Illinois - It was 1996, and Sessions, an engineer who helped develop the first pacemaker used on an Illinois patient, had made "an irrevocable pledge" of $1.5 million to help build a "president's house" near the Rush campus.
In a court fight dragging on years after Sessions' death, his family claims Sessions changed his mind about that pledge just before his death, and they say it was Rush's "failure to timely diagnose" his lung cancer -- leading ultimately to his death -- that caused his bitterness. Full Story - Discount Magazine Subscriptions - Discount Cigarettes & Tobacco - Nutty News Marketplace
In a court fight dragging on years after Sessions' death, his family claims Sessions changed his mind about that pledge just before his death, and they say it was Rush's "failure to timely diagnose" his lung cancer -- leading ultimately to his death -- that caused his bitterness. Full Story - Discount Magazine Subscriptions - Discount Cigarettes & Tobacco - Nutty News Marketplace