Newspaper Page Text
THE BUTLER HERALD, BUTLER, GEORGIA, MARCH 29, 1962.
PAGE FIVE
Governor Names
Engineers to Fix
Bibb-Jones Line
Macon, Gu. — A long Htnndlng
difference of opinion about the
boundary line dividing Jones and
Bibb counties was on Its way to
being settled Monday.
Bibb County Engineer Fenley
Ryther received an executive order
from Gov. Vandiver designating
John Oxford of Griffin to survey nnd
determine the line In the area be
tween Route 22 and the Ocmulgee
river.
Ryther said that Bibb nnd Jones
■county officials would have to get
together and settle on a contract
for Oxford.
The dispute over the boundary
lines began about two years ago.
An earlier survey was turned down
by Bibb county commissioners and
they then went to the county
grand jury, asking it to make a
recommendation to the governor
that a surveyor be appointed to de
termine the line.
The grand jury asked that he not
live in Bibb or Jones counties.
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Georgia Suit Asks
End of County Unit
By Achsah Posey
A request for an injunction to
end the county unit system in this
state before the Democratic primary
Sept. 12th was filed in federal court
Monday within minutes after the an
nouncement of the Supreme Court’s
Tennessee reappointment decision.
The action was filed by J. O. San
ders a Fulton County resident and
state chairman of Active Voters, an
organization which has actively
fought the unit system of voting.
Atlanta attorney Morris Abrams
drew up the suit in January and
held it until a U.S. Supreme Court
decision which he said Monday “re
moves what has been the legal
block.”
The great barrier to change of
the unit system in the past, accord
ing to opponents of the system, has
been the willingness of the Supreme
Court to accept jurisdiction.
The past cases concerning reap
pointment the court has claimed
that suits brought involved politi
cal issues not subject to the court
sought remedies no longer possible
to grant since subsequent general
elections had taken place, or that
relief sought might be properly
gained from legislative or congres
sional action. Decisions have been
increasingly close, however.
Pecan Tree
Fertilization
Chapel for All Faiths
Uurged By Vandiver
For State Hospital
This is the time of the year when
you should fertilize your pecan
trees.
Fertilizer grades such as 5-10-15 or
6-12-12 may be applied.
As for nitrogen, trees that are 20
inches or more in diameter or 20
years old or older can use ten
pounds of actual nitrogen. If you
use mixed fertilizers of low nitro
gen analysis, extra nitrogen should
be applied.
Lime should be applied only
when the pH level drops below 5.6.
You may determine your pH level
by taking a soil test.
When zinc is deficient in soil, re
gardless of liming, rosette develops
To prevent rosette you should apply
zinc sulfate (36 degree metallic
zinc) on the soils. The zinc may be
necessary even tho the soil has
never been limed.
The County Agent’s Office will
be glad to offer more advice on pe
can tree fertilization.
"If heaven has an agenda for
Ga. in 1962, high on the list will
be a Chapel of All Faiths for
Milledgeville State Hospital,” Gov.
Vandiver told an audience of 250
county chairmen, business leaders,
representatives of state organiza
tions including the United Church
Women, Jaycees and Jayeettes, Pi
lot Clubs, Garden Clubs, members
of civic clubs, and church leaders
at the “kick-off” drive luncheon at
Milledgeville State Hospital March
2nd. The governor spoke of the
campaign volunteers as an unbeat
able team and expressed confidence
that the goal of $800,000 will be
achieved.
John A. Sibley, chairman of the
steering committee. Invocation was
offered by Dr. Louie Newton, Druid
Hills Baptist church pastor, and
chairman of the sponsoring com
mittee of the campaign. Frank
Bone of Milledgeville welcomed
the guests and was followed by
Mrs. Ernest Vandiver, Campaign
Chairman, who spoke of her sincere
desire to bring spiritual guidance
and counseling into the lives of
Georgia's menatlly ill. The hos
pital choir presented two anthems
after which Dr. John H. Venable,
State Health Director, spoke of his
! sincere conviction that a religious
facility at Milledgeville State Hos
pital had long been an indispens-
! able need.
I Dr . I. H. MacKinnon, hospital
Superintendent, outlined the pro
posed program for which the chap
els will serve as a focal point.
