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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 32

Location:
Lansing, Michigan
Issue Date:
Page:
32
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

State Journal Capitol Bureau Willard Baird, Bureau Chief THE STATE JOURNAL Q.10 Nov. 8, 1972 Lansing School to Open in January Judges Will Teach Law. A Three Judges win take part to. the operation of the new Thomas M. Cooley Law School when it starts Jan.

10. "Supreme Court Justice Thomas Brennan is president and win be acting dean. Appeals' Court Judge John Fitzgerald and Ingham County Circuit Judge Donald L. Reisig win be two of the four faculty members. Other members are Donald Ubell, a research attorney and assistant clerk for the State Court of Appeals, and George V.

Warren a former as sistant attorney general and assistant prosecutor. ASKED ABOUT court officials assuming faculty positions, Brennan noted that "it's accepted practice." "Judge Thomas Cooley, after whom the school is named, was regarded as a great teacher. The American Bar Association code of ethics specifically notes that this is a fitting and proper use of a judge's time." Organization of the school was spearheaded by Brennan. Fitzgerald is listed as vice president After some delay, the proposed school, the fifth law school in the state, was approved early last summer by the State Board of Education. THE SCHOOL will operate only in the evening during the first semester- but will have both day and night classes starting next September Brennan said.

A fun load of 12 credit hours win run from 8 to 9 jn. our nights a week, with tuition set at $50 a credit The school is seeking to raise $100,000 from attorneys in the state, $100,000 from the Lansing area business community, $200,000 in foundation grants and $100,000 in public subscriptions, for a total of $500,000. BRENNAN SAID that an initial library of 20,000 volumes is planned, expected to cost $250,000, and that 10,000 volumes are already on order. The school will open in the Oding building, 507 S. Grand.

About 75 students are expected to be in class next January. More than 60 out of 100 applicants have already been ac cepted, Brennan said. The school prospectus estimates a total enrollment of 500 students by 1976. Among directors of the school, in addition to Brennan and Fitzgerald, are Ingham County Circuit Judge Jack Warren; Robert A. Fisher, senior vice president of Michigan National Bank; Louis A.

Smith of the Lansing law firm of Doyle, Smith and Whitmer attorney J. Bruce Donaldson of Detroit; Russel Swaney, president of the Detroit Economic Club; and Wayne County Circuit Judge James Ryan. Three Other Education Changes Farrell to Get New State Post of the public information office in the department of education in 1966, is also a former director of the motorist services and reports division of the Department of State Highways. He moved to the Commerce Department from a post as director of communications for the Michigan Catholic Conference in 1969. FARRELL IS a former Capitol reporter for United Press International and UPI Bureau Manager in Grand Rapids.

In January, 1965, FarreU went to Washington, D.C. as administrative assistant to U.S. Rep. John C. Mackie, former state highway By MARCIA VAN NESS State Journal Capitol Bureau Thomas M.

Farell, pubic information director for the State Commerce Department is expected to be named today as the new assistant state superintendent of public instruction for legislation and public affairs. He previously served the department as information director. The appointment was to be confirmed this afternoon by the State Board of Education, meeting in Southfield. OTHER PERSONNEL recommendations offered by State Supt. Dr.

John W. Porter and due for board approval include: Dr. Donald Shader, superintendent of the Garden City schools, as deputy state superintendent succeeding Dr. William Pierce who is leaving to accept a post in Washington, D.C. John Dobbs, a Detroit high school principal, as special assistant to the superintendent for equal educational opportunity, succeeding Marvin Tableman who has moved to the Michigan Department of State.

LOUIS KOCSIS, deputy and acting director of compensatory education, as director of that division. Farrell, who served as chief Tripe on Display B. Dale Ban (left), director of the Michigan Department of Agriculture (MDA), and Dr. Edmund Smyka, assistant state veterinary meat inspection review officer, hold up such meat byproducts as tripe, beef udder and pork stomach. The MDA will not allow such items in sausage and luncheon meat marketed in Michigan.

They are enlisting an "army of consumers" to protect the state's high quality meat against the lower federal standards favored by the Courts and the nation's three largest meat companies. LJ THOMAS FARRELL PRE-HOUDA Ml mm mm 333 S. Washington Shop the Store where you know the prices are the Lowest in Lansing. butters itself while it Pops! West Bend Automatic CORN POPPER (88 $10 14.95 Value! No.5467 West Bend's Butter-matic Automatic Con Popper adds the butter in a better way. Just, snap open the butter compartment and add butter or margarine.

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Pages Available:
1,933,981
Years Available:
1855-2024