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Sun Herald -
Biloxi, MS - October 10, 2006
OBITUARY
Ira B. Harkey, Jr.
Funeral services for Dr. Ira B. Harkey Jr., 88, former New Orleans and
Mississippi newspaperman will be held on Friday, October 13, 2006 at
3:00 p.m. in the Chapel of Lakelawn Metairie Cemetery in New Orleans.
Services were also held on Tuesday afternoon, October 10, 2006 at the
First United Methodist Church in Kerrville. Texas.
Harkey died from complications of Parkinson's Disease on Sunday, October
8, 2006 at 12:50 a.m. at Parsons House in Kerrville, Texas. He had been
a resident at Parsons House for nearly two years.
In 1963 he won a Pulitzer Prize for his editorials in the Pascagoula,
Mississippi Chronicle, of which he was editor and publisher from 1948 to
1963. He began his newspaper career as a reporter for the Times-Picayune
in New Orleans while a junior at Tulane University in 1940.
Among other honors were the Society of Professional Journalists' medal
for outstanding national newspaper public service, a media award from
the National conference of Christians and Jews, and the Silver Em Award
from the University of Mississippi. The Silver Em honors a broadcast or
print journalist whose career exemplifies the highest ideals of American
journalism.
In 1992 he was given the annual libertarian award of the Mississippi
Civil Liberties Union, and the following year was elected to the
Mississippi Newspaper Association hall of fame.
Harkey was born in New Orleans January 15. 1918. He was a graduate of
Isidore Newman School, attended New Mexico Military Institute, graduated
from Tulane and held masters and doctoral degrees from Ohio State
University.
He was author of five books. including The Smell of Burning Crosses, an
account of his 14-year participation in the Mississippi civil rights
battles. He published many magazines articles.
He intended to be a teacher, but in 1942 left Tulane graduate school to
join the US Navy, in which he served as a lieutenant in air combat
intelligence and as a mobile correspondent in the Pacific.
In 1946 he returned to The Times-Picayune as a magazine writer, and in a
1948 bought the Pascagoula newspaper, a weekly. In 1957 he converted it
to a semi-weekly, to a daily in 1962.
After selling the Chronicle in 1963, Harkey wrote his autobiographical
book and went to Ohio State University as a journalism teacher. In the
late 1960s and 1970s he was a Carnegie Foundation professor at the
University of Alaska and professional lecturer at the universities of
Montana and Oregon. Until 1993 he lectured at various colleges,
universities and before other organizations.
Since 1977 Harkey had lived near Kerrville, Texas.
His other books are Pioneer Bush Pilot: the Story of Noel Wien, a
biography of the first aviator to tame the Alaska Arctic; Alton Ochsner:
Surgeon of the South, with co-author John Wilds of New Orleans;
Dedicated to the Proposition a brief summary of his editorial activities
during and after the James Meredith crisis at the University of
Mississippi; and Mississippi Sounds, story of a family of six that moved
from the big city to a small town.
He was a member of Phi Beta Kappa, Delta Kappa Epsilon, the American
Association of University Professors and the American Political Science
Association. He was a member of the Louisiana Club and had been a member
of the Boston Club for sixty-five years.
Surviving are his widow, the former Virgia Ouin Mioton of New Orleans
and seven children, five of whom live in Mississippi, Ira, III in Ocean
Springs, Meg Harkey Walters and Amelie Harkey Foster of Gautier, Erik
Gore Harkey of Columbia and William Millsaps Harkey of Pascagoula and
Maybin Harkey of Beaumont, Texas and Katherine A. Kibby of Minneapolis,
Minnesota.
Also he is survived by a sister Eleanor Harkey Wheeler of Norfolk,
Virginia, 13 grandchildren, eight great-grandchildren, eight
stepchildren, and several nieces.
In lieu of flowers please make contributions to The Michael J. Fox
Foundation for Parkinson's Research, Grand Central Station. P.O. Box
4777, New York, New York 10163
The family invites you to send condolences at
www.grimesfuneralchapels.com by selecting the "Send Condolences"
link.
Funeral arrangements are entrusted to GRIMES FUNERAL CHAPELS OF
KERRVILLE.
© 2006 The Sun Herald and wire
service sources. All Rights Reserved.
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