Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 ADRIAN POLICE DEPARTMENT ALBION DPS ALLEGAN POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF VINCENT P EMRICK CHIEF SCOTT KIPP CHIEF JAY GIBSON 155 E. MAUMEE STREET 112 W CASS ST 170 MONROE ST ADRIAN MI 49221 ALBION MI 49224 ALLEGAN MI 49010 TX: 517-264-4846 TX: 517-629-3933 TX: 269-673-2115 FAX: 517-264-1927 FAX: 517-629-7828 FAX: 269-673-5170 ADRIAN TOWNSHIP POLICE ALCONA COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE ALLEN PARK POLICE DEPARTMENT SHERIFF SCOTT A. STEPHENSON DEPARTMENT CHIEF GARY HANSELMAN 214 WEST MAIN CHIEF CHRISTOPHER S EGAN 2907 TIPTON HWY HARRISVILLE MI 48740 15915 SOUTHFIELD RD ADRIAN MI 49221 TX: 989-724-6271 ALLEN PARK MI 48101 TX: 517-264-1000 FAX: 989-724-6181 TX: 313-386-7800 FAX: 517-265-6300 FAX: 313-386-4158 ALGER COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE ADRIAN-BLISSFIELD RAILROAD SHERIFF TODD BROCK ALLEN PARK POLICE POLICE 101 EAST VARNUM STE B DEPARTMENT CHIEF MARK W. DOBRONSKI MUNISING MI 49862 CHIEF CHRISTOPHER S EGAN 38235 N. EXECUTIVE DR. TX: 906-387-4444 15915 SOUTHFIELD RD WESTLAND MI 48185 FAX: 906-387-1728 ALLEN PARK MI 48101 TX: 734-641-2300 TX: 313-386-7800 FAX: 734-641-2323 ALLEGAN COUNTY SHERIFFS FAX: OFFICE AKRON POLICE DEPARTMENT SHERIFF FRANK BAKER ALMA DEPARTMENT OF PUBLIC CHIEF MATTHEW SIMERSON 640 RIVER ST. SAFETY 4380 BEACH STREET ALLEGAN MI 49010 CHIEF KENDRA OVERLA P.O. BOX 295 TX: 269-673-0500 525 EAST SUPERIOR AKRON MI 48701 FAX: 269-673-0406 ALMA MI 48801 TX: 989-691-5354 TX: 989-463-8317 FAX: 989-691-5423 FAX: 989-463-6233 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 ALMONT POLICE DEPARTMENT AMTRAK RAILROAD POLICE ARGENTINE TOWNSHIP POLICE CHIEF ANDREW MARTIN DEPUTY CHIEF JOSEPH DEPARTMENT 817 NORTH MAIN PATTERSON CHIEF DANIEL K ALLEN ALMONT MI 48003 600 DEY ST. 8274 SILVER LAKE RD TX: 810-798-8300 NILES MI 49120 LINDEN MI 48451 FAX: 810-798-3397 TX: 312-720-8441 TX: 810-735-5317 FAX: 269-683-0862 FAX: 810-735-5506 ALPENA COUNTY PROSECUTING ATTORNEY ANN ARBOR POLICE DEPARTMENT ARMADA POLICE DEPARTMENT PROSECUTOR CYNTHIA CHIEF MICHAEL COX CHIEF MICHAEL PATRICK MUSZYNSKI 301 EAST HURON AVE. 74274 BURK ST 719 WEST CHISOLM STREET ANN ARBOR MI 48104 74274 BURK STREET SUITE 2 TX: 734-794-6910 ARMADA MI 48005 ALPENA MI 49707 FAX: 734-994-9268 TX: 586-784-9152 TX: 989-354-9745 FAX: 586-784-4235 FAX: 989-354-9788 ANTRIM COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE SHERIFF DANIEL S BEAN AU GRES POLICE DEPARTMENT ALPENA COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE PO BOX 568 CHIEF CHARLES H. ALLEN JR. SHERIFF STEVEN J KIELISZEWSKI BELLAIRE MI 49615 124 EAST HURON 320 JOHNSON ST TX: 231-533-8627 PO BOX 121 ALPENA MI 49707 FAX: 231-533-5803 AU GRES MI 48703 TX: 989-354-9836 TX: 989-876-8821 FAX: 989-354-9867 ARENAC COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE FAX: 989-876-6462 SHERIFF JAMES MOSCISKI ALPENA POLICE DEPARTMENT 126 NORTH GROVE ST AUBURN HILLS POLICE CHIEF JOEL W JETT PO BOX 606 DEPARTMENT 501 WEST CHISHOLM ST STANDISH MI 48658 CHIEF JEFFREY BAKER ALPENA MI 49707 TX: 989-846-3002 1899 N. SQUIRREL RD TX: 989-354-1800 FAX: 989-846-1100 AUBURN HILLS MI 48326 FAX: 989-354-1805 TX: 248-370-9460 FAX: 248-370-9365 