The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 205, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1991 Page: 3 of 20
This newspaper is part of the collection entitled: The Baytown Sun and was provided to The Portal to Texas History by the Sterling Municipal Library.
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fHE BAYTOWN SUN
Thursday, June 27, 1991
3-A
DEATHS AND FUNERALS
ANDERSON
Services for Ronald E. (Ron)
Anderson, 43, of Houston will
be held at 11 a.m. Friday, June
28, 1991, at Pasadena Funeral
Home.
Anderson died on Tuesday,
June 25, in Houston.
He was bom and raised in
Baytown,
Anderson graduated from
Robert E. Lee High School in
1966 and Sam Houston State
University in 1973. He was em-
ployed with Cornwell Tool Co.
He is survived by his mother,
Louise J. Anderson of Pasadena;
daughter, Michaela Anderson of
Atlanta, Ga.; sisters and bothers-
in-law, Mary and Mike, Harris of
Deer Park and Jackie- and Ed
Jonps of Pasadena; nephew and
hi/wife, Joe and Jana Chitty of
i5eer Park.
Visitation will held from 10
a.m. to 10 p.m. Thursday, June
27, at Pasadena Funeral Home.
Burial will be on Friday, June
28, at Memory Gardens
Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Charles
Woodard, Ross Martin, Dwane
Davis, Doyce Tomlin, Joe Chi-
solm and Andy Bockholt.
In lieu of the usual remem-
brances, donations may be made
to the American Heart
Association.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Pasadena Funeral
Home.
BRACKIN
Services for Ronald Eugene
“Gene" Brackin, 36, of HTfeti-4
lands were held at 2 p.m. Mon-
day, June 24, 1991, at San Ja-
cinto Cemetery.
Brackin died Saturday, June
22, in a Baytown hospital.
He had lived in Highlands for
four years and was a former re-
sident of California and Color-
ado. He attended Highlands
Elementary School, Highlands
Junior High and graduated from
Ross S. Sterling High School in
1973. He also attended Lee Col-
lege and was a member of the
Merchant Marines.
He was preceded in death by
a brother, Wilbem Ray Brackin.
He is survived by parents,
Wilbern W. and Dorothy
Brackin of Cleveland; sister,
Linda Brackin of Highlands;
grandmother, Mrs. Mamie
Brackin of Highlands; and a
number of nieces, nephews and
other relatives and a host of very
dear friends.
Burial was at San Jacinto Me-
morial Cemetery in Houston.
In lieu of the usual remem-
brances, donations may be made
to the AIDS Foundation.
Arrangements were under the
direction of White Chapel Fun-
eral Home of Highlands. •
FRIES
Services for Herman Otto
Fries, 70, of Kamack, located
near Marshall, will be held at 1
p.m. Thursday, June 27,1991, at
Linney Cemetery in Dayton.
Fries died Tuesday, June 25,
in a Marshall hospital.
A native of Dayton, he had
lived in the state and had been in
Kamack for the last two years.
He is survived by his son, Jo-
nathan Fries of Kamack;
daughter, Janet DaRouse of La
Place, La.; sisters and brothers-
in-law, Lenora and Dugan
Rosser of Timpson and Venice
and Ronney Banks of Kamack;
brother, Ted Fries of Houston;
eight grandchildren and three
great grandchildren.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Sterling Funeral
Home of Dayton.
MARLOW
Services for Mary Gracie
Bundage Marlow, 93, of Barrett
Station will be hefd at 11 a.m.
Saturday, June 29,1991, at True
Vine Missionary Baptist Church
with the Rev. G.E. Sims
officiating.
Mrs. Marlow died Tuesday,
June 25, at her residence.
An area resident for 50 years,
she was a member of True Vine
Missionary Baptist Church.
She is survived by son, the
Rev. John C. Bundage of Barrett
Station; daughters, Bernice Val-
lery and Christeene Lockett,
both of Barrett Station, and
Leeonteene B. Nichols of
McNair, sister, Mary Jane Gib-
son of Fort Worth; 30 grandchil-
dren; 64 great-grandchildren; 19
great-great-grandchildren; and a
host of nieces, nephews and
cousins.
