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THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA. MAY 13. 1961.
PAGE FTVE
PIANO RECITAL
—By—
PIANO
And
4 Children and Man
Drown During
Swim Near Adel
Mankind Smokes,
Drinks, Drives,
Watches TV More
Elementary Pupils
—Of—
Mrs. Lewis Ruffin
High School Cafeteria
BUTLER, GEORGIA
Monday, May 15,1961
8:00 o’Clock P. M.
ELEMENTARY SCHOOL PROGRAM
Plano Solo—(a) “The Choir Sings” Weybright
(b) “Flower Dance Weybright
Ruth Tucker
Piano Solo—“Climbing” McLachlan
(b) "Brass Buttons” Scher
Claire Blasche
Piano Solo—(a) “Yellow Butterfly” MacLachlan
(b) “To a Skyscraper” Thompson
Bonnie Sue Harbuck
Piano Duet—“The Young Piano Prodigy” Besthoff
Bonnie Sue Harbuck and Elaine Welch
Piano Solo—“Lullaby Waltz” Scher
Judy Riley
Piano Duet—“Waltz” Strauss
Judy Riley and Elizabeth Riley
Piano Solo—“Mister Woof” Suddards
Gayle Woodall
Piano Duet—“After the Dance” Czibulka
Gayle Woodall and Marilyn Woodall
Piano Solo—"Birthday Party” MacLachlan
Irene Waller
Piano Duet—“The Pixies Dance” Keys
Dyrene Waller and Karen Parks
Piano Solo—“Bouncing the Ball” Carter
Karen Parks
Piano Solo—“The Breakers" Aaron
Elizabeth Riley
Piano Solo—(a) “In the Cotton Fields” MacLachlan
(b) “The Jolly Imp” Copeland
Martha Faye Parker
Piano Solo—“Caprice” Weybright
Charlene Wright
Piano Solo—“By Rippling Waters” Stevens
Claire Elliston •
Piano Duet—“Airy Fairies” Spaulding
Charlene Wright and Claire Elliston
Piano Solo—(a) “Morning Call” Hanson
(bJ “Dancing Daisy Fields” Mokrejs
Elaine Welch
Piano Solo—(a) "Dancing on the Dyke” Erb
(b> "Sunset in the Hills" Weybright
Sandra Spillers
Piano Solo—fa) “By a Blue Lagoon” King
(b) “Swiss Song” Banks
Pam Bazemore
Piano Duet—“March of the Tiny Soldiers” Munn
Linda Jarrell and John Jarrell
Piano Solo—fa) "Noah’s Ark" Burnam
(b) “The Bells of Mariemont” Weybright
Bobby Green
Piano Duet—“Girls of My Dreams” Clapp
Martha Clark and Elaine Clark
Piano Solo—(a) “Gretchen” Montague
(b) "The Bright Blue Sea” Erb
Janie Whitley
Piano Duet—"In the Morning Early" Jenkins
Nina Payne and Marilyn Woodall
Piano Solo—“Drifting Moon” Bentley
Marie Neisler
Piano Solo—fa) "Hovering Butterflies" Gaynor
(b) "The Elf and the Fairy” Bentley
Carolyn Albritton
Piano Solo—"Up in a Swing” Bentley
Marilyn Woodall
Piano Solo—“They Canyon” Burnam
John Jarrell
Piano Solo—"Valse Lente” Hayes
Nina Payne
Piano Solo—(a) “Serenade" Schubert
(b) "Frolicky, Rolicky Winds” Lemont
Martha Clark
Piano Duet—"The Toy Band Parade” Besthoff
Cathy Guinn and Marie Neisler
Piano Solo—"Avalanche” Heller
Cathy Guinn
Piano Solo—"Wintry Winds" Lemont
Linda Jarrell
Piano Solo—(a) “In a Forest Tall” ■••• Bur ™ in
(b) "Nocturne" Mendelssohn-Rolfe
* Merita Barrow .
Piano SoJo—“Dance of the Moon Dwellers” Eckstein
^ Diane Kirksey
Piano Duet—"Glow Worm" Lincke
Ellen Parks and Diane Kirksey
Piano Solo—“Album Leaf in "D” Koelling
Elaine Clark
Piano Solo—(a) "Hungary” ;; -
(b) “The Laste Date Cramer
, Ellen Parks
VOICE RECITAL
-By-
High School Pupils
—Of—
Mrs. Lewis Ruffin
High School Cafeteria
BUTLER, GEORGIA
Tuesday, May 16,1961
8:00 o’Clock P. M.
