The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, March 28, 1957, Image 2
PAGE TWO
THE NEWBERRY SUN
THURSDAY, MARCH 28, 1957
1218 Colkg* Street
NEWBERRY, S. C.
PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY
O. F. Armfield, Jr., Owner
Entered as second-class matter December 6, 1937
at the Postoffice at Newberry, South Carolina, under
the Act of Congrress of March 3, 1879.
SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad
vance; six months, $1.25.
COMMENTS ON MEN AND THINGS
By SPECTATOR
We of the low-country would do
well to bestir ourselves energet
ically; there is trouble ahead and
serious trouble at that. I’m think
ing of 'Berkeley, Colleton, Jasper,
Hampton, Allendale, Barnwell,
Clarendon^ Calhoun, Williamsburg
Counties, especially, though Flor
ence, Darlington, Marlboro, Ches
terfield, Newberry may be in the
same boat.
What’s the trouble? Think it
out for yourselves. Thousands of
dollars will be lost to the business
interests by the operation of the
Soil Bank. I am not opposing the
Soil Bank; I, too, am moderately
participating; it may be the sal
vation of our cotton and tobacco
farmers—of which group I am
one—but thousands of men, wom
en and children will have less
work to do; will, therefore, earn
less money, because there will be
fewer acres to plow; fewer acres
for hoe-hands, much less cotton
to pick next September. More or
less, the same applies to those
engaged in the production of to
bacco.
It is the old story of practical
Economics: If a prosperous man
of St. Matthews, for example,
should receive a legacy of a half
million dollars he would not spend
much of it, if any, in St. Matt
hews: he already lives well, so
he might buy a more expensive
car for son or daughter—and let
it go at this. The greater part of
the legacy would be investee in
stocks and bonds. Ndw, if a half
million dollars were paid in wages
to a thousand men and women it
would all pass over the counters
of the stores. The merchants
would carry more insurance, etc.,
etc., and a measure of prosperity
would trickle down to and through
.all the business of St. Matthews.
Now, in reserve, all the dollars
spent by hoe-hands, cotton-pick
ers, and others, will be greatly
reduced.
All this will apply, of course,
to Greenville, Anderson, Pickens,
Orangeburg, Richland and Lex
ington and all the other coun
ties, but some Counties are large
ly or partly industrialized.
Orangeburg, Pickens and An
derson are great cotton producers
but Pickens has more current
wealth in the payrolls of Easley,
^lone, than three or four low-
country counties. Anderson and
Spartanburg are great agricul
tural producers, but have rich
payrolls from diversified indus
tries.
We would do well to *‘go all
out” to get industries. Sumter
has a number of' industries, but
needs more.
L Those of us who are concerned
for our towns and our people
think we should decide at once to
make sacrifices, if necessary, in
order to induce enterprises to
come here. It is a matter now of
bread and meat.
Well, one-tenth of that would set
a dozen counties all agog down
my way.
The latest thing I’ve read about
that is that 30,000 men and wom
en who own that great power en
terprise have great faith in
South Carolina and recently
bought six million dollars more of
the stock. That was a handsome
endorsement of a great Company
and great management. Men and
women of South Carolina stood
ready to buy much more. I lift
my hat to the thousands of men
and women whose savings have
built the great South Carolina en
terprise, The South Carolina
Electric & Gas Company.
Of course President McMeekin
can’t operate where I live, but if
he could invest just a small part
with us Mayor Gamble. would
have an Arabian steed ready for
every director of the Company to
ride in the parade.
Even at this distance we can
be proud of a South Carolina en
terprise which is so competently
directed.
Incidentally, let us say a word
for our State Government. The
Governor, the General Assembly,
the Development Board, and all
the responsible officials are mind
ful of our need and are straining
every nerve to encourage what we
have and to induce others to
come.
You’ve heard my song about
industry as our immediate need.
It is a need which the Spaniards
express by the word imposter-
gable; that expressive word means
that it is of extreme urgency and
must not be postponed.
Well, surely we of the low-
country usually welcome invest
ments.
I live in the county which pro
duced that beautiful “Miss Am
erica”—Miss Marian McKnight.
