Newspaper Page Text
Page 10
— Griffin Daily News Saturday, April 30,1977
Miss Ruth Denise Bass
engaged to Mr. Coan
Mr. and Mrs. Richard D. Bass
of McDonough announce the
engagement of their daughter,
Miss Ruth Denise Bass, to Mr.
William Wilson Coan, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John R. Coan of
McDonough.
Miss Bass is the grand
daughter of Mrs. Ethel Dee
Lyell and the late Mr. Benjamin
F. Lyell and the late Mr. and
Mrs. A. L. Bass, all of Old
Hickory, Tennessee.
She attended Valdosta State
College where she was a
member of Phi Mu Sorority.
Miss Bass is currently a sopho
more at the University of
Miss Patsy McClure
JT' J3I
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CARTER QUINN [“ weVmaZTPEGGY QUINN
Manager . Every Saturday ■ Manager
462 W. Solomon St. j At 4 P.M. j 118 W. College St.
Georgia and will continue her
education at West Georgia
College as a political science
major.
Mr. Coan is the grandson of
the late Mr. and Mrs. S. C.
Harper and the late Mr. and
Mrs. John R. Coan, Sr., all of
McDonough.
He graduated from Abraham
Baldwin Junior College and
received his BBA from Valdosta
State College in 1973. Mr. Coan
is currently employed by the
Georgia Department of
Revenue.
The wedding will be at 7:30
p.m. on June 24 at Shingleroof
Miss Patsy McClure
to marry S-Sgt. McKie
Mrs. Inez McClure of Milner
announces the engagement of
her daughter, Miss Patsy L.
McClure, to S-Sgt. Robert D.
McKie, Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs.
R. D. McKie, Sr. of Griffin.
Miss McClure is the daughter
of the late Mr. Albert McClure.
She attended Milner High
School, receiving her diploma in
1969 through G.E.D. Miss
JU .
Miss Denise Bass
Mr. William Coan
Campground in McDonough,
Ga. All friends and relatives are
invited.
McClure is presently employed
as a bookkeeper at McLellans.
S-Sgt. McKie graduated from
Griffin High in 1966. He is
serving in the U. S. Army,
stationed at Ft. Benning, Ga.
The wedding will be held at
Bethel Baptist Church in
County June 19 at 3 p.m.
All friends and relatives are
invited.
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Nita's Greenhouse
118 Wisso Road - 228-8300
Bedding plants, Pot plants, Ferns,
Hanging baskets. Many other plants.
Cateas Tomatoes 6/M 00
(Two Free Viva Begonias With $7.50 Purchase)
Jackson Road, Ga. 16 East, 84 miles turn right on Wisso
Road, first house on right
Hours After 4
AU Day Saturday
Sunday 1-6 PJL
Miss Dena Lucile Morris
is bride of Mr. Chasteen
The marriage of Miss Dena
Lucile Morris to Mr. Daniel
Crawford Chasteen was
solemnized Saturday, April 16,
at Searcy Memorial United
Methodist Church. The Rev.
Maurice Moore performed the
double ring ceremony.
The bride is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Leslie
Morris, Jr. of Griffin. Mr.
Chasteen is the son of Mr.
Melvin C. Chasteen and the late
Mrs. Sara Waits Chasteen of
Griffin.
Mr. Steve Neill, organist, and
Mrs. Kathy Conkle and Mrs.
Dawn Harvill, cousins of the
bride, presented a program of
wedding music including
“We’ve Only Just Begun”,
“Whither Thou Goest” and
“The Lord’s Prayer”.
Mr. Melvin Chasteen served
as best man. Ushers were Mr.
Joel Chasteen, brother of the
groom; Mr. Steve Bozeman of
Griffin and Mr. Mike Bryans of
Watkinsville.
Miss Shirley Smith of Griffin
was maid of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Pam
Morris and Miss Leslie Morris,
sisters of the bride, and Mrs.
Jeri Bozeman, all of Griffin.
The attendants wore floor
length yellow knit dresses with
long full sleeves. Each
attendant wore a gold chain
necklace, a gift from the bride,
and carried a single long
stemmed blue carnation with
yellow streamers.
Miss Michelle Morris, sister
of the bride, and Miss Georgy
Cox lit the candles. They wore
blue dotted swiss dresses
trimmed with lace. Each wore a
locket, a gift from the bride, and
a corsage of a single yellow
carnation.
