The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)

THE COURIER JOURNAL 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1, 1994 State Militions, (10) KENTUCKY TUESDAY, NOVEMBER Wesbecker talked for years of killing people, witness says By LESLIE SCANLON Staff Writer Joseph Wesbecker talked for years about killing people at Standard Gravure and had a "long list" of people he wanted to hurt, a former pressman for the Louisville printing plant testified yesterday. Thomas Gosling said Wesbecker once spoke of bringing a bomb into the plant and "talked about coming in with guns and shooting everybody." He said Wesbecker "wanted to get the bosses." When Wesbecker was angry, he would "name off names" of people he wanted to kill, Gosling said. He said the list included Michael Shea, Standard Gravure's owner; Donald McCall, its executive vice president; Paula Warman, who headed human resources; and Donald Cox, the pressroom superintendent. Wesbecker was angry because he wanted to be given a permanent exemption from working on the folder, a complicated machine that Wesbecker found especially stressful, Gosling said. Some pressmen teased Wesbecker, calling him "nuts and crazy," Gosling said.

After Wesbecker went on longterm disability in August 1988, he would stop by the plant occasionally. saw him coming in, was going to Gosling said he told co co-workers "if I run. I felt that if he came in there, he was going to do what he did." On Sept. 14, 1989, Wesbecker came to Standard Gravure where he had worked for 17 years and opened fire with an AK-47 assault rifle, shooting 20 people. The survivors and the families of the eight people killed have sued Eli Lilly claiming that Prozac, an anti-depressant that Wesbecker began taking about a month before the shootings, made him violent.

Edward Stopher, a lawyer for Lilly, contends Wesbecker made threats years before the shootings. But Paul Smith, an attorney for Wesbecker's victims, asked Gosling to separate out what he knew firsthand from rumors that floated through the plant after the tragedy. James Popham, a Standard Gravure foreman in 1989, testified that Wesbecker became withdrawn in the late 1980s and stopped speaking to Popham about anything not directly related to work. And Popham said James Lucas, another pressman who was a friend of Wesbecker's, warned him that Wesbecker had threatened that "if I said anything that wasn't job-related, he'd blow my head off." Popham said he took the threat seriously and reported it to Cox, the pressroom superintendent, and to several others who worked closely with Wesbecker. But he acknowledged to Smith that he never really believed Wesbecker would shoot him.

The jury also heard more testimony from Brenda Camp, who was married to Wesbecker from 1981 until 1984 and who remained close friends with him until he killed himself the day of the rampage. Camp said Wesbecker would not talk to her about Standard Gravure after May 1989, when she tried to ask him how he was doing. She said he refused to answer, saying that if he did, "You would have me put back in the (psychiatric) hospital." He called her "Miss Goody Two Shoes" and said that "if I told you things I was thinking about, you'd call the police on me," Camp said. Camp also testified that Wesbecker had two lawn mowers at his home on Nottoway Circle that had not been working well. One day, with no warning, he attacked the lawn mowers with either an axe or a sledgehammer, destroying them, and then told her "we wouldn't be cutting grass anymore." But Smith asked Camp about instances through their relationship in which Wesbecker showed kindness and compassion.

In the summer of 1989, for example, when her father was bedridden and severely ill, Wesbecker visited the man regularly and helped care for him. On Sept. 13, 1989 the evening before the shootings and Wesbecker went out to dinner. She described him as more agitated than she had seen him in months and said he paced and only ate about half his food. That night, he stayed at Camp's home, although they did not sleep together.

The next morning, Camp said, Wesbecker rose and dressed before she did, then came into the bedroom. He told her: "Thanks for being a good friend, thanks for always taking care of me," and said, "I'll call you later at work," Camp testified. She got up, and Wesbecker walked away and then stopped part way down a hall. "He stood there and stared at me. I said, 'Joe, what's the He said, 'Nothing, I just came back to tell you goodbye I kissed him on the cheek, and he was gone." T.

