Berdene F. Hird

Funeral service for Berdene F. Hird, 86, Lawrence will be 10 am. Wednesday, April 23, at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. Mrs. Hird died Saturday at Lawrence Memorial Hospital. She was born Nov. 29, 1927 in Lawrence, the daughter of John W. and Priscilla M. Buchheim Unger.

She grew up in the Stull community, attended Lawrence public schools and graduated Liberty Memorial High in 1945. Mrs. Hird delivered the Lawrence Journal-World for many years, worked at Pladium Bowl, Royal Lanes, and Hillcrest Bowling Alley retiring in 1997.

She married Robert W. Hird on June 4, 1949 in Lawrence. He preceded her in death on Sept. 27, 1999.

Survivors include a daughter Diana L. McNish (Dennis) of Lawrence, sons John A. (Maraih) of Dallas, Richard A. (Diana Huseby) of Lawrence, grandchildren Lisa Chamberlain, Brian McNish (Kris), and 5 great-grandchildren.

She will lay in state Tuesday noon to 8 pm. where the family will meet with friends from 6 to 8 pm.

Memorials may be made to Lawrence Humane Society in care of the Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home, 601 Indiana, Lawrence, KS 66044.

Online condolences may be sent at Rumsey-yost.com.

Robert Wyer

Graveside inurnment services will be Thursday, April 24, 2014 at 1:00 PM at the Eudora City Cemetery.

On April 23, 2013, our beloved Robert Wyer “”Barb Wire”” was released into God’s care. Robert was born Aug. 27, 1925, to Orvia B. and Adeline (Boomgaarn) Wyer in Humboldt, Neb. He was raised on the family farm outside of Worth, Mo., with his brothers, Marion and George; and his sister, Ethel May; all deceased with George just passing three days earlier.

Robert graduated from Grant City High School on May 13, 1943. Soon afterwards, he was inducted into the United States Marine Corp on Nov. 12, 1943, to serve in World War II on the beaches of Okinawa, Peleliu, and the Palau Islands in the South Pacific. He was honorably discharged as Corporal First Class on March 21, 1946.

He married Gladys Robertson on Feb. 14, 1948. They bought a small farm outside of Eudora, Kan., where they raised their children. His sons, Ronald Eugene and Roger Dean, both preceded him in death.

He is survived by his daughter, Roberta Fay (Bill) Wyer Guffey; grandchildren, Jamie (Bryon) Robb and Jason (Britny) Guffey; and great-grandchildren, Nathan Justice, Teaghan Guffey, Dylan and Kailynn Robb.

Robert later re-married to Patricia (Pawley) Wyer following a move to the Belgrade area in 1969 where he worked at Peavey and Con Agra for several years. When other people would have been looking towards retirement, in 1975 at the age of 50, Bob and Pat started their own small engine business, Belgrade Sales and Service. This business carries on today, where he left a footprint on the Belgrade Community that he so loved. The community will always remember him wearing those bib overalls.

To a life well lived and a man well loved and respected!

Vencil Lee Shockley

Funeral services for Vencil Lee Shockley, 87, Lawrence, will be at 10 am Monday at Eudora Assembly of God Church, with the Rev. Glenn Weld officiating. Burial will follow in Oak Hill Cemetery, Lawrence. Mr. Shockley died Friday, Apr. 18, 2014, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.

He was born July 5, 1926, in Stark City, Mo., the son of Aud O. and Mary Jane Fielding Shockley. He came to Lawrence in 1951, and began working as a carpenter in the construction industry. He has been a member of Eudora Assembly of God since 1954, and was active in tractor pulling at the McLouth and Meriden threshing bees. He enjoyed fishing, hunting, woodworking, and was known as ‘Mr. Fix-It’ who loved to help others with repairs and tasks which often seemed impossible. He enjoyed spending time with his family.

He married Wilma Ruth McCracken on June 14, 1947, in Columbus, Kan. She preceded him in death in 1990. He was also preceded in death by two brothers, Edward and Harlan, and four sisters, Sarah, Lois, Lorene, and Marie. Survivors include a son, Danny Shockley and wife Becky, Eudora; four daughters, Virginia Armer and husband Aubrey, Topeka, Carolyn Drake and husband Steve, Lawrence, Hazel Bahnmaier and husband Mark, Lawrence, and Kathy Haun and husband Eldon, Richland, Mo.; three brothers, Everett Shockley and wife Kathy, Rogers, Ark., Donald Shockley and wife LaWanda, Powell, Mo., and Dean Shockley and wife Linda, Rogers, Ark.; three sisters, Thelma Trueblood, Wichita, Rena Mae Stephens, Tulsa, Okla., and Jean Roller and husband Merle, Muskogee, Okla.; thirteen grandchildren, 24 great grandchildren, and one great great grandchild.

Friends may call from noon to 8 pm Sunday at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home, where the family will receive them from 3-5 pm. Memorial contributions are suggested to the Eudora Assembly of God or the American Cancer Society, in care of the funeral home, 601 Indiana St., Lawrence, KS, 66044.

Leroy Eugene Smart

Funeral services for Leroy Eugene Smart, 60, Lawrence, will be 11:00 a.m. Tuesday at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home.

