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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 2
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Lansing State Journal from Lansing, Michigan • Page 2

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Lansing, Michigan
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2
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STATE JOURNAL May 25, 1974 Today's Weather No Rain in Sight Would you believe it, not a mention of rain in the Lansing weekend weather forecast. The weather man is calling for partly cloudy skies today with high temperatures in the lower 60s and a low tonight in the 40s. THEN FOR Sunday, it should be mostly sunny skies with temperatures reaching into the mid-60s. The long-range forecast is calling for a chance of rain next week with temperatures warming up a bit into the upper 60s and 70s through the week. U.S.

to Be Sunny Showers will fall in the Pacific Northwest. Scattered thundershowers are expected in the lower Mississippi Valley. A FEW overcast skies may linger in upper New York and New England. remainder of the nation wiThe enjoy sunny to partly sunny skies. It will be cooler from the central gulf coast north through the Ohio Valley into the eastern Great Lakes and along the mid and upper Atlantic Coast.

ELSEWHERE LITTLE change cr warmer readings are expected. Thunderstorms were scattered Friday from the Ohio River Valley to New Mexico and isolated storms struck Maryland and Florida. Tulsa, had an inch of rain with minor flooding. RAIN AND drizzle shrouded the western fringe of the Great Lakes area and the upper Mississippis Valley. There showers in parts of Utah, Arizona and the Pacific Northwest.

More than a half-inch of rain fell at Enid, and Hoquiam, Wash. FOG AND dense cloud cover lingered over Southern California. It remained chilly in parts of the Dakotas and New England where afternoon readings climbed only to the 40s and 50s. Afternoon temperatures ranged from 94 Blythe, to 44 at Loring Air Force Base in Maine. 60 70.

COLD 70 Showers 10 90 COLD Flurries Forecasts and Reports LOWER PENINSULA Partly cloudy and cool through tonight. Highs today mid 50s to 60s. Sunday increasing cloudiness southwest and mostly sunny else- where. Warmer. Highs low to mid 60s.

Monday thru -Mostly cloudy skies with periods of showers can be expected Monday through Wednesday. Seasonal temperatures are expected with daily highs mostly in the 70s north and 80s south and daily lows in the 50s north and 60s south. UPPER PENINSULA Partly cloudy and cool through tonight. Highs today in the low 50s. Sunday mostly sunny and warmer.

Highs in the mid to upper 50s. Monday through Wednesday-Chance of showers Monday through Wednesday. Highs in the 70s to low 80s. Lows in the 50s north to mid 60s south. OHIO Variable cloudiness today.

High today middle to lower 60s north and middle to upper 60s south. Clear and cooler tonight. Lows in the upper 30s to lower 40s northwest and in the 40s elsewhere. Sunday partly cloudy and somewhat warmer the highs in the 60s tic lower 70s. INDIANA Partly sunny today.

Highs upper 60s north to near 80 south. Fair to partly cloudy tonigat. Lows in the upper 40s northeast to the upper 50s southwest. Increasing cloudiness Sunday with chance of showers or thunderstorms. Highs mostly 70s to near 80 extreme south.

ILLINOIS Mostly sunny north and central today partly cloudy south the highs ranging from the middle 60s extreme north to in the 70s south. Increasing cloudiness and not so cool tonight the lows to 53 north and in the 50s south. Sunday cloudy with chance of rain the highs 65 to 72 north and in the 70s south. From Michigan Weather, high yesterday, low overnight, precipitation Alpena, cloudy .6 45 Jackson, cloudy .61 Flint. ptcidy .63 Sault Ste Marie, ptcidy .52 .08 Detroit, ptcidy 64 2 Marquette, ptcidy Houghton Lake, ptcidy .53 19 Traverse City, ptcldy .62 Houghton.

