Newspaper Page Text
8-B
The Summerville News, Thurs., June 29, 1967
Burson Becomes
New Welfare
Director Today
William H Burson will be
sworn in as director of the
State Department of Family
and Children Services at
2:30 p.m. today.
The ceremony will take
place in the chamber of the
Georgia House of Represent
atives in the Capitol. Ap
proximately 150 persons are
expected to witness the ad
ministration of oath of of
fice.
Fuller's Earth is kaolin.
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WESTERN AUTO ASSOCIATE CTORE
Al ■■ FRANK N. PRINCE, Owner W. Washington St. 857-2281
Ca/d of Tkanks
We would like to take this
opportunity to express our
appreciation to our friends
and neighbors for every
kindness and consideration
shown us during the sick
ness and death of our loved
one, Mr. Clarence Ward. Es
pecially do we thank Dr.
William Hyden and the
nurses of Trion Hospital for
their untiring services, Min
isters Shelby Mayes and Da
vid Sandman for their com
forting words, and the J D.
Wallis Funeral Home.
Mrs. Clarence Ward
and Family
Dayan Look
Is ‘ln’, Man
The Moshe Dayan look is
hitting Congress. Black eye
patches, like those worn by
the Israeli defense minister
and director of the light
ning-fast military victory
over the Arabs, are coming
to congressmen in the mail.
There's no hint to the
sender’s identity except a
California postmark.
Some recipients figure the
“Win in Viet Nam” card en
closed with each eye patch
is a subtle suggestion for the
U.S. to employ Dayan’s brisk
offensive in Viet Nam.
Group Would Exempt Small Newspapers |
Chairman Joe L. Evins
(D.-Tenn.) announced today
that he and eight other
Members of the House Small
Business Committee have
petitioned the Post Office
and Civil Service Committee
to exempt small, independ
ent newspapers from a pro
posed rate increase.
"The small, independent
newspaper has traditionally
been the hub around which
the life of Small Town and
Rural America has revolved,”
the Committee Members said
in a letter to Rep. Thaddeus
J. Duluski, chairman of the
Post Office and Civil Serv
ice Committee, and Rep. Ar
nold Olsen, chairman of the
subcommittee on Postal
Rates which is considering
the proposal.
“The free circulation of
news is a basic element in
our democracy,” Chairman
Evins commented. “The
small newspapers should not
be overburdened with in
creased postal rates that
could reduce the circulation
of these newspapers
throughout America.”
The letter to Chairman
Dulski said, in part:
“The House Small Business
Committee has received
numer ou s communications
from publishers of small, in
depenently-owned newspa
pers, all of whom raise ob
jections to the proposed in
crease in postal rates for
second class mail. The news
papers referred to are those
engaged in the business of
diseminating general news
of both national and local
interest.
These small newspapers
have “traditionally been the
hub around which the life
of small town and rural
America has revolved.
"Most (of these newspa
pers), by their very nature,
must use the mails in large
measure to accomplish de
livery of the papers to sub
scribers.
“The publishing of small
newspapers has never been
a high profit enterprise.
They perform a vital and
essential service and this
small business must be pro
tected and preserved.”
Scholarships Go
To Two Students
At Berry College
The William B. Stokely Jr.
Foundation of Indianapolis,
Ind., has awarded its first
two SSOO scholarships to
Berry College sophomore
Barbara Ann Shipley, of
Browns Mills, N. J., and
freshman Ronald Knoke, of
Guatemala City, Guatemala.
The William B. Stokely Jr.
Scholarships are awarded
on the basis of academic
achievement and general
merit. These awards are the
first two of eight to be given
to qualified Berry College
students over the next four
years.