You may have seen on TV the
great parade of eighty floats
which welcomed Miss McKnight
to her home. Well, if you recall
that, with our dashing young
mayor, Sam Gamble, cavorting
around on a beautiful horse—and
all that—I can tell you that if I
could tell Sam that an enterprise
of five million dollars, to employ
500 people, was coming our way,
Sam would forthwith mount two
horses at one time and lead a
much bigger parade than we ever
dreamed of. Yes, we need enter
prises; we shall have many unem
ployed.
But I read recently that a great
concern operating over in twenty
three Counties had budgeted $75,-
000,000 for expansion during three
years! Columbia is headquarters
of that great power Company,
but Columbia is so accustomed to
big things, millions of dollars,
that all this multi-million dollar
expansion hasn’t caused a ripple.
I don’t like to say it but there
is a lot of bunkum in the talk
about reducing the National bud
get. The only way to reduce is to
reduce. Obviously we can’t re
duce without omitting some items
and sharply cutting others. I
venture the assertion that there
is not a single item in the budget
which cannot be reduced without
bringing disaster. I’ve had some
experience preparing budgets and
I say it categorically that every
budget is prepared so as to stand
reducing.
Virtually every new item in
President Eisenhower’s budget
could be struck out. This is no
time for looking for something
new. Men and women, fathers and
mothers of all the years have
made sacrifices, practiced econo
mies—and have not suffered ir
reparably. Why should our Gov
ernment embark on billions of
dollars of all manner of things we
can do without?
We don’t need one dollar for
Federal aid for Schools; and we
would be wiser if we stopped try
ing to uplift all mankind to our
level.
It is a singular conceit of ours
that we can evangelize the world
economically. America achieved
her economic greatness by hard
work; we can’t hand it down, nor
can we rub it in. By sweat and
toil and free institutions this
country became great; it can’t be
developed in others as a gift.
In our own South our people
struggled through poverty, adver
sity, every form of discrimination
and, finally, achieved- a condition
superior to that of other people in
other lands, primarily agricultur
al. Now our Government, with
great zeal and small wisdom,
thinks all this can be put in a
package with a few billion dol
lars and passed around.
Hospital Patients
Mrs. Florrie Bishop, Rt. 5 Sal
uda,.
Mrs. Ollie W. Brown, 15 South
Academy St. Greenville.
Mr. Monroe Boland, Rt. 2
Mrs. Jessie Mae Bedenbaugh,
Rt. 3.
Mr. John Thomas Crowmer, 1229
Kinard St.
Mrs. Camilla Counts, Rt. 1
Whitmire.
Mr. William A. Clamp, 114
Chapin Rd. Lexington.
Mrs. Hazeline Dominick, 1224
Summer St,.
Mrs. Sarah Epting, Prosperity
Mrs. Myrtle Felker, 2201 Harper
St.
Mr. Joe L. Feagle, 800 Bounday
St.
Mrs. Mary Lou Griffin and Baby
Girl, 1312 Trent St.
Mr. William Hatton, Pomaria.
Mrs. Mary Ann Hancock and
Baby Girl, Rt. 1 Saluda.
Mrs. Bessie Hawkins, Rt. 4.
Mr. William Leonard Hatchell,
1108 Heron Ave. Whitmire.
Mrs. Ona Hare, Rt. 2 Prosperity
Mr. Sam Johnson, 1935 Nance
St.
Miss Ethel Koon, 817 Boundary
St.
Mrs. Anna Monroe, 1308 Calhoun
St.
Mr. Ambrose Mayer, Rt. 3.
Miss Belle Miller, 2630 Main St.
Mrs. Euna Mize, Rt. 1.
Mrs. Estelle Marlowe, 1519 Har
rington St.
Mrs. Lillian Price, 945 Cline St.
Mrs. Lillie Rodelsperger., 1730
Hutto Ave.
Mr. Fletcher Hoyt Rinehart, 20-
23 Rivers St.
Mrs. Dorthy Stoudemire, Rt. 2
Chapin.
Mr. Charles Rowland Wilsky,
1138 Summer St.
Mrs. Lizzie Worthy, &t. 1
Whitmire.
Mrs. Pansy Wingfield. Rt. 4.
Miss Mary Wood, Rt. 4.
