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The Index-Journal from Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

The Index-Journal du lieu suivant : Greenwood, South Carolina • Page 4

Publication:
The Index-Journali
Lieu:
Greenwood, South Carolina
Date de parution:
Page:
4
Texte d’article extrait (OCR)

The Index-Journal, Greenwood, S.C. Wednesday, October 22, 1997 DEATHS AND FUNERALS Sherman Goudy, Sr. NINETY SIX Sherman Goudy, 86, of 2506 Golf Course Road, husband of Annie Davis Goudy, died Tuesday at his home. Born in Saluda County, a son of the late Jack Darnell Goudy Culbreath. was a farmer and a Young Mt.

Zion Baptist in Saluda. He was also chairman of the church Trustees and he served surer of the church building Surviving in addition wife of the home are Sherman R. Goudy, Jr. Six and Thornton L. Decatur, three Juanita Goudy of Silver Barbara A.

Williams Benefield of Lavonia, Culbreath of Columbia Elmburst, N.Y., and three Elizabeth Culbreath, both Ella Mae Littlejohn of Funeral arrangements son and Son Mortuary. Edwin Campbell SHERMAN GOUDY SR. he was Goudy and He member of Church a former Board of as treafund. to his two sons, of Ninety Goudy of daughters, Spring, of Ninety Six and Cynthia two brothers, Rev. Ira and Eugene Goudy of East sisters, Lydia Goudy and of East Elmhurst, N.Y., and Gaffney.

to be announced by Robin- HARTWELL, Ga. Clarence Edwin Campbell, 83, of 1415 Ridge Road, Hartwell, husband of Cecile Harper Campbell, died Tuesday at his home. Born in Hart County, he was the son of the late M.G. and Rudie A. Holbrook Campbell.

He was a retired inspector for Monroe Auto Equipment Company. He was a member of the Milltown Baptist Church, Senior Men's S.S. Class, a Deacon and a World War I1 U.S. Army Air Corps veteran. Survivors, in addition to his wife of the home, are two daughters, Linda Carnes of Hartwell, Ga.

and Mary Helen Dunnell of Greenwood; one sister, Ruby Nell Mauldin of Lavonia; one brother, J.T. Campbell of Hot Springs, five grandchildren; and three great Funeral services will be Thursday at 3 p.m. at the Milltown Baptist Church with the Rev. Steve Patton officiating. Burial will be in the Nancy Hart Memorial Park.

The body will be placed in the church at 2:30 p.m. Thursday. The body is at the Strickland Funeral Home where the family will receive friends tonight from 7 to 9 p.m. The family is at the home. Flowers are optional.

Memorials may be made to the Milltown Baptist Church, 609 Milford Road, Hartwell, Ga. 30643. The Strickland Funeral Home of Hartwell, Ga. is in charge of arrangements. Henry Earl Watts McCORMICK Henry Earl Watts, 83, of 319 Taggart McCormick, died Tuesday at the McCormick Health Care Center.

Born in Greenwood County to the late Henry Watts and the late Emma Dean Watts, he was a carpenter. He was married to the late Willie Mae Blocker Watts. He was a member of Old Mt. Zion-Epworth Baptist Church where he was a former choir member, mason and treasurer of the missionary. Surviving are a son, Henry O.

Watts of Greenwood; four HENRY daughters, Glorietta W. Jones WATTS and Corressa W. Warren of Greenwood, Mary E. Marshall of Columbia and Felicia Dafirbirro of Atlanta; a sister, Corressa Morgan of Edgefield; 10 grandchildren and three greatgrandchildren. The family is at the home of George and Glorietta Jones, 102 Walnut Greenwood.

Robinson and Son Mortuary is in charge. Beulah Ballard HONEA PATH Beulah Mae Smith Ballard, 84, 107 Trussell Honea Path, formerly of Princeton, widow of Ernest Raymond Ballard, died Monday at the Heritage Inn Nursing Home in Hartwell, Ga. Born in Greenville County, she was the daughter of the late Charlie M. and Lula Phillips Smith. She was a homemaker and a member of Columbia Baptist Church.

Surviving are one son, Stanley Ballard of the home; four daughters, Betty Ballard of the home, Clara Ann Fleming, of Honea Path, Jearllean (Lena) Scott of Belton and Margaret Duncan of Greenville; two brothers, Grover Smith of Gray Court and Maxie Smith of Belton; three sisters, Rachel Day of Greenwood, Ella Mae Parker of Clinton, and Betty Burns of Belmont, N.C.; seven grandchildren and seven greatgrandchildren. Funeral services will be at 2 p.m. Thursday at Columbia Baptist Church with the Revs. John Lockaby and Dale Phillips officiating. Burial will follow in the church cemetery.

