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Vol. CXIX, No. 181,
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WINS $25,000 FIRST PRIZE—Mrs. Irvin H. McGuire, of High Shoals, first place
winner in the General Mills, Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane “I Like
Wheaties, because . . .” contest is shown above with her two children, Anthony, 4
(left), and Kathleen, aged 17 months. Mrs. McGuire is holding a recent photo
graph of her husband who is now serving with the Army Ordnance Corps in Ger
many. A certificate which designates Mrs. McGuire as the winner was presented by
L. N. Perrin, president of General Mills, at ceremonies held this morning at 11 o’clock
in the McGuire home at High Shoals. Among those present for the presentation,
other than Mr. Perrin, were Winthrop H. Smith, manager of the New York office of
Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane. These men represented the two organiza
tions which were co-sponsors of the contest.
High Shoals Housewife Is
Winner 0f $25,000 Award
CAP To Conduct
Rescue Mission
Here Next Month
Athens is to be the scene of a
Search and Rescue Mission con
ducted by the Civil Air Patrol
September 7-9, it was announced
today. : "
The Athens Squadron, under
Captain J. F. Logan, will have
charge of the Mission. Georgia
Wing Headquarters and U. S. Air
Force officers will be here to
supervise the mission. -
“SARCAP” literally means
Search and Rescue Civil Air Pa
trol. The Air Force down planes,
and airmen within a 50 mile radius
of Athens ,on hearing a report of
a missing aireraft (such reports
are received at CAP Athens
Headquarters) the last reported
position of the plane, course, and
speed are taken into consideration.
Search planes are then sent into
the air to look for the crashed or
grounded plane. As soon as the
plane is spotted from the air res
cue teams on the ground go into
action, locating the aircraft and
removing the injured airmen, who
must be given any necessary first
aid and brought out safely.
CAP gained national recognition
during World War II in perform
ing such duties. Originally begun
by men who were unable to enter
the service although they were pi
lots, CPA §s now a large organiza
tion. All through the war a
coastal patrol was maintained in
;(()’r;jcgnctlon with the Army Air
| Capt. J. F. Logan of the Ath
ens Squadron, states that an es
timated 100 planes and 300 mem
bers of the €AP will be in Athens
for this mission.
The cooperation of Athens busi
ness men is greatly appreciated.
Their cooperation and aid has en
abled Athens to maintain one of
the finest CAP groups in the state.
A recent addftli.on to the Athens
Squadron has been the forming
of a wide awake group of Elberton
men and women into the Elberton
CAP Flight which works under
the Athens Squadron administra
tion.
Tonight there will be a regular
meeting of the local group at
Squadron Headquarters at Muni
cipal Airport at 8 o'clock. All
members and those wanting to
become membersgare urged to at
tend in order tos*eceive duty as
signments for the™ forthcoming
SARCAP Mission.
H. S. Johnson
Taken By Death
Harry S. Johnson, former resi
dent of Brooks Crossing, near
here, died in Decatur where he,
had lived for the past several
years, last night, Mr. Johnson
had:@eerfln failing health for the
pastßtwo yéars. Death was due to
a heart ailment.
Funeral gervices are to be con
ducted Thursday afternoon at 1
o'clock in Decatur, with graveside
services to follow at 3:30 p. m. in
Oconee Hill Cemetery here.
Mr. Johnson was in his late 60s
and is survived by his wife, a son
and a daughter, the latter two of
whom attended the University of
Beorgia. : i
ATHENS BANNER-HERALD
Associated Press Service
“I'm So Happy | Can’t Think,"”
Says Mrs. Irvin H. McGuire
BY RANDALL COUGH
Banner-Herald City Editor
A $25,000 certificate was presented Mrs. Irvin H. Me-
Guire, 26-year-old High Shoals housewife, by Leslie N.
Perrin, president of Generals Mills, at ceremonies in the
spacious yard of the McGuire home this morning at 11
o’clock.
