By Ansel Oliver, Adventist News NetworkSpecial to ASSIST News Service
MEMPHIS, TN (ANS) -- The principal of Memphis Junior Academy in the U.S. state of Tennessee was found dead yesterday morning at the school, and police have a 17-year-old male student in custody.
FALLEN WORKER: Suzette York, 49, was the principal and teacher of grades 7 to 10 at Memphis Junior Academy. She was found dead at the school yesterday in an apparent homicide. [photo courtesy KTC] |
"This is a very sad day for all of us in this community, and particularly for the Seventh-day Adventist family," said Steve Haley, president of the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference of Seventh-day Adventists, which oversees the school.
"She was not only an administrator, but also a colleague, a friend and a fellow believer," Haley said. "Our prayers are lifted on behalf of her husband as well as the staff and students at Memphis Junior Academy. We are also praying for all those impacted by this tragedy."
"Our faith in God and in our mission remains; to it we now add a commitment to honor Suzette York's service and sacrifice," Haley said.
The school has an enrollment of 74 students in kindergarten through grades 10.
Originally from Canada, Suzette M. York was born on April 18, 1962, and attended Pacific Union College in Angwin, California. She graduated in 1983 with a bachelor's degree in elementary education. In 1988 she earned a master's degree from Loma Linda University, according to information supplied by the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference.
York taught for nine years in the British Columbia and Maritime Conferences in Canada. She first came to Memphis Junior Academy as a teacher in 1996 and served until 2001. She returned in 2008 to serve as principal and teacher.
"She had tremendous love for her students," said Marvin Lowman, secretary of the Kentucky-Tennessee Conference. He said York had lobbied the conference education board along with others to expand the school to serve up to grade 12. The board had recently approved the move, Loman said.
"Some students wouldn't go to other Adventist schools to complete high school. She didn't want that to happen," Loman said.
Counseling is being arranged for the students and staff of the school, said Haley, the conference president. He said classes would resume "when it is appropriate."
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