Newspaper Page Text
PAGE TWO
169
(Continued from Page One)
kinsville.
Master of Business
Administration
Horace G. Dodson, jr.,, Jasper
Ivy Maloy, jr., and William Hinton
Shy, all of Athens.
Master of Arts In Journalism
Sidney Samuel Thomas, Athens.
Master of Science In Home
Economics
Sara Parks Weems, Athens; and
Nora Newson Stone, Nicholson.
Bachelor of Laws
Susan Henrietta Brown, Jack
Sullivan Davidson, Leroy Clemens
Fowler, Lewis Archibald Mills, jr.,
Wilbur Jackson Tipton, all of Ath
ens; Clark Howell Bryant, jr.,
Comer; Thomas Edgar Dyer, Rob~‘
ert Lee Russell, jr., Winder; Lin
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coln Nelson Haslam, Elberton, and
Ezekiel Rqy Lambert, Madison.
Doctor of Veterinary
Medicine
Obe Daniley Dye, &mGlynor
Wilson Henry, Robert r Lott,
Clyde Monroe Reagan, all of Ath
ens, and Ollie Mabry Dodgen,
Monroe,
Bachelor of Science In
Wedo e T ey
Nathan Thomas Elder, Peyton
Warde Grigg, jr., Willie Lee Max
well, Iva Mae Wallace, all of Ath
ens; and Charles Ligon McWhor
oo, Winoew X
Bachelor of Arts
Carl Raymond Anderson, John
Berry Benson, Worth Payne
Brown, jr., Catherine Deriseau
Chance, Nona Marie Ferdon, Shei
la Whitman Kelly, Marion Cicero
Michael, George Andrew Mont
gomery, Frances Long Sachs, Bet
ty Nell Thomas, all of Athens; Al
bert Wimpy Ward, Watkinsville;
M;;y— 'N’la;gérei Williams, Hull;
Evelyn Myrtice Booth, Comer;
Beverly Allen Ashury; Susan
Rains Mattox, both of Elberton; Al
tred Asbury Quillian and Paul
Royce Smith, both of Winder.
Bachelor of Science
[ George Dewey Bailey, jr., Mad«-
ison Henry Briscoe, George Walk=
’er MecCannon, Chester Earl Mec
'Kay, Hoke Smith Nash, jr., Harry
White Parr, jr., Alexander M.
Pejerson, all of Athens; Allie Janie
Wright, Richard Carroll Lee, both
of Elberton; Lamar Cooledge
Brown, Herman Peskin, both of
Winder; William Eugene Blasin
game, Monroe; Comer Frank
Hampton, William Kenneth Pitt
man, both of Commerce; and Dew
€y Ralph Power, Danielsville,
Bachelor of Science in
Sy 002
Midford Middleton Broadwell
and Grayson Willlam Lambert,
both of Athens.
Bachelor of Fine Arts
Macon Gregory Core, Thomas
Gardner Gidley, James Kenneth
Griffeth, William Morton Gross,
Wilbur Royce Johnson, jr.,, all of
Athens; Charlotte Ann Bell, Joe
Travis Dye, George Herman
Gaines, Mary Eleanor Haslett,
James Clifford Hulme, jr.,, all of
Elberton; Thomas G. Williams, jr.,
Maxeys; and Troupe Mercer Har
ris, jr., Washington.
Bachelor of Science In
Agriculture
John Henry Bridges, Robert
Hardin Farmer, Julian Alphonso
Gissendanner, Jack Tarver Harri
son, Harry Edward Hemphill, Ro
bert Clarence* Lee, William Russ
Meigs, William H. Worrell, jr., all
of Athens; Leonard Fretwell Cobb,
Bogart; John Sidney Conner,
Thomas Berry Tillman, jr., both
of Monroe; Claude Ralph Gaines,
jr., Walter Harrison Rucker, both
of Elberton; Joe Ellis Ingram,
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Commerce; Ray Wood, Bishop; and
Howard Bacon Young, Watkins
ville. |
Bachelor of Seience In |
Agricultural Engineering
Alfred Cecil Doudney, Charles
Bedinggeld Lanier, both of Ath
ens; win Harbor Hill, Com
merce; and Fred Edward House,
Madison,. e ey
Bachelor of Landscape
Architecture
William Brantley Wise, Athens;
and James Edward Hammond, jr.,
Elberton.