The body is at Pruitt Funeral Home where the family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. tonight. The body will be placed in the church at 1 p.m. Thursday. The family is at the home of a daughter, Clara Greenwood County Mildred Kirven "Sis" Lyles, 132 Allison Drive, Greenwood Gerald George Allen, 310 Vintage Court, Greenwood Sherman Goudy, 2506 Golf Course Road, Ninety Six.

Abbeville County George Dale Smith, Due West McCormick County Henry Watts, 319 Taggert McCormick Others in South Carolina Beulah Ballard, 107 Trussell Honea Path Outside South Carolina Edwin Campbell, 1415 Ridge Road, Hartwell, Ga. Gerald Allen GREENWOOD Funeral services George Allen will be conducted on Friday at Mt. Pisgah Baptist Church with the Rev. Otis Cunningham officiating. Burial will be at Oakbrook Memorial Park.

The body will be placed in the church at 1 p.m. Pallbearers will be the Environmental Department at Grede Foundry. Flowerbearers will be cousins and friends of the family. Honorary escorts will be Carl Moss, Charles Butler, Metal Fabricators Welding and Grede Department. The family will receive friends at the Vintage Court and at 202 Byrd St.

Apt. Percival-Thompkins Funeral Home is George Dale Smith for Gerald Friday at 2 p.m. GERALD ALLEN Environmental home at 301 3. in charge. DUE WEST George Dale Smith, 76, of North Main Street, died Tuesday.

Born in Abbeville County, he was a son of the late Oscar L. and Clara Baldwin Smith. He was retired from Monsanto and was a member of Due West Baptist Church. Surviving are one son, Randy Dale Smith of Due West; one daughter, Lisa Smith Branham of Abbeville; four brothers, Walter Smith of Donalds, Albert Smith of Union City, Val Smith of Demorest, Ga. and Jameson Smith of Gastonia, N.C.; six sisters, Ora Belle Worrill of Donalds, Helen Chambers of Anderson, Mae Pruitt of Baldwin, Myra Williams of Donalds, Mildred McClain of Donalds and Lula Hanks of Honea Path; and three grandchildren.

He was predeceased by a brother, Oscar E. Smith. Funeral services will be held Friday at 2 p.m. at Due West Baptist Church with the Rev. Carroll Andrews officiating.

Burial will follow in the Due West Baptist Church Cemetery. The body is at Pruitt Funeral Home where the family will receive friends from 7 to 9 p.m. Thursday. Memorials may be made to Due West Parking Lot Fund, P.O. Box 247, Due West, S.C.

29638. The family is at the home of a brother, Walter Smith, 6170 Highway 184 East, Donalds. Sis Lyles GREENWOOD Mildred Kirven "Sis" Lyles, 68, resident of 132 Allison Drive, wife of William Ellis "Bill" Lyles, died Tuesday at Self Memorial Hospital. Born in Darlington, Nov. 27, 1928, she was a daughter of Mildred Williamson Kirven and the late Laurie L.

Kirven. Surviving in addition to her husband of the home, and her mother of Darlington, are three sons, William E. Lyles, and Stephen C. Lyles, both of Greenwood and Jerry C. Lyles of Clinton; a brother, James C.

Kirven of Fairfield, and four grandchildren. Graveside services will be conducted at 3 p.m. Thursday in Oakbrook Memorial Park with Rev. Charles Leonard Pate officiating. The body is a Blyth Funeral Home.

The family is at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Steve Lyles, 205 Brookfield Drive in Gatewood. Memorials may be made to the Self Memorial Hospital Foundation, 1325 Spring Street, Greenwood, S.C. 29646.

Blyth Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. TV director dead at 76. LOS ANGELES (AP) Hy Averback, a one-time announcer for Bob Hope and Jack Paar who was a producer-director on "M-A-S-H," Troop" and many other television shows, died Oct. 14 following heart Fleming, 300 Baldwin Honea Path. surgery.

He was 76. Study finds most in service favor men, women training together WASHINGTON (AP) -A majority of enlisted men Most endorsed joint training, but 25 percent of and women in the military believe they should train to- women and 39 percent of men favored training sepagether, and that women should be allowed to serve in rately. Only the Marine Corps segregates men and ground combat units, a study found. women in basic training. "Gender integration is perceived to have a relatively The Rand report was released Tuesday by the small effect on readiness, cohesion and morale in the Pentagon as officials braced for the release of another units we studied," the report stated.

"Both men and study today by the Defense Advisory Committee on women. contended that women perform about as well as Women in the Services. men." Pentagon officials, speaking on condition of Defense Secretary William Cohen issued a statement anonymity, said the report by the panel will show that saying he was pleased by the report. "More needs to be sexual harassment on military bases in Alaska and the done to improve career opportunities for women in the Pacific had much to do with how leaders handled the military. We can and will do more.