Brown Logsdon dies; helped develop Radcliff From Staff and Special Dispatches Hardin County Water District 1. He worked as a teacher, barber, RADCLIFF, Ky. Former Mayor tobacco grader and tobacco farmer, T. Brown Logsdon, a self-pro- served as the first chairman and apclaimed city planner who was in- praiser of the Farmers Home Adstrumental in the development of ministration in Hardin County and Radcliff, died Sunday at was a farm loan appraisal Hardin Memorial Hospital officer for First Hardin in Elizabethtown of con- National Bank. gestive heart failure.

He A proposal he presented was 89. at the American Farm BuLogsdon, Radcliff's first reau convention was later elected mayor, served used in the Soil Bank Plan from 1966 to 1969. adopted by the EisenhowHe purchased a Hardin er administration. County farm in 1946 and Survivors include four by 1954 decided the land sons, David Logsdon of was better suited for 1963 PHOTO Elizabethtown, Robert homes than crops. Logsdon Wayne Logsdon of BowlBob-O-Link Acres was ing Green, and Marion the first of Logsdon's subdivisions, and Marvin Logsdon; a sister, Elizaand he eventually developed more beth Smith; 10 grandchildren; and than 1,400 acres and built several 13 great-grandchildren.

dozen miles of water and sewer The funeral will be at 2 p.m. tolines and streets. morrow at Radcliff United Methodist Logsdon received many awards Church, with burial in North Hardin from civic organizations, including Memorial Gardens. Visitation at Nelthe Chamber of Commerce and Ro- son-Edelen-Bennett Funeral Home tary Club, and was a director of will be after 10 a.m. today.

Letcher teachers, parents blast schools' management Associated Press WHITESBURG, Ky. About 400 teachers, school employees and parents attended a public meeting yesterday to air complaints about state control of the Letcher County school system. Teachers complained that the state management team appointed to run the district was not treating them as professionals. And several parents said local input was lacking when the team was chosen. Members of the management team, which took over earlier this year after Superintendent Jack Burkich resigned under the threat of removal, were preparing for a school board meeting and did not attend the other meeting.

"I wish they'd have come," said Jon Henrikson, president the Letcher County Teachers Organization. "We heard a wide range of ideas." KENTUCKY DEATHS BARBOURVILLE Eva Mae Engle Foley, 86, died Sunday in Corbin. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Paint Hill Baptist Church. Visitation at Knox Funeral Home after 5 p.m.

Tuesday and at the church after 10 a.m. Wednesday. BENTON Evalee Barnes, 78, died here recorder Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Funeral Home. Visitation after 2 p.m.

Tuesday. BENTON Dorothy Ross, 71, Gilbertsville, died Monday in Paducah. There will be no funeral or visitation. Arrangements: Filbeck Cann Funeral Home. BOWLING GREEN Jack Franklin Harvey, 64, died Sunday in Nashville, Tenn.

His wife, Jean, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Johnson-Vaughn Funeral Home. Visitation after noon Tuesday. CAVE CITY Jessie B.

Whitaker 77, died Sunday in Horse Cave. His wife, Mary Louise, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Bob Hunt Funeral Home. Visitation after 9 a.m.

Tuesday. CORBIN Clifford 35, formerly of Corbin, died Friday in Indianapolis. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Corbin Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m.

Tuesday and after 9 a.m. Wednesday. CROFTON Clara Nichols Cansler, 95, died Sunday in Hopkinsville. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Hughart Beard Crofton Funeral Home.

Visitation after 4 p.m. Tuesday. DAWSON SPRINGS Willabell Holland, 69, Howland, Ohio, formerly of Dawson Springs, died Friday in Warren, Ohio. Her husband, James, survives. Funeral, 11 a.m.

Tuesday, Townsend-Jones Funeral Home, Providence. ELIZABETHTOWN Cynthia Jane Brewer, 62, died here Sunday. Her husband, Phinus, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Christ Episcopal Church.

Graveside service, 2 p.m. Friday, Forest Hills Cemetery, Chattanooga, Tenn. Visitation at Brown Funeral Home after 6:30 p.m. Tuesday and at Wann Funeral Home, Chattanooga, after noon Friday. ELIZABETHTOWN Katie L.

Jones, 75, died here Saturday. Arrangements: Percell Funeral Home. ELKTON Edward Wilson Stratton, 67, died Monday in Hopkinsville. His wife, Grace, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m.

