The Commercial Appeal from Memphis, Tennessee (2024)

THE COMMERCIAL APPEAL MEMPHIS, FRIDAY, JULY 10, 1987 TN EDITION DEATHS TENNESSEE BIG SANDY Linus 'Blackie' Cooper, 79, retired commercial fisherman and employee of the Tennessee Forestry Division, died Wednesday at Henry County Medical Center in Paris. Services will be at 3 p.m. today at Stockdale-Malin Funeral Home with burial in Crooked Cemetery near here. He was a creeber of the Church of God. Cooper, husband of Clara Mae Hawkins Cooper, also leaves three daughters, Mrs.

Doris Jeanette Wade of Ledyard, Miss Judy Dale Cooper of Bolivar, and Mrs. Deborah K. Horton of Big Sandy; three sons, Raymond Cooper and Linus Edward Cooper, both of Big Sandy, and Larry Cooper of Camden; three sisters, Mrs. Vinie Pafford, Mrs. Mary Willene Cook and Mrs.

Asilee Perry, Big Sandy; a brother, Jake Cooallot Salem, 21 grandchildren and six great-grandchildren. BROWNSVILLE Samuel Henry Marcom, 78, died Thursday at his home after a long illness. Services will be at 4 p.m. today at Brownsville Funeral Home with burial in Brownsville Memorial Gardens. Marcom, the husband of Naomi Coburn Marcom, also leaves a daughter, Mrs.

Carol Knipper of Bartlett; seven sisters, Artie Mrs. Evelyn Eubanks, and Mrs. Walter Duffey, all of Brownsville, Mrs. Kathleen Garrett of Holladay, Mrs. Lelia Sellari of Clinton, Mrs.

Olivia Faur of Le Claire, Iowa, and Mrs. Willie Mae Vandeveer of Roswell, N.M., and two grandsons. DECATURVILLE Grady Elder Brasher, 80, retired machinist for McDonnell-Douglas Aircraft, died Thursday at Jackson-Madison County General Hospital after a long illness. Services will be 2 p.m. Saturday at Boyd Funeral Home ial in the Pleasant husband Hill Cemetery, Brasher, Austin Brasher, also leaves four sons, Tommy Austin Brasher and Ronald Gary Brasher, both of St.

Jessie G. Brasher of Decaturville, and Grady Harold Brasher of Sacramento, Calif; five sisters, Mrs. Nettie Fisher and Mrs. Grapel Fisher, both of Decaturville, Mrs. Lavon Etheridge and Mrs.

Betty D. Brasher, both of Parsons, and Mrs. Omega McClure of Connecticut; two brothers, Glenn of Decaturville, and Lamar Brasher of Milan; 15 grandchildren and 17 greatgrandchildren. DYERSBURG William Preston 'Press' Reed, 100, retired farmer, died Wednesday at Methodist Hospital after a long illness. Services will be at p.m.

today at McCullough Chapel ba Baptist Church near here, of which he was a member, with burial in the church cemetery. J. W. Curry Son Fumeral Home has charge. He was a World War I veteran.

DYERSBURG Thomas H. Ward, 93, of Irving, Texas, formerly of Dyersburg, died Tuesday in Irving. Services will be at 10:30 a.m. Saturday at J. W.

Curry Son Funeral Home with burial in Friendship Cemetery near here. Ward leaves a daughter, Mrs. Marion Brewer of Dunedin, three sons, Jerry Ward of Irving, James Ward of Jackson, and Thomas Ward of Buffalo Grove, two sisters, Mrs. Ida Screws and Mrs. Iva Screws, both of Friendship, 14 grandchildren and eight great-grandchildren.

GLEASON Mrs. Ruby Pearl Arnold, 61, died Wednesday at Volunteer General Hospital in Martin after a long illness. Services will be at 4 p.m. today at Gallimore Funeral Home with burial in New Hope Cemetery near here. Mrs.

Arnold, the widow of G. W. Arnold, leaves two daughters, Mrs. Linda Martin of Gleason, and Mrs. Betty Sisson of Fulton, two sons, Billy Arnold and Jim Arnold, both of Gleason; two sisters, Mrs.