COLORED PATIENTS
Ethel Cleveland Rt. 3.
Johnny Cooper, Rt. 1 Pomaria.
Mabelle Davis, Silas St.
Betty King, 1328 Evans St.
Joe McMorris, Rt. 3.
Eddie Suber, Rt. 3.
Will Toliand, Rt. 1. r .
MILLS CLINIC
Mr. Carl Epting,- Pomaria.
Mrs. Minnie Frick, Chapin.
EarKne Lindler, Chapin.
Leon Lindler, Chapin.
Virginia Blount, Pomaria.
Mrs. Elmina Griffin, Newberry
Mrs. Loretta Barker, Saluda.
Mr. Malcolm Taylor, Prosperity.
COLORED
Erie Baxter., Newberry.
Yes, we need a revised Farmers
and Taxpayers League in South
Carolina. We need it to support
legislators now under the most
insistent pressures. We need it to
stir up our members in Congress
to a resourceful and undeviating
resistance to much that the Presi-
ient, the Court, and the Congress
are doing.
“In the Biblical reign of Re-
hoboam, son of Solomon, the
Sorely-taxed tribes of Israel rose
up and stoned to death A dor am,
collector of the tribute. Centuries
later, a group of angry British
subjects, embittered by what they
considered an unfair tax, donned
Indian headdress and dumped a
load of tea into Boston harbor.
Through the ages, taxpayers
this have demonstrated in no un
certain fashion their resentment
over government levies. Such di
rect measures tumbled the sym
bols of taxation, but they seldom
did away with taxes. And today,
although U. S. tax collectors are
not apt to be stoned or set upon
bodily, this ire over taxes re
mains, fueled by growing Govern-
Sisters Group
Elects Officers
At a regular group meeting
of the Sisters of the Swish Mon
day night, the Twickenham Sis
ters organized by electing offi
cers as follows: President, Mrs.
Winifred Culclasure; vice presi
dent, Mrs. Claudine Summer, sec
retary - treasurer, Mrs. Clara
Ward.
- r ...
Keystone Kops: Mrs. Joyce
Smith, Mrs. Alice Mllstead, and
Mrs. L0I9. Mayer. /
Kangeroo Kourt: Mrs. Clara
Wertz, Mrs. Sunshine Sease, and
Miss Shirley Aughtry.
Caravans: Mrs. Mary Helen
Hite, Elizabeth -Jite, Edith Min-
ick, Doris Hipp. Frances Clark,
and Mildred Chapmnn.
Everyone present bought then-
official Centennial Bonnets. Time
and place of next meeting was set
at Centennial Headquarter ,
Thursday night at 7:30.
■■■■!■ ■■■
ment expenditures^and grorvng
Government levies.
Focal points for much
tion to taxes generally av - st te [
taxpayer organizations, t v 1 . i i
37 states now have wat x j
groups whose main funct o*-. is 10
keep an eye on state, c«n d
local spending plans. A tYngh
they go by various name d op
erate in widely diseimi] m v : s,
these organizations hav
erriding air: To hold down t xes.”
“President Eisenhowe 1
ing growing resistance to his
plans for ‘modernizing’ 1 ha Re
publican party.
Important Republicans, i and
out of Congress,. are d ing
reductions in Federal so n ing.
They also are beginning to Yamor
for tax relief before tu. 1958
Congressional election. G.O.P.
leaders now size up the spending-
tax issue as the biggest domestic
question facing voters.
Even some of Mr. Eisenhower’s
strongest supporters added a note
of concern about the Federal
spending trend. ‘Believe some
what stronger emphasis on Gov
ernment economy consistent with
the requirements of our position
of leadership in the free world is
desirable,’ the Idaho governor
stilted.
Gov. Lane Dwinell of New
Hampshire, though emphasizing
greater dependence on U. S. world
leadership, declared: ‘We must
learn to substitute thinking for
spending, in many areas of mili
tary, political and economic pol
icy-making’.”
Mr. and Mrs. Birge Wise and
their two children and Miss Lila
Scott of Columbia were supper
guests Sunday of Mrs. J. F.
Browne and Mrs. P. W. Smith.
Mr. and Mrs Burton Lewis and
their little daughter of Clemson
spent the weekend with Mr. and
Mrs. Jesse Lewis.
Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Hendrix at
tended the Arrington family re
reunion at Clemson Sunday.
Miss Lynda Pugh spent from
Wednesday till Saturday of last
week with her sister, Mrs. Carl
Russell Caughman and Mr. Caugh-
man in Orangeburg. The Caugh-
mans brought Lynda home and
spent the weekend with Mrs. R.
W. Pugh.
Mrs. Joe White of Charleston
who has been with her parents,
Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Chappell, for
several weeks returned home
Sunday with Mr. White, who
came up for the weekend.
FT3 Keith Shealy has return
ed to San Diego, Cal., after a
month’s furlough with his par
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Otway Shealy.
Mrs. Essie B. Singley, retiring
worthy matron of the Prosperity
Eastern Star chapter, and J. A.
Williams, retiring worthy patron,
entertained the members of the
chapter with a weiner roast, Fri
day evening, in the banquet hall
of the Masonic Building. A large
number of the members attended
and had an enjoyable time.
Mrs. J. R. Bedenbaugh Sr. and
John Bedenbaugh went to Colum
bia Sunday afternoon to see their
son and brother, J. R. Bedenbaugh
of Newberry, who underwent sur
gery at the Providence Hospital
Saturday.
Misses Erin and Nell Kohn of
Columbia were guests Monday of
Mrs. J. Frank Browne.
Mr. and Mrs. Otto Putzek of
Erie, Penna. and Mr. and Mrs.
Ray Welch and their tlirfee d?hgh-
ters, Anne, Karen, and Lynn of
Corpus Christi, Texas, were
weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs.
P. E. Wise.
Mr. and Mrs. Willie Ruff of
Princeton spent the weekend with
their uncle and aunt, Mr. and
Mrs. D. H. Hamm Sr. The
Hamms and the Ruffs visited
relatives in Florence Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Lowe and
son of Allendale spent the week
end with Mrs. Lowe’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Frank S. Harmon.
Mr. and Mrs. Clyde Bedenbaugh
of Easley were weekend guests
of Mr. and Mrs. Maxcy Beden
baugh and Mr. and Mrs. B. C
Bedenbaugh.
Mrs. L. J. Fellers spent from
Thursday till Saturday with her
son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Wise in West Co
lumbia.
Mrs, P. C. Singley is visiting
her daughter, Mrs. W. D. Calla
han and Mr. Callahan in Colum
bia.
Mrs Miriam >B. Leaphart, Misses
Shirley Hilton, Sarah Scott, Lin
da Hawkins, Dollie Minick, Jane
Bedenbaugh and Brenda Sum
mers attended District 2 JHA
meeting at Great Falls last Sat
urday.
Mrs. G. W. Counts, Miss Ethel
Counts, Miss Mary Watkins and
Richard Counts were Sunday
guests of Mr. and Mrs. John
Schrum in Lincolnton, N. C. Miss
Counts remained for a longer
visit with her sister, Mrs.
Schrum. .
Hunter L. Fellers and J. A.
Williams attended the funeral
services of the Rev. W. D. Halti-
wartger in Lexington Saturday af
ternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Webster and
their little daughter, Lola of,
Florence spent the weekend with
Mr. and Mrs. B. T. Gibson.
Miss Shirley Hilton, home eco
nomics practice teacher in the
high school, spent Saturday
night and Sunday with her par
ents in Liberty Hill.
Mrs. O. B. Shearouse, Miss
Eleanor Shearouse, Rev. and Mrs.
Ben M. Clark, Mrs. Forrest
Shealy and E. G. Eargle attend
ed the funeral services of Rev.
W. D. Haltiwanger in Chapin,
Saturday afternoon.
With Mr. and Mrs. Roland
Merchant for the weekend were
their son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Givens and
their son, Warren Jr. of Sumter.
Mrs. Webster Grayson and her
small son, Tony, of North Augus
ta, are spending the week with
her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Roy
Connelly.
Miss Jewel Connelly of Colum
bia College spent the weekend
with her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Dove Connelly. The Connelly’s had
as supper guests last Friday
night Dr. R. W. Spears, president
of Columbia College, who preach
ed at Zion Revival services th
night, Misses Joe Breeeland and
Mary Watson, also of Columbia
College, who contributed music
for the services.