Wednesday, Latham Funeral Home. Visitation after 4:30 p.m. Tuesday. EVARTS Greg McLain, 34, died here Sunday. His wife, Tammy, survives.

Funeral, noon Wednesday, Evarts Funeral Home. Visitation after 5 p.m. Tuesday. FRANKLIN Lillian Mayhew, 75, died here Sunday. Her 1 husband, Mert, survives.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Crafton Funeral Home. GLASGOW Alma J. stead, 88, died Sunday in Bowling Green. Funeral, 1 p.m.

Tuesday, Hatcher Saddler Funeral Home. HARDINSBURG Michael Wayne Timberlake, 11, formerly Louisville after an illness. His father, Richard Timberlake of Westview, and his mother, Wendy Timberlake of Louisville, survive. Funeral, 11 a.m. CST Wednesday, Horsley Chapel Methodist Church.

Visitation at Trent-Dowell Funeral Home after 2 p.m. CST Tuesday. HARLAN Mindle Davidson 111, 8, formerly of Cawood, died Sunday in Rocky Face, of injuries from a four-wheel all-terrain vehicle accident. His parents, Mindle Jr. and Sherry N.

Davidson, survive. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Church of the Living God, Baxter. Visitation at the church after 2 p.m. Tuesday.

Arrangements: Mount Pleasant Funeral Home. HARLAN The Rev. Lloyd Stokes, 93, Wallins, died Sunday in Middlesboro. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Wallins United Methodist Church.

Visitation at Anderson-Laws Funeral Home after 6 p.m. Tuesday and at the church after noon Wednesday. HARRODSBURG Ella Hazel McMurry, 81, died Monday in Lancaster. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Ransdell Funeral Chapel.

No visitation. HAZARD Pearl Pratt 55, Viper, died here Sunday. His wife, Delphia, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Hickory Gap Pentecostal Church.

Visitation at the church after 5 p.m. Tuesday. Arrangements: Engle Funeral Home. HINDMAN Hargis Cornett, 77, West Milton, Ohio, died there Sunday. His wife, Dovie, survives.

Funeral, 10:30 a.m. Wednesday, Wickline Funeral Home, West Milton. Visitation there after 5 p.m. Tuesday. Local arrangements: Hindman Funeral Services.

HINDMAN Joe Johnson, 74, died Saturday in Lexington. His wife, Gertie, survives. Funeral, 10 a.m. Tuesday, Hindman United Baptist Church. Arrangements: Hindman Funeral Services.

HINDMAN Adrian Jones, 71, formerly of Knott County, died Friday in Lexington. Funeral, p.m. Tuesday, Clear Creek Regular Baptist Church, Emmalena. Arrangements: Hindman Funeral Services. HODGENVILLE Louise Skaggs, 68, died Monday in Elizabethtown.

Her husband, Hal, survives. Arrangements: Bennett-Bertram Funeral Home. HOPKINSVILLE Brandon Scott Pugh, 15, Henry, formerly of Hopkinsville, died Sunday in Memphis, Tenn. His parents, Wendell and Donna Pugh, survive. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Wednesday, FuquaHinton Funeral Home. Visitation after 4 p.m. Tuesday. HYDEN Dosha Begley, 63, died here Sunday. Her husband, Junior, survives.

Funeral, 1 p.m. Thursday, her home. Visitation there after 3 p.m. Tuesday. Arrangements: Dwayne Walker Funeral Home.

IRVINE Clyde Douglas Christy, 71, died here Sunday. His wife, Myrtle, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Warren F. Toler Funeral Home.

Visitation after 5:30 p.m. Tuesday. IRVINE Aileen Kirby Johnson, 65, died here Sunday. Funeral, 1 p.m. Tuesday, Warren F.

Toler Funeral Home. Visitation after 9 a.m. Tuesday. LEBANON Dorothy Mae Lankford Gillespie, 85, formerly of Marion County, died Sunday in Huntington, Ind. Her husband, Paul, survives.

Funeral, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Myers Funeral Home, Huntington. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday. LEBANON The funeral for Terry Lee Porter Gray, 28, be at 1 p.m.