Allene Tucker and Mrs. Annie Bell Kubicek, of Chicago, nine grandchildren and Botha two great-grandchildren. MAURY CITY Elbert Festus Booth 79, retired farmer, died Wednesday at Jackson-Madison County General Hospital. Services will be at 2 p.m. today at Ronk Funeral Home in Alamo with burial in Maury City Cemetery.

He was a member of City Baptist Church. Booth, the husband of Melba B. Booth, also leaves two sons, James Elbert Booth of Jackson, and Bobby Booth of Memphis, four grandchildren and four greatgrandchildren. MILAN Rufus McMackins, 92, retired farmer and employee of Milan Arsenal and a Milan Box died Wednesday at Ridgewood Retirement Inn. Services will be at 2 p.m.

today at Bodkin Funeral Home with burial in the cemetery of New Hope Methodist Church in the Vale community near Hollow Rock. He was a member of Maulburg Church of Christ in Vale. McMackins, the widower of Ella Maude McMackins, leaves three daughters, Mrs. Velma Smith of Atwood, and Mrs. Thelma White and Mrs.

Alice Wheeler, both of Milan; a sister, Mrs. Madrell Janes of Bruceton; 27 grandchildren, 45 great-grandchildren and 15 great-great-grandchildren. PARIS Lunie T. Holland, 77, retired farmer and state Highway Department employee, died Wednesday night at Henry County Medical Center in Paris. Services will be at 2 p.m.

today at McEvoy Funeral Home in Paris with burial in Memorial Cemetery. He was a member of Hill Baptist Church, where he was chairman of the board of deacons. He was also an Army veteran. Holland, the husband of Mamie Bright Holland, also leaves several nieces and nephews. RIPLEY Mrs.

Mary Elizabeth Hopkins Bowers, 47, died Tuesday at Methodist Hospital in Memphis after an extended illness. Services will be at 1 p.m. Saturday at Springhill Baptist Church, of which she was a member, with burial in the church cemetery. Thomas Funeral Home has charge. Mrs.

Bowers, the wife of Frank Bowers, also leaves two daughters, Miss Daphne Hopkins of Ripley and Miss Cynthia Hopkins of Mainz, West Germany; Prison funds cleared for Shelby facility By Richard Locker Nashville Bureau NASHVILLE A $12 million state grant to expand and renovate the Shelby County Correctional Center passed the final hurdles yesterday two years after Mayor Bill Morris and former governor Lamar Alexander agreed to the project to ease Tennessee's prison crowding crisis. Court urged to reverse book ruling CINCINNATI (AP) Tennessee lawyers urged a federal appeals court yesterday to reverse a lower court's decision that would allow a group of public school children to be excused from reading textbooks their families contend offend their religious beliefs. Attorneys for the state of Tennessee and the Hawkins County, school district said the lower court's ruling could undermine public education nationwide by allowing students with religious objections about any text or teaching to voluntarily opt out of any curriculum studies. But a lawyer, representing the seven Tennessee families who sued in 1983 to object to a series of basic reading textbooks used from grades 2 to 8 in the Hawkins County schools, urged the court to uphold the right of any students to opt out of reading religiously offensive materials. The families are not asking that the objectionable textbooks be banned, said Michael P.

Farris, lawyer for the families. "We think every religious person has the right to opt out of religiously offensive books," Farris told the Sixth U.S Circuit Court of Appeals. "We think Jews should be allowed to opt out of Christmas carols. Jehovah's Witnesses should be allowed to opt out of flag salutes." The case has pitted fundamentalist Protestants against public school officials. Education associations around the nation and a conservative women's organization have taken an interest in the case by filing supporting court documents or hiring courtroom lawyers.

"This is a significant case for the American public schools," said Timothy Dyk, lawyer for the school board. "If these plaintiffs have the right to opt out of this reading course because they have religious objections to it, then I would think others would have the opportunity to opt out of any course they chose This case was tried on the belief it was a test case." Appeals Judges Cornelia Kennedy, Danny Boggs and presiding Judge Pierce Lively heard the arguments and took the matter under review. Judge Lively did not say when the panel will rule. Island tram is repaired The Mud Island monorail resumed operations late yesterday. The two cars had sat motionless for six days while a pair of worn-out ball bearings were being replaced, park general manager Jimmy Ogle said.