First place winner in the recently held Wheaties contest,
Mrs. McGuire is the daughter of Rev. and Mrs. E. N. An
thony of High %pals, and the wife of Lt. Irvin H, McGuire,
who ig now in dervice with Army Ordnance Corps in Ger
many.
“I'm so happy and surprised—
I can’t believe it, ” Mrs. McGuire
said on accepting the certificate
from Mr. Perrin.
To Invest Winnings ;
Winthrop H. Smith, manager of
the New_ York office of N%erriu
Lynch, Pierce, Fenner and Beane
—co-sponsors of the contest with
General Mills—told Mrs. McGuire
tl}at his entire firm was at her
disposal for aid in investing her
winnings. She was introduced to
F. D. Winis, manager of the At
lan'ta office of the firm, who will
assm_t her in preliminary consid
eration of just how to invest the
money.
Asked how much Mrs. McGuire
could expect to retain after taxes,
Mr. Smit™ estzmated that approx
imately SB,OOO would be deducted
by the government, leaving the
winner a toal of around $17,000.
winner a total of around $17,000.
Mrs. McGuire averred. “My hus
band knows I won something, But
the fact that I am the recipient of
$25,000 will probably floor him,”
she continued.
Mr. Perrin and his party arrived
at the McGuire home at eleven
o'clock sharp and were met by
little Anthony McGuire, 4, who
called his mother from the house.
She emerged holding her 17~
months-old daughter, Kathleen,
and greeted Mr. Perrin and Mr,
Smith. Dressed in a white-trim
med blue house dress, the at
tractive brunette grand-prize win
ner wore an apron which she
promptly removed on being told
of the size of her winnings by
Mr. Perrin.
Also on hand to congratulate
Mrs. McGuire were G. A. Pirkle,
Southeast Division Sales Execu~
tive for General Mills, who visit
ed the McGuire home several
days ago and informed Mrs. Mc-
Guire that she was among the
top winners in the “I like Whea
ties, because . . . » contest. E. E.
(Gump) Long, Athens area Gen
eral Mills salesman, was also
present.
The General Mills giant DC-3
plane, which was to leave Athens
this afternoon with the Perrin
party aboard for the return flight
to Minneapolis, home of General
Mills, circled the little hamlet of
High Shoals throughout the pre
sentation ceremonies.
62 Prizes
A total of 62 prizes were of
fered in the contest, amounting
to $25,000. First prizes, won by
Mrs. McGuire, was §25,000 and
second prize, won by a Chicagoan,
was SIO,OOO. Sixty other prize win
ners received $250 each. :
The contest was sponsored joint
ly by General Mills’ and Merrill
Lynch, Pierce, and Béane, one of
the world’s largest investment
houses. :
Attending the presentation cere
monies other than those alredy
listed were Robert Sturgis, Min
neapolis office of General Mills in
charge of gales promotion for
“Wheaties”: Howard Sanstadt,
General Mmills Department of Pub~
lic Service, Minneapolis; and Mike
Hosp, General Mills bhowgra?mr,
and personnel from Radio Stations
wSB and WRFC, who recorded
the ceremonies. :
«I entered the contest on the last
(Continued On rage Twe)
Tickets For ‘Cue
Are Put On Sale
Tickets have been placed on sale
at three business firms for the
big barbecue to be given at Oco
nee Street Methodist Church on
Wednesday, August 22, it was an
nounced today.
Tickets may be purchased at
Horton’s Drug Store, Gunn’s
Men'’s Store and Warren J. Smrith’s
and are selling at $1.50 for adults
and 75 cents for children.
The ’cue will be held at Oconee
Stregt Methodist Church in the
big shady grove surrounding the
church and the hours will be
from 6 to 8 p. m.
The menu will include barbe
cued pork and lamb, well season
ed and well cooked barbecue
hash, sliced tomatoes, cole slaw,
pickles, iced tea and home-made
pies, baked by the ladies of the
church.
