Newspaper Page Text
— Griffin Daily News Thursday, April 27, 1972
Page 16
Property
Transfers
The following property
transfers were recorded during
the past week in the office of
Superior Court Clerk F. P.
Lindsey at the Spalding County
Courthouse:
Bobby Dunn to Peggy A.
Scott, house and lot Parkview
drive; Slade Realty, Inc., to H.
J. Krantz, lot Ramsey circle;
James E. Moore to Silas J.
Stephens, lot County road; A. S.
Hill and others to Thomas C.
and Mary Jo B. Kennedy, lot
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Millcreek lane; Kenneth E.
Pressley and Thomas J. Barrett
to Imperial Homes Construction
Co., lot Ellis road; Douglas J.
and Geraldine Fitzgerald to
Charles R. and Diane H.
Howell, house and lot
Tomochichi road.
E. D. Wilson Jr. to Mildred G.
Orlowski, house and lot
Tomochichi road; O. N. Mathis
to Eugene Maddox, lot Thomas
street; George N. Murray Jr.
and W. L. Simons to W. T.
Treadway, lot Pleasant Hills
subdivision; James D. and Iris
B. Smith to J. Marcus Sharpe,
lot Covington road; James E.
Aiken to Melvin E. and
Elizabeth L. Brooks, lot Bend
view road; Ruth G. Martin to
Michael A. Martin, five acres
Vaughn road; Slade Realty Inc.
to Leonard J. Hefner, two acres
Third Land District.
William Wesley Boggs to
Charles Mills Jackson, house
and lot North 16th street; First
Presbyterian Church of Griffin
to Taylor Collier, building and
lot at West Taylor and South
Eighth streets; Joe Dutton to
Sara D. Jimmerson, house and
lot Cherokee avenue; E. V.
Upton to I. N. Hill, two acres
U.S. 19 and U.S. 41; Robert L.
Cayse to Augustus R. Powell,
house and lot Edgewater drive;
Nathaniel H. Bailey to Joe
Dutton, lot Placid road; Central
Land Corp, to Albert F. Eady,
lot Banks road.
Louis W. Goldstein to Henry
R. Milner HI, lot Ella drive;
Ralph Bruce Crawford to
Adolph Coyett Johnson, 33 plus
acres Second Land District;
Willie George Reeves to Louis
W. Goldstein, house and lot
Atkinson drive; Grace M.
Patrick and others to Joseph V.
and Gwendolyn W. White, house
and four acres Locust Grove
road; Billy E. and Mary D.
Crowley to James B. and Lois
N. Green, two lots O’Dell road;
Reba Dutton to Willis O. Akins,
acre Whatley road.
Tom Barrett and Associates
Inc. to W. Barron Cumming,
house and lot Bieze street;
Lewis E. Horton to Dan J. and
Fred R. Smith, 66 acres Maloy
road; Thomas W. Pollard to
Industrial Wholesalers Inc.,
tract West College street;
Marshall Pape to Milus W. and
Jane R. Duke, three acres
Johnny Cut road; W. M. Kend
rick Jr. to James F. and Nannie
L. I>ane, house and lot Loumae
road.
Marjorie S. Kennedy to R. B.
Gray, three acres East Vine
yard road; Central Corp.
Social concerns
Methodist body backs
right to resist draft
By JACK WILKINSON
ATLANTA! UPI (-The Gener
al Conference of the United
Teachers given
50-50 pay chance
ATLANTA (UPI) — A State Education Department
official thinks Georgia teachers have a 50-50 chance of
having the federal pay board approve the 9.1 per cent pay
hike they have been given, because it is a two-year
contract.
Dr. Russell S. Clark, director of the department’s
division of planning, research and evaluation, said the
increase given the teachers by the legislature would be
well below the seven per cent level, if the board considers
the Georgia raise over a two-year period.
Clark said the board has also approved two raises for
Ohio teachers of S6OO.
Clark went with State School Supt. Jack Nix to
Washington Tuesday to deliver the request to the board,
which is expected to make a decision in about a month.
to Donald E. Blanton, lot Ella
drive; I. F. Scott to W. H. Scott,
two acres Line Creek road;
Thomas J. Patterson to Samuel
V. Jones, house and lot Ga. 92;
Randolph E. and Margie C.
Shedd to James E. and Barbara
H. Banks, house and lot Mobley
street; J. Marcus Sharpe to
William H. and Linda W. Bates,
house and lot North Ninth street
ext.; James H. and Yvonne C.
Brooks to Beecher and Pauline
S. Williamson, house and lot
Winona street.
Thomas D. and Faye M.
Sneed to Ruth G. Martin, five
acres Vaughn road; Donald E.
and Roxie O Shirey to John
Nichols, house and lot Grand
view drive; John H. Nichols to
Donald E. and Roxie O. Shirey,
house and lot McKinley drive;
Methodist Church has gone on
record in support of draft re
sisters who won’t serve because
FGS Enterprises Inc. to C. T.