The monorail will be operating tonight when park officials expect 4,500 people to attend the Judds' concert which begins at 8 in the Mud Island Amphitheatre. "We didn't want people to stay away from the concert because they might have to walk Ogle said. Operators noticed a grinding noise July 3 and closed the tram until mechanics from New York could replace the bearings in the main bullwheel tension rings at the island end of the monorail, Ogle said. The monorail was put back in service about 3:30 p.m. yesterday.

The bullwheel is the main mechanism to move the continuous cable which draws the two 180-passenger cars along the mile track. Ogle said the monorail has traveled 80,000 miles in five years of service. The State Building Commission and State Funding Board approved the grant in back-to-back sessions, the last two steps before the first $3.5 million installment is released. Three other payments will follow at various stages of construction until the project is completed in 1989. New figures provided to the Building Commission show the Correctional Center's eventual capacity has been decreased from 1,831 to 1,639 inmates since the project was presented to the legislature's Select Oversight Committee on Corrections in February.

The center contained 960 prisoners yesterday. In February, state and county officials: announced they were scaling back the project and trimming its price tag from the $23.8 million projected last November to $19 million. Shelby County is to provide $7 million. However, there was some concern in the Building Commission over how committed the county is to its share. County officials asked that the $7 million be removed from their contract with the state but the county remains to the funds, Jeff Reynolds, special assistant to the governor, told the commission.

"Because the governor wants to go ahead with the project, I'm voting for it. But otherwise I would have gotten the $7 million from Shelby County first," said Lt. Gov. John Wilder (D-Somerville), the Building Commission chairman. The expansion and renovation will occur in several stages.

The first, which is already under way, is the construction of a new building that will house 294 inmates on an interim basis during other construction. The structure will then become a recreational, academic and visitation program center. It is to be completed in November. An existing building now holding 102 inmates will be renovated into women's housing and the existing kitchen will be enlarged, with both to be completed in August. The major construction involves a new free-standing unit housing at least 384 inmates.

The last stage, which would use most of the county's $7 million, would renovate the existing main building, built in 1929. Shelby County will continue to own and operate the Correctional Center. It will house misdemeanor convicts, which are the county's responsibility, and at least 776 felony convicts, who are normally the state's responsibility. The state will pay the county its regular $25 per day for expenses for each state inmate housed there. Mr.

Maness dies at 82 Special to The Commercial Appeal HENDERSON, Tenn. Services will be today for Robert Lomax Maness, a former county magistrate who died Wednesday night at his home. He was 82. Maness, who was a magistrate on the old Chester County Court for six years during the '50s, was also a retired custodian at the Chester County Courthouse and the post office. He was a member of Crossroad Primitive Baptist Church.

Services will be at 3 p.m. today at Casey Funeral Home with burial in Old Friendship Cemetery. Maness leaves three daughters, Mrs. Willadean Thrasher of Germantown, Mrs. Joy Whittaker of Virginia Beach, and Mrs.

Frankie Sue Young of Memphis; two sons, C. A. 'Andy' Maness of Henderson and Ernest Maness of Detroit; three sisters, Mrs. Rosann Dunn of Henderson, Mrs. Ruby Tignor of Memphis and Mrs.

Mattie Sue Burrough of Humboldt; 13 grandchildren, and five great-grandchildren. County lighting up BENZONIA, Mich. (AP) Benzie County is getting its first traffic light. By the weekend, the light in Benzonia, population 463, will be operating at the intersection of M115 and U.S. 31.

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Box 34577 EAST MIDTOWN SOUTH 2440 Whitten Rd. 1861 S. Elvis Presley Blvd. 2545 E. Holmes Rd.

38184-0577 1-40 Exit 14 Name Street City State Phone Zip Whitten fires another shot at Navy plan two sons, Keith Fitzgerald of Detroit, and Jeffrey Michael Hopkins of the Panama Canal Zone; her mother, Mrs. Florence Nailey of Ripley; her father, Elvoid Bullock of Michigan; a sister, Miss Shirley Ann Bullock of Detroit; four brothers, Roosevelt Bullock, Walter Bullock and Elvoid Bullock, all of Detroit, and William Bullock of Ripley, and four grandchildren. RIPLEY William Lynn Maness, 72, retired heavy equipment mechanic, died Thursday at Baptist Hospital Lauderdale after a short illness. Services will be at 3 p.m. Saturday at Yarbrough Funeral Home with burial in Ripley Memorial Gardens.