America's sons and issue. daughters deserve no less," he said. The issues of same-sex training and women in the The study, conducted over a three-month period in military have come under increased scrutiny in the past year by the Rand found that 80 percent Congress in recent months, particularly in the wake of of women and half the men support allowing women in the Army's numerous sexual harassment cases and ground combat units. courts-martial. NE beASSIC Residents and staff of Greenwood Methodist Starke, Sara Couch, Ruth Garvey and Marilyn Retirement Community won 13 gold medals, five Eaton, marketing officer.

Second row, from left, are ribbons and one third place ribbon at Bette Hoogerhyde, Harold Hoogerhyde, Bob Zeh second place the Senior Sports Classic held at Savannah Lakes. and Ed Garvey. Pictured, from left, front row, are Eleanor Zeh, Jean 82-year-old couple brings home medals at Senior Sports Classic GREENWOOD Robert and Women's 55-59 1, Mary H. Davis. Women's 65-69 1, Frances Bolin.

are Women's 70-74 1, Sara Couch. 2, Gloria Eleanor Zeh of Greenwood proof you're never too old to win Reynolds. 3, Bette Hoogerhyde. gold medals. TABLE TENNIS The 82-year-old couple, a few days after celebrating their 60th wedding anniversary, brought home five gold medals from the recent Upper Savannah Senior Sports Classic at Savannah Lakes Village in McCormick.

They earned gold in the 80-and-over age division in putt putt golf, shuffleboard and bocce ball. "Our 16-year-old granddaughter got so excited to hear her grandparents won gold Eleanor says, with a big smile. "She thought that was really great." Robert won three golds while Eleanor, who did not play shuffleboard, earned two. They were two of 337 who signed up for the Senior Sports Classic held over three days in Greenwood and McCormick. "We had fun," says Robert, who recommends participation in the Games.

"It encourages seniors to get into some sports activities where otherwise they might not have the incentive or opportunity." The activities in which athletes participated by age division included track and field, swimming, tennis, golf, bowling, basketball, racquetball, spin casting, shuffleboard, bocce ball, croquet, table tennis, putt putt, and horseshoes. The oldest gold medal winners were 87-year-olds Mary McCain of North Augusta in basketball free throw and spin casting, and Ouida Shaw of Ware Shoals in bowling in Greenwood Sept. 26. The biggest overall winner with 11 medals and ribbons was Ken Frazier of Chappells, who won seven golds, two silvers and two bronzes. The top gold medal winner was Evert Prior of McCormick with nine, eight of those won in events at the Greenwood YMCA.

The oldest gold medal winner last week at Savannah Lakes was 84- year-old Christine Henderson in horseshoes. Another 84-year-old, Ruth Garvey, placed second twice to Eleanor in bocce ball and putt putt. The Zehs were among a contingent of eight Greenwood Methodist Home residents who participated. The others were Ruth and Ed Garvey, Bette and Harold Hoogerhyde, Jean Starke, and Marilyn Eaton. The Zehs had experience in one of their gold-medal winning sports, bocce ball.

Unknown to many people in this area, bocce ball requires BOB ZEH at Savannah Lakes one player to roll a small yellow ball onto a grass court, then both players try to roll their balls closest to the yellow one. The player with the ball(s) closest to the yellow earn points. Bocce ball is similar to lawn bowling. The Zehs came to Greenwood from Sun City Center, a retirement community where international lawn bowling tournaments were played. They learned there that the object of bocce ball or lawn bowling is to roll the balls, not throw them as many Senior Sports Classic participants did.

"You can be much more accurate if you roll the ball. Whenever you throw it in the air and it bounces on the ground, it will stop," Robert says. "Instead of rolling it, I threw it up in the air and it came down and put a hole in the green. They didn't want me out there anymore," said Eleanor, laughing when thinking back to her Florida experience. "I really rolled the ball the other day at Savannah Lakes.

I could see the difference between those who were throwing it and those who were rolling it." Will the Zehs participate again next year? Robert says, confidently, "Sure. Why not?" Following are results from Senior Sports Classic activities held Oct. 9 at Savannah Lakes Village (the rest of the Games were held Sept. 24 and 26 in McCormick and Greenwood; following are activities that were originally to be played Sept. 25 but were postponed to Oct.

