TYLER — Artistic interpretations of family will be on display as Gallery Main Street opens its “Family” art exhibit with a reception from 4:30 p.m. to 6:30 p.m. Thursday at 110 W. Erwin. The reception, which is open to the public, will feature art, live music and refreshments. There is no cost to attend. More than 60 entries were considered for inclusion in the show, said Beverly Abell, director of the City of Tyler’s Main Street Department. Eighteen pieces were eventually selected for the exhibit. Abell explained that all exhibits and pieces of art in the gallery are selected via a jury process. The jury is composed of artists and arts instructors. Oil, acrylic, photography, watercolor and mixed media are all represented in the exhibit. Participating artists range in age from their 20s to their 80s. “We take pride in the wide variety of media and artists who participate in Gallery Main Street,” Abell said.
“Family” will be on exhibit through July 31. The next exhibit, “The Uncommon Image: an Exhibition of the Abstract and the Non-Objective,” is set for Aug. 5 through Sept. 10. Go to http://www.downtowntylerarts.com for prospectus for all exhibits. Gallery Main Street is a project of the City of Tyler Main Street Program and the volunteers of the Downtown Tyler Arts Coalition. Hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday through Wednesday; 10 a.m. to 7 p.m. Thursday and Friday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Saturday. Those who want more information should go to http://www.downtowntylerarts.com or call Gallery Main Street at (903) 593-6905.

LONGVIEW — Funeral services are scheduled Friday for well known Longview attorney R. E. Peppy Blount. He died yesterday morning at his home at the age of 85.
LONGVIEW — Longview police say two pawn shop burglars were captured Tuesday morning. At around 12:12 a.m., Longview Officers were dispatched to a business alarm at the Insta Cash Pawn shop at 1200 East Marshall Avenue. Sergeant David Hazel arrived within minutes and located two men with flashlights in the fenced-in area of the pawn shop, just east of the building. Sergeant Hazel saw that the two suspects were carrying chainsaws from a storage container located within the fenced area, and he demanded that the suspects stop. 


TYLER (AP) — An ex-Smith County deputy must serve 10 years of probation after pleading guilty to aggravated assault with a deadly weapon in an off-duty attack on a murder suspect. Terry Helms Lindsey of Tyler must serve 180 days in jail in his plea agreement Tuesday in Tyler. The case against the 24-year-old Lindsey involved a 2009 party at his home. An affidavit says Lindsey was accused of beating 22-year-old Joshua Dwain Barnes after Barnes allegedly killed James Brandon Lee. Barnes, who served in the U.S. Army in Iraq, sought to have Lindsey’s plea deal rejected. Barnes testified that his alleged stabbing of Lee was self defense. Barnes still faces a murder charge. A judge declined to reject the plea agreement for Lindsey, who was fired after his arrest.