HIGH SCHOOL PROGRAM
Piano Duet—“The Merry Bobolink" Krogman
Jean Griggs and Linda Wright
Piano Solo—(a) "Follow the Band” Fletcher
(b) “Lolita’s Dance Eckstein
Ann Waller
Piano Solo—“Whirling Leaves” Burnam
Linda Wright
Piano Solo—"Peanut Whistle” Miller
Jean Griggs
Piano Duet—“Somewhere Over the Rainbow”—Arr by Hugo Frey
Jeddie Pennington and Daphene Barnes
Piano Solo—“Song of Tahiti" Fenstock
Jeddie Pennington
Piano Solo—“Gallopade” Lake
Daphene Barnes
Piano Solo—“By a Blue Lagoon" Eckstein
Janice Peed
Piano Solo—“Gypsy Rhapsody” Sarasate
Sara Jane Garrett
Piano Duet—“Czardas Rhapsody” Scher
Sara Jane Garrett and Ellen Eubanks
Piano Solo—"Melody of Love” _ Englemann
Laverne Poole
Piano Solo—fa) “Petite Rhapsody" Spencer
(b) “Black Waters in the Moonlight”—Liszt-Schaum
Ellen Eubanks
Piano Solo—fa) "Two Part Invention No. 14” Bach
(b) “Norweigan Concerto” Greig
Ellen Guinn
Piano Duet—"Sympathy” Friml
Kay Davis and Dondra Peed
Piano Solo—(a) “In Hanging Gardens” Davies
(b) “Burlesca” Weybright
Korona Waller
Vocal Solo—“In the Garden of Tomorrow" Deppen
Kay Davis
Piano Solo—“Paganini Variations” Arr. by Schaum
Dondra Peed
Piano Solo—"Impromptu” Op. 142. No. 2 Schubert
Kay Davis
Piano Duet—“Two Guitars”
Beatrice Kirksey and Ellen Guinn
Vocal Solo—Selected
Margaret Tante
Piano Solo—“Aragonaise” Massenet
Beatrice Kirksey
Vocal Solo—(a) “Rose Marie” Friml
(b) “I Love You Truly C. Jacobs-Bond
Wilhelmina Neisler
Piano Solo—“Scarf Dance” Chaminade
Ellen Allen
Vocal Solo—(a) "A Little Bit of Heaven” Ball
lb) “My Own True Love” Steiner
Betty Ann Peed
Piano Solo—“M’amselle” Mainville
Peggy Fincher
Vocal Solo—(a) “O Sole Mio” Copus
(b) "June Is Bustin’ Out All Over”
Alice Koring
Vocal Solo—fa) "Goodbye” Tosti
(b) “Shadow March Protheroe
Jimmy Cosey
Vocal Trio—"Jeannine” Shilkret
Ellen Locke, Dondra Peed, and Alice koring
Piano Duet—"On the Road to Mandalay” O. Speaks
Peggy Fincher and Ellen Allen
Clear, cold mountain streams, such as at Fort Mountain State Park
near Chatsworth, invite you to Georgia’s Mountain Leisureland.
Georgia Department of Commerc9
Six drownings Sunday brought
to nine the number of persons who
lost their lives in Georgia accidents
over the weekend.
In addition, a Georgia man
drowned near Chattanooga, Tenn.,
a Shiloh woman was killed in Ala
bama and three student nurses
from Savannah died in a South
Carolina traffic accident.
Four children and a man drown
ed while swimming in a water- j
filled pit in South Georgia about -
three miles northwest of Adel.
Sheriff D J. Connell identified
them as Bob Talbert, 50; Willie C.
Palmer 15; Lavina Palmer, 11:
Mary Lee Palmer, 10 and Annie
Pearl Brown, 10; He said the five
Negroes lived in nearby Sparks.
The sheriff said information he
received indicated Annie Pearl
Brown got into deep water and
went under. Talbert and the others
attempted to resuce her and lost
their lives in turn.
A man stepped into a hole and
drowned in a lake near White
Plains while trying to grab a fish
ing line pulled from its moorings
by a four-pound catfish. Sheriff L.
j L. Wyatt identified him as John C.
Stevens, about 45.
The sheriff said the fish was
landed after Stevens’ body was re
covered.
Four-year-old Early Lee Law was
killed Sunday when he ran into 1
the path of an oncoming car in |
his home town city limits of Rey- 1
nolds, in Taylor County, the State i
Patrol said.
Richard Gordon, 30. of Darien
died Sunday when his auto went
out of control on a curve, left the
road and struck a tree three miles
east of Darien.
A 33-year-old Danville man, Os
wald Petitis, was killed Saturday
when he lost control of his car on
a Wilkinson County road near Dan
ville.
Three student nurses from Savan
nah were, killed in a two-acr colli
sion on Highway 321 about seven
miles south of Chester, S. C., Satur
day.
Officers said Glnny Smith and
Linda Marie Palmer were found
dead at the scene. Theresa Blanche
Roughen died in a hospital about
an hour after the wreck. All were
18.
A 26-year-old Lafayette man, Ju
lian Hughes, drowned while skin-
diving Saturday in Soddy Lake, a
part of Chickamauga Lake near
Chattanooga, Tenn.