Wednesday at St. Augustine Catholic Church. Visitation at Campbell-DeWitt Funeral Home after 6 p.m. Tuesday. He died Sunday.

LEXINGTON Mary Hughes, 68, died Sunday in Denver. Her husband, Virgil, survives. Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Broadway Christian Church. Visitation at W.

R. Milward Mortuary-Broadway after 5 p.m. Tuesday. LEXINGTON The funeral for Fannie Miller, 80, has been changed to noon Tuesday at Temple Adath Israel. Arrangements: W.

R. Milward Mortuary-Broadway. She died Sunday. LOYALL Elbert Sizemore, 80, Brookside, died Sunday in Harlan. Funeral, 2 p.m.

Wednesday, Loyall Funeral Home. Visitation after 5 p.m. Tuesday. MADISONVILLE Mary Alice Noble, 78, formerly of Madisonville, died Saturday i in Owensboro. A graveside service was Monday in Odd Fellows Cemetery.

Arrangements: Harris Funeral Home. MADISONVILLE Luther Stearsman, 96, died here Sunday. A graveside service was Monday in Forest Lawn Memorial Park. Arrangements: Reid-Walters Funeral Home, Earlington. MANITOU Lester Howard Winebarger, 61, died here Saturday.

His wife, Lula, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Harris Funeral Home. Visitation after 4 p.m. Tuesday and after 8 a.m.

Wednesday. MARTIN Earsel Tackett, 67, Beaver, died there Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, his home. Visitation there after 8 a.m.

Tuesday. Arrangements: Hall Funeral Home. MAYFIELD John D. Lanmon, 81, died here Sunday. His wife, Gertrude, survives.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Tuesday, Byrn Funeral Home. MAYFIELD Wilburn Tibbs, 87, died Sunday in Charleston, Mo. His wife, Mozell, survives. Funeral, 2:30 p.m.

Thursday, Byrn Funeral Home. Visitation after p.m. Wednesday. McKEE Laura Blevins, 84, died here Sunday. Her husband, Carl, survives.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Lakes Funeral Home. Visitation after 8 a.m. Tuesday. McVEIGH Zella Stump, 76, died Monday in Williamson, W.

Va. Funeral, 2 p.m. Thursday, Rogers Funeral Home, Belfry. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

McVEIGH Homer son, 86, died Monday in Williamson, W. Va. Funeral, 11 a.m. Thursday, Dix Fork Regular Baptist Church. Visitation at Rogers Funeral Home, Belfry, after 6 p.m.

Tuesday. MONTICELLO Claude Turner, 81, died here Monday. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Hickey Son Funeral Home. Visitation after 4 p.m.

Tuesday. MOUNT VERNON Mae Boone Thomas, 74, died here Sunday. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Dowell Martin Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m.

Tuesday. MUNFORDVILLE Dicie Heath, 78, Magnolia, died Saturday in Louisville. Her husband, J. survives. Funeral, 1 p.m.

CST Tuesday, Mount Pisgah Baptist Church, Arrangements: Sego Funeral Home. MUNFORDVILLE Dorothy Johnson, 71, Bonnieville, died Saturday in Elizabethtown. The funeral was Monday at Sego Funeral Home. MURRAY Patricia Lee Reed, 29, formerly of Murray, died Sunday Elizabethtown. Funeral, 1 p.m.

Wednesday, J. H. Churchill Funeral Visitation after 5 p.m. Tuesday. MYRA Courtney Wright, infant daughter of Timothy and Mary Wright, died Sunday in Pikeville.

Graveside service, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Branham Cemetery, Caney Creek. Arrangements: Jones Funeral Home, Virgie. OWENSBORO Gilbert B. Millay, 68, died here Monday.

His wife, Anna, survives. Funeral, 10 a.m. Wednesday, Blessed Mother Catholic Church. Visitation at Glenn Funeral Home after 1 p.m. Tuesday.

PAINTSVILLE Allen Cavins, 68, Hager Hill, died here Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, JonesPreston Funeral Home. Visitation after 5 p.m. Tuesday.