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 AUGUSTA POLICE DEPARTMENT BANGOR POLICE DEPARTMENT BARRY COUNTY SHERIFFS CHIEF JEFFREY HEPPLER CHIEF THOMAS SIMPSON OFFICE 109 WEST CLINTON ST 257 W. MONROE ST. SHERIFF DAR LEAF PO BOX 216 BANGOR MI 49013 1212 WEST STATE ST AUGUSTA MI 49012 TX: 269-427-5801 HASTINGS MI 49058 TX: 269-731-4338 FAX: 269-427-5418 TX: 269-948-4805 FAX: 269-731-5255 FAX: 269-948-4831 BARAGA COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE BAD AXE POLICE DEPARTMENT SHERIFF JOE BROGAN BARRY TOWNSHIP POLICE CHIEF DAVID W ROTHE 940 US 41 SOUTH DEPARTMENT 100 SOUTH HANSELMAN PO BOX 307 CHIEF MARK D. DOSTER BAD AXE MI 48413 LANSE MI 49946 11300 SO. M-43 HWY TX: 989-269-9242 TX: 906-524-6177 P.O. BOX 311 FAX: 989-269-6154 FAX: 906-524-5577 DELTON MI 49046 TX: 269-623-5512 BANCROFT POLICE DEPARTMENT BARAGA POLICE DEPARTMENT FAX: 269-623-5509 CHIEF PHILIP HRUSKA CHIEF IRVIN SMITH 120 WARREN ST 100 HEMLOCK ST BARRYTON POLICE DEPARTMENT PO BOX 97 BARAGA MI 49908 CHIEF SCOTT MORGAN BANCROFT MI 48414 TX: 906-353-7181 94 ANGEL STREET TX: 989-634-9771 FAX: 906-353-7189 PO BOX 31 FAX: 989-634-5911 BARRYTON MI 49305 BARODA-LAKE TOWNSHIP POLICE TX: 989-382-7822 BANGOR POLICE DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT FAX: 989-382-5149 CHIEF THOMAS SIMPSON CHIEF SHAWN A MARTIN 257 W. MONROE ST. 3169 W. SHAWNEE RD BATH TOWNSHIP POLICE BANGOR MI 49013 P.O. BOX 816 DEPARTMENT TX: 269-427-5801 BRIDGMAN MI 49106 CHIEF LYLE LINDEMULDER FAX: 269-427-5418 TX: 269-465-3258 14480 WEBSTER FAX: 269-466-2170 PO BOX 247 BATH MI 48808 TX: 517-641-6271 FAX: 517-641-8189 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 BATTLE CREEK POLICE DEPARTMENT BEAVERTON POLICE DEPARTMENT BELLAIRE POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF JAMES BLOCKER CHIEF BRAD DAVIS CHIEF WILLIAM DROLLINGER 34 NORTH DIVISION 126 W. BROWN STREET P.O. BOX 557 BATTLE CREEK MI 49014 P.O. BOX 477 BELLAIRE MI 49615 TX: 269-966-3322 BEAVERTON MI 48612 TX: FAX: 269-966-3583 TX: 989-435-9111 FAX: FAX: 989-435-8503 BAY CITY DPS BELLEVILLE POLICE DEPARTMENT DIRECTOR MICHAEL J CECCHINI BEAVERTON POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF DAVID ROBINSON 501 THIRD ST CHIEF BRAD DAVIS 6 MAIN ST BAY CITY MI 48708 126 W. BROWN STREET BELLEVILLE MI 48111 TX: 989-892-8571 P.O. BOX 477 TX: 734-699-2710 FAX: 989-892-5607 BEAVERTON MI 48612 FAX: 734-699-3767 TX: 989-435-9111 BAY COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE FAX: BELLEVUE POLICE DEPARTMENT SHERIFF TROY CUNNINGHAM CHIEF TIMOTHY GRIFFIN 503 THIRD ST BELDING POLICE DEPARTMENT 201 NORTH MAIN STREET BAY CITY MI 48708 CHIEF DALE E. NELSON BELLEVUE MI 49021 TX: 989-895-4050 120 S. PLEASANT ST. TX: 269-763-9429 FAX: 989-895-4058 BELDING MI 48809 FAX: 269-763-9998 TX: 616-794-1900 BAY MILLS TRIBAL POLICE FAX: 616-794-4807 BENTON HARBOR POLICE DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT CAPTAIN RONALD CARRICK BELLAIRE POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF DANIEL MCGINNIS 12449 W LAKESHORE DR CHIEF WILLIAM DROLLINGER 251 E. MARKET BRIMLEY MI 49715 P.O. BOX 557 PO BOX 648 TX: 906-248-3244 BELLAIRE MI 49615 BENTON HARBOR MI 49022 FAX: 906-248-3306 TX: TX: 269-927-8423 FAX: 231-533-8753 FAX: 269-927-8423 