Lt. Governor Speaks
To Local Kiwanians
Over sixty-five Athens Kiwan
ians, business men and farmers of
this locality heard an informal
address by Marvin Griffin, Lieut
enant Governor of Georgia, in the
interest of soil conservation in this
state.
The address, which was heard
by the assembled members of the
Athens Kwanis Club and their
guests at the Watkinsville Mun
icipal Park, climaxed a tour of the
Experimental Station in Oconee
County and a barbecue which was
enjoyed under the shady oak trees
of Harris Shoals. -Mr. Griffin was
introduced by Bob Stephens, pres
ident of the Kiwanians. i
Mr. Griffin opened his remarks
by saying that “hope as we may
for the further industrialization of
Georgia, Agriculture is the hope
of the state at the present time.”
The Lieutenant-Governor added
that it has only been in recent
years that the people of Georgia
have awakened to the problem
of soil erosion but reported that
great;progress is being made tow
ard combatting this enemy of the
farmer. G
New Units
“As president of the Senate of
the Georgia Legislature,” he said.
«I am happy to tell you that the
legislature has recently given an
additional $70,000 for the purpose
of purchasing and setting up four
additional sail analysis units for
the use of the Georgia farmers.
This farming is too big a gamble
as it is without knowing what your
soil problems and needs are.”
Mr. Griffin &tated that their are
now six such soil analysis units
in the state to aid the “fellow who
grows the crops’..
The erosion problem was termed
SERVING ATHENS AND NORTHEAST CEORCIA OVER A CENTURY.
ATHENS, CA., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 15, 1951.
President Raps
Hate Mongers,
Is Challenged
WASHINGTON, Aug. 15.—~(AP)
—President Truman’s blast at
“hate-mongers” brought a chal
lenge from Senator McCarthy (R.-
Wis.) today for a 1952 political
showdown on his Communists-in
government charges.
Mr. Truman dedicated the new
Washington headquarters of the
American Legion last night with
a punch-packed attack on those
he said “are trying to create fear
and suspicion among us by the
use of slander, unproved accusa
tions and just plain lies.”
Senator Benton (D.-Conn.)
promptly nominated McCarthy as
the object of the attack. Benton
‘has proposed that the Senate for
‘mally consider ousting the Wis
‘consin senator.
McCarthy, accepting the desig
nation, rrung a challenge back at
the President. He said:
“If Truman wants to nrake the
fight against Communism—which
he calls ‘MeCarthyism’—an issue
in the campaign, I will welcome
it. It will give the people a
chance to choose between Ameri
canism or a combination of Tru
manism and Cemmunism.”
In his speech, Mr. Truman as
sailed people he said claim to be
against Communism but are
“chipping away at our basic free
doms just as insidiously and far
more effectively than the Com
mur,xists have ever been able to
do.’
Declaring that these people,
whom he did not namre, have at
tacked the basic principles of fair
play, Mr. Truman said:
“They are filling the air with
the most irresponsible kinds of
accusations against other people.
They are trying to get us to be
lieve that our government is rid
dled with Communism and cor
ruption—when the fact is that we
have the finest and most loyal
body of civil servants in the
world.
“Those slandermongers are try
ing to get us so hysterical that no
one will stand up to them for fear
of being called a Communist.”
Senator Taft of Ohio, mentioned
as a possible Republican presiden
tial candidate next year, told a
reporter he regards Mr. Truman
as the “hysterical” one.
“He might point l<l)ut specifical
ly sdfpething that has been said
about him that isn't true,” Taft
suggested. v
Mr. Truman told the Legion
audience that it was *“an old
Communist trick in reverse” to
scare people into keeping silent
about their rights, and he added:
“Yet this is exactly what the
scaremongers and hate-mongers
are trying to bring about. Char
acter assassination is their stock
in trade. Guilt by association is
their motto.
Wave of Fear
“They have created such a wave
of fear and uncertainty that their
attacks -upon our liberties go al
most unchallenged. Many people
are growing frightened — and
frightened people don’t protest.”