Parker and Leila S. Fortune,
house and lot South Eighth
street ext.; Emmett Grover
Lynch estate to Ray M. Jim
merson, house and lot West
Solomon street; Ray M. Jim
merson to Claud Barrow, two
houses and lots Experiment
street.
James Edward and Barbara
H. Banks to Kathryn J. Eller,
house and lot Poplar street; Ted
H. and Brenda G. Meeks to
Kenneth E. Presley, house and
two lots South 14th street;
Searcy-Murray Realty Inc. to
Robert Gary Wilcher, lot
Tomochichi road; Searcy-
Murray Realty Inc. to Grover L.
and Carolyn M. Sauls, lot Tomo
chichi road; O. N. Mathis to W.
T. Kirkland, lot Kennedy drive.
they object to a particular war
and in favor of a redistribution
of the nation’s wealth.
The conference Wednesday
night approved a broad docu
ment of social principles, that
also included condemnation of
homosexuality as “incompat
ible” with Christian teachings.
“We support those ... who op
pose all war or any particular
war and who therefore refuse
to serve in the armed ser
vices,” the document said.
“We assert the duty of
churches to support everyone
who suffers from cause of con
science and urge government to
seriously consider restoration
of rights to such persons while
also maintaining respect for
those who obey.”
“We support measures that
would reduce the concentration
of wealth in the hands of the
few,” the delegates also said.
“We further support efforts to
revise the tax structure and
eliminate governmental support
programs that now benefit the
wealthy at the expense of other
persons.”
The delegates, representing 11
million Methodists around the
world, said in condemning
homosexuality that it was “in
compatible” with Christian
Pittinger says
motion unfortunate
ATLANTA (UPI) — A South Dakota minister who had
criticized evangelist Billy Graham says it is
“unfortunate” that a motion to strike his remarks from
the United Methodist Church General Conference record
was tied to a motion to omit laudatory comments about
Graham.
Dr. Richard Pittinger said in a statement Wednesday
that “you know and I know this body did not intend” to
include the general resolution praising the evangelist in
an effort Pittinger made to have his earlier remarks cut
out of the record.
The delegates rejected the effort to strike the comments
from the record.
The move to take them out came after Graham
retracted a comment he made about legislation pending in
Congress for a rat eradication program.
Graham had said when he was young, “people got rid of
their own rats,” rather than let the federal government do
it
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RAPT ATTENTION is one
viewer’s reaction to one of
the works in an East Ber
lin art exhibition. The fig
ure in wood, entitled
“Angela,” is sculptor Man
fred Salow’s impression of
Angela Davis.
Indian Convert
The first Indian convert to
Christianity in the American
colonies was Pocahontas of
Virginia. She was converted,
baptized and given the Chris
tian name of Rebecca.
First Composer
Francis Hopkinson. author
of “Seven Songs," is consid
ered America's first musical
composer. The book is said
to be the first book of music
to be published by an Ameri
can composer.
Presidential Cousins
Franklin D. Rosevelt, 32nd
U.S. president, was a fifth
cousin, and his wife. Elea
nor, was a niece of Theodore
Roosevelt, the 26th president.
doctine teaching that they
disapproved of homosexual
marriages.
They changed the wording of
the original resolution submit
ted to them to substitute “all
persons” for the word “homo
sexuals” in a passage urging
human and civil rights be guar
anteed.
Dr. Robert Monn of Sacra
mento, Calif., who first gave
the Methodists a report calling
for guaranteeing rights for
homosexuals, said no attempt
was being made to answer the
question as to the normality of
homosexuality. He said the re
port merely showed concern for
homosexuals.
Several delegates condemned
homosexuality as “perversion
in its crudest form” and a
“predactory threat to young
people.”
Russell Kibler, Farmersburg,
Ind., charged there were homo
sexuals “preying on our young
men in our universities.”
The conference adopted an
amendment to the resolution
that put the church on record
as saying “we do not condone
the practice of homosexuality
and consider this practice in
compatible with Christian
teaching.”
The social doctrine also:
—Approved women having
abortions only after “thorough
and thoughtful consideration
made by the parties involved,
with medical and pastoral coun
sel.”
—Supported the right of pub
lic and private employes to or
ganize for collective bargaining.
—Disapproved gambling as a
“menace to society” and in
cluded in that church charities
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and public lotteries.
—Urged government support
for guaranteeing the right to
adequate food, clothing, shelter,
education and health care.
—And support full rights for
women.
The delegates also approved
allocations totaling $26 million
to aid church-related minority
education.
They voted to allot $6 million
per year over the next four
years to the denomination’s 12
black colleges, two of which
are in Georgia: Paine College
of Augusta and Clark College
of Atlanta.
Another $250,000 annually for
the next four years was ap
proved for scholarships for
Mexican - Americans and an
equal sum for American In
dians for ministerial and gener
al education.
The allocations must be ap
proved by the church’s Council
on World Service and Finance.
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