Mrs. Raymond Ruff was host
ess to the Crepe Myrtle Garden
club Monday afternoon, March 18.
Miss Faye Shealy was a guest.
Mrs. C. K. Wheeler, program
leader, opened the meeting with
devotions. Mrs. Wheeler gave an
interesting paper on The Message
of Flowers as found in the Bible.
Mrs. Colie Wessinger gave
gleanings—a poem entitled “Con
sider the Lilies of the Field.”
Mrs. Elbert Shealy conducted
a flower contest with Mrs. Ben
Clark as i>rize winner.
Officers elected for the new
year were president, Mrs. Ben M.
Clark; vice president, Mrs. Ray
mond Ruff; secretary-treasurer,
Mrs. W. E. Wessinger.
Mrs. John Dawkins, who had
been put of the club for some
time, was welcomed back.
During the social hour the hos
tess served a salad plate, fruit
cake and coffee. Miss Faye Shealy
assisted the hostess in serving.
County Girl Is
JHA President
Linda Smith of the Bush River
Chapter Junior Homemakers As
sociation was elected president of
District II JHA at the 12th an
nual convention held at Great
Falls High School in Great Falls.
Libby Jones, president, Great
Falls chapter, welcomed the 500
JHA members, homemaking teach
ers, and guests from Cherokee,
Chester, Fairfield, Lancaster,
Newberry, Spartanburg, Union,
and York counties.
Other district officers elected
were Patsy Grant of Chester, vice
president; Mary Sue Baker, York,
secretary; Suzanne Parris, Cow-
pens, reporter, and Mrs. Kather
ine Floyd of Bush River, district
teacher advisor.
Candidates nominated for state
reporter were Joan Foster of Roe
buck and Mary Ann Garrison of
Fort Mill. Election of the state
reporter will be made at the State
Convention to be held at Winth-
rop College, April 26, 27 and 28.
Awards were presented to
chapters which received outstand
ing ratings on tall state and dist
rict activities. Nell Bedenbaugh,
Silverstreet, and Annie Ruth Med-
lock, Pacolet, district vice presi
dents, presented the awards.
Among the chapters receiving
awards was Little Mountain.
‘ Among the officers taking part
on the program were Nell Bed
enbaugh of Silverstreet, vice-
president and Linda Smith, Bush
Ri^er, secretary.
Miss Martha Seawright, district
supervisor, Home Economics Edu
cation of Chester, has announced
the following ratings by chapters
in this county:
Bush River: Yearbook, excel
lent; scrapbook, good; dress, Car
rie Longshore, excellent; home
experience, Judy King and Linda
E. Satterfield, excellent.
Little Mountain: Excellent on
yearbook, Scrapbook, dress by
Myra Cannon, home experience,
Carolyn Koon and Myra Cannon.
Newberry: Excellent, , dress,
Martha Felker; home experience,
Sara Brown and Billie Harrison,
(excellent.
Proserity: excellent on all
phases: yearbook, scrapbook, dress
by Linda Hawkins; home exper
ience, Mary Julia Hawkins and
Judy Horton.
Pomaria, excellent on all phases:
yearbook, scrapbook, dress by
Llewella Livingston; home ex
perience, Evelyn Wedaman and
Charlsie Counts.
i *3
this week's:
tami
><
n
IN AN EFFORT TO STIMULATE interest in the Newberry College Centennial Celebration, Mayor
Cecil E. Kinard issues a proclamation that Sisters of the Swish must wear official bonnets or suffer
the penalty of wearing no make-up. Looking on during the signing are, left to right. Miss Margaret
Paysinger, Mrs. Jane Floyd and Mrs. Naomi Epting. (Sunphoto.)
: ' : Y : v, ~ ''"
W. O. Wessinger
Of Chapin Dies
Willie Oscar Wessinger, 69,
died last Wednesday afternoon at
Newberry County Memorial Hos
pital after an illneoa of several
hours. He was suddenly stricken
at his home in Chapin about noon.
He was bom, reared and spent
his entire life at Chapin and
was the son of Mrs. Nola W. Wes
singer and the late J. N. Wes
singer. He was a member of Mt.