PAINTSVILLE Mary Jane Perry, 49, Auxier, died there Sunday. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Jones-Preston Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

PAINTSVILLE Robert B. Hoose, 62, Staffordsville, died Sunday in Lexington. His wife, Patricia, survives. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Toms Creek Freewill Baptist Church.

Visitation at Jones-Preston Funeral Home after 8 a.m. Tuesday. PINEVILLE Grant Brown 71, died Monday. His wife, Martha, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m.

Wednesday, Arnett Steele Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday. RADCLIFF Loxie McCubbins Boyd, 74, formerly of Radcliff, died Monday in Valley Station. Her husband, Vernon, survives.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Vine Grove Baptist Church. Visitation at NelsonEdelen-Bennett Funeral Home after 11 a.m. Tuesday. RADCLIFF Paul D.

McKay, 63, died Sunday in Elizabethtown. Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, NelsonEdelen-Bennett Funeral Home. Visitation after 5 p.m. Wednesday.

RICHMOND Herbert H. Ponder, 65, died Sunday in Lexington. His wife, Daphne, survives. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Oldham, Roberts Powell Funeral Home.

Visitation after 5 p.m. Tuesday. RUSSELLVILLE Robert "Skip" Abney, 72, died Sunday in Nashville, Tenn. Funeral, 11 a.m. Tuesday, Memorial Funeral Home.

Visitation after 8 a.m. Tuesday. SCOTTSVILLE Penny nette Patterson, 17, died Monday of injuries from a traffic accident on Ky. 1332 in Allen County. Her mother and stepfather, Robbie and Jimmy Stinson of Scottsville, and her father and stepmother, Daniel and Sandy Patterson of Oliver Springs, survive.

Funeral, 2:30 p.m. Wednesday, Goad Funeral Home. Visitation after noon Tuesday. SOMERSET Gordon Bradley 62, died Saturday in Lexington. His wife, Geraldine, survives.

Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Pulaski Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday. SPRINGFIELD Dr.

Russell Fredrick Grider, 88, formerly of Springfield, died Sunday in Louisville. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, Carey Son Funeral Home. Visitation after 4 p.m. Tuesday.

STONE Loraine Rose Justice, 74, formerly of Stone, died 11 a.m. Thursday, Rogers Funeral Sunday in Ypsilanti, a Mich. Funeral, Home, Belfry. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

VANCEBURG June Skidmore, 77, Garrison, died Sunday in Ashland. Her husband, Buster, survives. Funeral, 1 p.m. Wednesday, Gaydos Funeral Home. Visitation after 2 p.m.

Tuesday and after 8 a.m. Wednesday. VIRGIE Clennon D. Jones, 57, died here Sunday. His wife, Betty, survives.

Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, Bethel Freewill Baptist Church. Visitation is at the church. Arrangements: Pike County Funeral Home, Zebulon. WEST LIBERTY Herman Henry, 61, Trenton, Ohio, formerly of West Liberty, died a Sunday in Dayton, Ohio.

Funeral, 10 a.m. Thursday, Herald Stewart Halsey Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Wednesday. WHITLEY CITY James William Grundy, 59, died Sunday in Somerset.

His wife, Janice, survives. Funeral, 2 p.m. Wednesday, McCreary County Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

WHITLEY CITY Nellie Bryant Sumner, 72, died Sunday in Somerset. Funeral, 4 p.m. Wednesday, McCreary County Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

WHITLEY CITY Angel Renee Vanover, 3-month-old daughter of Pearly Vanover and Ricky Bennett, Parkers Lake, died there Sunday. Funeral, 11 a.m. Wednesday, McCreary County Funeral Home. Visitation after 6 p.m. Tuesday.

Pearl Primus, portrayer of black life in dance, dies New York Times News Service Pearl Primus, a pioneering dancer, choreographer and teacher whose anthropological work exposed Americans to the realities of black life in America and to the richness of African and Caribbean dance, died Saturday at her home in New Rochelle, N. Y. She was 74. Primus died after a brief illness, said Joyce Knight, a friend. A powerful performer and lecturer, Primus believed there was material for dance in the everyday lives of black people.