Senator Capehart (R.-Ind.), an
administration critic, said Mr.
Truman isn’'t going to frighten
him by the blasts in the Legion
speech.
“All he has to do to stop the
honest criticism of 100 percent
Amrericans is to clean house—
sweep out the Communists and
the pinks in his administration,”
Capehart said. “Certainly he
doesn’'t mean that we who con
demned Alger Hiss were hate
mongers.”
Mr. Truman said that “the
growing practice of character as
(Continuea Om Page Two)
as “deplorable” the Lieutenant-
Governor who said that the citi
zens of Georgia are forced to
stand on the bridges and the banks
of Georgia streams and rivers to
watch entire farms being literally
washed away in the red waters.
In his remarks on soil conserva
tion Mr. Griffin told that there are
approximately 250,000,000 inches
of dirt between the center of the
world and the perimeter. Of this
large amount of soil there are only
about inches of the soil on the top
that can be used for the 2,400,000
inhabitants of the world to gain
their food. Mr. Griffin very aptly
asked the question, “Can we af
ford to lose any of that soil?”
In conclusion, Mr. Griffin said,
“We, in Georgia, are not so fort
unate as people in some sections
who have very fertile soil and
soil that sometimes needs only to
be drilled a few feet to produce oil.
“But we certainly can take what
God has given us, use it to the
best of our ability and accomplish
our job”.
Mr. Griffin’s address was one
of charming informality which
was received with great apprecia
tion by the assembled Athenians
He enlivened his short talk with
nurnerous anecdotes about friends
and family in Bainbridge, Geor
gia, where he make shi shome.
The barbecue, which preceed
ed the_talk by the#Lieutenant-
Governor, was planned as was the
entire instructive and emjoyable
afternoon, by the Agriculture
Committee of the Kiwanis Club
under the leadership of Herb
Henderson, head of the Univer
sity dairy Department.
BY JACK BELL
Truman Speech
Not So Fortunate
T [ Ry ;;
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CAPITOL BEAUTIES — “Miss
Washington” for 1951 is 20-
year-old June Beverly Klein
(left) who is here embraced by
her runner-up, Diana Wallace,
19. June will represent the na
tion’s capital in the “Miss Am
erica” competition at Atlantic
City.—(NEA Telephoto.)
“Shoot-To-Kill”
Ordered For
Escaped Slayer
CHICAGO, Aug. 15—(AP) —
Police with “shoot to kill” orders
screached through Chicago today
for a rapist-slayer who killed a
guard and jumped a jail wall in a
desperate try to beat the electric
chair.
The fugitive, Harry Williams, is
armed with the riot gun of the
guard he killed in breaking from
the Cook county jail last night.
Williams, 20, six foot, two inch
negro, had been sentenced to death
in the electric chair on Sept. 14
for murder.
Jail Warden Philip Scanlan and
Sheriff John E. Babb issued the
“shoot to kill” order. Babb per
sonally offered a SI,OOO reward for
Willians’ capture—dead or alive.
A short time after he escaped,
Williams attempted to hold up a
motorist about a mile from the
jail. A policeman opened fire on
Williams and he fled.
Later scores of police in more
a dozen squad cars surrounds
mroofi’flht%ouge on the S‘gfi:
Side when it was discovered Wil
liams had been there at the home
of his uncle, William Hawkins,
in search of a pair of shoes. It
was not known why he was bare
footed.
Hawking said Williams couldn’t
find any shoes to fit him. Just
then a squad car arrived and Wil
liams fled.
“This man is so desperate he
never will be taken alive,” Warden
Scanlan said.
The warden said Raymond
Jenko, 20, white, who also was
sentenced to die for murder, was
seized in Williams cell in the
death row. He said Williams and
Jenko were together in the escape
plot, but that Jenko remained in
the cell.
The slain jail tower guard in the
Chcago break was George Tur
ley, 43. Turley, his head and chest
crushed by vicious blows, died in
the Bridewell Hospital a half hour
after the assault.