Bachelor of Science In
Forestry
Alfred Lloyd Hughes, Frank Ed
ward Tinker, both of Athens; and
Ray Nickens, jr., Madison.
Bachelor of Science In
Education
Jesse Addison Anderson, jr.,
George Lewis Bradberry, Robert
Alexander Finney, jr., Marjorie
Layer Haislet, Edward Eugene
Hawkins, Newnan Lamar Moore,
Salley Wylly Orr, Robert William
Roland, Charles Chester Smith,
Maude Wood, all of Athens; George
Clifton Barrett, Winterville; Ruth~
erford Brown, Jack Purcell, both
of Jefferson; Betty Kathryn Ed
wards, Bogart; Joseph Nathaniel
Edwards, Madison; and Charlotte
Harris, Monroe,
Bachelor of Business
Administration
Preston Stovall Anderson, John
Ernest Bailey, Calvin Lamar
Betts, Virginia Ann Bonner, Paul
W. Chapman, jr., John Homer
Cook, jr., Garnett Lee Daniel, jr.,
Jack Sullivan Davidson, Robert
Daniel Dearing, Robert C. Elling
ton, jr., Jack Travis Farrar, Ted
dy Rowe Kemp, William Homer
Martin, Robert Norman Nicholson,
William Melvin Poole, Robbie Lee
Stone, jr., William R. Townsend,
Oscar Lee Wiseley, William Ben
jamin Witcher, all of Athens;
Warren Erastus Clegg, Thomas
atson McDonald, jy., Ernestine
goekhy, all of Monroe; Constan
tine Comolli, Elberton; Charles
Richard Crawford, jr., Lexington;
Richard Stanhope Escoe, Jefferson;
Dala Smith and James Edward
Smith, both of Winder.
Bachelor of Arts In
Journalism
Winifred Faye Butts, Carolyn
Goodman, Gene Wheeler Griffeth,
Robert Joseph Hill, jr., Mary
Turner Jenkins, Toula Williams
Jones, William Alexander Simp
son, all of Athens; Walter Wey
man Brooks, Monroe; James Stu
art Lyle, and Charles Cleveland
Wansley, both of Elberton.
Bachelor of Science In
ot Home Economies
Phillis Irene Barber, Betty Max
ine Crane, Evelyn Elizabeth Orr,
Katherine Carleton Trussell, all of
Athens; Eleanor Leila Bradford,
Monroe; Martha Crooks, Jefferson;
Betty Ann Hardin, Watkinsville;
Billie Sue Wilbanks and Barbara
Ellen Williams, both of Winder. ~
Athens
(Continued from Page One)
ceived hig Master of Theology De
gree in 1940 and Doctor of
Theology Degree in 1941.. He
earned the unusual distinetion of
being baccalaureate speaker for
his class.
Dr. Barnett served as pastor of
the First Baptist Church of Chapel
Hill, North Carolina, from 1943-
47, During the year 1944-45 he also
served as Associate Professor of
Religion at Meridith College and
in 1946-47 was lecturer on Baptist
polity at Duke University Divinity
School,
Dr, Barnett is a member of the
Southern Society for the Philoso
phy of Religion, and was founder
and first editor of Christian
Frontiers. He came to Mercer Uni=
versity in 1947 as Roberts Pro=
fessor of Christian Ethics and So
ciology. During the past years he
has been on leave of absence from
Mercer, and studying for a Doctor
of Philosophy Degree at Yale Uni
versity in New Haven, Connecti
cut.
Graduation exercises will be
held Tuesday, June 6, 8:30 p. m,
in the Fine Arts Auditorium. Com
mencement speakers wiil be Hugh
Hale, son of Mr. and Mrs. H. G.
Hale; Nelson Hitcheock, jr., son
of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Hitchcock,
sr; Bobby Singleton, son of Rev.
«nd Mrs. R, C. Singleton; Henry
West, son of Judge and Mrs, Henry
West; and Tommy Whitehead, son
of Dr, and Mrs, Tom Whitehead,
Survey
(Continued from Page One.)
iexistonce of the county unit sys
tem is a very real issue.”