Primus visited Africa for the first time in 1948, but she had begun to present carefully researched dance with African themes in 1943. Primus was celebrated for her depiction of American life and of the injustices inflicted on black Americans, particularly in the South. "Dance has been my freedom and my world," she said once. "I dance not to entertain but to help people better understand each other." An accident of fate led Primus to dance. Born in Trinidad, she came to the United States as a child with her parents.

She completed premedical studies at Hunter College and intended to become a doctor. Unable to find a laboratory job open to blacks, she applied to the National Youth Administration and was put into a dance group. In 1953 she married Percival Borde, a dancer she met on a visit home to Trinidad in 1953, and they founded a popular school in New York. Borde died in 1979. "My life has been like traveling up a river," she said in 1979.

"Every now and then I would hear singing around the bend, and so around the bend I would go and become occupied with She is survived by a son, Onwin Borde of Miami. 1963 PHOTO The meeting came a day after teachers and classified employees voted not to strike over salary concerns. Instead, they scheduled three meetings with state officials during the next two weeks to iron out differences. Classes were called off yesterday. School employees threatened the walkout last week because they received no pay raises this year.

Meanwhile, the district is footing the $309,000 bill for the management team and its consultants. Employees voted Sunday to accept a "memorandum of understanding" worked out with state officials. The document outlined six goals, including establishment of "fair and affordable" salaries for school employees. "We're going to be watching very closely how this development of procedures and processes works next couple of weeks," Henrikson said. LOUISVILLE AREA FUNERALS Max Robert Barton, 64.

Private graveside service: Zachary Taylor National Cemetery. No visitation. Arrangements: Pearson's. Grace Wieber Best, 90. Funeral: 10 a.m.

Tuesday, Highlands Funeral Home, 3331 Taylorsville Road. Thomas Sidney Bradford, 84. Funeral: 7 p.m. Tuesday, Perryman's Mortuary, 3237 W. Broadway.

Visitation: after noon Tuesday. Ballard H. Cox, 49, of 605 Creel Ave. Funeral: 10 a.m. Tuesday, O.

D. White Sons Funeral Home, 2727 S. Third St. Margaret Holt Edwards, 66. Funeral: 10 a.m.

Wednesday, Evergreen Funeral Home, 4623 Preston Highway. Visitation: after 2 p.m. Tuesday. Charles Michael Goesman, 68, Pleasure Tuesday, Ridge Park. E.

Funeral: Ratterman 1 p.m. Joseph Son South End Funeral Home, 7330 Southside Drive. Carrie Lark Green, 83. Funeral: 1 p.m. Tuesday, Pearson's, 149 Breckenridge Lane.

Visitation: after 10 a.m. Tuesday. Janet Aurel Green, 57, South Louisville. Funeral: 1 p.m. Tuesday, Arch L.

Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Mary T. Pedro Hutson, 64, South Louisville. Funeral: 10 a.m. Tuesday, Arch L.

Heady Southern Funeral Home, 3601 Taylor Blvd. Albert Ray Johnson, 86. Funeral: 1 p.m. Tuesday, Southeast Christian Church, 2840 Hikes Lane. Arrangements: Ratterman's-Bardstown Road.

Mrs. 0. F. Moser, 90, Mount Holly Nursing Center, formerly of Clifton. Private graveside service: Tuesday, Resthaven Memorial Park.

Arrangements: Neurath Underwood Funeral Home. Isabell Oelze Payne, 82, Elizabethtown, formerly of Shepherdsville, a native of I Breckinridge County. A graveside service was Monday in Resthaven Memorial Park. Arrangements: Maraman-Billings neral Home, Shepherdsville. Mary Rose Seadler Reeser, 72.

Funeral: 10 a.m. Wednesday, Embry-Bosse Funeral Home, 2723 Preston Highway. Visitation: after 2 p.m. Tuesday. Michigan man uses tractor to flip car of investigator Gannett News Service MELVIN, Mich.

A father of two chose a dramatic way to chase off a child-abuse investigator. Charles E. Groat, 39, used a tractor to flip the car of a protective services worker who was inside the family's Sanilac County home, police said. The car was badly damaged, and Groat was arrested, the county undersheriff said..

The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky (2024)

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