The sun. [volume] (Newberry, S.C.) 1937-1972, May 31, 1962, Image 8
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PAGE EIGHT
THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOTJTH CAROLINA
Graduation At
Gallman Set
Commencement exercises at Gall-
man High School will be held at
7:30 p.m. Monday, June 4, School
Gymtorium, Switzon S. Wigfall
Sr., Principal, has announced.
A total of 103 students aie can
didates for diplomas.
The baccalaureate sermon will
be preached at 5:30 Sunday, June
3 at School Gymtorium by Dr. H.
M. Butler, P. E. Georgetown Dist
rict, A.M.E. Church.
Commencement speakers will be
Barbara L. Gallman and Barbara
Griffin. The valedictorian will be
George C. Thacker and salutator-
ian will be Rosa Anna Burton.
Special honors will go to George
Thacker, Lue Crecie Davis, Bar
bara Floyd. Doris Wilson, Richard
Sligh, Shealy Means, and Thomas
Goudelock.
The following are candidates for
diplomas:
Mary Alice Atchison, Robert L.
Bates, Polly B. Baxter, Carolyn
Bennett, James R. Bishop, Rich
ard Bluford, James Bookman,
Fannie Boozer, Evans S. Bowers,
Annie P. Boyd, Mamie Boyd,
Thomas L. Boyd, Willie E. Boyd,
Israel Brooks Jr., Rosa Burton,
Julius A. Chick, James E. Clark,
Jerold Clark, James W. Coleman,
Bnmelle Davis, Lu Crecie Davis,
Nathaniel Davis, Roger Davis,
Elizabeth A. Dawkins, Robert T.
Dawkins, Shirley Dawkins, John
W. Dewalt, John W. Dominick,
'Elizabeth Edwards, Betty Jo Epps,
'Thomas Epps, Barbara Jonell
Floyd, Cleo S. Freeman, Barbara
Lenora Gallman, William Gibbs
Jr., James Glasgow, Thomas R.
Goudelock, Dorothy Graham, Nar-
vis Graham, Wardell Graham;
Also, Juanita Grey, Barbara A.
Griffin. Samuel Griffin, Minnie D.
JJall, Eugene Harpe, Milton Harpe,
Hyler S. Harris Jr., Betty Herbert,
Minnie Higgins, Anna P. Hunter,
Mauda B. Hunter, James Jeter,
Mozella Johnson, John W. Jones,
Ruby R. Lark, Alvin Essly Lind
sey, James R. Lindsey, Annie B.
Lyles, Barbara J. Mayer, Charlie
McKissick, Larry McQueen, Shealy
S. Means, Barbara Mendenhall,
George W. Miller, Ulysses Miller
Jr., Prince Mitchell, Annie D.
Nance, Mattie Nance, Mattie E.
Nelson, Bobbie J. Oxner, James H.
Perry, Willie E. Perry;
Alpo, Shirley Pope, Bernice
Quiller, Margie Ree Quiller, Ida
Mae Reeder, Sylvia Lee Robinson,
Carl A. Ruff, Loretta Ruff, Nancy
Ruff, John E. Sanders, William L.
Sanders, Lougenia Scott, Lou Den-
nie Scurry, Bertha B. Shelton,
Martha Singleton, Andrew Singley,
Richard Sligh, Mary Spearman,
Tommy Tolbert, George C. Thack
er, Margie Tribble, Mary S. Tuck
er, Allen F. Wicker, Annette
Williams, Mary M. Williams, Ber
nice Wilson, Doris V. Wilson,
James C. Wilson, James Wise,
Zebby Wise, Elizabeth Young.
WIS-TV PROGRAM TO
EXAMINE LOYALTY OATH
The controversial Loyalty Oath
required of ail persons voting in
the South Carolina Democratic
Primary, will come in for close
scrutiny on Monday, June 4th at
9:00 p.m., as WIS-TV presents
“The Oath.”
Some of the questions that the
program will attempt to answer
are: W T hy the oath?; Is it new?;
Is it needed?; Who wrote it?; Has
it ever been changed?; and W r hat
are the moral and legal issues in
volved ?
WIS-TV News staff members
have spent months in careful re
search and analysis of these ques
tions, and in filming interviews
with prominent persons through
out the state. These interviews will
make up a major part of the pro
gram. Another important part will
be the history and evolution of the
present oath, using film taken in
the South Carolina General As
sembly, the United States Supreme
Court, offices of prominent attor
neys and jurists, and concerned
citizens.
“The Oath” will be presented
just over a week before the South
Carolina Democratic Primary—
and will try to shed light on one
of the present compaign’s hottest
issues.
Dance Recital
To Be Tuesday
The Tommy Lybrand School of
Dance will present its recital on
Tuesday, June 5 at the Newberry
High school auditorium at 8 p.m.