ptcidy 52 59- Saginaw, ptcldy .61 Escanaba, cloudy 56 44 23 Peliston, cloudy 9997787 .02 Muskegon, cloudy .57 Travel Outlook Tomorrow's Weather, high, low City, Weather Lo Albany, ptcidy .63 43 Albuquerque, pteldy 88 Asheville, ptcicy .80 Atlanta, ptcidy 82 63 Atlantic City, clear 79 Austin, picidy 88 Baltimore, fair 71 Billings, ptcidy .75 Boise, fair .80 Boston, fair .70 50 Charleston, S. ptcldy 87 63 W. ptcidy 70 Charlotte, ptcidy 84 59 Chicago, rain 67 50 Cincinnati, ptcidy .73 Dayton, Columbus. ptcidy Ohio, ptcidy .70 44 Duluth, ptcidy 60 Jacksonville, ptcidy 88 Kansas City, Tshowrs 86 Las Vegas, fair .94 60 Little Rock, shwrs 81 63 Los Angeles, fair 80 58 Louisvillt, cloudy 75 58 Memphis, ptcidy .85 62 Miami Beach, Tshwrs 88 76 Milwaukee, ptciay .65 Minneapolis-St. Paul, ptcidy .72 New Orleans, ptcidy 88 New York, fair 70 Philaelphia, clear 79 53 Phoenix, fair 79 53 Pittsburgh, fair 70 Providence, fair 69 50 Raleigh, ptcldy .83 58 Rapid City, ptcidy .84 50 Richmond, fair 74 St.

Louis, shwrs 86 Salt Lake City, fair 86 Tucson, fair 100 Tulsa, ptcidy 83 Washington, fair 73 53 Wichita, Tshwrs .63 83 From the World p.m. 50 Oslo, partly cloudy. p.m. 66 p.m. Paris, partly cloudy.

p.m. .3 p.m. Peking, clear p.m. .2 p.m. Pome, cloudy p.m.

66 Saigon, cloudy p.m. p.m. Seoul, clear p.m. p.m. Sofia, Stockholm, rain partly cloudy p.m.

p.m. 2 p.m. 86 Sydney, partly cloudy 10 p.m. 68 Taipei, cloudy ..8 p.m. p.m.

Teheran, clear p.m. p.m. 55 Tel Aviv, clear. p.m. p.m.

Tokyo, cloudy p.m. 66 .8 p.m. 81 Tunis, clear p.m. 79 Vienna, partly cloudy p.m. 59 p.m.

Warsaw, partly cloudy p.m. 59 p.m. 81 Asuncion, partly cloudy 8 a.m. 72 .8 p.m. 86 Buenos Aires, a.m.

54 p.m. 46 Lima, cloudy a.m. 63 p.m. 99 Montevideo, drizzle 9 a.m. mis.

p.m. 61 Rio de Janeiro, partly cloudy 9 a.m. 68 VOL. 120 NO. 28 THE STATE JOURNAL Maurice Hickey, Publisher Harold Fildey Frank Wippel Executive Editor Business Manager Ben Burns Ted Sondag Advertising Director Managing Editor Richard Ferris Patrick McCarthy Circulation Director Assistant Managing Editor Robert Stuart Donald Shockey Production Manager Editorial Page Editor Published every day by FEDERATED PUBLICATIONS, a wholly owned subsidiary of GANNETT 120 E.

Lenawee Lansing, Mich. 48919. Second Class postage paid at Lansing. SUBSCRIPTION RATES Delivered by Carrier $1.10 per Week. By Motor Route Delivery $5.50 per Month, Mail Rates: Michigan Elsewhere Michigan Elsewhere 1 Year $60.00 3 Months $15.00 $16.50 6 Months 30.00 33.00 1 Month 5.00 5.50 TELEPHONES (Newsroom, AdvertisDAYTIME: Call 485-3211 for all departments Service) Business.

Production, Public ing. Circulation. Classified. NIGHT: Newsroom-489-5247: Sports-485-7168. World News Roundup Wilson Confers on Strike BELFAST, Northern Ireland (AP) British Prime Minister Harold Wilson called his cabinet into emergency session Friday evening to discuss ways to resolve the crippling Protestant-led general strike here.