Horeb Lutheran Church, a form
er member of St. Thomas Luth
eran Church and had served a
number of years on the. St. Thom
as Church Council. He was an
active member of the Chapin
Ruritan Club. Mr. Wessinger was
a merchant at Chapin and also op
erated a shoe repair shop.
He is survived by his wife,
Mrs. Hattie Amick Wessinger,
Chapin; his mother; three sons,
Haskell L., Lawrence W., and
Cecil E., all of Chapin; two
daughters, Mrs. Everette Sum
mers and Mrs. . ^enhings-jCpipitjp,
both of Chapin; three sisters,
Mrs. Holmes Shealy «nd * * Mrs.
Eula Wessinger, both of Chapin,
and Mrs. Bessie Gainey, Colum
bia; a brother, Noah F. Wessing
er, Bethesda, Md.; 14 grandchil
dren and two great-grandchil
dren.
. it .,. :
Funeral services, were held Fri
day at 3 p. iti. from Mt. Horeb
Lutheran Church with Rev. John
Kock in charge. Burial was at Mt.
Horeb cemetery. ;
^ i : ~ 1: : ..
CRAVEN-CROMER
Mr. and Mrs. John Wesley
Craven of Kinards, Route 1, an
nounce the engagement of their
daughter. Miss Jane Adair Cra
ven to Alvin Fredrick Cromer of
Kinards, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
lie Fredrick Cromer of Kinards.
The wedding is to take place next
month.
Rabies Clinic To
Begin Next Week
According to South Carolina
law the vaccination of all dogs
over four months of age in now
mandatory. Schedules for the 1957
rabies vaccination clinics in New
berry County were announced to
day by the Newberry County
Health Department. The program
in Newberry County will run this
year from April 2nd through Ap-
ril24.
The health department officials
urge the full support of the en
tire population of Newberry
County in taking advantage of
these rabies clinics and having all
dogs vaccinated. Since some of
the adjoining counties are having
some cases of rabies, it is neces
sary that all dogs in Newberry
County be vaccinated against ra
bies. Newberry County had two
known positive cases of rabies in
dogs which necessitated several
human treatments during the past
year. The public is asked to give
this program full support. The
following clinics have been set up
by the local sanitation officer and
veterinarians. The fee is $1.00 per
dog.
Schedule for week April 1-6 is
shown below. Further schedules
will be published next week.
Tuesday, April 2: Peak, Chap
man’s Store, 2 p. m.-3 p. m.; L.
M. Shealy’s Home, Little Moun
tain, 3:15 p. m.-4:15 p. m.; Shealy
Service Station, Little Mountain,
I
Lending a helping hand to a frie
nd in trouble you can be certain
of one thing, he’s sure to remem
ber you . . . the next time he’s
in trouble.
4:30 p. m.-5:30 p. m.; Horace
Richardson’s Esso Station, Slighs,
5:45 p. m.-6:15 p. m. >
Wednesday, April 3: Werts
Service Station, Chappells, l:30p.
m.-3:15 p.m.; Billie W. Sheppard
Store, Silverstreet-Chappells Hwy,
3:30 p.m.-4:00 p.m.; Murray Shep
pard Store, Silverstreet, 4:15 p.
m.-4:45 p.m.; Sheppard’s , Store,
Deadfall, 5:00 p.m.-5:30 p.m.
Thursday, April 4: Neel Bros.
Store, Belfast Road, 2 p.m.-3 p.
m.; Jim Wallenzine’s Store, 3:15
p.m.-3:30 p.m.; King’s Store, Bush
River Section, 3:45 p.m.-4:45 p.
m.
Friday, April 5: City Hall, Whit
mire, 12:30 p.m.-4:30 p.m.; D. D.
Counts’ Store, Whitmire Hwy,
4:45 p.m.-5:15 p.m.
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Earn for All April on Savings
placed by the 10th!
Building & Loan Association
1117 Boyce Street * The State Building
Newberry, S. C.
Pinckney N. Abrams, Sec.-Treas.'
- DIRECTORS
Louis C. Floyd
R. Aubrey Harley
Thomas H. Pope
Pinckney N. Abrams
J. Dave CaldweO
Ralph B. Baker