9 due to rain): CROQUET Aiken teacher placed on leave AIKEN (AP) An Aiken County teacher is on administrative leave while school district officials investigate a seventh-grade student's complaint that she drew a "big blue line" down his face as punishment for being tardy. The honor student's mother said he was embarrassed and upset by Thursday's incident, which apparently is a class tradition at Kennedy Middle School. She has hired a lawyer to explore the family's options, The Aiken Standard reported Tuesday. The blue line, which extended from the boy's hairline over the bridge of his nose, allegedly was drawn by Karen Baker, who teaches language arts and reading. The teen's mother said he had stopped by the restroom and was about a minute late to class.

Ms. Baker had shut the door when the LOCALISMS The Savannah River Scenic Highway runs through Abbeville County on the west side along Lake Russell and through the towns of Lowndesville and Calhoun Falls. Women's 55-59 1, Marilyn Eaton. Women's 60-64 1, Betty Meekins. Men's 55-59 1, Don Caywood.

Men's 60-64 1, Bill Edmondson. Men's 65-69 1, Jack McDowell. 2, Ken Anders. 3, Paul Leroy. Men's 70-74 1, Mac Arnold.

Men's 75-79 1, Evert Prior. HORSESHOES 1 Women's 55-59 1, Emma Burton. Women's 60-64 1, Doris Banks. 2, Janie Klugh. 3, Betty Meekins.

Women's 65-69 1, Ludelle Freeman. 2, Lola Butler. Women's 70-74 1, Martha Jennings. Women's 75-79 1, Ola Ouzts. 2, Virginia Johnson.

Women's 80-and-over 1, Christine Henderson. Men's 50-54 1, Roy Schumpert. Men's 55-59 1, Franchot Parnell. Men's 60-64 1, Edward Cogdill. 2, William "Bo' Parkman.

3, William Banks. Men's 65-69 1, Paul Leroy. 2, Ken Anders. 3, Marvin Parkman. Men's 70-74 1, John Leroy.

2, Harold Hoogerhyde. 3, George Bolin. Men's 75-79 1, Charles Keene. BOCCE BALL Women's 65-69 1, Dollie Cartledge. 2, Nell Henderson.

Women's 70-74 1, Gloria Reynolds. 2, Matilda Freeland. 3, Lillie Jennings. Women's 80-and-over 1, Eleanor Zeh. 2, Ruth Garvey.

Men's 60-64 1, Bill Herring. Men's 70-74 1, Lewis Mathis. Men's 75-79 1, Edmond Garvey. Men's 80-and-over 1, Robert Zeh. ONE-MILE BIKE RACE Men's 65-69 1, Robert Linsenmayer.

2, Alex Butler. 10K BIKE RACE Men's 55-59 1, Franchot Parnell. Men's 65-59 1, Robert Linsenmayer. Shuffleboard Women's 60-64 1, Mary Emma Johnson. Women's 65-69 1, Francis Bolin.

2, Sarah Moore. Women's 70-74 1, Bette Hoogerhyde. Women's 75-79 1, Katrina Harrison. 2, Annie Morgan. Men's 60-64 1, Morris Davenport.

Men's 70-74 1, George Bolin. 2, Thomas Henderson. Men's 80-and-over 1, Robert Zeh. PUTT PUTT Women's 55-59 1, Marilyn Eaton. 2, Mary Davis.

Women's 60-64 1, Betty Meekins. Women's 65-69 1, Jean Starke. 2, Frances Bolin. Women's 70-74 1, Bette Hoogerhyde. 2, Sara Couch.

3, Gloria Reynolds. Women's 75-79 1, Ola Ouzts. Women's 80-and-over 1, Eleanor Zeh. 2, Ruth Garvey. Men's 50-54 1, Roy Schumpert.

55-59 1, Franchot Parnell. Men's 60-64 1, Morris Davenport. Men's 65-69 1, Jack McDowell. 2. Ken Anders.

Men's 70-74 1, Harold Hoogerhyde. 2, George Bolin. Men's 75-79 1, John Fooshe. 2, Edmond Garvey. Men's 80-and-over 1, Robert Zeh.

tardy bell rang, and the boy's classmates were chanting "Dot, dot, dot!" expecting him to receive a blue dot on his face, his mother said. ETHRIDGE MOM MEAT CO. luv. 25 South 227-3114 223-7943 Quality- Sewice Reasonable Prices BRONZE MARKERS GRANITE MONUMENTS Since 1947 Please call us for a quote before you purchase your memorial. go In Memory of Lewis Williams' Oct.

22, 1924 May 5, 1994 We still miss you very much and think of you each passing day. You were a wonderful father to us in many ways and we look forward to the time when we can be together again. Happy Birthday Dad! Your Children, Grandchildren Great Grandson GOSPEL MEETING CENTRAL CHURCH OF CHRIST Oct. 27 Oct 29 7:30 pm 1018 Highway 72. Bypass East across from Block.

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