The walkout began 10 days ago to protest British plans for closer ties between predominantly Protestant Northern Ireland, a British province, and the mainly Roman Catholic Irish Republic to the south. So far the strike has closed factories and shops, drastically curtailed electrical power, and brought Northern Ireland to the brink of economic ruin. French President Official PARIS (AP). Valery Giscard d'Estaing was formally proclaimed the 20th president of the French Republic on Friday by France's Constitutional Council. The official count of the May 19 election runoff gave Giscard d'Estaing 13,396,203 votes against 12,971,604 for his Socialist opponent Francois Mitterrand.

Giscard d'Estaing is to be inaugurated Monday in a ceremony at the Elysee Palace, the official presidential residence. expected to name his prime minister immediately afterward. He has given no advance hint of his choice. Hong Kong Hostages Safe HONG KONG (AP) Police stormed a bank Saturday and captured a gunman who had held a dozen employes hostage for more than 19 hours, a police radio bulletin said. All the hostages were reported safe.

Police were said to have moved in when several of the hostages burst out of the building shortly before noon, shouting that they and other captives had jumped the gunman and knocked him down when he said he was going to shoot them all. National News Roundup Radio Copter Crash Kills 3 RICHMOND, Va. (AP) A helicopter used by radio station WRVA to report traffic conditions crashed into a house Friday evening, killing both persons aboard the craft and a 10-year-old child inside the house. The nelicopter crashed through the roof of the house, went through the dining room and into a crawl space under the house. Nixon on Radio Today KEY BISCAYNE, Fla.

(AP) President Nixon will make a live radio address on the economy at 12:07 p.m. Friday. E.D.T. Press today, Secretary the Ronald Florida L. White Ziegler House said the announced President would take a look at current problems facing the nation and talk about the future economic outlook in the broadcast, one of a series he has been making on domestic problems and legislation.

In the address, Nixon is expected to announce the appointment of Deputy Secretary of State Kenneth Rush, Nixon's one-time Duke School professor, to be the new White House economic coordinator. Radioactive Material Sought SPRINGFIELD, Ill. (AP) Teams of Air Force specialists and state Public Health officials searched unsuccessfully Friday for a 15-pound cannister of radioactive material believed to have been aboard a cargo plane that crashed during a thunderstorm. Officials described the material as harmless. Investigators did recover recording devices cos that reveal what caused the Saturn Airways C130 crash, killing four persons.

Import Increase Balanced WASHINGTON (AP) The nation offset a 43 per cent increase in oil imports with increased exports of machinery, chemicals and aircraft to rebound from what had been its first trade deficit in 10 months. The Commerce Department's traditional measure of foreign trade activity showed on Friday that the United States exported some $8.2 billion worth of goods in April while importing about $8.1 billion. The surplus of $92.8 million compared with March's deficit of $171.3 million. New York Papers Automated NEW YORK (AP) A tentative 11-year contract brought an end Friday to a 17-day printers strike at the New York Daily News, the newspaper with the largest circulation in the nation. The agreement provides for full automation of the composing room and lifetime job guarantees for all present typographers.

There also is a ban on layoffs, even should work not be available. But the costly resetting by printers of "bogus," or type that duplicates away with. contract, if approved by 1,800 affected material originally, set outside a newspaper plant, is done members of AFL-CIO New York Typographical Local, 6, becomes retroactive to March 31, 1973, when the old pact expired. It covers the tabloid News and its morning rival, the Times. Further negotiations are scheduled with a third major Manhattan daily, the afternoon Post.

Scientist Admits Fake Results NEW YORK (AP) A scientist at the world-famous Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center has admitted faking basic research results, a peer review committee said. "It is an indisputable fact that misrepresentation took place," said Dr. Lewis Thomas, president of the center, at a two hour news conference. The scientist is Dr. William T.