He a member of Olive Branch Baptist Church. the husband of Carrie Bell Maness, also leaves a daughter, Mrs. Lynda Thomason of Memphis; two sons, Charles Maness Kissimmee, and Gary Maness of Saratoga Springs, N.Y.; a brother, A. J. Maness of Clifton, Texas, and five grandchildren.

RIPLEY Charlie Ed Tyus, 47, of Madison, formerly of Ripley, died July 3 at Madison General Hospital after an extended illness. Services will be at 11 a.m. Saturday at Thomas Funeral Home with burial Durhamville Cemetery. Tyus leaves a daughter, Miss Linda Tyus, son, Michael Tyus, both of Chicago; his mother, Mrs. Gloria Reed Tyus, and his father, Ed Tyus, both of Henning; two sisters, Miss Ada Tyus and Miss Betty Tyus, both of Ripley; three brothers, Willie James Tyus and Thomas Earl Tyus, both of Chicago, and Thomas Tyus of Ripley, and five grandchildren.

SELMER Terry Lee Matlock, 26, automobile repair shop owner and mechanic, died Wednesday morning when his car struck a metal bridge railing near Ramer, authorities said. Services will be at 3 p.m. today at Shackelford Funeral Home with burial in Friendship Cemetery near Ramer. Matlock leaves his parents, Mr. and Mrs.

Woodrow Matlock of Selmer; two brothers, Roger Matlock and Ronnie Matlock, both of Ramer, and an adopted brother, Jimmy Forman of Selmer. SOMERVILLE Jesse Morton, 84, retired farmer, died Tuesday at his home after a long illness. Services will be at noon Saturday at Olive CME Church near here, of which he was a member, with burial in St. John's Cemetery in Dancyville. J.

A. Lofties Funeral Home has charge. Morton, the husband of Fannie Morton, also leaves four daughters, Miss Lorene Morton and Mrs. Ginger Dotson, both of Somerville, Mrs. Mary Bailey of Memphis, and Mrs.

Anna Taylor Dancyville, and two sons, Rev. James Morton of Memphis, and Silas Morton of Charleston, Miss. SPRINGVILLE Herman Walter Pinson, 76, retired employee of Spinks Clay died Wednesday at Middle Tennessee Medical Center in Murfreesboro after a long illness. Services will be 10 a.m. today at Church of God of Prophecy in Big Sandy with burial in Oak Hill Cemetery, also near Big Sandy.

StockdaleMalin Funeral Home of has charge. Pinson, the husband of Odell Evans Pinson, also leaves three daughters, Mrs. Betty Tippitt Mr. Snow, mortician, dies at 81 John H. Snow, 81, of 1382 Florida, owner and founder of Snow Funeral Home, died yesterday afternoon at Memphis Veterans Medical Center after a long illness.

Snow, who had been in the funeral business the 1930s, was one of the oldest morticians in the city. He was a World War II Army veteran. He Snow was a member of Bloomfield Baptist Church, where he was a trustee and Sunday school teacher. Snow Funeral Home has charge. He leaves his wife, Mrs.

Lessie B. Snow; a daughter, Mrs. Johnny Showers; brother, Fletcher 'Jack' Snow, both of Memphis, four grandchildren and 10 greatgrandchildren. Suspect denies theft charges NASHVILLE, Ark. (AP) An informant who made drug buys for several law enforcement agencies in Southwest Arkansas has pleaded innocent to a charge of theft of property.

Howard County Circuit Court Judge Ted Capeheart Wednesday set Oct. 26 for the trial of Leroy Rusher Jr. Rusher, 35, is charged with theft of $600 given him by Howard County officials for drug buys and expenses. At least 80 drug cases involving Rusher in several counties have been on hold since he told two State Police narcotics officers June 2 that he had not made six or seven of the 48 drug buys he originally said he made for the Pike County sheriff's office. Rusher said later that the State Police officers had threatened his life to coerce him to say he had not made the drug buys.