Burial will be in Pleasant Hill Cemetery.

He was born April 12, 1954, in Lawrence, the son of Nebe B. and Betty J. Flory Smart.

Mr. Smart served in the U.S. Army and worked in maintenance at the University of Kansas.  He enjoyed hunting, fishing, coin collecting, and playing in a pool league with his family.

Survivors include a daughter, Debi Leonard and husband Steve of Oskaloosa;  granddaughter, Lily Leonard of Oskaloosa; father, Nebe Smart of Lawrence; brothers, Joe Smart of Lawrence, Tom Smart of Lawrence, Randy Smart of California, Gary Smart of Topeka; sisters, Jeri Long of Lawrence, Neba Coble of Perry, Sherlina Barnes of Indiana; and numerous nieces and nephews.

He was preceded in death by his son, David Smart; mother Betty Smart; and sister, Donna Smart.

Friends may call from 9 a.m. to 8 p.m. Monday at the funeral home, where the family will receive them from 6-8 p.m. Monday.

The family suggests memorials to the Leroy Smart Memorial fund, sent in care of the funeral home.

Grant K. Goodman

Grant K. Goodman died peacefully in his sleep at Brandon Woods at Alvamar, on the evening of Sunday, April 6, after a year of many ups and downs in his brief battle against lung cancer.

Grant was born in Cleveland, Ohio in 1924. His interest in Asia started in his childhood, when he became an avid stamp collector and thus learned to take Manchukuo seriously; and when he became a voracious reader and learned early on about the Marco Polo Bridge Incident and Japan’s invasion of China. His parents nurtured these interests and, by age seven, Grant was on his way as a budding Asianist.

By the time he graduated from high school, Grant was eager to seriously pursue Asian Studies. By then, World War II had begun. In the fall of 1942, he commenced his freshman year at Princeton—where he subsequently applied for and was accepted by the U.S. Army Intensive Japanese Language School for Military Intelligence.

In May of 1944, Grant was a Technical Specialist 5, ready for another six months of advanced military Japanese language training. Commissioned a Second Lieutenant in the Military Intelligence Service in May of 1945, he arrived in the Philippines. Initially he interrogated Japanese prisoners and eventually assisted in the translation of the Japanese Order of Battle as well as the Japanese surrender terms delivered to General Douglas MacArthur’s GHQ in Manila.

On October 1, 1945, Grant landed in Yokohama. He served in Tokyo in the Headquarters of the Supreme Commander Allied Powers until shortly before his discharge in October of 1946. He received his B.A. from Princeton University‘s Woodrow Wilson School of Public and International Affairs in 1948, his M.A. in Far Eastern Studies from the University of Michigan in 1949, and his Ph.D. in Japanese History in 1955 from the University of Michigan.

Grant’s arrival at the University of Kansas in 1962 was one of several key appointments that saw Asian Studies develop rapidly through the 1960s with considerable support from the Ford Foundation and later on, the Federal Government through its National Defense Education Act. These young KU Asianists managed to put KU’s program on the map in a very short time through their own individual achievements and the University’s support. Grant’s contributions as eventual Co-Director of the East Asian Center with Prof. Felix Moos were immense. He traveled extensively and established many academic connections that proved indispensable to the Center. All the while, he continued to be a prolific writer and presenter of papers at a great many regional, national, and international meetings.

Grant has authored nine books (including two memoirs), edited or co-edited eight books, and published over 45 articles. In his long, highly productive career as a truly international scholar, he has been awarded many professional fellowships and grants by such organizations as the Netherlands Institute for Advance Study in the Humanities and Social Sciences, Mid American State Universities Association, Japan Foundation, Fulbright and Fulbright-Hays, American Council of Learned Soeieties, and the Sumitomo Foundation. Besides English, he spoke Dutch, French, Spanish and Japanese fluently. His many travels took him as a visiting professor to the Philippines, Hong Kong, Japan, Australia, England, Ireland, Poland, and Germany.

Grant K. Goodman retired from the University of Kansas in 1984. His collected papers and notes are in the Bentley Historical Library, University of Michigan, but his personal papers are in the University Archive, Spencer Library, University of Kansas. After his retirement, he was active in Lawrence for many years with the Douglas County Senior Center; was a strong supporter of the KU School of Music and the KU Hall Center for the Humanities; and a fierce advocate for KU retirees through the Endacott Society at the KU Alumni Center. Finally, Grant was a tireless promoter of theatre and new plays by Kansas playwrights by single-handedly funding the award-winning English Alternative Theatre (EAT) for over 20 years through the work of KU English Prof. Paul Stephen Lim, his lifelong friend, until Lim’s own retirement in 2010.

When his illness took a sudden turn for the worse three weeks ago, Grant was in the midst of planning a big celebration for what would have been his 90th birthday in October. It was then his final wish that this birthday party should be held as his memorial service in the event of his death. Grant K. Goodman is survived by a younger brother, David, and his wife Helen, of Chagrin Falls, Ohio.