Edwn T. Breen, First Assistant
State’s Attorney, began question
ing guards in his office. He said
he wag attempting to learn whe
ther a conspiracy was involved in
the break.
Williams had confessed murder
ing a negro woman, Mrs. Mary
Scott, in a purse snatching attempt.
He also was identified in ten rapes
and five robberies. He was arrest
.ed, Dec. 11 after he wounded two
detectives who wanted to question
him as a rape suspect.
Jenko was convicted of stab
bing 16 year old Patrica Sch
wartz to death in an attempted
purse snatching in May, 1950.
Judge Julius H. Miner, who sent~-
enced Jenko, called the killing one
of the most “inhuman and brutal”
murders ever committed. There
were nine knife wounds in the
victim’s body.
Jenko orginally had been sen
tenced to die in March, but his
execution was postponed.
ATHENS AND VICINITY
Mostly fair and hot today, to
night and Thursday with wide
ly scattered showers this after
noon or evening. Increasing
thundershower activity on Fri
day and somewhat cooler. Low
tonight 70; high tomorrow 93.
Sun sets today 7:20 and rises
tomorrow 5:55.
GEORGIA — Clear to partly
cloudy and continued hot this
afternoon, tonight and tomor
row, with widely scattered
thundershowers this afternoon
or evening.
TEMPERATURE
Bilahost ;... .oiy wevs ovi 0
LOWest i.. i dive veesGD
MARD .oos ssve biss sune SouniD
TN ot inienie sil
RAINFALL
Inches last 24 hours .. ... .00
Total since August 1 .. ~. .28
Deficit since August 1 .. .. 1.97
Average August rainfall ... 4.62
Total since January 1 .. ..30.04
Deficit since January 1 ... 415
UN Suggests Method
To Break Deadlock
Prison Rios In
Utah Quelled:;
Guards Released
WILLIAM E. LARKWORTHY
and DWIGHT L. JONES
POINT -OF-THE-MOUNTAIN,
UTAH, Aug. 15—(AP)—The third
riot in as many months at Utah’s
new multi-million dollars prison
was put down without bloodshed
yesterday.
} And as it ended with the re
lease of two prison officers who
had been held hostage under threat
of death most of the day, embat
tled state officials announced a
new and tougher era at thé institu
tion where 472 inmates are housed.
The State Board of corrections
ordered that all men be confined
to their cells.
“Only those who have definite
work assignments will be allowed
to leave their quarters at any time
—except on signed permission of
the warden,” said the board state
ment. ;
Hearing Promised
The uprising ended with Joseph
W. Dubler, State Commissioner of
Public Safety and Superintendent
of the Highway Patrol, conferred
l with the roit leaders and promised
them a hearing by the Prison Ad
justment Board.
The riot had brought 150 armed
officers said over the State, of
ficials said 22 (cq) men were in
the maximum security cell block
taken over by the prisoners.
Among them were six “death
row” inmates. However, newsmen
admitted to the ceil block to hear
prisoner grievances found 17 of the
inmates locked in a corridor with
the two hostages, while two ring
leaders and several “assistants”
controlled the cell block entrance
and locks.
Dudler told the prisoners all in
segregation would be returned to
their regular cells and an inves
tigation would be made of their
The hostages emerged unharmed
| to meet newsmen in a press con
' ference at 4:30 p. m.
Later, after tonferring with
Gov. Bracken Lee, the corrections
board announced its get tough
policy.
Acting Warden Weston E. Has
lam and guard Edward A. Sch
midt were attacked by two inmates
Tuesday morning and locked as
hostages in the maximum security
cell block.
Officers Escape
Two other officers, Wayne E.
Hoobler and Clarence Dent, escap
ed after brief fights with the two
prinsoners who were identified
as leaders of the uprising.
The two inmates were Alwin
Strauss and Wayne Johnston.