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 BENTON TOWNSHIP POLICE BERRIEN SPRINGS-ORONOKO BIRMINGHAM POLICE DEPARTMENT TOWNSHIP POLICE DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT CHIEF BRIAN M. SMIT CHIEF PAUL TOLIVER CHIEF MARK H CLEMENCE 1725 TERRITORIAL RD 4411 EAST SNOW RD 151 MARTIN BENTON HARBOR MI 49022 PO BOX 97 PO BOX 3001 TX: 269-926-8221 BERRIEN SPRINGS MI 49103 BIRMINGHAM MI 48012 FAX: 269-926-9533 TX: 269-471-2813 TX: 248-530-1870 FAX: 269-471-4367 FAX: 248-530-1270 BENZIE COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE SHERIFF KYLE ROSA BEVERLY HILLS DPS BISHOP INTERNATIONAL 505 SOUTH MICHIGAN AVE DIRECTOR RICHARD C TORONGEAU AIRPORT AUTHORITY BEULAH MI 49617 18600 W 13 MILE RD CHIEF WAYNE MCINTYRE TX: 231-882-4484 FRANKLIN MI 48025 G-3425 W. BRISTOL RD FAX: 231-882-5814 TX: 248-540-3400 FLINT MI 48507 FAX: 248-540-3437 TX: 810-235-6560 BERKLEY DPS FAX: 810-233-3065 DIRECTOR MATTHEW KOEHN BIG RAPIDS DPS 2395 WEST 12 MILE RD DIRECTOR DANIELLE HAYNES BLACKMAN TOWNSHIP DPS BERKLEY MI 48072 435 N. MICHIGAN AVE DIRECTOR MICHAEL L. JESTER TX: 248-658-3380 BIG RAPIDS MI 49307 1996 WEST PARNALL FAX: 248-658-3381 TX: 231-527-0005 JACKSON MI 49201 FAX: 231-592-5570 TX: 517-788-4223 BERRIEN COUNTY SHERIFFS FAX: 517-788-4688 OFFICE BIRCH RUN POLICE DEPARTMENT SHERIFF LEONARD PAUL BAILEY CHIEF JASON A LEIDEL BLISSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT 919 PORT ST 12060 HEATH ST CHIEF DALE A GREENLEAF SAINT JOSEPH MI 49085 PO BOX 371 130 S LANE ST TX: 269-983-7141 BIRCH RUN MI 48415 BLISSFIELD MI 49228 FAX: 269-983-9956 TX: 989-624-1113 TX: FAX: 989-624-4979 FAX: 517-682-1036 Michigan Law Enforcement Agencies 07/15/2021 BLISSFIELD POLICE DEPARTMENT BRANCH COUNTY SHERIFFS OFFICE BRIGHTON POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF DALE A GREENLEAF SHERIFF C JOHN POLLACK CHIEF ROBERT BRADFORD 130 S LANE ST 580 MARSHALL RD 440 SOUTH THIRD ST BLISSFIELD MI 49228 COLDWATER MI 49036 BRIGHTON MI 48116 TX: TX: 517-278-2325 TX: 810-227-2700 FAX: FAX: 517-278-5698 FAX: 810-227-2063 BLOOMFIELD HILLS DPS BRECKENRIDGE POLICE BRONSON POLICE DEPARTMENT DIRECTOR NOEL CLASON DEPARTMENT CHIEF STEPHEN P JOHNSON 45 E LONG LAKE RD CHIEF JAMES A DURHAM 124 SOUTH MATTESON ST BLOOMFIELD HILLS MI 48304 104 EAST SAGINAW ST. BRONSON MI 49028 TX: 248-644-4200 P.O. BOX 276 TX: 517-369-9083 FAX: 248-644-0972 BRECKENRIDGE MI 48615 FAX: 517-369-2901 TX: 989-842-5657 BLOOMFIELD TOWNSHIP POLICE FAX: 989-842-3138 BROWN CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT DEPARTMENT CHIEF PHIL LANGMEYER BRIDGEPORT TOWNSHIP POLICE LT. EMILY MEDAUGH 4200 S TELEGRAPH RD DEPARTMENT 4205 MAIN ST BLOOMFIELD HILLS MI 48302 CHIEF DAVID A DUFFETT BROWN CITY MI 48416 TX: 248-433-7754 6740 DIXIE HWY TX: 810-346-2325 FAX: 248-433-7785 BRIDGEPORT MI 48722 FAX: 810-346-3802 TX: 989-777-2800 BOYNE CITY POLICE DEPARTMENT FAX: 989-777-5790 BROWNSTOWN TOWNSHIP CHIEF JEFF D GAITHER POLICE DEPARTMENT 319 NORTH LAKE ST BRIDGMAN POLICE DEPARTMENT CHIEF JEFFERY WATSON BOYNE CITY MI 49712 CHIEF DANIEL J.
Recommended publications
  • Washtenaw County Economic Graphs