A very colorful and spectacular
array of talent will be seen at this
lecital entitled “Dance Along With
Tommy.”
Those taking part in the prog
ram are:
Debbie Hentz, Sheree Bobb, Pam
Boozer, Sonja Bowers, Tammy
Kinard, Jocelyn Attaway, Lea Su-
ber, Dean McCullough, Pam Mor
ris, Kay Mayes, Alice Paysinger,
Shaye Sheppard, Karen Hite Bren
da Tingen, Karen Mills, Roslyn
Fretwell, Jimmy Phibbs, Tim
Longshore, Branders Shealy, Mick
ey Moye, Georgia Hunter, Eleanor
McCaughrin, Alyce Youmans, Lynn
Longshore, Jane Paysinger, Fran
ces Jordan, Ann Hentz, Kathy
Roberts, Gayle Setzler, Pat Shealy,
June Marrett, Cecelia Wicker,
Gayle Bouknight, Caroline Smith
and Mildred Suber.
A small admission fee will be
charged at the door. The public is
cordially invited.
i casual. Admission will be 50e for
members and $1.00 for non-mem
bers. The dance will start at 8:00
p.m. and end at 11:45 p.ift. ^ w
Candidates For
Alumni Office
G. G. Dowling, Beaufort attor
ney, and Hugh T. Stoddard, super-
intendant of Sumter County School
District No. 2, are the candidates
for president of the University of
South Carolina Alumni Associa
tion. Ballots have been mailed to
active members of the association.
Candidates for circuit vice presi
dent, in the 8th circuit are James
Edward Chaffin of Greenwood and
A. E. (Buddy) Morehead of New
berry.
WIS-TV SET FOR NINTH
U. S. C. TELECAST
WIS-Television has announced
plans for the live telecast of the
1962 Commencement Exercises at
the University of South Carolina,
Friday, June 1, beginning at 10:00
a.m.
Highlights of the program will
be the Keynote Address by Allen
W. Dulles, former director of the
Central Intelligence Agency; and
the awarding of honorary degrees
to Mr. Dulles, Solomon Blatt,
Speaker of the S. C. House of Rep
resentatives, R. Beverly Herbert,
Columbia attorney, and Hugh C.
Lane, Chairman of the Board of
the Citizens and Southern Bank of
South Carolina.
Recruiter For
Army Is Here
M-Sgt. Rayna R. Vernon, U. S.
Army recruiter for Newberry, an
nounced today that he will be
available to interested persons at
the Selective Service Board in
the Newberry County Courthouse.
Sgt. Vernon has recently been as
signed to the Columbia Recruiting
station after serving the people
of Greenwood and Laurens coun
ties. He may be contacted perspn-
ally each Monday from 10 a.m.
until 4:30 p.m. at the Selective
Service office, or by writing the
Columbia Recruiting Station, the
Wade Hampton hotel, Columbia.
Scout Promotions
Troop 101: Ronald Richardson,
Second class; Troop 66, Alan Ives-
ter, Life.
Merit Badges Troop 66: Henry
Brooks, Jeff Cavanaugh, Rusty
Culbertson, Alan Paysinger and
Strother Paysinger, Surveying;
Leonard Halfacre, Agriculture,
Beef Production, Farm Records;
Alan Ivestv^r, Cooking; Jim Kin
ard, Basketry, Nature; Ronnie
Kyzer, Reading; Leon Nichols,
j Firemanship; Sammy Price, Citi
zenship in the Community; Ray
mond Ruff, Automobiling, Henry
Summer, Public Health.
SENIOR TEEN
CLUB DANCE
The Senior Teen Club of the
Newberry Recreation Department,
will sponsor a dance Saturday
night, June 2, at the Newberry
National Guard Armory. This
dance is for high school and for
mer students who are home from
college. Each club member will in
vite his parents as special guests.
Music will be by the “Crystals”
from Augusta, Ga. Dress will be
LAST MEETING
Drayton Rutherford Chapter, U.
D. C. will hold its last meeting of
the chapter year on Tuesday, June
5 at 4 p.m. at the home of Mrs. E.
E. Westwood, Sr. A Memorial
Service for Miss Lucy McCangh-
rin, loyal member of the chapter
for many years, will be in charge
of Mrs. J. J. Chappell.
Mrs. George McCall will present |
the historical program. Officers to
be elected. Associate hostesses will
be lected. Associate hostesses will
be Mrs. J. E. Wiseman, Sr., Mrs.
Steve C. Griffith and Mrs. L. C.
Floyd. %
CAMP LEJEUNE, N. C. (FHt
NC)—Pfc. Car) E. Epting, USMC,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph E. Ept
ing of Little Mountain, is serving
aboard the radar picket destroyer
USS Ernest G. Small ,a unit tak
ing part in Exercise Pork Barrel,
a 10-day Navy training operation
off the coast of Southern Califor
nia.