Strauss, 25, is serving five years
to life for robbery. Johnston, 21,
is serving one to 10 years for
grand larceny.
The same pair was involved in
(Continued On Page Two)
Aviation School
Planes Burned
COLUMBUS, Ga., Aug. 15 —
(AP)—Fire roared through a han
ger of the King School of Aviation
late yesterday doing “thousands
of dollars” worth of damage at
Columbus Munipipal Airport.
The fire, of undetermined origin,
started at the back of the tin and
steel hanger and jumped forward
from plane to plane. Some of
the destroyed planes were private
ly owned. All were small passen
ger craft.
Jack King, co-owner of the
school, said the hanger, though
damaged extensively, was still
usable.
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TRACER BULLETS LIGHT THE WAY—Tracer bullets
form a doodle-like pattern in the night sky for Army
Signal Corps soldiers in basic ¢raining at Camp Gordon,
near Augusta, Ga. The recruits are crawling along the
ground (foregrounds) on the battle indoctrination
course.—(U. S. Army Photo via AP Wirephoto.)
Read Daily by 35,000 People In Athens Trade Area
REDS REVEAL INTEREST IN
JOY-PROPOSED COMMITTEE
MUSAN, Korea, Aug. 15.— (AP) —United Nations dele«
gates suggested today that a subcommittee be set up tq
break through the formality of Korean truce negotilgonl
and attempt to settle the buffer zone deadlock.
Red delegates showed interest, a U. N. spokesman sd.&.
Simultaneously, U. N. command headquarters in To?o
announced that the Allies, if necessary, will continue “de
stroying or driving out of Korea” the Red Chinese and
Korean armies. e
At Kaesong the chief U. N, del
egate, Vice Adm. C. Turner Joy,
proposed a two man committee—
one from each side—seek an end
to the deadlock in an air of in
formality. i :
He proposed the subcommittee
“meet around rather than across
the table.” They would thus es
cape “the formality of utterances”
which he said contributed to the
three-week-old dispute over where
to place a militatry dividing line
across Korea that would separate
(t)ipposing armies during an armis
ce.
Reply Asked
Joy asked the Communists to
reply Thursday. The negotiators
meet next at 1 p. m. (10 p. m.
Wednesday EST).
The five Red generals “showed
more - visible interest in Admiral
Joy’s proposal than they have
shown in any other statement”
Brig. Gen. William P. Nuckols re
})orted. “It was sufficiently dif
erent to call for their undivided
attention” Nuckois commented.
Both delegations appeared more
cheerful than usual when they left
the meeting place, a pool dispatch
from Kaesong said. And Com
munist newsmen on the scene
hinted the Reds might be willing
to discuss a demarcation line
based on the present battle front,
as the Allies demand.
Delegations have been stymied
since July 27 over the location of
the demarcation line. North Ko
rean Lt. Gen. Nam I, heading the
Red negotiators, Wednesday re
iterated the Red demand it be
along the 38th parallel. This is
generally south of the battle line.
Joy made his subcommittee pro
posal near the close of the 25th
Kaesong session. It was the 15th
in which the negotiators had ar
gued over the buffer zone. |
Idea Advanced
He advanced the idea, the offi
cial U. N: communique said, after
both sides “expressed their re
spective but divergent views on
the effectiveness of Naval and
Alr operations on the 'present
overall military situation. ’
Nam 11 conceded that U. N. air
and naval bombardments had a
“definite amount of effect” on
Red troop movements.
Joy’s proposal called for a joint
committee of one delegate from
each side aided by not more than
two staff assistants each, includ
ing interpreters. He said he was
willing to name his men immedi~
ately, if Nam accepted the idea.
Joy said “we have hung in dead
lock” on the buffer zone “for
many days.”
“We show no progress along
present lines of procedure,” he
said.
“One of our difficulties is the
formality of utterances of each.
delegation regarding the point at
issue.” ‘
He said this was necessary in
formal sessions, but a subcommit-~
tee could avoid it.