Burial will be at Evergreen
Cemetery in Barrett Station.
Pallbearers will be Mark A.
Harris, Reggie Harris, Louis Ea-
gleton, Donald R. Lewis Sr.,
Donald R. Lewis Jr. and Bryan-
D. White.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Walker Funeral
Home in Crosby.
for over 50 years and was a re-
tired- Exxon annuitant. Strother
was a U.S. Coast Guard World
War II veteran. He was a mem-
ber of Second Baptist Church.
He is survived by his wife,
Montie Strother of Baytown; .
son and daughter-in-law, Lynn
and Barbara Strother of Bay-
town; grandchildren, Greg
Strother, Chris Strother, Kelvin
Hill and Kristi Hill, all of Bay-
town; brothers, Floyd Strother
of De Ridder, La„ and Lloyd
Strother of Baytown; brother
and sister-in-law, Cecil and
Sabra Strother of Baytown; sis-
ters, Lonnie Greene of De Rid-
der, La., Jessie Wilson and Bes-
sie Wilson, both of Dry Creek,
La.; sisters and brothers-in-law,
Velma and Carmen Smith and
Ruth and Bill Sweeney, all of
De Ridder, La.
Visitations will be held
Thursday, June 27, at Navarrp-
Lee Funeral Home.
Burial will be at San Jacinto
Memorial Park Cemetery.
Pallbearers will be Asa Dun-
can, Wilton Jones, D.G. Keene,
Elton McDaniel and Chester
Smith.
Arrangements are under the
direction of Navarre-Lee Fun-
eral Home.
GRADY STROTHER
Services for - Grady W.
Strother, 69, of Baytown will be
held at 2 p.m. Friday, June 28,
1991, at Navarre-Lee Chapel
with the Revs. Bruce Baker and
D.C. Mangum officiating.
Strother died Wednesday,
June 26, at his home.
He was a Baytown resident
NCNB, C&S-Sovran plan merger
CHARLOTTE,. N.C. (AP)
— Unlike two years ago
when it fended off a takeover
bid by NCNB Corp., C&S-
Sovran Corp. is in no position
to fight the Charlotte banking
company’s latest overtures,
analysts say.
“1 think it could happen.
NCNB could make a reaso-
nably attractive offer,” bank
analyst Richard Stillinger of
Keefe Bruyette & Woods
said. “C&S would have a lot
more difficulty rejecting it
than it did two years ago.”
On Wednesday NCNB —
known in the banking world
for aggressive growth — con-
firmed it was in talks with
C&S-Sovran on a possible
merger that would create the
nation’s second largest bank.
NCNB’s last large acquisi-
tion touched off controversy
in some quarters. A House
Budget Committee task force
on urgent fiscal issues said
the bank was given too much
of a break when it assumed
control of Dallas-based First
Republic Bank of Texas in
1988.
Yugoslav tanks move on borders
LJUBLJANA, Yugoslavia
(AP) — Army troops and tanks
moved Thursday to seize
Slovenia’s borders and main air-
port, provoking the secessionist
republic’s president t6 promise a
fight and call on government
soldiers to desert.
The challenge to Slovenia’s
independence bid came two
days after Slovenia and neigh-
boring Croatia declared their
sovereignty from the Yugoslav
federation, which has long been
troubled by feuds between rival
ethnic groups.
In Croatia, government troops
were apparently limiting them-
selves to trying to prevent
clashes between ethnic Serbs
and Croats.
The central government said
it would crush opposition.
Slovenian leaders, who met in
emergency session, vowed
resistance.
Slovenes used buses, trucks
and snowplows to block roads
leading to their international
borders after government troops
were ordered to secure them.
They also blocked roads into
Ljubljana, their capital. And
troops of the republic’s territor-, ,
ial militia, armed with anti-tank -
weapons and rifles, patrolled the
capital’s streets.
Government troops made no
move into Ljubljana itself.
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Brown, Leon. The Baytown Sun (Baytown, Tex.), Vol. 69, No. 205, Ed. 1 Thursday, June 27, 1991, newspaper, June 27, 1991; Baytown, Texas. (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth1052578/m1/3/?q=%22~1%22~1: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu.; crediting Sterling Municipal Library.