Summerlin, 35, a physician and immunology researcher who admitted that early on the morning of March 26, he used a pen to darken patches on the skin of two white mice, the committee said. By doing this, Summerlin made it appear that he had been able to successfully transplant skin between animals that were genetically incompatible by first storing the skin in a common laboratory culture solution, the committee indicated. Michigan Roundup AIW Settles in Jackson JACKSON (AP) Allied Industrial Workers Local 670 has ratified a new three-year contract with Kelsey-Hayes ending a strike of nearly 12 weeks. The agreement, reached Wednesday, was approved, 739 to 99. Following the ratification announcement, Donald Varblow, plant manager, said he was "relieved and happy" at the outcome of the vote.

Levin Knocks Rail Plan MARQUETTE, (AP) Gubernatorial candidate Sander Levin says using the "meat axe" approach to rail reorganization will leave parts of Michigan without service. A Department of Transportation proposal to reduce Michigan's track mileage by 37 per cent would force parts of the state to rely on motor transit, the Berkley Democrat said Friday as hearings on the plan concluded. A spokesman for Wickes Corp. opposed the plan because 20 per cent of the route it uses for rail service in northern Michiigan and the Upper Peninsula has been recommended for abandonment. The record from the state hearings is supposed to aid the U.S.

Railways Association in drawing up a preliminary plan on reorganization by October. State Gets New Plant CONSTANTINE (AP)-A new transmission- parts plant employing about 100 persons is expected to go into operation in Constantine by the beginning of next year. Constantine village officials and the Spring-Brummer division of Borg- Warner Corp. of Detroit announced the plans Friday. The firm manufactures friction clutch plates for passenger and utility vehicles.

He said the south lower Michigan town was chosen because of proximity to division headquarters in a Chicago suburb and to Borg. Warner's main operation in Detroit. Conviction for Sale Of Marijuana Reversed The 30-to-40-year prison sentence of an Eaton County man for sale of less than as ounce of marijuana has been overturned by the state Court of Appeals. The court today reversed the conviction of Walter R. Farr of Charlotte, who was sentenced to prison by Eaton County Circuit Court Judge Willard L.

Mikesell March 2, 1972, less than a month before a new law lowering the penalty for marijuana sale went into effect. FARR'S SENTENCE also came just one week before the state Supreme declared the old law unconstitutional. At Farr's sentencing, state law set a 20-year minimum sentence for marijuana sale. The Controlled Substances Act that went into effect April 1, 1972, established a maximum sentence of four years. Farr was released on bond from Southern Michigan State Prison at Jackson about a month after his sentencing.

Farr, now 27, was convicted by a jury of aiding and abetting in the sale of 26 grams of marijuana to a State Police undercover agent in August, 1971. IN REVERSING the conviction, the appeals court cited a State Supreme Court ruling made March 7, 1972, which declared the marijuana law unconstitutional. The Supreme Court said the old law invited "cruel and unusual punishment" and that classifimarijuana as a hard narcotic violated the equal protection clauses of the state and federal constitutions. Justice Thomas G. Kavanagh found Michigan's old drug law unconstitutional because it was an invasion of privacy.

Kavanagh and Justice John B. Swainson also ruled the defendant, John Sinclair, was entrapped by Detroit police. THE COURT reversed Sinclair's sentence for giving two marijuana cigarettes to undercover agents. Consumers Man Burned A Consumers Power Company service man was listed in "fair" condition at St. Lawrence Hospital Friday night after being burned in a gas explosion as he tried to light a furnace.

Arnold Heinze, about 30, of Potterville, suffered second degree burns on his face and arms about 7 p.m. Friday when natural gas flowing from a defective pilot light safety valve exploded in the basement of 1141 W. Lenawee. AFTER THE explosion, Heinze crawled up the basement stairs and out to his truck to notify his dispatcher of the mishap. Consumers Division manager Charles said Power.

Heinze was turning on the gas for new occupants of the house. Brown said the failure of a pilot light safety valve is quite rare. THERE WAS no property damage at the house, according to Brown. Local Woman Sentenced Mellanie Joy Ansley, 24, of 2034 W. Lenawee, was given a sentence of one and a half to 14 years in prison Friday for cashing traveler's checks stolen from Washburne Travel Center last December.

