the space While attempting to inovate new areas of law, Cantlon said, the new school would also try to provide in-service training and professional opportunities for area lawyers. In the audience was Thomas E.

Brennan, chief justice of the Michigan Supreme Court, and among the organizers and supporters of the proposed Thomas M. Cooley Law School. In response to questions, Brennan said the proposed law school is scheduled to begin classes next fall in Lansing. He said it will be organized along the lines of the Detroit College of Law which is a private, nonprofit organization catering to people who work full-time at other jobs. Brennan emphasized that the proposed Cooley school would not be in competition with the proposed MSU school and said he hopes the two will complement each other.

One of Cantlon's closing remarks was; "It seems that the major question is not whether the Lansing area needs another law school, but how many and when." W. Robert Carr, MSU researcher and one of two people in charge of liaison between the university the Legislature, today said the main focus of the conference is to determine which direction the proposed law school would go. "We are calling on some of the best legal the country to mull things" over like philosophies and basic principales for the new law school," Carr said. IMPROVE YOUR INCOME KEY PUNCH ACADEMY PH 393 8615 MSU Volunteers Recognized The student volunteers at Michigan State University have received national recognition with the granting of a citation from the National Center for Voluntary Action. The citation, according to Jerome E.

Klein, the center's director, places the MSU volunteers "among the 20 per cent of those nominated who have met the rigid preliminary screening process and are now in consideration for the $5,000 award." The final awards, formerly called the Lane Bryant Awards, are offered to one individual and one group who have displayed "extraordinary volunteer achievement." "While not in itself the final The student award," Klein said, "this citation serves to recognize this group's superior achievement and is symbolic of the pride and gratitude of the community for the group's achievements in its behalf." The MSU volunteers were nominated during the summer by Gov. William G. Milliken, who said, "Michigan is grateful for the services of the Volunteer Bureau. The efforts of more than 1,500 students working. giving in 40 of different pro- and talent, deserve The MSU Office of Volunteer Programs, under the direction of John Cauley, served as a model for developing collegiate volunteer programs across the country.

Instituted in 1967, the bureau has participated in programs ranging in scope from adult tutoring to consumer protection. Common sense in matters of dollars and cents recommends the classified section for regular reading. IRREGULAR? DUE TO LACK OF FOOD BULK IN YOUR DIET TRY BRAN Kellogg's ART SHOW Waverly High School art students Dale Welch (foreground) and Brian Taylor put finishing touches on the art exhibit that will be open to the public tonight, Friday and Saturday at 7:30, prior to curtain time for the high school musical production of "Fiddler on the Roof." The exhibit is in room 9 of the high school. (State Journal Photo) Local, Area Deaths and Funerals Mrs. Elvira Davis, 95, of 200 S.

Sycamore, formerly of Hartland, died Wednesday at Ingham Medical Hospital where she had been a patient six weeks. Surviving are a granddaughter, Mrs. Jeannine O'Loane of 3500 Glenbrook, and three great-grandchildren. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday at MacDonald Funeral Home, Howell, with burial in Lakeview Cemetery there.

Louis Rich Elvira Davis Louis J. Rich, 58, of 3102 W. Michigan, died Wednesday in a local hospital. He was employed at Oldsmobile for 36 years until his retirement early this year and was a member of the Quarter Century Club at Oldsmobile. Surviving are his wife, Frances; two sons, Steve at home and Gene of Lansing; two grandchildren, his mother, Mrs.

Ella Rich of Grand Rapids; two brothers, and Howard, both of Grand Rapids, and two sisters, Mrs. Mildred Fessler of Oakley and Mrs. Irene Miller of Grand Rapids. Services will be Friday at 1 p.m. Jessen Funeral Home "with burial in Crystal Lake Cemetery, Crystal Lake.

Lettie Mock Mrs. Lettie L. Mock, 82, of 1321. Vermont, died today in a local hospital. A lifelong resident of the Lansing area, she was formerly employed at Michigan State University, retiring 12 years ago.

Surviving are three daughters, Mrs. Winston Rayman of DeWitt, Mrs. Richard Kill of Lansing and Mrs. Archie Barber of Grand Ledge; a son, Norman of Centralia, nine grandchildren; 16 greatgrandchildren; two sisters, Mrs. Lotus Cross of Haslett and Mrs.

Hazel Mock of Lansing; brother, Ross Brown of Lansing. Services will be Saturday at 2:30 p.m. in the Gorsline-Runciman Funeral Home with burial in Pleasant Hill Cemetery, Bath. Nora Wrigley Mrs. Nora M.