The FBI and State Police are investigating the matter. of Murfreesboro, and Mrs. Margie Gentry and Mrs. Elizabeth Peacock, both of Hilliard, a son, Wayne Pinson Camden; four brothers, Truman Pinson, Loys Pinson, Louis Pinson Byron Pinson, all of Big Sandy, and six grandchildren. TRIMBLE Mrs.

Mary Karnese Drummond, 63, died Wednesday at Jackson-Madison County General Hospital after a short illness. Services will be at 2 p.m. today Johnson Funeral Home in Newbern with burial in Dyer County Memorial Gardens in Dyersburg. She was a member of Trimble Baptist Church. Mrs.

Drummond, the wife of Lewis Drummond, also leaves two daughters, Mrs. Peggy Bennett of Trimble, and Ms. Judy Page of Newbern; a son, Elvin of Trimble; two and Pascale of Trimble; a sisstepsons, Charles Miller of Rives, ter, Mrs. Wilma Cantrell Detroit; a brother, Rev. Carlton Davis of Tiptonville, 18 grandchildren and 13 great-grandchildren.

Mrs. Gerber dies at 80; rites today Mrs. Beatrice Scheibler Gerber, 80, who was a leader in Memphis amateur acting and art circles, died yesterday at Baptist Hospital. Services will be at 10 a.m. today at St.

Columba Conference Center at 4581 Billy Maher Road, with burial in the family ceme. tery there. Canale Funeral Di- rectors has charge. Mrs. Gerber attended Snowden School, St.

Mary's Episcopal School, the University of Chicago and The Sorbonne in Paris. Beatrice Gerber Mrs. Gerber was lead actress in many Little Theater (now Theatre Memphis) plays in the 1930s and 1940s and was a former president of Memphis Little Theater Board. She had been president of the Brooks Art Gallery League and treasurer of the Mary Galloway Home. She served three terms as president of Le Bonheur Club and helped found Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center.

She was a former member of Memphis Country Club, the Tuesday Study Club, the Little Glass Club, Stage Set and Memphis Symphony League, and she was a board member of the Memphis Orchestral Society. Mrs. Gerber, of 704 East Drive, was a communicant of Calvary Episcopal Church. She and her brother, the late James E. Scheibler, in the mid-60s donated 60 acres of the family farm on Billy Maher Road to the Episcopal Diocese of West Tennessee for use as a conference center.

The principal building was named Scheibler Lodge. Scheibler Road in Raleigh also is. named for the family. Mrs. Gerber was the widow of Charles Cole Gerber, who was murdered in 1948 by a hitchhiker.

Memorials may be sent to Le Bonheur Children's Medical Center or the Mary Galloway Home. Ruling today on officer in sex case Jackson, Bureau NASHVILLE A decision on disciplinary action against Tennessee Highway Patrol Capt. Gerald Allen is expected today. Allen, commander of the 11- county "Jackson THP district, was called to Nashville yesterday to answer "serious" allegations of sexual misconduct involving a female subordinate, said Capt. Robert McDonald, state Department of Safety personnel director.

Col. Larry Wallace, commander, was the hearing officer, McDonald said. The hearing was called after THP officials investigated official" complaint made against Allen by one of the female employees in the Jackson district, McDonald said. He would not elaborate on those allegations, saying the issue is administrative and is not a matter of public record. After the hearing, which lasted less than an hour, Wallace said he needed more information before making a recommendation on disciplinary action to Safety Commissioner Robert D.

Lawson, McDonald said, adding that a decision is expected today. Allen could be fired, McDonald said. Neither Wallace nor Allen was available for comment on the hearing. Allen, who has been with the Highway Patrol for 21 years, has been the Jackson district commander since 1983. He has received several departmental commendations, McDonald said.

The department has no record of Allen's previously being brought before an administrative hearing on misconduct charges, McDonald said. Washington Bureau WASHINGTON House Appropriations Committee chairman Jamie Whitten (D-Miss.) is keeping the 1 pressure on the Navy to scrap a plan to reduce the command structure at Memphis Naval Air Station at Millington. Whitten also said the construction appropriations bill includes les more than $35 million for projects in Mississippi, including $5.5 million for Columbus Air Force Base and money for new National Guard armories in Booneville, Louisville, Canton and Pontotoc. Less than two weeks after adding language to one money bill that called the changes "totally unacceptable," Whitten's committee passed another bill demanding an answer from the Navy. The military construction bill directs the Navy to say how it will comply with Whitten's directive to restore the base to 1984 levels of operations.