Private inurnment services at KU’s Pioneer Cemetery are being arranged by Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home for the immediate family and a small group of friends. Donations can be made directly to the KU Endowment Association (PO Box 928, Lawrence, KS 66044) in honor of Grant K. Goodman, designated for either the Endacott Society, or for the Annual Grant K. Goodman Distinguished Lecture in Japanese Studies in the KU Center for East Asian Studies.

Dale E. Myer

Dale Ervin Myer

Graveside services for Dale E. Myer, 72, Eudora, will be at noon Friday, April 18, 2014, at Oak Hill Cemetery in Lawrence, with the Rev. Phillip Scott officiating.

Mr. Myer died Sunday, April 13, 2014, at Pioneer Ridge Retirement Community in Lawrence.

He was born February 17, 1942 in Humboldt, KS, the son of Alfred & Mabel Orth Myer. He served in the US Army from 1959 to 1963. He worked at Lawrence Paper Company and also worked at FMC now called ICL Performance Products which he retired from in 2007. Dale loved being with family and friends, fixing things and going to garage sales. Dale will be sadly missed for his sense of humor.

Dale married Judy Coffman on September 21, 1967, in Lawrence. She survives of the home.

Other survivors include a son Jeffrey of Lawrence; six brothers, Elvin of Bennington, NE; Art of Corinth, TX; Larry of Duncanville, TX; Gary, John & Carl all of Lawrence;  two sisters, Doris Pablish  of Greenbelt, MD; and Connie Ridgeway of McLouth, KS. He was preceded in death by a brother, AJ Myer and two sisters, Peggy Eberhard and Mary Bellisime.

Friends may call at the funeral home on Thursday from 9 AM – 8 PM and the family will greet friends from 6 – 8 PM

Memorials contributions may be made to the Family of Faith Widows Fund in care of Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home.

Online condolences may be sent to rumsey-yost.com.

Lewis W. Ellis

Lewis Ellis was taken home to live with his father, Sunday, April 13, 2014, after a long illness.

Mr. Ellis was a roofing contractor in Lawrence for 30 years.  He attended the Mustard Seed Church in Lawrence.

He is survived by his wife Ruby of the home; three sons, Ron Ellis, Don Ellis, and Lonnie Ellis; 5 step children, Kim Turner, Ray Ramey, Rene’ Tucker, John Grimes, and Niki Kihm; grandchildren; a brother and his wife; and nieces.

There will be a private celebration of life service held at a later date.

Lenita Catherine Rose

Lenita Catherine Rose, 65, died Saturday, April 12, 2014 at Golden Living Center Eskridge, Kansas.

She was born March 24, 1949 and grew up in Clay Center, Kansas. 

Full of spirit, she made life interesting and fought until the end. 

She was a Navy veteran and mother to two daughters, Elizabeth Benfield and Jennifer Meyer, grandmother to Cody Knapik, Jessica Meyer (Deceased) and Rebecca Herring Meyer, sister of Charles Rose, Debra Schneider and Stephen Rose.

The family suggests memorial contributions to the Lenita Rose Memorial Fund, sent in care of Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home & Crematory, 601 Indiana, Lawrence, KS66044.

Condolences may be sent at rumsey-yost.com.

Todd Anthony Holloway

Todd Anthony Holloway, 45, Lawrence, passed away at home following a lengthy illness.

Todd was born in Saginaw, Michigan, June 14, 1968.

He is survived by his mother, Judith Holloway of Lawrence; two brothers, Kevin Holloway and wife Pamela of Big Lake, Minnesota, Rick Holloway of Parkersburg, West Virginia; and one sister, Jill Dunham and husband Michael J. of Cleveland, Missouri.

His father William H. Holloway preceded him in death.

Todd was an RN at Select Specialties Hospital in Kansas City, Kansas.

Private memorial services are planned for a later date.

The family suggests donations to the LMH Oncology Unit, sent in care of Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home, PO Box 1260, Lawrence, KS 66044.

Jon Thomas ‘J.T.’ Isaacs

Funeral services for Jon Thomas ‘J.T.’ Isaacs, 68, rural Lawrence, will be at 1 pm Tuesday at Rumsey-Yost Funeral Home. Burial will follow in Memorial Park Cemetery.  Mr. Isaacs died Thursday, Apr. 10, 2014, at Lawrence Memorial Hospital.

He was born Dec. 21, 1945, in Lawrence, the son of Fred R. and Mary Breakey Isaacs.  J.T. graduated from Lawrence High School, and later became co-owner and operations manager at Schendel Pest Control for over 40 years. He was a member of Breakfast Optimist, and was known as a ‘master of all trades’ who would help anyone. He enjoyed spending time at their cabin in Colorado.

He married Veronica ‘Vicki’ Mages on June 9, 1965, in Missouri. She survives of the home. Other survivors include two sons, John F. Isaacs, and Neal L Isaacs and wife Melissa, all of Lawrence; a sister, Mary Ann Saunders, Lawrence; and five grandchildren.

The family will receive friends from 6:30 to 8 pm Monday at the funeral home.  Memorials are suggested to Prairie Paws Animal Shelter of Ottawa, in care of the funeral home, 601 Indiana St., Lawrence, KS, 66044. Online condolences may be sent at rumsey-yost.com.