Police say about $36,000 00 in blank traveler's checks were taken in a burglary that also netted $135 in cash. Ms. Ansley was picked up Dec. 5, 1973 at Jacobson's in East Lansing where they say she presented some of the checks. INGHAM COUNTY Circuit Court Judge Ray Hotchkiss gave Ms.

Ansley 15 days credit in alloting the prison sentence. In an unrelated case before Hotchkiss, Ms. Ansley stood mute to the charge of gross indecency. Boys Call Off Strike boys the north side Lansing Boy's Club, at 1235 Center called off their oneday strike because their demands have been met. "We had a meeting with Chuck Strasburg, unit director, Wednesday night and he has decided to work and play with the kids more often," said Joe Gutierrez, leader of the strike.

Wednesday afternoon, about 10 young boys ages 5 to 16 picketed the club because they were dissatisfied with Strasburg and the program. No Mail on Monday There will be no residential or business area mail delivery on Memorial Day, but special delivery service will be available, the U.S. Postal Service has announced. Mail will be picked up from boxes designated air mail (white top) or those with one or two white stars as late in the day as possible to meet established airmail and first class service standards, officials said. COLLECTIONS WILL also be made from most "no-star" boxes.

Normal weekend service will be provided today and Sunday. Local, Area Deaths Myrtie Dershem ST. JOHNS -Services for Mrs. Myrtie Dershem, 85, of 200 N. Lansing who died Thursday, will be Sunday at 2 p.m.

at the Osgood Funeral Home. Mrs. Dershem is survived by three daughters, Mrs. Martha Klopp of Lansing, Mrs. Marjorie Fritzche of High Park, and Mrs.

Norma Jacob of Tennessee: a Mrs. McKenzie of Breckinhalf ridge; and three sons, Harold and Francis of St. Johns and Lester of St. Louis. Vera Edington DANSVILLE Mrs.

Vera C. Edington, 85, of 726 Mahlon, died Thursday at a local hospital. Mrs. Edington had been a lifelong resident of Lansing. Surviving is a grandson, Max Edington of Lansing, four one great and several nieces.

Services will be held at 1 p.m. Tuesday at the GorslineRunciman Lansing Chapel. Darrell A. Crandell CHARLOTTE Funeral services for Darrell A. Crandell, 44, of 504 E.

Lovett will be at 2 p.m. Sunday at the Pray Funeral Home. Crandell was killed Thursday night in a tractor accident at his farm. Frances Crocker ITHACA A Frances E. Crocker, 74, died Friday morning at Gratiot Community Hospital.

is survived by a daughter, Mrs. Warner Sadler of Ashley, and two sons, Verle of Ithaca, and Robert of Ashley. Services will be Sunday at 2 p.m. in the Bebe-Dewey Funeral Home. Clarence Lopshire Clarence J.

Lopshire, 88, of 1016 Parker, died Friday at a local hospital. Funeral arrangements are pending with the GorslineRunciman Lansing Chapel. Eaton County Murder Suspect Arraigned CHARLOTTE Billie Lee Bargy was arraigned Thursday in Eaton County Circuit Court on an open murder charge in the slaying of a Lansing youth four years ago. Circuit Court Judge Willard Mikesell remanded Bargy to Eaton County Jail where he is being held without bond to await trial. BARGY, 43, was brought back to Eaton County in April from Denver, Colo.

to face the murder charges. He is accused in the shooting death of Stanley Casey, 15, of 4825 Lansing Road, on June 12, 1970. Casey's body was found in a ditch along Broadway Road south of Charlotte with a .22 caliber bullet in the back of his Bulldozer Cop Nabs Speeder Lansing Police officer Tim Poxson gives chase to speeders with a James Bondian flair. And although he may not set any speed records for the chase, he has to be given credit for ingenuity in "getting his man." RECENTLY POXSON, driving alone in his patrol car, bore down on a speeding motorcyclist on Lansing's south side. But the crafty cyclist ducked into a vacant field with some mighty rough terrain, where the patrol car couldn't follow.

