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PAGE FOUR THE NEWBERRY SUN, NEWBERRY, SOUTH CAROLINA THURSDAY, JUNE 17, 1965 tin 1218 College St., Newberry, S. C. 29108 PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY 0. F. Armfield, Jr., Owner Second-Class Postage Paid at Newberry, SoutU Carolina. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $2.00 per year in ad vance :Six Months $1.25. Dean Manion THE MANION FORUM This year marks the 150th an niversary of Napoleon’s defeat at Waterloo. His British conqueror later declared that the big battle had been won “on the playing fields of Eaton.” This was a tri bute to the quality of courage and patriotism, then developed on the campuses of the ancient arid fam ous English schools. Like others before him and like the Communists now, Napoleon was determined to conquer the world, but thanks to the spirit generated on the “playing fields of Eton” his ambitions were frus trated. When and where will the Com- munits meet their Waterloo? Does the current news from American colleges encourage you to believe that what it will take to beat the Communists is being developed here in our own college campuses today. In a recent edition of The Sat urday Evening Post this opening sentence is the lead-in to a story about radical groups on college campuses: “Swarms of young peo ple on college campuses and in cities across the nation are join ing new radical groups. Some are almost peaceful; others are so militant that even the American Communist Party deplores and disowns them. Their hero is Fidel Castro. Their program is protest. They joy in tangling with the po lice.” Patriotism ? Courage ? The playing fields of Eaton were never like this. These young people are not playing, t^ey are working like beavers. Any attempt to laugh this radical rough age out of the record as “youthful exuberance” is sheer self-delusion. These young people know where they are going and they proceed under expert guid ance. One of their most influen tial leaders predicts “ a Socialist” revolution in America within the near future. One of the ways to stop this criminal clamor on the campus is public recognition of its sub versive origins, its seditious sus tenance, and its treasonable pur poses. The Communist conquest of mankind does not advance by old- fashioned military attacks but by ulterior penetration and subver sion. The effectiveness of this devious technique is written across all the paths that the conquering conquests has made through East ern Europe, Asia and Latin Am erica. The Communists took Czechos lovakia with Chechs, Poland ' with Poles, Roumania with Rouman ians, Cuba with Cubans, and China with Chinese. The Communist con quest of the world will be com plete if they succeed in thei r plan to take America with Americans: So far, nobody has devised a way to develop a business with out somebody putting in hard work. State of South Carolina, County of Newberry. By FRANK H WARD, Proibate Judge Whereas, Maggie Baxter hath made suit to me to grant Letters of Administration of the Estate and effects of Wilhelmina Baxter deceased. These are therefore, do cite and admonish all and . singqlgr the Kindred and Creditors of the said Wilhelmina Baxter, deceased, that they be and appear before me, in the Court of Probate, to be held at Newberry, S. C., on June 24, 1965 next, after publication here of, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, to show couse, if any they have, why the said Administration should not be granted Given under my hand and seal this 10th day of June, Anno Dom ini 1965. FRANK H. WARD, , Probate Judge, Newberry County We Serve the Daily ... and CONGRATULATE -the- NEWBERRY COUNTY DAIRY INDUSTRY .. . and the Newberry County Farm Bu reau which is promoting this important part of our county’s economy. It is a pleasure to salute our Dairy Industry. We not only sell, but install and ser vice DeLaval Milkers. Let us help you with our fine supply of dairy farm equipment and materials. lilt Dairy fam M. M. Moseley Dairy Supplies 916 Harrington St. Phone 276-4901 Newberry, S. C. Looking A head ... by Dr. George S. Benson PRESIDENT—NATIONAL EDUCATION PROGRAM Searcy, Arkansas A CASE OF CLEVER POLITICS Again we have had a demon stration of the fact that Ameri cans (and most certainly our national leaders) have a weakness for the supposed underdog. For two decades the Congress regu larly rejected general federal aid to education—until somehow it was slipped in under the guise of the poverty program. This seems the have resulted from a wild stretch of imagination (based on a premise that poverty is based on lack of education), the object of which was to make aid acceptable to a nation which clearly has not wanted it during 20 years of Con gressional debate. The irony of it all is that what ever need was cited earlier is now no longer present. Our “war baby” enrollment boom is leveling off. The school age population, after almost doubling itself after the war, is predicted to grow only 15 per cent in the ntxt decade. The lower grades may show a decline. But the eminent success of local and state governments in provid ing for the postwar school growth left aid proponents little argu ment. The- projected doubling of expenditures that in 1946 was supposed to require federal aid was handled very nicely by the states. Actually, they achieved a seven-fold expansion, without federal aid! The Scheme Worked The educational picture all up and down the line reveals expan sion through local initiative. Vast improvements were recorded in teacher training, in salaries, in student-teacher ratios. In facili ties, local authorities have been building 70,000 classrooms, a year, for above the federally proposed goal of 60,000. But all the facts and figures meant little to the advocates of federal aid. They had been clamoring for aid for years and they now had the votes to put it over. Why bother, they said, to hear all the arguments all over again. The Congressman who is not in a habit of voting federal money to the underdog is hard to find today, it seems. But it was the National Educa tion Association that cooked up the idea of hitching the bill to the poverty war. Their idea, of course, was to keep the federal aid idea alive and push a more general program at the next opportunity. The President had told them he was on their side until every teacher got his due and no over crowded classrooms exist. If the next Congress is as receptive to Presidential dictum,, we may ex pect the program to be broadened for the rich and poor alike. The NEA knows that it will be no trick at all to broaden the aid idea in future years. Federal projects go that way. Effective Steamroller •Besides, what politician can re sist helping public education? What Congressman can succeed without the teachers and the sup port of their organizations ? There’s no denying the power of big lobbying for good causes, even if bad methods and unwise legis lation are proposed. When money is to be handed out, the home dis trict comes first. This bill is re quired to funnel funds into 94 per cent of the nation’s counties. Some of the most distressing needs in education, existing both in big cities and the poorer states, will get only token attention from the bill. News reports during the pro gress of the bill through Congres showed the steam roller in oper ation. Even in committee, debate was virtually eliminated as Rep. Adam Clayton Powell rubber- stamped the bill and rammed it through. The Congress again crowned itself with no laurels for being a democratic, deliberative body. The result was a bad bill, so faulty and so full of loopholes that a 6th grader could point them out The double talk will be inter preted largely as allowing the Commissioner to dispose of the $1.34 billion about as he pleases. No Control? The broad inclusiveness of the bill’s language has impressed its critics, but its backers gloat at this. The “or others,” the “ else- wheres,” and the Commissioner’s choices are notable for their fre quency. Opportunities for federal discretion and rulings of conven ience are abundant. Recipients may find it easy to do what they please with the federal money, and they are thought to look upon the bill largely as extra money for school districts. Either this is chaos on the face of it, or it will create a fully centralized, federal school bureaucracy. This last is apparently what the NEA wants. This unfortunate business, there fore, represents the definite be ginning of a federal educational system. And all of this is going to be done without any federal control. The bill itself says so! PROPERTY TRANSFERS Allen D. Barron to Eugene C. Griffith, 5 1-2 acres $5. Mamie B. Edgeworth to J. Aub rey Parkman, one lot $5. Charles B. Fellers to Sallie Lee Cromer, one lot and one building, $5.00. Eugene C. Griffith to Rebert C. Farb and Marion S. Farb, one lot on unnamed street $5. Doris M. Suber to Nelson Van De Luyster and Helen Van De Luyster, one lot and one building on Main street $1,236.59 and as sumption of a mortgage. Newberry No. 1 (Outside) W. T. (Edgar) Dominick and - Lula B. Dominick to William T. Boozer and Martha Jo Boozer, one lot, Hartford Heights $5. Whitmire No. 4 Tennyson Watkins to Etha W. Keel, one lot and one building on Lowery street, $10 love and affec tion. Pomaria No. 5 Lucy Graham to Roy Graham, 20.8 acreSj $5 love and affection. Claude T. Graham to J. Harold Wicker and Christine S. Wicker, 11 acres $600. Omerle Graham to Lucy Gra ham, Jonn Adam Graham, Vinnie Rawls, Claude Garham and Vern on Graham to Roy Graham, 82.4 acres, $5 love and affection, Omerle Graham, et al to Claude Graham, 20.8 acres, $5 love and affection. Claude Graham, et al to Vinnie Rawls, 20.8 acres, $5 love and af fection. Omerle Graham, et al to John Adam Graham, 20.8 acres, $5 love and affection. Claude Grahar et al to Lucy Graham, 20.8 acres $5 love and affection. Vinnie Rawls, et al to Omerle Graham, 20.8 acres $5 love and affection. Omerle Graham et al to Vernon Graham, 41.6 acres $5 love and affection. Prosperity No. 7 W. M. Harris to J. Frank Mar tin, three lots $5. Prosperity Lumber Co. to A. R. Chappell, 13 acres $5. JOHNSON - MALLORY In a beautiful setting of palms, white flowers in silver containers and cathedral candles, Miss Mary Elizabeth Johnson became the bride of James Hugh Mallory of Atlanta, Georgia June 12 at sev en o’clock at the First Baptist Church. Rev. J. Anderson Bass Jr., officiated at the double ring ceremony. Wedding music was presented by Darr Wise, organist. Miss Laura Morgan of Buchan an, Georgie, was maid of honor. Her dress was a floor length yel low linen with empire waist and scoop neckline. The bridesmaids who wore nile green linen dresses styled like the maid of honor’s were Miss Fran Mallory of Co lumbus, Ga., sister of the groom; Miss Karen Kirkegard and Miss Anne Newton, of Newberry, cous ins of the bride, and Miss Leonide Reagin of Newberry. They all car ried cascades of Esther Reid dai ries. Miss Tina Teresa Floyd, niece of the bridegroom, was flower girl and wore a dress of pale yel low organza. Robert Young Schumpert of Newberry was ring bearer. Stephen T. Carter served as best man. Senior ushers were uncles of the bride, J. Ralph Black- well of Spartanburg an<^ Thomas D. Johnson of Roanoke, Virginia. Other ushers were Pope Duncan Johnson, III, Arthur Leroy Smith, Jr., James E. Floyd and Dennis W. Newton, Jr. Acolytes were Geoffrey Johqson and Gordon Blackwell Johnson. The bride, who was escorted and given in marriage by her father, was attired in a champagne peau de soie and re-embroidered alen- con lace wedding gown. The high rise waist of lace had a Duchesse neckline and short cap sleeves. The A-line skirt featured a band of lace around the bottom of the skirt which extended into a gracious de tachable train edged in lace. She wore a matching Mantilla of fine silk illusion edged in re-embroid ered alencon lace and carried a cascade of roses and ^tephanotis, centered with a white orchid. The bride’s mother was attired in a floor length pink linen dress with pink lace overblouse. The groom’s mother was attired in a floor length turquoise crepe with chaarilly lace overblouse. Both wore white orchid corsages. ^ For a wedding trip to North Carolina the bride chose a celery green suit with a small straw hat. She wore a white orchid corsage. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Pope Duncan John son and is a rising junior at Agnes Scott College. The groom, son of Mrs. Thelma Webb Mallory and Hugh Kasier Mallory of Columbus, Ga., holds a B.S. degree from Georgia Tech and at present is an electrical en gineer with Western Electric Com pany in Atlanta. The couple will make their home in Atlanta, Ga. Following the ceremony a re ception was given by the bride’s parents at the Newberry County Club. The club was decorated with white flowers, palms, Smilax and floor candelabra with cathedral candles. The refreshment table was centered with a large arrange ment of white carnations, snap dragons and mums. A string trio from Columbia composed of Mrs. Darrell Richardson, Mrs. Arthur Fraser and Mrs. Herbert Benson, played music throughout the re ception. TEA IS GIVEN On Monday, June 7, a tea for Miss Mary Elizabeth Johnson and Miss Elizabeth Norris was given at the home of Mrs. Ralph B. Ba ker. Associate hostesses were Mrs. Ralph P. Baker and Mrs. Walter Summer. Blue hydrangeas were used throughout the rooms and the dining table was decorat ed in white. 50 guests called be tween the hours of five and six o’clock. The receiving line was composed of Mrs. Ralph B. Baker, Miss Elizabeth Norri,®, Mrs. John Norris, Mrs. Von Long, Miss Mary Elizabeth Johnson and Mrs. Dun can Johnson. Refreshments were served by Beth Baker, Mary Bak er, Kathy Baker and Mary Parr. Each bride-to-be was presented a white carnation corsage and a serving spoon in her stainless steel pattern. ENTERTAIN AT BRIDGE A bridge party for Mips Mary Elizabeth Johnson was given Tueday, June 8 by Cindy Lominick and Jane Shannon. Miss Johnson was presented a white carnation corsage and a cream pitcher in her pattern of dinnerware. Lillies were used for decorations and a salad plate with Iced tea was serv ed. Mrs. Duncan Johnson was in vited for refreshments. BRIDGE LUNCHEON On Wednesday Mrp. Lou Fran ces Lide, Mrs. Furman Reagin and Miss Leonide Reagin gave a bridge luncheon and towel shower for Miss Johnson at the home of Mrs. Lide. Lunch was served buffet style from the dining table center- j§§| mWmmm ed with an arrangement of mag nolias. At the two tables of bridge Anne Newton won high score and Cathy Bennett won low score. Mrs. Duncan Johnson, Sr., Mrs. Duncan Johnson, Jr., Mrp. Dennis Newton, Mrs. H. B, Kirkegard and Mrs. Gordon Blackwell came in for refreshments. KITCHEN SHOWER Wednesday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Preston McAlhany a kitchen shower was given ,for Miss Johnson by Mrs. McAlhany, Mrs. Josie McAlhany and Mrs. I. Kaplan. ’Hie two rooms used were decorated with blue hydrangeas and shasta doisies. The guests played, bridge bingo after which kitchen gifts were presented the honoree in a large laundry basket The hostesses served a dessert plate. The bride-to-be was present ed a gift of Corning ware and a corsage of small useful kitchen items.: LAKE SUPPER 'VI Mr. and Mrs. Louis Floyd enter tained for Miss Johnson with a supper at the Lions Club House on Lake Murray. She was pre sented a gift of a silver-edged cry stal pitcher. The club house was decorated with Shasta daisies and Queen Anne’e lace. BRIDGE ON THURSDAY Last Thursday a bridge party for Miss Johnson was given by Mrs. Owen Holmes, Mrs. W. C. Carter and Mrs. William Monroe at the home of Mrs. Monroe. Four tables were laid for bridge. The house was decorated throughout with orchids and the dining table with a white cloth was centered with a white and pink asrange- ment. Refreshments were served buffet style from the dining table where Miss Sue Ellen Hipp poured punch and served assort ed sandwishes and decorated cakes. An orenid was pinned on the bride-to-be and a small one on each guest. Miss Johnson was pre sented a beautiful bedspread. LUNCHEON FOR COUPLE On Friday, June 11, 'Miss John son and Mr. Mallory attended a luncheon in their honor at the (Continued on page 5) ON JUNE 30, f y “The beginning of wisdom is the courage to liberate oneself from the self-hypnosis of hate propa ganda, to sit down at the confer ence table without prior condi tions.”—Levi Eshkol, Premier of Isreal. The State Building & Loan Ass’n 1117 BOYCE STREET NEWBERRY, S. C. is paying a DIVIDEND to its shareholders. This fine ■ * • . f I* ? t . ' T savings institution, which has paid a dividend every / June and December since being organized, has never r / ' ' V; * !>■ ' , had any restrictions imposed as to dividend payments by governmental agencies that supervise its operation —a truly significant factor to be considered by inves tors. Member Federal Savings & Loan Insurance Corporation Member Federal Home Loan Bank STATE BUILDING & LOAN ASSOCIATION DIAL 276-5660 1117 BOYCE STREET Newberry, South Carolina OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS R. B. BAKER, President THOMAS H. POPE J. DAVE CALDWELL, Vice-President R. AUBREY HARLEY PINCKNEY N. ABRAMS, Secretary-Treasurer LOUIS C. FLOYD