The bill singles out the medical and hospital services, which have re seen a reduction in staff this summer. The director of the base hospital has said the doctor shortage there is temporary. Navy officials are proposing to cut the total officers and support personnel under R. Adm. David Harlow, chief of Navy Technical Training at Millington, from 232 to 68.

Many of the jobs would be shifted to Pensacola, Fla. The Navy proposed to move portions of three other schools to Millington, with corresponding increases in students and personnel, but has so far failed to convince the community or area congressmen that the changes would benefit Millington. MID-SOUTH DEATHS ARKANSAS BLYTHEVILLE Lincoln Jackson, 69, of Memphis, formerly of Blytheville, retired employee of Fruehauf Trailer husband of Mildred Jennings Jackson. CHERRY VALLEY Earl William Patton, 81, retired farmer and husband of Cozett Vance Patton. MARKED TREE Mrs.

Ella Glidewell, 82, widow of John Glenn Glidewell. McCRORY Mrs. Fannie Williamson Fields, 75, of McCordsville, formerly of McCrory, retired employee of Wishard Memorial Hospital in Indianapolis and wife of Thomas J. Fields. MISSISSIPPI BRUCE Earl Ruth, 67, retired furniture salesman.

CHARLESTON Jim Roberts, 83, retired farmer and husband of Olene Roberts. CORINTH Mrs. Minnie Strickland Horne, 66, widow of Allen L. Horne; Mrs. Mary Ella Merryman Thacker, 84, retired employee of Weaver Pants Factory and widow of William Warren Thacker.

GOODMAN Lee Anderson McCrory, 99, retired farmer. GREENVILLE Mrs. Annie C. Unkle, 76, former district supervisor for the Mississippi Welfare Department and widow of Frank Unkle. GUNNISON Mrs.

M. Irene Newman, 68, wife of Odel Newman. MARKS Miss Myrtle Dale Jones, 93, former teacher. McCOOL Mrs. Leslie Mearl Slater, 68, widow of Dewey Rudolph Slater.

WATER VALLEY Tommy Kent Eubanks, 38, of Houston, Texas, formerly of Water Valley, an employee of W. D. Anderson Cancer Research Hospital; Airman 1C Hugh Edward Nicholson 21, and his wife, Allison Spearman Nicholson, 21, of Homestead, formerly of Water Valley; Mrs. Annie Mae White Woodard, 68, retired restaurant cook and teacher's aide, wife of Alvin Woodard. MEMPHIS DEATHS John M.

Burk, 46, of Memphis, manager of technical services at Buckman Laboratories Inc. Fred Cook, 78, of Memphis, retired Corps of Engineers employee. Mrs. Freddie Lee Faulkner, 70, of Memphis. Carnell Fox, 26, of 596 Seventh Street.

J. D. Gilliam 44, of 1445 Standridge, mechanic at White Rose Laundry Service. Eddie J. Harris, 78, of 434 South Danny Thomas Boulevard, retired employee of William F.

Epstein Pawn Shop. Bertram L. Hart, 92, of 2990 Hickory Hill. Charles E. Hawkins, 63, of 4390 Hodge Road, retired Memphis Veterans Medical Center employee.

Mrs. Ruby Jackson, 47, of 1618 Sunset. Mrs. Virginia Wagner Leonard, 64, of 2654 Orman, employee of Osco Drugs. Mrs.

Mildred L. Montgomery, 54, of 2542 Burns, employee of the University of Tennessee, Memphis. Russell B. Pearce, 86, of Memphis, retired teacher. Mrs.

Florence Loeffel Quigley, 78, of 777 Mt. Moriah, retired employee of the Federal Housing Administration. Willie I. Sholar, 61, of 606 East Davant, retired Memphis Light, Gas Water Division employee. Leo E.

Shotts, of 1334 Laudeen, retired quality control leader for Hunter Fans. Mrs. Estella Thompson, of 529 Leavert. Mrs. Birdie Mae Watson, 80, of 4365 Bayliss.

A Remembrance FTD Arranged With Special Care Consult Your Professional Florist FIRST.

The Commercial Appeal from Memphis, Tennessee (2024)

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