Wrigley, 52, of 722 Glenhaven, East Lansing, died in a local hospital today. A resident of East Lansing since 1957, coming here from New Zealand, she was a teacher at the Michigan School for the Blind since 1959. She graduated from the University of Otago, New Zealand, where she received her bachelor and master's degree. Surviving are her husband, Charles F. of East Lansing; two sons, James A.

of East Lansing and Edward S. of the University of Auckland, New Zealand; two daughters, Miss Margaret A. of Chicago and Miss Julia C. of Madison, and a brother, Dr. C.

Barclay Innes of Auckland, New Zealand. Services will be in the Estes Funeral Home. Memorial contributions may be made to the Michigan School for the Blind. Area Births LAINGSBURG To Mr. and Mrs.

Gary D. Koonter, 311 10, West a son, Mark William, Nov. at parrow Hospital, Lansing. Mrs. Koonter is the former Barbara Arthur.

GRAND LEDGE To Mr. and Mrs. Marsden Antcliff, 7800 Vista, a son, Kristopher Dale, Nov. 11, at Ingham Medical Hospital, Lansing. LAINGSBURG To Mr.

and Mrs. Lee F. Vieth, 11341 Peacock, a son, Jason Manley, Nov. 14, at Lansing General Hospital. LAINGSBURG To Mr.

and Mrs. Harry A. Martin 13, 10985 at Woodbury, Gen- a son, James Noel, Nov. Lansing eral Hospital. MASON To Mr.

and Mrs. Robert Allen Ford, 322 E. South, a son, Michael Allen, Nov. 13, at Lansing General Hospital. BATH To Mr.

and Mrs. Gary L. Donovan, 4256 Clark, a son, Patrick Shawn, Nov. 11, at Lansing General Hospital. PERRY To Mr.

and Mrs. Daniel Williard Wells 2274 Milton, a daughter, Connie Jo, Nov. 10, at Lansing General Hospital. PORTLAND To Mr. and Mrs.

Enrique Luna, R. 2, a son, Enrique Nov. 10, at Lansing General Hospital. WILLIAMSTON To Mr. and Mrs.

Paul William Consavage, 1340 W. Grand River, a son, Dennis Joseph, Nov. 10, at Lansing General Hospital. Eaton Man Injured Fatally EATON RAPIDS--Dennis L. Digby, 25, son of Dr.

and Mrs. Robert H. Digby, 1594 M-99, was killed shortly after 6 p.m. Wednesday when he walked in front of a car on the highway near his home, according to Eaton County sheriff's deputies. Officers said 1 the victim was retarded and partly blind and had gone out of the house without his parents' knowledge.

Officers said the driver, Mrs. Helen M. Clegg, of 312 W. Broad Eaton Rapids, was not held responsible for the accident. She told deputies that she was driving south on M-99 about four miles northeast of town, when a pedestrian suddenly appeared in her car's headlights.

A staff writer for The State Journal, she is a friend of the Digby family. Mrs. Digby is the newspaper's Eaton Rapids correspondent. Coroner Thomas Murray of Grand Ledge said the victim died instantly. The body was taken to Skinner Funeral Home.

Entangled Clothes Lead To Death MT. PLEASANT-Amzy K. VanHorn, 48, of 302 E. Pickard, was killed Wednesday afternoon when his clothing became entangled in the rotating drive shaft of an oil tanker truck while the vehicle was parked at the Beard Bulk Oil Plant, Mt. Pleasant.

Isabella County Medical Examiner Dr. Leo Wickert said VanHorn died of crushing internal injuries. The body is at the J. J. Rush Funeral Home, Mt.

Pleasant. Boys Find Body On South Side Four boys playing in a thick brush south of the end of Alpha Street Wednesday afternoon found the badly decomposed body of a man reported missing to police Oct. 14. Coronor Glen Dunn identified the as Richard D. Young, 43, "tho lived with relatives at 564 Lincoln.

Dunn said the man apparently committed suicide. He had been dead for as long as a month, police said. The victim has a wife and other relatives in California and recently had moved here, officers said. Births ROSENBERG-TO Mr. and Mrs.

Gordon M. Rosenberg, 824 E. Thomas L. Parkway, a son, Jamie Lyn, Nov. 9, at Sparrow Hospital.

Mrs. Rosenberg Is the former Natalie R. Esch. BATES To Mr. and Mrs.

Joseph Owen Bates, a daughter, Angela Renae, Nov. 7, at Lansing General Hospital. GALLIMORE To Mr. and Mrs. Donnie Gallimore, 2105 Mary, a daughter, Angela Lynn, Nov.