Poxson was not to be thwarted. Spotting a bulldozer crawling along slowly in another section of the field, Poxson summoned the dozer operator and asked for aid in the chase. The driver consented, and Poxson, hopped aboard. never expected to be chasing someone on a bulldozer," Poxson related afterwards. REALIZING THE chase was still on despite his field maneuver, the biker grew panicky.

But the newly-initiated, slow-speed "patrol car" kept plodding along, eventually cornering the biker. The motorcyclist, described by police as an 18- vear-old high school student, was taken into custody and charged with speeding. Curses, nabbed by a bulldozer and a persistent cop. head. gene Hoag Bargy has Eaton County, Sheriff Eubeen a suspect in the murder for more than a year and a half.

Hoag had asked Colorado authorities to put a hold on Bargy if they found him, and he was arrested in Denver in late March on a minor charge. HOAG SAID his department had followed hundreds of leads in the case. But he said no one had earned any of the $3.500 in reward money offered for information leading to a conviction in the case. was a ninth grader at Waverly East Junior High School. Three months after his murder, his mother, Mrs.

Mabel Casey, took her own life. Circuit Court Action INGHAM COUNTY ARRAIGNMENTS Judge Ray C. Hotchkiss Charles A. Lorraine, 19, of 400 E. Higham, St.

Johns, and Kenneth R. Perry, 18, of 1630 W. Price, St. Johns, both stood mute to larceny in a building, both pleaded guilty to attempted larceny in a building, both pleas accepted, both remanded to county jail to a await sentencing. Marvin A.

Benton, 23, of 2800 Beau Jardin, stood mute to four counts of obtaining money under false pretenses, bond continued for trial. David Galindo Chavez, 19, of 5823 cardy, stood mute to possession of Pio. caine, bond continued for trial. William S. Felts, Pontiac, stood mute to carrying a concealed weapon, bond continued for trial.

Melanie Joy Ansley, 24, of 2034 W. Lenawee, stood mute to gross indecency, bond continued for trial. Judge Jack W. Warren Luanna L. Ankney, 19, of 3122 Roborn, stood mute to delivery of cocaine, bond continued for trial.

Steven Aaron Pierce, 17, of 2105 Sunnyside, stood mute to two counts of breaking and entering, bond continued for trial. Marshall L. Otis, 31, of 4016 Lowcraft, stood mute to arson, bond continued for trial. Jay Wilbert Pratcher, 24, of 516 S. Pine, stood mute to larceny in a building, remanded to county jail for trial.

Judge Thomas L. Brown James Lee Reynolds, 24, of 1916 Hoyt, stood mute to carrying a concealed weapon, remanded to county jail for trial. Steven Rutledge, 19, of 411 E. Howe, stood mute to delivery of L.S.D., pleaded guilty to possession of L.S.D., plea alcepted, bond continued for sentencing. Walter R.

Stine, 19, of 259 W. Grand River, and Terrance M. Conlisk, no age listed, of 4986 Shephardville, St. Johns, both stood mute to breaking and entering, and possession of burglar tools, bond continued for both for trial. Cristobal Rodriquez, 25, of 704 Julia, and Juan Cavaios, no age listed, of 920 S.

Washington, both stood mute to delivery of cocaine, bond continued on both for trial. Lonnie H. Moore, 21, of 206 Main, stood mute to attempted gross indecency, bond continued for trial. and Juan Cavajos, no age listed, of 920 S. trial.

stood mute to attempted gross indecency, bond continued for trial. John Wesley Cox, 17, of 1314 W. Ottawa, stood mute to two counts of larceny in a building, remanded to county jail for trial. Judge Donald L. Reisiq Patrick James Nilson, no age listed, of 503 S.

Francis, stood mute to breaking and entering an occupied building, bond continued for trial. Paul Edward Taylor, no age or address listed, stood mute to aid in concealing embezzled property, and aid in concealing stolen property, bond continued for trial. Frank William Foster, no age or address listed, stood mute on delivery of heroin, bond continued for trial. Danny Thayer, no age or address listed, stood mute to larceny by conversion, bond continued by remanded to county jail on another case. Judge James T.