Referring to court attacks on
the system and a recent successful
defense, the Governor added: “Do
you know who saved the county
unit system for the peog}e of this
state? It was Herman Talmadge.
It was Talmadge who threw the
whole support of the state into
Shat :
“My oPposition will never raise
their - voices ag:‘inst the FEPC
(Federal Fair ployment Prac
{tices Commission,) Now I tell
you with all the strength I have
—that the FEPC threat and all
that goes with it has been an issue
in the South since the painful
days of reconstruction.”
Thompson said the Talmadge
“machine’ is cracking up. “The
ghosts down in the cellar of the
capitol have been grinding out ex
cuses for holes in the roads, dams
that won’t hold water, frolics at
state expense for state employes
until the chief ghost is worn down
—yes, sir, the ghost is thin as a
ghost, :
Holes In Roads
He said he-has talked to 100,000
Georgians in 52 counties. He said
even friends of Talmadge “can’t
help seeing the holes in the roads
and wondering why the money
poured into 203 negotiated con
tracts wasn't used to pour a little
sand and tar into them.”
He said he will build roads “in
front of peoples’ houses and farms,
and not from the city limits to the
country club, as the only farm-to
market road in Laurens County
built by this administration goes.
“The machine has cut the heart
out of the Neill Primary Act, That
act provided for a free primary,
It summed up all the gains that
Georgia voters had made since the
scalawag-carpetbagger machine.”
Editors of daily papers in larger
counties listed Chatham, Floyd,
Richmond and Dougherty for Tal
madge so far. Bibb, Fulton, Mus
cogee and Troup were placed in
Thompson’s column, Def(alb was
rated a toss-up and Clarke was un
regg‘rted.
e Eatonton Messenger wired,
“Governor's race creating about
as much interest in Putnam ag the
bag limit on ostrichs in Africa.”
The Constitution said it did not
survey editors who are candidates
themselves or actively campaign
ing for other candidates.
Ten International League base
ball flags have been womn “v the
tochester Red Wings, four of them
in a row. -
Funeral Notice
GARREN.—The friends and rela
tives of Mr. and Mrs. Leßoy
Garren, Lexington Road; Mr.
Richard Garren, U, S, Navy; Mr.
and Mrs. John Rowe, Hickory,
N. C,, are invited to attend the
funeral of Mr, Leßoy Garren,
this, Sunday afternoon, May
28th, at three-thirty o'clock
from T uckston Methodist
Church., The following gentle
men will serve as pallbearers
and meet at Tuckston Methodist
Church at 3:15 o'clock: Mr. A.
G. Barton, Mr. Willis Johnson,
Mr. Fred Hill, Mr. Burch Coch
ran, Mr. Odell Banks and Mi.
Huygh Logan. Rev. Newt Saye
and Rev, W, H. McNeil will of
ficiate. Remains will lie in
state in the Tuckston Methodist
~Church from two-thirty o’clock
until the hour of the service.
Interment in Tuckston cemetery.
Bernstein Funeral Home.
Sauth
(Continued from Page One)
E. Drewry presented Sigma Delta
Chi scholastic awards to top seniors
at the banquet in the Georgian
Hotel.
Great Possibilities
Mr, Brady said the South has
made many gains in the past, but
there are st multiple possibili
ties for greater improvement. He
said “There is a public relations
job to be done by industry and
business” and in other fields.
Henry Grady was paid tribute
by Mr. Brady, who also brought
out as was emphasized in Grady’s
time that Sou%-n educated youth
should stay here “to help develop
the South’s resources.” He said
more are doing this now and the
situation is encouraging.
A telegram was received from
Eugene C, Pulliam, one of the
founders of Sigma Delta Chi from
Indianapolis, Ind., 8“”{3 best
wishes to the chapter, illiam
Brady and Dean Drewry on the
occasion of Grady Day observance.
(Continued From Page One)
Chatman, Carl T. Durham, F.
Ertel Carlyle, C, B, Deane and
Hamilton C. Jones. Rep. A. L.,
Bulwinkle retired and there was
a four-cornered race for his seat.