The bride was given in
marriage by her father. Her
gown was sheer ivory organza
with a high V-neck, long full
sheer sleeves accented with
domestic alencon lace. The
bodice featured rows of lace
down the front. A full sweeping
skirt formed a chapel train and
was completely encircled with
lace. Her fingertip veil was
edged in matching domestic
lace and the Juliet cap was of
lace and seed pearls. The bride
carried a colonial bouquet of
yellow roses, daisies and jyp.
Her jewelry consisted of a gold
necklace, a gift from the groom,
and small ivory earrings, a gift
from the maid of honor.
Inaugral
medals
WASHINGTON (AP) - The
National Portrait Gallery of the
Smithsonian Institution
recently opened an exhibit,
“The President’s Medal,”
which contains an array of all
available examples of the Chief
Executive’s official medals
from George Washington to
Jimmy Carter.
Mrs. Morris, mother of the
bride, wore a floor length pink
knit dress with white
accessories and a corsage of
two white carnations.
Mrs. Waits, aunt of the
groom, wore a street length
pink knit dress with white
accessories and a corsage of
two white carnations.
The wedding was directed by
Mrs. Evelyn Perkins.
Following the wedding, a
reception was held in the fellow
ship hall of the church.
The wedding cake was baked
by Mrs. J. K. Garner and the
groom’s cake was baked by
Miss Gail Pearl.
Serving at the reception were
Mrs. Anne Sutton, Mrs. Peggy
Cox, Mrs. Louise Conner, aunt
of the bride; Miss Beth Conner
and Mr. Joey Conner, cousins of
the bride; Miss Beth Castles, all
of Griffin, and Miss Sallie
Harris of Carrollton.
Mrs. Jeanne Payton, sister of
the bride, kept the bride’s book.
Miss Michelle Morris gave
out rice bags.
After a wedding trip to Hilton
Head, S. C., Mr. and Mrs.
Chasteen will reside in Griffin.
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S ”- 1 - 5 im“ S L
Griffin, Gi
Woman
Actress likes adventure
By Dick Kleiner
HOLLYWOOD - (NEA) -
Fun and adventure. That’s
what Joanna Cassidy wants
out of life, and she’s getting it
as a movie star.
But she feels there would
have been more fun, more
adventure, had she come
along 20 years earlier.
“I was born at the wrong
time,” she says. “I want to
have fun with life and fun with
acting. I want to do the kind of
pictures that Carole Lombard
did, and they’re just not mak
ing those pictures today."
Still, she’s doing the best
she can with the time the
calendar is giving her. She’s
had big, juicy roles in such
films as “The Outfit” and
“Bank Shot” and “Stay
Hungry,” and now she’s in the
soon-to-be-released “Stunts,”
playing a stunt girl.
That came easily for her.
She’s always been a physical
person and is noted around
Santa Monica, where she
lives, for her penchant for
roller skating wherever she
goes.
She decided early in life that
she needed adventure. The
first shot at it that came her
way was marriage.
Bl -v -
JOANNA CASSIDY: noted
for her roller skating.
“I was studying art at
Syracuse University,” she
says, “and I married a young
doctor. My fantasy was that
that would be an adventure —
I saw myself, in a Jaguar
XKE, driving up to the
hospital with the kids iq the
back seat, waving to my hus
band after he had just com-
pleted some marvelous feat of
major surgery.
“It didn’t quite work out
that way. He was just an in
tern, so there was no Jaguar,
only an old DeSoto. And there
wasn’t much money, so I
worked as a model to help
out.”
After seven years, and two
children, she decided that was
enough. She and the children
drove to Los Angeles. She
knew nobody here, but quickly
got work as a model. Then she
heard about a movie that was
starting and called the
producer and said, “I hear
you’re making a movie and I’d
like to be in it.” And, stunned
by her audacity, he hired her.
Although her career is
progressing, she feels that
Hollywood is “an unfair
town.”
“I go up for a reading,” she
says, “and I know I’m good
and I'm right for the part, but
they decide they have to give
it to a bigger name, to
somebody like Candice
Bergen. It happens all the
time.”
I NEWSPAPER ENTERPRISE ASSN )