He spoke of the proposed break
down of the hospital into 2000 bed
units, and the necessity for each
unit to have its own center for re
ligious services. This would re
quire the eventual construction of
six chapels strategically located
throughout the vast thousand acre
hospital campus. Dr. MacKinnon
! also emphasized the vital part
which religion plays in establish
ing understanding with the patient
who is afraid of hospitalization and
| hostile to all staff members with
jthe exception of the chaplain. He
stressed the necessity for the par
ticipation of clinical chaplains on
the psychiatric treatment teams,
the educational program which
would develop under the supervis
ion of clinically trained and na-
1 tionally accredited chaplains and
1 the need for training facilities here
j at Milledgeville which would pro
vide theological seminaries in the
Information of Interest
To All VA Persons
Atlanta. — Veterans or their sur
vivors receiving pensions who failed
to respond to income questionnaires
from the VA in January must do
so immediately or they will sustain
severe penalties, Ga. Veterans Serv
ice Director Pete Wheeler
said this week.
The VA this month is mailing out
a second income questinnaire to
each person receiving a pension
who did not complete and return
the questionnaire included with the
December checks.
Pension payments have aliready
been suspended for those who did
not return the questionnaire before
the Feb. 1st deadline, and they
cannot be re-instated until the in
come information has been report
ed.
Further, an overpayment for the
entire year of 1961 will be created
if the pensioner fails to complete
return the second questionnaire
sent by the VA. The government
requires the entire amount of an
over-payment re paid to the VA.
Such a situation would undoubt
edly cause an extreme hardship on
any veteran or survivor and every
effort is being made to prevent
such an occurrance, Wheeler said.
Any veteran or survivor who
needs assistance or advice in com
pleting an income questionnaire
should contact the nearest office
of the Ga. Department of Veterans
Service.
state and in surrounding states with
a facility for the training of the
students in bringing religious serv
ices to mentally disturbed patients.
Bishop Arthur Moore gave five
reasons why the chapel should be
Ibuilt and stressed that the principal
(one was that “God wills it”. Chap
lain Gus Verderyof Ga. Baptist
hospital told of the needs for clin
ical chaplaincy training for theo
logical students and welcomed
Milledgeville into the fraternity of
three other hospitals in the state
which are now providing such
training facilities. Rev. W. H. Lit
tleton, pastor of St. Stephens Epis-
copay Church, Milledgeville, pro
nounced the benediction.
Almost anybody can tell you ex- There are any number of people?
cellent reasons why he or she, who will do great things if they
cannot make a contribution. can do them without exertion.
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AFTER ALMOST eight years
the shocking trut 11 of how the
Supreme Court used manufac
tured history to pull the camel
of integration through the
needle’s eye of the Constitution
is a matter of record. —
The story of how the techni
que of the “big lie” was em
ployed by the
NAACP to
give the War
ren Court the
excuse for
which it was
looking to
usurp the con-
stitutional
right of the
states to operate public schools
in accordance with local wishes
and without outside interference
has been told by none other than
the historian who played per
haps the most important single
role in perpetrating the fraud
upon the American people. He
is Dr. Alfred H. Kelly, Profes
sor of History at Wayne State
University of Detroit, Michigan,
who revealed all in a speech be
fore the American Historical
Association’s Annual Meeting in
Washington.
* * *
THE PROFESSOR told with
embarrassing candor how he
struggled with his “professional
integrity” when asked by
NAACP General Counsel Thur-
good Marshall to turn out “a
plausible historical argument”
to justify the Supreme Court to
abolish school segregation. He
admitted that on the basis of
the facts it was “painfully clear”
that the South would “win the
historical argument hands
down!”
Marshall put Kelly and Yale
Law Sc h o o 1 Professor John
Frank in a New York hotel suite
with instructions to come up
with something which would
“get by those boys down there."
In Kelly’s words their job waa
“not the historian’s discovery of
the truth . . . But we were using
facts, emphasizing facts, bear
ing down on facts, sliding off
facts, quietly ignoring facts and,
above ail, interpreting facts in
a way to do what Marshall said
we had to do. . . .” In other
words, they were manufacturing
historical evidence to influence
the outcome of a legal proceed
ing—an act which if committed
by the other side surely would
have resulted in wholesale cita
tions for contempt and subse
quent harsh prison sentences.
* * *
WHAT HAPPENED is well
known to every mourner of the
constitutional rights of the states
and their citizens. The Warren
Court seized upon the trumped-
up Kelly-Frank brief as a basis
for declaring that the historical
background of the 14tn Amend
ment was “inconclusive” as to
whether it applied to public edu
cation and then proceeded to en
gage in what Dr. Kelly himself
called “a piece of judicial law
making.”
The fact that the Justices hava
expressed no shock at this reve
lation can be interpreted as
nothing less than their condon
ing this tampering with history
and the Constitution and, indeed,
giving credence to the implica
tion by Dr. Kelly that they indi
cated to Marshall that they
wished this to be done. Had the
decision involved been on any
other subject, there currently
would be a national outcry for
the impeachment of the entiie
Court.
/A
S'fo-
^4.
(not prepared or printed at government ezpen§$)
by Malcolm
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