The other six were unopposed.
Graham, 63, surrendered the
presidency of the University of
North Carolina to accept senatorial
appointment 14 months ago. When
another Liberal, Gov., W. Kerr
Scott, arose at a dinner to an
nounce he had appointed Graham
a senator, this State— and much
of the nation — was startied.
Graham had been the object of
criticism for his Liberal leanings.,
He had been president of the
Southern Conference for Human
Welfare, charged with bheing a
Communist front. He has been an
official of the Oa Ridge Institute
of nuclear studies, identified with
the atom bomb. And there were
cries in Congress that he would
not have access to atom secrets,
He had befriended negro causes.
Commerce
(Continued from Page One)
the Reds took over China, A de
partment official has denied it.
- Lee could not be reached for
comment,
McGrath, in a speech at Omaha,
Neb., warned against “witch hunts
and procedures, as do some who
have criticized the present loyalty
investigation program and grossly
misrepresented it.”
(Continued from Page One.)
appeared to be their heeding of
the order to stay out of West Ber
lin during today’s warmup,
Thousands wandered up to |
Brandenburg gate and to Pots
damer platz where East and West
have clashed often in the past.
None stepped across, Any blue
shirt was welcome in the West if
he behaved but none dared try
it against erders.
(Continued fieta Page One)
two years ago, She is survived by
only one member of her original
family, a sister, Mrs, W, A, Lock
wood (Elizabeth Edwards) of New
York City.
The Rochester. Red Wings base
ball team joined the International
League in 1885.
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Reactivafion Of
Colleglafe Press
Begins As Confab
l Reactivation of the Georgia Col
legiate Press Association, co-spon
sored by Henry W. Grady School
of Journalism at the University
of Georgia and Stgma Delta Chi,
was begun at' a mom at GSCW
i Milledgeville ves ay,
huies for the meeting were
GSCW and Mercer of Macon. A
committee to make plans for a
Fall meeting in Atlanta was chosen
with Don M. Judd, Georgia Tech,
as chairman. Other members are
Millard Grimes, University of
Georgia;- Miss Polly Brannan
GSCW; John Hyde, Mercer; m&
Bud Stone, Georgia State Teach
ers College,
All Georgia colleges with publi
cations will be invited to the Fall
meeting and at that time the GCPA
will be reactivated after two years
of non-functioning. The GCPA is
over 15 years old. Election of of
ficers will be held at that time and
further plans and activities for
the organizations will be made.
In Milledgeville the group heard
addresses by Bert Struby, execu
tive editor of Macon Telegraph
and News; Miss Margaret Meaders,
assistant professor of journalism
and English at GSCW; Jere Moore,
AR
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4R : 5 R ) o
1 As aoverTiseD IN | N
seventeen
| (MARCH Issun) |
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‘SUNDAY, MAY 28, 1050,
editor of Milledgeville Union-Re
corder; Robert W. Brown, editor
of The Columbus Ledger; Donalq
McDonald, assistant managin«
editor of Macon Tetegraph; Ellis
lcufton and Alan Patureau, former
editor &nd present editor of Uni
versity of Georgia’s Red and Blaclc.
Introducing Mr., Struby was
Worth McDougald, University of
Georgia journalism professor,
Convention committee - eonsisteq
of John Hyde and John Ward Mer
cer, and Miss Brannan, GSCOW.
Presiding over the business meet
ing was George Abney, ir., of
University of Georgia chapter of
Sigma Delta Chi.
GEORGIA RAISES CRICKETS
ATLANTA -~ (AP) — Cricket
raising is a booming business in
this part of the south. Fishermen
say th:{ make fine bait. But
wild crickets are sometimes as
hard to catch as the fish.
Those who raise them sell them
for bait at a cent and a half s
crictl;et. Breeding stock brings two
cents,
George Smith, for Instance, has
turned his backyard chicken house
into a cricket raising business. He
has 150,000 breeders and possibly
a total of 300,000 erickets. Heo
hasn’t counted them. They eat
laying mash just as his ai-u-.-ns
used to do. But the 18 bags a
week he used to buy for his
chickens would feed his erickets
for 10 years.