Nam 11 asked for and received a
copy of Joy’'s proposal for further
study.
If a subcommittee is convened,
Nuckols said, he did not know
whether the full delegations would
continue in gession at the same
time. There are five men on each
delegation. Joy and Nam do all
the talking. Most everything they
said is read from prepared state-
(Contmaed tyn Pare fwo)
BY SAM SUMMERLIN
Colleges Wary
0f West Point’s
Ousted Cadets
NEW YORK, Aug. 15—(AP)—
Most of the nation’s colleges have
no strict rules that would prevent
them from admitting West Peint’s
ousted football players but many
of them today assumed a wary
“hands off” policy.
This was particularly true in the
conservative Ivy League and in
the Dixie belt, where open grid
scholarships long have been ad
vocated.
Columbia University said it
normally does not take in transfer
students and would “not even eon
sider” accepting students from an
other institution.
This appeared to be a rather
common attitude in the Ivy
League. Army cadets faci;&gis
missal for violation of the ry
academy’s honor code said they
were getting a “cold shoulder” in
the east.
University of Virginia
The University of -Virginia to
which several of the Army grid
ders were pointing announced that
a student “suspended or dropped
from another college will mot be
admitted.”
The Southeastern Conrnce,
home of such powerhouses 48 Ken
tucky, Tennessee and Alabama,
has the normal year’s residence
rule but sports editor Zipp New
man of the Birmingham News
wrote:
“It's firmly believed that none
of the West Point players will ever
play for Southeastern Conference
teams. Most of the college presi
dents are against it. Most of the
athletic directors are against
coaches bringing in some of the
Army players with a year or two
eligibility left.
“It would be a terrifie indict
ment against the SEC if it went
after the players dismissed from
West Point. It would be hard: to
convince many that the players
weren’t getting something extra.”
Only the Southwest Conference
is bound by rules not to let trans
fers play football.
The other conferences have a
year's residence rule, meaning a
transfer must be in school & year
before he can 'so out for the team.
The .professional picture also
d:h:?dfed today for the 40-odd
athletes whose careers were inter
rupted by the exam-cribbing sean~
dal at West Point.
Bert Bell, commissioner of the
National Football League, said the
players would not be ella for
(Continued On Page
Bullock Rises
Set Tomorrow
Friends and relatives will regret
to learn Mrs. Elzie Brooks Bullock,
70, wife of William J. Bullock,
died Tuesday morning at 11:30
o’clock at her home, 119 Judson
Road, Greenville, S. C. She had
been in ill health for several
months.
Mrs. Bullock was formerly of
Georgia, having been born and
reared in Madison County, a
daughter of the late William and
Modenia Whitsell Brooks. She had
for the past 30 years resided with
her family in Greenville.
She was a =x>mber of Westview
Baptist Churchs
In addition to her husband, she
is survived by two sons, Ceecil E.
Bullock of Chattanooga and C. T.
Bullock of Greenville;, three
daughters, Mrs. L. G. Ginn of Hull,
Mrs. John F, Hix of Commerce,
and Miss Eulala Bullock of Green-~
ville in addition to 11 grandehil
dren and six great-grandchildren.
Also surviving are one brother,
A. L. Brooks, of Athens; four sis
ters, Mrs. C. W. Kennett of Jones~
ville, Mrs. L. E. Dawn of Dan
ville, Va.,, Mrs. Donzie MeCall of
Reidsville, N. C,, and Mrs. J. T.
Devany of Detroit.
Funeral services will be held
at Westview Baptist Church at 12
o’clock noon Thursday and will
be conducted by the Rev. B. B.
Caldwell and the Rev. W, F. Lis~
ter. Final rites will be conducted
by the Rev. Virgil Edwards and
Rev. W. P. Holland at 3 o’clock ai
Pleasant Grove Baptist Chureh of
Neese and interment will an-%_m
the church cemetm% g
After 10 a. m. ednm
body will be at the :
awaiting the service.
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