    EDA Community Economic Adjustment Program Community Profile for Washtenaw County, Michigan EDA Community Economic Adjustment Program Introduction Washtenaw County is located in the southeastern area of Michigan. The county’s 720 square mile area is home to about 344,000 people spread among 28 municipalities. These municipalities include the cities of Ann Arbor, Ypsilanti, Saline, Milan, and Chelsea; the villages of Dexter, Manchester, and Barton Hills; as well as 20 townships. Ann Arbor is the Washtenaw County Seat, as well as the largest of the five cities. Image Source: Mapquest.com Washtenaw County is bordered by Wayne County on the east, Monroe and Lenawee Counties to the south, Jackson County to the west, and Livingston and Oakland Counties to the north. The Detroit Metropolitan Airport, as well as the City of Detroit, is located approximately 30 miles east in Wayne County. The County name is derived from the Chippewa Native American word “Wash-ten-ong”, meaning Grand River. Much important history developed rather quickly in Washtenaw. The Territory of Michigan (founded in 1805) outlined the boundaries of Washtenaw County in 1822, although the area administratively became a separate County in 1826, having previously been governed as part of Wayne County. The first permanent European settlement in Washtenaw County was initiated by Major Benjamin Woodruff in 1823 approximately a mile southeast of Ypsilanti. Soon after, in early 1825, the Village of Ann Arbor was founded by John Allen and Elisha Rumsey, who purchased the land from the Governor in order to sell it to settlers expanding westward. Ann Arbor was selected as the county seat the same year of its founding, despite the fact that the first cabin there had been built just that spring and the entire county had only between 15 and 30 residents and the village did not yet have a name.
    [Show full text]
  • DRP St Andrews Abolitionism
    Race, Slavery, and Moral Argument in 19th century Ann Arbor For ‘Black and White in Ann Arbor’ St. Andrew’s Episcopal Church, Ann Arbor, 14 November 2018 Derek R. Peterson University of Michigan This talk is meant to bring to view aspects of Ann Arbor’s 19th century history that—while long past—continue to shape the present in which we live. Slavery is woven into the fabric of the early history of this part of Michigan. There were 33 slaves among the 483 residents of Fort Detroit in the year 1750. Many of them labored in the fur trade, carrying pelts to the eastern colonies during the warm summer. Lewis Cass, named territorial governor of Michigan by President James Madison between 1813 and 1831, was a slave owner. So was William MacComb, after whom MacComb county was named. He owned Grosse Ile and Belle Isle and several houses and a great amount of livestock; he also owned people. The names of the people he owned—which he listed in a 1791 inventory—were Scipio, Tom, Charly, and Jim Girty. Together the slaves’ value was 1,655 pounds in New York currency. Detroit’s first mayor, John R. Williams—after whom two major streets in Detroit are named—owned slaves. The Catholic church in Detroit was heavily invested in slavery—priests owned slaves and baptized them; and at least one slave worked in the construction of St. Anne’s Church in 1800. The men who owned the Detroit Free Press when it was founded in 1831 were slaveowners, and during the 19th century the paper supported slavery.