Kallman Linda Marie Shanklin, 21, of 6225 Balfour, stood mute to illegal possession with intent to deliver heroin, bond tinued. Joseph Summerville, 21, of 1131 Kingsley Court, stood mute to uttering and publishing, bond continued. Don Whitford and Danny Olsen, no ages or addresses listed, bth std ages or addresses listed, both stood mute to breaking and entering and receiving and-or aiding in the concealment of stolen oroperty, bond continued for Olsen, Whitford remanded to county jail to await trial. Car Wayne Aldridge, no age listed. of 300 S.

Jenison Lane, stood mute to illegal posssesion with intent to deliver heroin, bond continued. Marty Ross Langin, 17, of 1505 N. Logan, stood mute to breaking and entering, pleaded guilty entry without breaking, remanded to county jail. SENTENCES Judge Ray C. Hotchkiss Mellanie Joy Ansley, 24, of 2034 W.

Lenawee, passing bad checks, one and a half to 14 years Michigan Corrections Commission, 15 days credit. Thomas Roger Watters, 27, of 5909 Piper, attempted carrying a concealed weapon, one year probation, with first 90 days in county jail, to be suspended if not in possession of a firearm for a year, 22 days credit, and $200 court costs. Michael James Wright, 19, no address listed, larceny in a building, two years probation with last six months in county jail, three days credit, and $200 costs. Ernest Washington, 19, of 403 N. Sycamore, attempted larceny in a building, 18 to 24 months Michigan Corrections Commission, 67 days credit.

Judge Jack W. Warren Clair E. Morgan 47, of 1710 W. St. Joe, stood mute to receiving and concealing stolen property, pleaded guilty to receiving and concealing stolen property under $100, plea accepted, sentenced to 60 days in county jail to commence June 10.

Judge Thomas L. Brown John Edward Jeffrey, no age listed, of 3524 Ronald, larceny in a building, two years probation and $200 costs. Stephen Lee Woods, no age listed, of 1887 Aurelius, Holt, breaking and entering motor vehicle, three years probation and $150 costs, youthful trainee status granted. Serving Lansing Since 1917 Lavey Funeral Home Exclusive But Not Expensive 1003 N. Washington Ave.

Ph. IV 4-6329 1 VI Judge Donald L. Reisig Willie Blocker, no age or address listed, felonious assault, two years probation and $100 costs. Judge James T. Kaliman William H.

Mason, 31, of Southfield, unlawfully driving away an automobile without intent to steal, two years probation and $300 costs. EATON COUNTY ARRAIGNMENTS (May 16) Judge Richard Robinson Pauline Rogers, 34, of Lansing, stood mute to larceny of a building, bond continued for trial. Mark Jones, 22, of Lansing, stood mute to breaking and entering, bond continued for trial. Kenneth Nelson. 18, of Charlotte, stood mute to larceny in a building, bond continued for trial.

Joel Heyboer, 20, of Lansing, stood mute to possession with intent to deliver LSD, bond continued for trial. Donald Schwerin, 33. of Charlotte, stood mute to felonious assault, remanded county jail for trial. ARRAIGNMENTS (May 23) Judge Willard Mikesell Billie Bargy, of Denver. stood mute to an oper, charge of murder, remanded to county jail to await trial.

Mark D. Jones, 22, of Lansing, stood mute to breaking and entering, bond continued for trial. Mark Wiley, no age listed, of Sunfield. stood mute to breaking and entering, request for youthful trainee status, denied, bond continued for trial. SENTENCES (MAY 16) Judge Richard Robinson Gretta Eggers MASON Mrs.

Gretta L. Eggers, 63, of 636 W. Center died Thursday in a local hospital. She is survived by her husband, Henry and two sons, Bruce and Richard, both of Mason. She was a lifetime resident of the Mason area.

Services will be at the Gorsline-Runciman, Ball Dunn Chapel, Mason, May 28 at 1 p.m. Contributions may be given to the Heart Fund. Accident Victim Services Slated Funeral services for Hal Coburn Wade, 57, of 2032 Culver, who was killed Friday morning in an automobile accident, will be Tuesday at 11 a.m. at the North Presbyterian Church. Graveside services are scheduled for 3 p.m.