Officers said 50-year-old Gladys
W. Hardy of Shiloh was killed Sat
urday when her car collided with
a dumptruck near Fairfax, Ala.
The woman shall not wear that
which pertaineth to a man, neither
.shall a man put on a woman’s
garment;for all that do so are abo
mination unto the Lord thy God.
Deut. 22:5.
UNITED NATIONS, N. Y—Man
kind is drinking more wine and
beer, smoking more cigars and cig
arettes, driving more automobiles
and tuning in more radio and TV
sets than ever before.
These and many more aspects of
the world's population explosion are
reported in the 1960 U. N. Statisti
cal Yearbook published Sunday. It
was prepared by the U. N. statisti
cal office in cooperation with 150
nations and territories and U. N.
specialized agencies.
There are some gaps because in
formation is lacking, in some fields
from Soviet-bloc countries and com
munist controlled sections of Asia,
including mainland China. But the
642-page English-French book is
one of the U. N.’s most ambitious
publication ventures. The cloth-
bound edition sells for $10 and the
paperbound for $8.
Its 187 different charts show that
, tobacco manufacturers made 1.77
trillion cigarettes in 1959, compared
with 1.03 trillion in 1948. Wineries
produced 239 million hectoliters of
wine compared with 185 million for
1948-52. Breweries dispensed 381
million hectaliters of beer compared
with 260 million in 1948. A hecto
liter is about 26 1 2 U. S. Gallons.
Radio sets in use in 1959 totaled
j 365 million, and TV sets 86 million.
Of the radio sets the United States
had 169 million and the Soviet
Union 40 million.
Of the world’s T. V. sets, United
States had 53 million, Britain 10
million, the Soviet Union 3.568,000,
Canada 3,420,00, West Germany
3.375.00 and Japan 3,229,000.
Twice as many cars rolled over
the world's highways in 1959 as in
1948. More than 91 million passen
ger cars and nearly 24 million com
mercial vehicles were in use, an in
crease of 6 and 5 per cent, respec
tively over the previous year.
| Sixty-five per cent of the passen
ger cars were in the U. S. The aver
age number of passenger cars per
1.000 persons in use over the world
was 48. For the United States the
figure was 355, Canada 216, Au
stralia 177, France 111, Britain 98,
West Germany 70. Italy 34, and
Japan 3.
Accompanying the increase in
economic activity was a rise in
world population — set at 2.905,-
000,000 in mid 1959 — an increase
^of 16 per cent over 1950.
38 Negroes
Ask Transfer
A total of 38 Negro students has
applied for transfer to white high
[schools this fall.
Seven students filed applications
with their principals during Wed
nesday. Nine had done so on
Tuesday and 22 had applied Mon
day, the first day for applications
were received.
IN THE NAME of “civil
rights,” the Justice Department
has taken a step which threat
ens the most basic of all civil
rights—the right of the people
to govern themselves.
Despite the fact that Congress
on two separate occasions has
refused to give
the Justice De
partment au
thority to i n-
tervene ini
school cases, i
the Attorney j
General and 1
his associates
have filed a
federal court suit to prohibit the
State of Virginia from spending
state funds for the operation of
public schools so long as the
schools in Prince Edward Coun
ty which are under court order
to integrate remain closed. The
effect of the action is to dictate
to the General Assembly of a
sovereign state how it can and
cannot spend public funds in the
field of education. If success
ful, it would establish a prece
dent for federal control over
any facet of life in which the
Executive Branch for any rea
son might choose to intervene.
* * *
THERE IS NOTHING in the
Constitution of the United States
which requires states and their
political subdivisions to operate
public schools or which author
izes the Executive Branch of
the Federal Government to ex
ercise any degree of supervision
or control over the manner in
which public education is or is
not provided on the state and
local levels.
When the time arrives that the
Tederal Government, through
court decrees or executive or
ders, can force state and local
governments to spend the taxes
they collect contrary to the will
of their citizens, then the consti
tutionally-reserved right of the
American people to govern
themselves in all areas not spe
cifically delegated to the Fed
eral Government will have been
destroyed. Should such circum
stances ever prevail state and
local governments will have
been rendered useless luxuries
and the Constitution of the
United States reduced to an arti
fact of a free society which no
longer exists except in name.
* * *
THERE IS OBVIOUS incon
sistency in an Executive Branch
which on one hand seeks enact
ment of a program of federal
aid to education on the assur
ance that it will be free of fed
eral controls while on the other
hand asks the federal courts to
issue orders controlling the ex
penditure of state and local
funds for the same purpose.
Surely it cannot be seriously be
lieved in official circles that the
American people can be fooled
by such working of both sides
of the street.
It would be interesting to
know whether Attorney General
Kennedy read what President
Kennedy said in his message to
Congress recommending enact
ment of a federal-aid-to-educa-
tion bill. It was in that message
that President Kennedy declared
that "education must remain a
matter of state and local con~
trol, and higher education a
matter of individual choice.”
(not prepared or printed at anvernment