    [Show full text]
  • Ann Arbor, Michigan
    Ann Arbor When John Allen and Elisha Rumsey established the town of "Annarbour" in 1824, the two land speculators named the settlement after their wives, both named Ann, and a grove of trees where the women preferred to meet. From that bucolic beginning, Ann Arbor has grown into a city of more than 110,000 people. It is home to one of the nation's finest public universities, and has become a industrial hub for a variety of commercial enterprises, from automotive design to pizza. Since its inception, the Bentley Historical Library of the University of Michigan has collected materials on the history of Ann Arbor and its residents. There are numerous collections that spotlight the city's culture, architecture, history, and a long tradition of social outreach. This guide is designed to inform interested researchers of the existence of unique materials currently held by the Bentley Historical Library. Listed are manuscript collections and selected publications reflecting the life, history and culture of Ann Arbor. These materials are open to researchers for the study of the social, political, religious, and economic dimensions of this community. Table of Contents African-Americans .......................................................................................................................... 3 Ann Arbor: Architects and Architecture ......................................................................................... 9 Arts ...............................................................................................................................................
    [Show full text]
  • A History of the German Settlers in Washtenaw County
    A HISTORY OF THE GERMAN SETTLERS IN WASHTENAW COUNTY 1830 to 1930 by: Dale R. Herter and Terry Stollsteimer January 2007 (updated January 2009) This is a brief history of a group of German immigrants who settled in Washtenaw County, Michigan. They are our ancestors, the ancestors of many families from Washtenaw County, and the ancestors of a number of people spread across the United States. These immigrants probably numbered over 1,500 families and emigrated from various portions of German-speaking Europe. They settled in Washtenaw County from 1830 to around 1900. Theirs is an American immigration story that has many parallels in other parts of the United States; one in which immigrants arrived in a strange land, spoke a different language from the majority, and therefore tended to form a cohesive community bound by a common language and customs. We often resist thinking of our own ancestors as poor, foreign-tongued immigrants, similar to many immigrant groups of today, who also tend to stay together in separate communities. This self-imposed isolation can have consequences, as these immigrants are sometimes on the receiving end of unflattering descriptions and even outright prejudicial taunts, but given their achievements, they are often admired as well. These were our ancestors too, at one time. During the early decades of European settlement in Washtenaw County, from around 1820 to1850, settlers consisted primarily of 4 groups: (1) Americans (Yankees) of primarily British descent from New England, New York, and the mid-Atlantic States, (2) English- speaking immigrants from Canada, (3) the Irish (who spoke English), and (4) the Germans.
    [Show full text]
  • Final Report Proposed Fourth and Fifth Avenue Historic District Study
    FINAL REPORT PROPOSED FOURTH AND FIFTH AVENUE HISTORIC DISTRICT STUDY Fourth and Fifth Avenue Historic District Study Committee Adopted MAY 17, 2010 CHARGE OF THE HISTORIC DISTRICT STUDY COMMITTEE Pursuant Chapter 103, Section 8:408 of Ann Arbor City Code, the Fourth and Fifth Avenue Historic District Study Committee (“Study Committee”) was established by the Ann Arbor City Council to evaluate a residential area just south of downtown Ann Arbor to determine if it meets the criteria for historic district designation. The Study Committee was established by Council vote on August 17, 2009 and members were appointed on September 8, 2009. The Study Committee was given until September 2010 to complete its work and make its recommendation to City Council in the form of this report. The City Council also passed a resolution establishing a six-month moratorium on building permits in the proposed historic district was to expire on February 6, 2010. A six-month extension of the moratorium was passed by City Council on February 1, 2010, extending it until August 6, 2010. STUDY COMMITTEE MEMBERS Patrick McCauley, Chair, is a graduate of the University of Michigan with a BA in History. He has worked on older and historic homes for over 20 years with his family's painting business. He has restored three houses on his own since 2001, and won a Rehabilitation Award from the Ann Arbor Historic District Commission in 2007 for the rehabilitation of his 1845 Greek Revival-style house. Kristi Gilbert, Vice Chair, is a ten year resident of the Old West Side.