LECT
Clayton
Doing business with New
berry County Folks for the
past 27 years.
Educated in Newberry City
Schools; a graduate of New
berry College School of
Business Administration.
Honorary member of New
berry Fire Department hav
ing served twenty years as
an active member.
Member of the Board of
Deacons of Aveleigh Pres
byterian Church.
Served in United States Air
Corps 46 months during
World War 2.
President S.C. Candy and
Tobacco Jobbers Associa
tion.
YOUR
PROBATE JUDGE
for NEWBERRY COUNTY
Vote On June 12-YOUR Vote Counts!
WASHINGTON AND
SMALL BUSINESS
By C. WILSON HARDER
Readers oftefi ask if there is
any way of bringing the fed
eral budget into balance other
than Congress wielding an axe
to cut sharply all non-defense
expenditures.
* • a
To answer this it Is perhaps
best to look at the record. Cong
ressman Har-
old Ostertag
points out
that federal
spending this
fiscal year
will reach
$111 billion, a
$12 billion
jump over
last year. Of
this total
$25.5 .billion C.W. Harder
will be paid out in social secur
ity, unemployment insurance,
highway building, and civil
service pensions. The remain
der, $89 billion, will be spent
for a host of items.
* * *
He estimates tax collections
at around the $102.5 billion
mark. Of this total, the largest
take is on individual income
taxes, some $45 billion. Corpor
ation incomes taxes should
bring in $21.3 billion, the bal
ance from excise taxes on
autos, gasoline, jewelry, fct al,
plus social security tax collec
tions, which incidentally, will
be almost $1.5 billion less than
expenditures.
* * •
There has been some ques
tion of raising income taxes,
rather than cntting non-essen
tial government expenses.
* * *
But Congresman Richard
Roudebush feels this is im
possible insofar as individuals
are concerned. He takes the
example of the typical $5,000
per year family.
* * *
. This family, he finds, is pay
ing $300 in federal income tax
i’s. $305 in excises taxes and
Federation of Independent Business
fmm —
$215 in social security taxes,
for a total federal tax of $820.
State taxes take $30 in income
taxes, sales and state excise
taxes take another $198, prop
erty taxes $205 and social taxes
$45 for a state total of $470.
The combined total is $1290 for
food, clothing, insurance, hous
ing, heating, car expense, and
all other living cost?.
♦ * *
What about increasing cor
poration taxes. Ip the long run,
this could add to the burden
of the family shown above.
* ♦ #
For example, assume the
family cited above buys a
breakfast cereal. On each box,
the manufacturer, to stay in
business must make a penny
profit. But before the manufac
turer can get a penny profit, on
a 52% corporation tax, he has
to make 1.2 cents profit. The
wholesaler needs to make a
cent profit, but he too, in order
to realize a penny profit, must
first make a 1.2 cent profit to
pay taxes* and the retailer
must figure his nark-up on
the same way. Thus, in order
for the processor, the whole
saler and ihe retailer to meet
their taxes, the consumer pays
a pyramided tsx that on a box
of cereal probably adds 5 cents.
* * *
Thus, it is a fallacy to be
lieve increased corporation tax
es will help the consumer. Be
cause every tax added into the
production, distribution and
sales of goods is reflected in the
sales price. ^
♦ * *
This then seem* quite self-
evident.
* * *
It is high time that govern
ment start slashing expendi
tures right and left. The Ameri
can nation can no longer af
ford the luxury of an expanded
welfare state, foreign give
aways, and other dollar con
suming schemes.
'O
r i
One thing is certoin about
fishing: the angler can never
be sure of the size of the
“one that got away.” No one
is ever surprised to hear a
fisherman complain that the
“big one got away.”
Some folks who like to
"fish around" for values
when they have need of some
product or service are of.en
quite surprised when they
take the time to realty see
what local stores and local
business people have to offer.
If you are not a “home-
towner,” give it a try. Next
time, check the local store
first. We know you will be
surprised—and pleased.
Besides, when we do
business with one ano'her,
everyone profits,
benefits.
Trade at Home
for Your own sake!
and community progress
Stanford University
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Stanford University was founded by Le’and and Jane Stanford in
memory of their only son, Leland Stanford Jr., who died a few
week? before his 16th birthday—an age when most boys are planning
their college education. On March 22, 1891 David Starr Jordan was
named fust president of this University which opened on October 1
of the same year.
Leiand Stanford was Governor
of California at a time when the
State was forced to make a great
decision—whether to stay in the
Union, follow the South, or per
haps set up an independent re
public. Election of Stanford, a
Union man, was hailed as a clear
vote of the people’s choice.
From the beginning, Stanford
accepted women students, in a
day when it was still widely held
that woman’s place was in the
home and the trend toward higher
education for her was considered
regrettable.
As an independent institution,
Stanford is free to select its stu
dent body without respect to local
or state quotas. This is clearly
reflected in the cosmopolitan na
ture of the student body. In a
recent year, for example, of the
1,275 freshmen who entered, 16
per cent came from states east
of the Mississippi, 16 per cent
from Central and Mountain states,
and 66 per cent from the Pacific
Coast.
Each autumn Stanford admits
approximately 825 men ard 425
women as Freshmen, the maxi
mum for which it has classroom
facilities. It is a Stanford require
ment of long standing that Fresh
men reside on campus. Students
may select their major study
upon acceptance, but can defer
their choice until their sophomore
year. During the entire four
years, however, they are required
to take courses in the General
Studies Program, instituted in
1956.
Academically, the University is
composed of four schools, which
offer both undergraduate and
graduate courses: Humanities and
Sciences, Education, Mineral Sci
ences, and Engineering. There
are also three graduate schools:
Law, Medicine and Business.
Last September, some 1850 new
students arrived at Stanford. Of
these, 1,355 were freshmen and
500 were students from 26 coun
tries around the globe.
THURSDAY, MAY 31, 1962
, . -=
losses
Some 13 members of the New
berry Missionary group of Jeho
vah’s Witnesses are making ad
vance preparations to attend a
three-day training program in
Columbia June 1-3 for specialized
training in the ministry.
Miss Rebecca Hawkins, spokes
man for the group, said that 18
South Carolina cities will be rep
resented.
The theme, “Faithfully Increas
ing Our Praise to Jehovah,” will be
expressed by discourses, demon
strations and pantomines in morn
ing, afternoon and evening sess
ions.
The assembly site is Allen Uni
versity. The main public talk wi)l
be given Sunday, June £ at 3 p.m.
by H. L. Brissett, a district sup
ervisor. He will speak on the sub
ject “Who Will Rule the World?”
The public may attend all sessions
without charge. .
FOR
Newberry County
Mi
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Youth Officers
You^h organizations of Central
] Methodist Church have elected of
ficers for the ensuing year as fol
lows:
Senior Methodist Youth Fellow-
ship: President, Butch Graves;
vice-president, Neal Dickert; sec
retary-treasurer, 'Marsh a Lomi-
nack; MY Fund treasurer, Paul
ette Whitaker; program area
l chairmen, Witness, Mac Cobb;
• Marion Crooks; Outreach, Judy
Half acre; Fellowship, Donna
Nichols; Citizenship, Marsha
Stutts.
Junior High MYF: President,
Martha Jo Rinehart; vice-presi
dent, Eleanor Burnett; secretary,
Mary Helen Whitaker; treasurer,
Al Ivester; IVfY Fund treasurer,
Rebecca Senn.
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Waldrop Bros. Egg Plant
MO! .E PROCESSING
ilK PLANT'S
CLASSIFIED
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“MY rugs and chairs look l ? Ve
new. Cleaned with Blue Lustre.
So easy to do.” Ribhard L. Baker.
AMBITIOUS MAN—Full or spare
• time: ', Supply famous Rawleigh
Products in Immediate Area.
Can earn $1$5 per week. Write
y Rawleigh, Dept. SCE-361-1124
Richmond, Va. 2-5tp
RITZ
Theatre
THURSDAY & FRIDAY
Tony Curtis, James Franciscus,
Bruce Bennett
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SATURDAY 10:00 A. M.
Judy Canova, Donald Barry,
Chick Chandler
Untamed Heiress
SATURDAY
Gene Nelson, Joanna Barnes, Kent
Taylor
The Purple Hills
Last Showing of “The Purple
Hills” on Saturday at 5:30 P. M.
SATURDAY—7:00 & 9:00 P.M.
Also MONDAY & TUESDAY
Audrey Hepburn, Shirley Mac-
Laine, James Garner
The Children’s
Hour
CLOVER LEAF
DRIVE-IN
Theatre
THURSDAY
THE ALAMO
John Wayne, Laurence Harvey,
Ricard Widmark
Added Color Cartoon—High Steak
FRIDAY A SATURDAY
First Run Picture in Newberry
tber Storm
Joanne Dm, Mark Stevens
Added Color Cartoon—Nobobdy’s
Ghost
Vacant Store
BETTER BUSINESS
CLIMATE
CoMMERCI
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SUNDAY, MONDAY &
TUESDAY
A Majority
Of One
Rosalind Russell, Alec Guinness
Added Color Cartoon—Zip and
Snort
THE DRIVE-IN NOW OPEN
EVERY NIGHT
Whitmire Hosiery Mill
DIVERSITY IN INDUSTRY
Progress
Is Our Most
Important Product
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STEVE C.
GRIFFITH, JR.
Candidate for Re-election
House of Representatives
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