8, at Ingham Medical Hospital. BACHMAN To Mr. and Mrs. Wayne Bachman, 637 Denver, a son, Richard Kenneth, Nov. 9, at ingham Medical Hospital.

McGEE To Mr. and Mrs. Michael McGee, 2801-D Waverly, a son, Patrick David, Nov. 10, at Ingham Medical Hospital. Eleanor F.

Ledwidge PINCKNEY A funeral Mass for Mrs. Eleanor F. Ledwidge, 85, Pinckney, will be Friday at 11 a.m. at St. Mary Catholic Church here, with burial in Pickney Cemetery.

Mrs. Ledwidge died Tuesday in a Howell hospital. Dora E. Brumm WOODLAND-Mrs. Dora E.

Brumm, 87, lifelong area resident, died Wednesday at a Hastings nursing home following a long illness. She had been a teacher: in the Woodland and Sunfield schools. Surviving is her husband, Dr. L. H.

Brumm of Woodland. Services will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday Pickens Funeral Chapel, Lake Odessa, with burial in Woodland Memorial Park. Leon T. Cox ITHACA Leon Thomas Cox, 85, of Ithaca, died Wednesday at Carson City Hospital.

He was a retired employe of Ithaca Roller Mills and a member of the Masons and Odd Fellows. Mr. Cox is survived by four daughters, Mrs. Marguerite Horton and Mrs. Lillian Vozar of Ithaca, Mrs.

Caroline Bunker of Lovell and Mrs. Adeline King of Long Beach, a son, Robert of Rives Junction; two sisters, Mrs. Nancy Collins of Linden and Mrs. Minnie Mancour of Bradenton, 18 grandchildren and 27 great grandchildren. Services will be at p.m.

Saturday at Barden Funeral Home here. Burial will be in Riverside Cemetery, Elsie. Deaths In the News Yehuda Leib Levin MOSCOW (AP)-Yehuda Leib Levin, 76, chief rabbi of Moscow synagogue and unofficial leader of Russia's three million Jews, died Wednesday. Tass reported Levin had been suffering from heart trouble for the past few years. George Schneider HOUSTON (AP) George Schneider, 74, a pioneer in the development of synthetic fibers and retired vice chairman of the Celanese died Wednesday in Houston.

Schneider was among the scientists to lead the development of the manmade fiber industry in the 1920s. Everett Fraser LINCOLN, Mass. (AP)-Everett Fraser, 92, father of Rep. Donald M. Fraser, died Wednesday.

He had taught at three law schools and had been the dean at both George Washington University and the University of Washington law schools. William Culbertson (C) 1971, N. Y. Times News Service CHICAGO-William Culbertson, Chancellor of the Moody Bible Institute, died Tuesday night in a hospital here on the eve of his 66th birthday, after two operations for cancer in recent years. AMBULANCE IV2-1651 ESTES Care Free Retirement Now worry-free, comfortable retirement can be yours in a pleasant allnew apartment style cooperative with 80 spacious acres on the Grand River near Lansing.

Operated as a Christian-oriented non-profit retirement community, JARVIS ACRES offers independence, prepared food. medical and nursing care. personal services, and investment security. For more information about gracious retirement. write or call: Rev.

Herbert E. Ryan, Administrator JARVIS ACRES COOPERATIVE, INC. 4000 N. Michigan Road Dimondale, Mich. 48821 Ph.

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DOWNTOWN FRANDOR LANSING MALL MERIDIAN MALL Calls that put you where the "Ac- 203 WASHINGTON SHOPPING CENTER WEST SAGINAW HIGHWAY OKEMOS. MICHIGAN This busy little radio searches for an active signal DOWNTOWN, Open Monday and Friday 'til 9 p.m. stops to hear the transmission LANSING MALL, Weekdays 'til 9 p.m.; Sun. 1 'til 5 p.m. then resumes the search for the FRANDOR, return of another signal, all auto- Open Monday, Thursday and Friday 'til 9 p.m.

matically. MERIDIAN Okemos, Open Weekdays 'til 9 p.m. MALL, EX-SENATOR DIES--James Howard Edmondson, 46, the nation's youngest governor when he was elected Oklahoma's Chief Executive at the age of 33 in 1958, died Wednesday of an apparent heart attack in his suburban Oklahoma City home. Ed- mondson, a former U.S. Senator, had been labeled the "Boy Wonder" of Oklahoma politics.

A Democrat, Edmondson is the brother of Re p. Ed Edmondson (D- who is running for the U.S. Senate next year. WAYS Serve 5200 S. S.

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Pages Available:
1,934,041
Years Available:
1855-2024