    [Show full text]
  • Michigan Imprints, 1851-1876
    Michigan Imprints, 1851-1876 Volume 2: 1861-1870 • Entries 1259-3397 Prepared by LeRoy Barnett from data compiled by the Michigan staff and other members of the American Imprints Inventory, 1938-1942 Michigan State University Libraries East Lansing, Michigan 2013 Michigan State University Libraries 366 West Circle Drive East Lansing, Michigan 48824 ©2013 by Michigan State University Libraries. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America, on acid-free, SFI-certified paper (Sustainable Forestry Initiative, www.sfiprogram.org) ISBN-13: 978-1-62610-022-0 (paper, 4-volume set) ISBN-10: 1-62610-022-5 (paper, 4-volume set) Replacement copies of individual volumes of Michigan Imprints, 1851-1876 may be purchased from the Michigan State University Libraries at $19.95 per volume, plus $5 shipping and handling. To order, contact the Espresso Book Machine Coordinator, Michigan State University Libraries, 366 West Circle Drive, East Lansing, MI 48824. Email: [email protected]. Sales through bookstores, Amazon.com and other retail outlets are for the 4-volume set only. Dedicated to the Michigan staff of the American Imprints Inventory, 1938-1942 Contents 1861 ................................................... 1 1862 ................................................. 12 1863 ................................................ 22 1864 ................................................ 36 1865 ................................................ 50 1866 ................................................ 66 1867 ...............................................
    [Show full text]
  • Commencement 1971-1980
    Tig Johns h ns I Confe ig of Degree the Ninetv-sixth Academic le Baltir Maryland Digitized by the Internet Archive in 2012 with funding from LYRASIS Members and Sloan Foundation http://archive.org/details/commencement1972 ORDER OF PROCESSION MARSHALS MICHAEL BEER GERALD S. GOTTERER ROBERT E. GREEN JOHN W. GRYDER WILLIAM H. HUGGINS MONROE LERNER RICHARD A. MACKSEY CHARLES B. MARSHALL ALVIN NASON EVERETT L. SCHILLER PHOEBE B. STANTON CHARLES R. WESTGATE THE GRADUATES * MARSHALS CARL F. CHRIST ALSOPH H. CORWIN THE DEANS HONORED GUESTS OFFICERS OF THE UNIVERSITY THE TRUSTEES * MARSHALS FRANCIS ROURKE JOHN WALTON THE FACULTIES * CHIEF MARSHAL ROBERT H. ROY THE CHAPLAIN THE PROVOST OF THE UNIVERSITY CANDIDATES FOR THE JOHNS HOPKINS UNIVERSITY SOCIETY OF SCHOLARS PRESENTORS OF THE HONORARY DEGREE CANDIDATES AND THE HONORARY DEGREE CANDIDATES CHAIRMAN OF THE BOARD OF TRUSTEES THE PRESIDENT OF THE UNIVERSITY ORDER OF EVENTS STEVEN MULLER President of the University, presiding * * * PROCESSIONAL Festival March Felix Mendelssohn Bartholdy The audience is requested to stand as the Academic Procession moves into the area and to remain standing until after the Invocation and the singing of the University Ode. * INVOCATION CHESTER L. WICKWIRE Chaplain of the University * " THE STAR-SPANGLED BANNER " " THE UNIVERSITY ODE " * GREETINGS ROBERT D. H. HARVEY Chairman of the Board of Trustees * INDUCTION OF NEW MEMBERS INTO THE SOCIETY OF SCHOLARS RAY MORRIS BOWEN E. G. D. COHEN DERYL HART ANNA MARTTA HIETANEN-MAKELA ABRAHAM HORWITZ GEORGE JAMES LAWRENCE C. KOLB ALEXANDER D. LANGMUIR ROBERT Q. MARSTON DAVID ALAN PRICE EVANS CHAO-CHENG WANG W. HOWARD WRIGGINS Scholars Presented by harry woolf Provost of the University MUSICAL INTERLUDE Divertimento No.
    [Show full text]