She will be remembered for her sense of humor and positive/uplifting personality. Judy was an avid painter, a world traveler, and a doting grandparent. William Catholic Church and served as a parish religious education teacher and secretary of the Women’s Club. 31, 1948, the daughter of the late Roy and Joyce Vance. 4, 2022, at Methodist North Hospital in Memphis, Tenn.Ī native of Mitchell County, North Carolina, Judy was born Jan. Judy Bach, 74, of Millington, Tenn., died Sept. The Eagle-Marry Funeral Home – Morenci Chapel assisted with arrangements. Memorial contributions are suggested to the Lenawee County Humane Society. She is survived by son Tyson (and Candace) Sager daughter-in-law Jessica Luck grandson Jayme Sager brothers George Cleghorn, Jr., and Leonard (and Gail) Cleghorn and a sister, Connie Millron.īesides her parents and husband, she was preceded in death by a son, Triston Culp, on March 25, 2022.Īs requested, Carol’s body was donated to the University of Toledo for medical research and there will be no services. She also loved to attend to her cats, bake, cook and go bargain shopping. 27, 2016.Ĭarol work for many years at the Dari-ette in Morenci as a cook. 29, 1982, she married Mike Culp in Adrian, Mich., and he preceded her in death Jan. She attended Weston Elementary School, then Sand Creek Schools, and graduated from Morenci Area High School. Memorial donations are suggested to Evergreen Local Schools in honor of the Evergreen Elementary Library.Ĭarol Ann Culp, 72 of Morenci, Mich., died at her home Sept. 30, at Weigel Funeral Home in Metamora, with services following at 6:30 p.m. Visitation is planned from 2 to 6:30 p.m. In addition to her parents, she was preceded in death by siblings Clifford (and Nelda) Langenderfer, Harold (and Joan) Langenderfer, June King, and Jean (and Mac) Simon. Kitty is survived by five daughters, Debbie May of Cleveland, Ohio, Kathie (and Bryon) Brock of Swanton, Ohio, Pattie (and the late James) Deakin of San Diego, Calif., Mollie (and Jeff) Youtzy of Metamora and Peggie (and Paul) Haywood of Lebanon, Ohio siblings Kenneth (and Sallie) Langenderfer and Elaine Langenderfer 17 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren. She was a member of the Lyons Literary League, the Lyons VFW Auxiliary Post 7574 and the Lyons Historical Society. After raising her family, she worked as a library aide for 21 years at Evergreen Elementary School. Kitty was a 1949 graduate of Metamora High School and attended Miami of Ohio University for one year and then worked at Owens-Illinois for three years. On May 9, 1953, she married Bob Donahue in Richfield Center, Ohio. Kitty was born March 13, 1932, to Omer and Minnie (Buckenmeyer) Langenderfer. His prints are in collections at the Metropolitan Museum of Art, the Museum of Modern Art, the Philadelphia Museum of Art, the Phillips Gallery, the Fogg Museum in Cambridge, the New Orleans Museum of Art and other museums around the country.Kathryn "Kitty" Donahue, 90, of Lyons, Ohio, died Sept. He first began taking photographs in the 1930's, influenced by Alfred Steiglitz, Edward Weston and others. Laughlin was born in Lake Charles, La., and spent his first years on a plantation in New Iberia before moving to New Orleans with his family. His photographs have appeared in Life, Look, Architectural Review, Harper's Bazaar, Town and Country and other periodicals. Laughlin supported his avant-garde photography with freelance work for architects and for magazines. As he explained in the book's prologue, he was attempting to show ''the beauty that comes out of time, that transcends decay and the tenderness the years can bring.''įor much of his career, Mr. Laughlin transmogrified the decaying houses according to his own surrealistic vision. With unusual photographic effects and careful attention to light, Mr. Laughlin became best known for his book of photographs and essays, ''Ghosts Along the Mississippi.'' The book, published in 1948, centered on Louisiana country houses evolving from the plantation culture that flourished along the Mississippi River before the Civil War. In his career as a photographer and writer with a strong interest in fantasy, Mr. Clarence John Laughlin, one of the first Surrealist photographers in the country and a writer of poetic essays, died here Wednesday in Touro Infirmary after a long illness.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |