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The Courier-Journal from Louisville, Kentucky • Page 17

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Louisville, Kentucky
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17
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SPORTS AND GENERAL NEWS RADIO AND TV PROGRAMS SECTION 2-16 PAGES TUESDAY, JUNE 10, 1952 Grauman May Resign Perjury Charge Denied by Spivey Kentucky Star Pleads Innocent; Attorneys Demand Early Hearing Spivey, Kentucky's towering O.P.S. Says Beer Price Can Go Up General Raise Is Considered Unlikely, Though Louisville beer retailers who did not raise their prices the full amount allowed by an Office of Price Stabilization order last January may do so now. However, a new order announced yesterday by O.P.S. in Washington is not expected to bring a general price increase here. It could not exceed one cent a bottle or can.

O.P.S. said the new regulation authorizes retailers to compute new ceilings whenever there is an ''5 1 fit it '''f'jK Circuit Court Judge Cites Restrictions On Practice Circuit Judge Lawrence S. Grau man said yesterday that he is considering resigning from his bench because of law-practice re strictions enacted by the 1952 Legislature. Grauman sits in Common Pleas Court, Division 5. He was ap pointed in August, 1950, by the then Governor Clements to fill one of two Jefferson-circuit judge ships created by the 1950 Legisla ture.

A Democrat, Grauman was elected to a six-year term last November. The post carries an annual sal ary of $8,400 $7,500 from the State and $900 from the County. The 1952 Legislature passed a law, effective June 19, barring circuit judges from practicing law. The old law prevented judges from practice in courts only. 'Can't Even Write Deed' "Now a circuit judge can't even write a deed or draw a will," Grauman commented.

"Under the new restrictions, about the only persons who can afford to be a judge are those who don't have to depend on an income from law The new law was sponsored by Representative Henry R. Heyburn, Louisville Republican. It had been suggested by the Louisville Bar Association. Grauman said that if he resigned it would not be until within 90 days of the November election so that no election would be neces sary this year to fill the vacancy. The law requires that if a vacancy occurs before the 90-day re-election period, the office must be filled by the voters.

Otherwise, the governor appoints someone to fill the vacancy. Grauman's appointed successor would serve until the 1953 general election. Then an elected judge would serve the four years of the unexpired term. T11 1 stores noDDea At 4tli and Market Burglars stole money from three clothing stores in the vicinity of Fourth and Market over the week end, it was reported to police yesterday. Several hundred dollars was reported taken from the Joy Shop, 214 S.

Fourth; $150 from the Style Center, 410 W. Market, and $650 from Shirley's Children Wear, 404 W. Market. A metal box containing $373.58 was stolen from the Chef's Shop, restaurant at 4532 W. Broadway.

Courier-Journal Photo TEACHER 50 YEARS of the Baraca Bible Class at Walnut Street Baptist Church, George Edwin Hays, right, is presented a scroll of devotion by S. E. Ruley, a class member, at a dinner in Hays' honor. Baptist Class Honors Teacher of 50 Years George Edwin Hays, was honored last night at Walnut Street Baptist Church by the Sunday-school class he has taught for 50 years. About 35 members of the Baraca Bible Class bestowed on the prominent layman a wealth of kind words, a bouquet of Courier-Journal Photo GREAT OLD DAYS of the class of 1917, Louisville Boys High School, are recalled by souvenirs and pictures in scrapbooks of Harcourt Parrish, New York, class president.

Boys High Class of '17 Has Record of Exploits Obviously, those were great old days. Days when the students at Louisville Boys High School wore wide, floppy caps and sometimes flirted at unauthorized times with the young ladies of Louisville Girls High. New York, June 9 (AP) former all-America star, pleaded the basketball-fix scandal. His attorney said he gave a perjurycharge rather than be chains." General Sessions Judge Francis L. Valente released Spivey on $2,500 bond to await trial.

No date was set, but -the defense demanded an early hearing. Spivey was accused by the State of New York of talking with a fixer about rigging scores before almost every game at the height of the 1950-1951 Kentucky basketball season. The indictment charges Spivey collected $1,000 "as a result of such deals and arrangements that December and January." Spivey denied all this last February before a New York grand jury. As a result he was indicted April 28 on perjury charges. Two days later he was arrested in Lexington, on a fugitive warrant.

Spivey flew to Naw York from Louisville last night and gave himself up today at the district attorney's office. His lawyers, Harold Frankel and John Young Brown, came with him. Brown called the perjury indictment "worthless." Brown said Spivey surrendered with the understanding that he'd get a speedy trial. Assistant District Attorney Wil liam Sirignano replied that other business might tie up his office untf fall. The defense lawyer said that wasn't his idea of a speedy trial.

Judge Valente told Brown he'd do what he could to get Spivey an earlier trial. In the same court today the first trial resulting from the basketball scandal got under way. All the previous defendants pleaded guilty. The lawyer for two alleged fixers indicated at the outset that he would try to prove that "conditions of immorality" and an alleged bribe conspiracy existed long before his clients came onto the scene. The State said it would prove that Joseph Benintende, 42, and Jack "Zip" West, 39, conspired to bribe players on the Bradley University and U.

of K. teams. Convicted Players To Testify The State also promised testi mony by players of the 1949-1950 season already sentenced for ac cepting bribes on their dealings with the two defendants. Defense attorney Samuel Segal, in his opening statement to the jury, said they would have to de cide whether Benintende and West Bill County, has been a member of Walnut Street Baptist Church 53V2 years. He has been a deacon more than 50 years.

Retail Food Price Rose In Last Half of May Washington, June 9 (U.R) The Labor Department reported today that average retail food prices rose a tenth of a per cent the last half of May. The Department estimated, the food-price index was 231.2 per cent of the 1935-39 average on May 26. This was 13.8 per cent over the pre-Korea level. increase in what malt beverages cost them. It also permits wholesalers of beer and ale to tack onto their ceiling prices a recent increase in freight rates.

Wholesaler Holds Line One Louisville wholesaler who handles four out-of-town brands said he trucks them in, and does not intend to increase prices. Another said he did not know what effect the new regulations would have on his prices. Both said that some retailers did not increase their prices to the limit per mitted last January, but many of them did. Paul Morton, executive director of the Kentucky Brewers Association, said he was unable to say what effect the new regulation would have here until he studied it. In Washington, O.P.S.

said that primarily the new regulation clarifies pricing techniques in the beer and ale industry. Pricing Date Changed It changed the base pricing date for retailers to permit them to pass on to consumers if they have not already done so the increase in federal excise tax that became effective last November The new base date will be October, 1951, instead of December, 1951. The tax increase amounted to three tenths of a cent on a standard bottle or can. O.P.S. officials explained that the ceiling may be boosted only when higher costs, including taxes, amount to a half cent or more.

They said that, in figuring new ceilings several months ago, some retailers found they could raise prices a cent because the new tax and other costs amounted to a half cent or more. house operator he was a helluva track star. And William Lehigh Rees, a rear admiral in the Navy now, and Edward S. George, who left just before graduation and was killed in France a few months later. Yessir, we were a real class." Displays Anderson Note Among the scrap'oook souvenirs was a handwritten note as follows: "Admit (Olof) Anderson to 3, 4, and 5 periods.

Was at Girls High School on Wednesday. C.E.R. (For C. E. Reed, principal)." Parrish explained that Anderson and a group of others "snuck out" to some sort of a meeting at Girls High and were suspended temporarily from classes.

Louisville Boys High was a fleeting combination of Louisville Male and du Pont Manual Train red roses, and a scroll indicating their devotion for the 80-year-old teacher. "I don't know whether the Lord will let George Hays sit in on his funeral or not, but we are plad tr hp savin? snmp nf tht things that will be remembered for years to come," said Dr. W. O. Carver, prof essor emeritus of comparative religion and mis- sions at Southern Baptist Theo- logical Seminary.

'Opened The Door' for Many "Some day he will know how man ymen there are in Heaven who would not have been there if he had not opened the door." Hays sat calmly during the recitations in his praise, but Mrs. Hays constantly dabbed her eyes. They celebrated their 53d wedding anniversary in April. Hays a native of Hardin Policeman, Facing Charges, Resigns Louisville Police Sgt. Irvin E.

Hibbs, 3624 Lentz, resigned yesterday under charges of conduct unbecoming an officer. Safety Director James E. Thorn-berry announced the 35-year-old officer's resignation. Thornberry had scheduled a hearing on the charges against him for yesterday morning. Thornberry declined to say what prompted the charges, but other officers said they involved obscene pictures in the Traffic Bureau, where Hibbs was assigned.

Hibbs had been on the force 10 years. innocent today to any part in himself up voluntarily to answer treated like "a Roman captive in were trying to bribe players or just "seeking information in order to place bets "It is for you to say," he said, "whether the conspiracy had existed long before the defendants entered the scene A witness, Saul Feinberg, 26, a former New York University law student, testified he made a deal with the defendants in De cember, 1949, to contact Dale Barnstable of Louisville, a for mer Kentucky star, He said the deal was $1,000 for each player bribed and $500 for Feinberg himself. Tells of Barnstable Contact Feinberg said that the day after the deal was made he, Benintende, and West went to New Orleans, where the Kentucky team was scheduled to play, and he contacted Barnstable. "I asked him if there was any opportunity to get assistance for the coming season and he said he would let me know the -next day," Feinberg testified at today's session. Feinberg has pleaded guilty to a conspiracy charge and is awaiting sentence.

In his opening statement. Assistant District Attorney Vincent A. G. O'Connor said he would present evidence to show that "the players in the main were willing to do business." He said the defendants were not inclined to approach a player who had not previously indicated a willingness to accept bribes. Barnstable was one of three Kentucky players given SBspend-ed sentences here last April after they pleaded guilty to fixing the point spread in a National Invitational Tournament game with Loyola of Chicago on March 14, 1949.

Highland Church Buys- House for 330,000 Highland Presbyterian Church has bought a three-story stucco residence at 2335 Bonnycastle from Albert C. Dick for about $30,000. The 11-room house will be usedv as a residence for the church's pastor, Dr. W. A.

Ben-field, Jr. Dr. Benfield now lives on Bardstown Road at Fern Creek. Dick will move to a new home on Penruth in the Zorn-Mocking-bird Valley area. Telephone switchboards at the City Fire Department, City, County, and State police, and The Courier-Journal were flooded with calls from residents of the area trying to find out what was burning.

man, Nancye Holt, Joyce Holton, Henry Holzheimer, Robert Hoover, Mary Ann Hornback, Dominic B. Horstman, Marvin Horton, Jon E. Hosch, James Howard, Augustine HoweU, Mary Jane Hubbard. Evelyn Humphress, Jerry Humphreys, Barbara Huneycutt, Doris Jean Hyatt, Betty Lee Jaggers, Wanda Lee James, Louis M. Johnson, Pauline R.

Johnson, Linda J. Johnson, Billie J. Jones, Carolyn Jones, George W. Jones. Howard L.

Jones, Mary Kay Jones, Donald K. Katz- Chemical Fire Bigger Than Usual the plant, said. "But there's no o'clock with a flash residents re-question it was much larger than ported could be seen for more the usual fires we have there," than a mile, he said. The resulting fire was so large The basin, he explained, re- it had to be put out by the plant ceives overflow solvents used in fire department. Du Pont Reports No Damage An "unusually large" fire in the catch basin at the north end of the du Pont neoprene plant last night laid a pall of smoke over southwestern Louisville.

The fire caused no injuries or damage, Timothy Delaney, indus- trial-relations superintendent of Learn To Ride Today's 'Wild Manual Graduates Told Days when a remarkable class, the boys of 1917, played pranks on their principal such as rolling his Model Ford into the school building. Evidence of such events lies preserved in two well-stuffed scrapbooks of the class president, a former newspaperman, Harcourt Parrish, New York. Here for Class Reunion Parrish displayed the faded photographs, play programs, handwritten notes, boat-ride tick ets, and scores of other souvenirs of a bygone age while in Louis-vilje for a class reunion. "I just kept this junk, that's all. I've always saved stuff," said Parrish, former state editor of The Courier-Journal and now a public-relations man.

"We were a real class," he said. "Look at these photographs. There's the cast of 'The a play we put on by Richard Harding Davis. "There's Petie (Paul Mallon, the newspaper columnist who died not so long ago. He played the lead in 'The Dictator' Dann Byck In Class Parrish went on to identify Dann Byck, president of the Board of Aldermen; the Rev.

Olof Anderson, pastor of Harvey Browne Memorial Presbyterian Church; J. Colgan Norman, insurance agent, who was named best all-round boy in the class, and William G. Frederick, president of Stewart Dry Goods Com pany. There's Millard Cox, attorney for Kentucky distilleries," Parrish added, "and Harry Switow, movie- Carol Jean LaDuke, LeRoy Langston, Letcher Langston, William A. Leake, Dorothy LeMaster, Carl Robert Lencke, Lloyd Lewis, Reba Logsdon, Jacklyn Mae Love, Donna Loving, William Kenneth Lutz, Donald Lyons, Eddie Lyons, Gary McCord, Helen McCoy, Robert McDaniel, Betty S.

McFarlin, Wanda J. McGeorge, Patricia Mcintosh. Carolyn S. McKim, Janice McLemore, Carolyn Maier, William B. Mann, Gwin Marcum, Arthur Markl.

Patsy Martin, Peggy C. Martin, Shirley Anne Martin, Harry Louis Mason, James Ronald Mason, Rita Alice Mayfield. James William May-nor, Alma Corinne Meeks, Wesley Lyvonne Melton, John Kenneth Menges, Wanda Rose Meredith, Ann Carole Miller, Sharon Miller, Wanda June Miller, Wendell F. Miller, Mary Katherine Minyard, Fatty Minzenberger, Eddie Moberly. Curtis Moffett on List Curtis Moffett, Gilbert Montgomery, Carolyn Moore, Don Moore, James Morris, Patsy Jenevie Mosier, Betty Ann Mouser, Nellie Jane Mullins, Brandon F.

Nail, Marilyn Nail, Lindbergh Napier, Barbara Niemann, Nancy Niles, Margaret Noble. Betty Nolan, David Noyes, Janice Oaks, Thelma Lee Owen, Kathleen Page, Don Parker, Bobby Earl Parks. Philip Parties. Charles Parsons, Carolyn Patterson, Mary Helen Patterson, William D. Peers, Ada P.

Pendleton, J. W. Pendleton, Clara Agnes Perry, Alarlene A. Perry, Kenneth Peters, Billie Phillips, Billy R. Pitcock.

Martha Potts, Gloria Priddy, Joyce Proctor, Robert M. Putnam. Robert Quire, Barbara Radcliffe, Gloria Rafferty, Gilbert Rankin, Betty Lou Rash, Elwyn Raymer, Betty Reaves, Patsy -Reeves, William J. Renz, Douglas Rhodes, Eleanor Richardson, John Ritchey, Warren D. Robb.

Eva Mae Robitaille, Betty Roman, Lois Roman, Wendell R. Ross, Carolyn Rothwell, Marlene E. Routt, Charles Edward Rowe, Rodger Ruark, Charles Edward Sale, Ralph Leslie Sampson, Margie Sands, Alice Frances Sartin, Doris Saunders, Joyce Schaeftlein, Julia Schaeft-lein, Jo Ann Schaffner, Charles Schafroth, Helen Scheele, Don Scheer, Clifford Wm. Schiphorst, Barbara Schmied, Donald Schmitt, William Schneidtmiller, Doris Schuler, Lynette Schulman, Frankie Diana Scott, Quinten Joseph Seadler, Byron Young Sellers, Leonard SeweU. School Ends for Helen Sharp' Helen Sharp, Donald Shepherd, Mary Sue Sherman, Eleanor Jane Schuster.

Viola Silverman, Herman Silverstein, Robert A. Sinclair, Neal Skeeters, Ellen Louise Smith, Macon E. Smith, Marshall C. Smith. Sue Y.

Elva Jane Sneegas. Betty Colleen Sowell, Ethel Jane Spector, George E. Squier, Eleanor Lois Stader, Carol Jean Stanley, Arthur James Stead, Willetta Steiner, James A. Stevens, Jimmy H. Stevenson, Mae Stinson, Lester Stoll, Edna Stowers, John Straton, Carol Gene Strey, Beverly Sweazy, Thomas Terns, Morris Thacker, Donald L.

Tharp, William H. Thielemann, Barbara M. Thompson, June Frances Thompson, Mary Maxine Thompson, Martha Jean Thornhill, Garnet Todd, C. Dorene Tomerlln. John L.

Trinkle, Joe Tucker. Louis Twyman, Doris Underwood, Rodney Valentine, Terrell Vanover, Beulah Faye Vaughn, Ted Vogt, Ronald VonAU-men. David Waggoner. Davie Walker, Jean Walker, Elizabeth Wallace, Donald Walters, Karl Walz, Billie Ann Waters, Shirley Weber, Yvonne Weber, Don Wedding, Richard Welch, Shirley Welch, Elizabeth Welker, Colleen Wethington, Joyce Whitehouse. Joyce Williams.

Ruhv Jn Wolfe, Edward Wong, Kathryn Wooden, Glenn F. Wright, Charles F. Yancey, Kay V. TiMi- rt 1. 1 Zimmennan He has been vice-president of the Southern Baptist Convention.

moderator of the General Asso- "ation of Baptists in Kentucky, and trustee of Southern Baptist Theological Seminary, New Or- Ieans Baptist Theological Semi- nary, and Georgetown College. Helped Found Hospital He was instrumental in founding Kentucky Baptist Hospital and was its acting superintendent for about five years. He is a Gideon, a charter member of the Rotary Club of Louisville, and a member of advisory boards of the Salvation Army and Kentucky Young Men's Christian Association. Hays attended Georgetown College and although he did not graduate he was recipient of an honorary doctor-of-divinity degree several years ago. Hays was founder and is president of the Louisville Seed Company.

The Hayses live at 930 Hess Lane. 3 Drivers Fined A Total of $290 Three motorists were fined on reckless-driving charges in Traffic Court yesterday after charges of drunken driving were filed away. Wallace R. Roy, 35, Liberty, and John W. Cowan, 33, of 1121 Garvin Place, were fined $100 each.

Cpl. Donald L. Britton, 19, Fort Knox, was fined $90. Dr. Florence E.

Meder memorial prize for chemistry Jennie Isa-belle Clore. Mirror award William Kenneth Lutz. Mitre award Samuel Terrell Vanover. National Honor Society merit awards John Erward Hosch and Nancy Lee Niles. Parent-Teacher Association med- als -William H.

Collins, and -f amcia Ann Glaze. Anna S. Pinkert memorial prize Beverly Faye Farrior. Capitol Ross prize Barbara Sue Hayes. Art Prize Won by Girl Frances E.

Wilberding memorial art prize Lynette Schulman. Woodman of the World History award Charles Robert Kern. The graduates are: Berlene Acord. Mildred Jean Adkins. Betty Lou Aiklsson, Jo Ann Allen.

Norma Allen. Walter C. Andrmn. Jn Ann vWu AwSffi Geraldine AvUt. Betty Sue Baker, Stanley Ttr' Bmoh, Joyce Bentley.

Peggy Bertram. SSSTxJSk. BaU R- Bivln. Eddie Black, Delores Blackburn, Clarence Blum, Mary Helen Bollinger. Virginia Bond, Patricia Boston, Morton s.

Bottorff, Walter L. Brauner, Marvin Brew- er DaTid P. Brian, Esther Brown. Norma Brown. Henry L.

Brumleve, Jo Ann Bryan, Lola Buchanan, Joann Buck, Martha Buck. BUI Buckaway. Stewart ousii vnartea nooerx caDeii, trances Marie Cagle, Patricia Cambron, Rose Mary Cambron, Leroy Franklin Carlton, Jane Ruth Carroll. Guy Carter, Donald Caudfll, Jean Cecil, Betty P. Clark, Doris Clarke, Isabel Clore.

Helen Cloyd, Bar- oni tow, nuuara a. wuiiam Henry CoUins, Maritza Compa, Gordon i4uey, on aid Lewis cook. Donald Cook- MV. Dfllia Fiv rnAnr. arh.r.

A mm Jimraie Tyne Cornett, David Axton Cousins, Aleie Frances Cox. Carl Cox, Donald Cox. Samuel Cox. Ralph Cnfton. '-''k- GeneTa Craigmyle, Richard.

Crawley, Commencement Speaker Likens Intangibles, Including Education, to Usable Horsepower If you can't ride today's wild horses, you'd better stay out of the corral. If you don't, Dr. Joseph King Vivion told graduates of du Pont Manual High School last night, 'the horses will stamp you to death." Fern Creek Man Injured In Pony Fall Earl Woodrow, 54, Briscoe Lane, Fern Creek, was injured critically about 4:40 p.m. yesterday when he fell or was thrown from a pony near his home. He was taken to Kentucky Baptist Hospital.

Attendants said he suffered several fractured ribs, a broken collarbone, and a head injury. He had not regained consciousness last night. Woodrow stopped at the residence of a neighbor, Charles Laws, wrhile going home from work and asked permission to ride Laws' pony, as he frequently did. Relatives found Woodrow unconscious a few minutes later in a nearby field after the pony returned riderless. Woodrow is an employee of the County Road Department.

WKLO Revises TV Application Mid-America Broadcasting Cor- poration, owner of radio station WKLO here, yesterday filed a revised application for a television station here with the Federal Communications Commission. The new application is for ultrahigh frequency on Channel .21. The company asked for Channel 13 before F. C. C.

in 1948 froze the issuance of TV licenses. Later F. C. C. removed Channel 13 ing High Schools.

It lasted from 1915 to 1919. Here are excerpts from a news story of 1919: "Birds in their little nests agree. "So they do, in poetry. But just imagine it in real life, and imagine further that it isn't a little nest, but a big one, and full of woodpeckers and owls. Would they agree?" The story explained that "the woodpeckers are the birds taking manual training and the owls are the staid, idealistic birds who are taking the academic courses Officials have admitted that 1u uec." a Ul.

OI.UUUI oyixii, suicc lUdie and Manual were merged. There fore, the account went on, the Board of Education had decided to return to the original status of two schools. Outside schools, such as Hyde Park High in Chicago, had to be found for the Thanksgiving Day football game that traditionally featured Male vs. Manual. Joint Meeting Was Big Event The major social event each year was the joint meeting of the Athenaeum Literary Association, formerly of Male; the Mitre Club, formerly of Manual, and the Ale- thean Literary Society of Louisville Girls High.

There also were vaudeville shows and class plays. The 1917 class play was "Mr. Hoi Polloi Receives," by Aulyn Edvard Kan-ston, faculty member and a member of the Male class of 1898. Parrish, who attended Male two years before going to the consolidated school, naturally sprinkled his scrapbooks liberally with souvenirs of Male. Doomed Building Was Hite Home.

Not A. D. Hunts The old three-story brick residence to be torn down on the northwest corner of Second "and Walnut was the home of the W. C. Hite family from pre-Civil War days until 1897.

Yesterday's Courier-Journal referred to the building as having been the A. D. Hunt residence. William. Gaunt, Brown Hotel, a granddaughter of W.

C. Hite, 'said that to her knowledge the Hunt family had never lived in the building. She said the Hunts at one time lived across the street. Mrs. Gaunt said her grandfather bought the brick residence before the Civil War from its builder, whose name she did not know.

The present owner, Emanuel Levi, Weissinger-Gaulbert Apartments, plans to tear'it down to make way for a filling station. making neoprene from acetylene. The solvents are automatically set on fire by a pilot light and "burned off." Last night, however, there was an unexpectedly large overflow that ignited shortly before 9 Glass, Patricia Glaze, Betsy Glutting, William H. Goff, Robert Golden, Elizabeth Goodpaster, Doris Gordon, Herbert M. Gosling, Bill Grant, Charles W.

Grass, Willie Grau, Philip Grawemeyer, Anthony Gray, Colleen Gray, Edward N. Green, Norman Greenwell, Margie Gregory, Clifford Grieb, Connie Grimes, Robert F. Grimes, Betty Ann Gutterman, Kathryn E. Hale, Doris Jean Handy, Janis Harder, Michael Hargan, Alice Hargrove, Taleen Harp, Minnie Harris, James Donald Hart, Shirley Hartley, Calvin Hatfield, Barbara Sue Hayes, RusseU Hayes, Alma Haynes, Betty Hendershot, Geraldine Herman, Charlen Herron, Robert Heybach, June Hickerson. Ruth Ann Hoagland, Dorothy noDson.

Dave Hodge, Janice Holliday, Fred Hoi- I Dr. Vivion, pastor of Fourth Avenue Methodist Church, spoke at Manual's commencement exercises in Memorial Auditorium. "This generation is pre-eminently under the necessity of learning to control and use horsepower," he said. "We have available horses that we can use and control if we learn to ride them," he said. "The 'horses' are not just those tangi- bes that create horsepower, but intangibles as well.

Chief among thm is education." you take it?" he asked, "or will you alibi your Principal Arthur J. Ries an nounced these awards to seniors: Alumni awards James Tyne Cornett and Alma Loretta Haynes. Lomb honorary science award Betty Rea Custis. Elizabeth Breckinridge award Starr Neuwirth Craig. Caroline B.

Bourgard prize William Bowman Grant, Jr. Chapm Memorial award-Sam- Uel Terrell VanOVer. Crimson Key award Betty J. Burchette Felts. FinCaStle Chapter D.A.R.

prize for citizenship-Ethel Jane Spec- tor Valerie Hi. Hannau memorial rri7 fnr ffonaral srhnlarchirv pnze IOr general SCnOiarSnip Ethel Jane SpeCtOr. Ti JefferSOn POSt NO. 15. Amen- can Legion Auxiliary, citizenship medal Patsy Lynn Earls.

Harry Mason Wins Award Kiwanis Efficiei Harry Louis Mason. tt-, rff- KlWaniS Efficiency award JOnn Marsnail CnaPter D.A.K. t-t -a Cf prize for United States history Kthel Jane SneCtOr iidue opeiiur. Courier-Journal Photo FEUD IFF DAYS ARE OVER The Hatfield-McCoy feud never became an issue with these two seniors at du Pont Manual High School. He is Calvin Hatfield, 715 Woodlawn, and she is Helen McCoy, 435 Saginaw.

Approving her "We just get along fine' is Dr. Joseph King Vivion, commencement speaker. from the list available to Louis ville. The freeze was lifted last April. If F.

C. C. approves the new application, construction will begin immediately, said Joe Eaton, gen- eral manager of WKLO. The radio station is outlet for the A. B.

C. network. Bookie Charge Here Amended; Man Fined George F. Eilers, 33, was fined $50 in Municipal Court yesterday after a handbook- charge was amended to disorderly conduct. Judge David Cates said it was "close question" whether police should have acquired a search warrant before arresting Eilers Saturday at 2644 Portland.

Eilers has a federal gambling-tax stamp. Ronald E. Crump, Norma Crutcher, Louise Cundiff, Betty Custis, John Daily. Malta Decker, Norma Denzik. James Detenber, Henry Devore.

Cormd Diebold, Frances Dowell. John Downs, Betty Drexler. Shirley Driskell, Frederick Drybrough, Charles Duddingston. Peggy Dugan, Ruth Dukes, R. L.

Duncan. Ruth Hardin Duncan, Jean Dunman, Patsy Earls, Ray Eigelbach, John J. Eisner, Bill Fairfax, Beverly Farrior, Jo Ann Faust, Betty J. B. Felts.

Charles Fife, June Filmer, John Fleming, Charles Franck, Jerome Fred- erick, Edward Gafford. Samuel Clay GamblU, Alice Louise Gandin? Kenneth im, nooen ie Gay, Helen Lenon Gilbert, Norma Gilbert, Jack Bryon man, Mary Jo Keeling, Patricia Ann Williams, Woody Willis, James T. Winnen-Keene. Shirley Ann Kelly. Patricia Ken- berg.

Ethel WUhnia. Georee Wiuin. Roti. nedy, Delores Kercher, Charles Kern, Beverly King, John King, Peggy King, Gloria Kirhv. Jam Vir-k- Paul STicmI John Kletnhenz, Barbara Jean Knadler.

police said. a iaiii i- i.

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