Tuesday at West Cemetery in Hesperia. The accident occurred at Grand River Ave. and Larch about 6:55 a.m. Friday. The driver of the second car, identified as Robert V.

Lang, 22, of 1432 Lyons, was treated for injuries at Sparrow Hospital and released. Friends of Mr. Wade may call at the Gorsline-Runciman Lansing Chapel from 7 to 9 p.m. Saturday and from 2 to 4 p.m. and 7 to 9 p.m.

Sunday and Monday. CONTRIBUTIONS MAY be made to the Hal Wade memorial fund in care of North Presbyterian Church. Mr. Wade was a ruling elder and deacon of the church and worked with the Sunday school program. He is survived by his wife, Dorothy, a daughter, Mrs.

Otto Danby II of Pataskala, Ohio; a son, Hal C. Wade Jr. of Bartlesville, Oklahoma; and his mother, Mrs. Wade of Lansing and- brothers Aubrey and Rex both of Kalamazoo. Joel Wilson, 17, of Lansng, breaking and entering two years probation, $200 fine and $400 court costs.

Dean Parish, 18, of Charlotte, larceny of a building, two years probation $100 fine and $200 costs. Glen Haring, 17, of Eaton Rapids, larceny in a building, two years probation, $200 fine and $400 costs. Spencer Dowell, 17. of Holt, larceny of a building, two years probation $200 fine and $400 costs. William Huntoon, no age listed of Charlotte larceny in a building, two years probation $100 fine and $200 costs.

Gloria Horton, 25, of Lansing, larceny of building, nine months in county jail. Robert Gabel, no age listed. of Morris, larceny of a person, nine months in county jail and two years probation. Charla Head, Eaton Rapids, larceny of building, two years probation. Jason Bywater, Eaton Rapids, breaking and entering, two to ten years, Michigan Corrections Commission.

Randy Mills, from Charlotte, larceny of a building, two years probation, $100 fine and $200 costs. SENTENCES (MAY 23) Judge Willard Mikesell Tyrone Lafayette, 25, of Lansing, attempted larceny in a building, 16 months to two years Michigan Corrections Commission. Jerry Adams, no age listed, of Eaton Rapids, driving under the influence of liqvor, second offense. two years probation and $300 costs and fine. Terry R.

Black, no age listed, of Sunfield, possession of a dangerous weapon, three years probation and 0800 costs and fine. Terry L. Washburn. no age listed, of Eaton Rapids, breaking and entering an unoccupied building, two to ten years Michigan Corrections, Commission, two days credit. Robert Lightner, no age listed, of Charlotte, larceny in a building, two years probation, and $500 costs and fine.

Kathleen Rogers no age listed, of Lansing, attempted larceny in a building, two years probation, with first 30 days in county jail and 0600 costs and fine. Joseph Henry, no age listed. Charlotte, breaking and entering. two to ten years Michigan Corrections Commission, 82 days credit. Roger Franks, no age listed, of Vermontville, attempted breaking and entering an unoccupied building, two and half to five years Michigan Corrections Commission, 113 days credit.

Aberdeen, cloudy Amsterdam, partly cloudy Ankara, ar Athens, clear Auckland, clear Berlin, partly cloudy Birmingham, partly cloudy Brussels, partly cloudy Cairo, clear Casablanca, clear Copenhagen, partly cloudy Dublin, cloudy Geneva, cloudy Hong Kong, clear London, rain Madrid, clear Malta, clear Manila, partly cloudy Moscow, rain New Delhi, partly Nice, Thunderstorm GERANIUMS 09 Large 4-Inch Pots All Colors 75 Ea. BARNES Avenue Floral 725 W. Barnes IV 5-5431 FOR SALE: Used baby Grand piano in nice condition. $895. MacLaughlin's Piano and Organ Mart.

Phone 487-5995 1606 E. Michigan.

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