Savannah-Chatham Metro police will be operating radar hot spots along Benton and Highland boulevards.
Police remind drivers there is zero tolerance for speeding in school zones.
Savannah-Chatham Metro police will be operating radar hot spots along Benton and Highland boulevards.
Police remind drivers there is zero tolerance for speeding in school zones.
Jail bookings from Mar. 29–30 for Savannah-Chatham County are now posted.
Click through this slideshow to view photos and information obtained from the Chatham County Sheriff’s Department.
All individuals posted have not been convicted of a crime and are innocent until proven guilty.
Find previous jail bookings at savannahnow.com/booked.
Savannah-Chatham police say they’re investigating a home invasion Wednesday morning in Georgetown.
About 5:45 a.m., two armed men knocked on the door of a residence in the 1700 block of Grove Point Road and kicked it open, said Sonny Cohrs, police spokesman.
The homeowner, however, met them with his own gun, after which the two suspects fired their weapons while running away.
One of them was wearing a yellow jacket and they fled in a dark Chevrolet Silverado.
Police ask anyone with information on the case to call CrimeStoppers at 912-234-2020.
Police say a Florida teenager took his mother’s car and drove to Savannah before he and a friend were caught breaking into cars at a hotel on the city’s south side.
Both Orlando-area teenagers were busted about 8 p.m. Tuesday near a hotel in the 17000 block of Abercorn Street and charged with second-degree burglary. Officers had received reports of suspects breaking into cars at a hotel in the area, and, after a search, found the alleged culprits at a second hotel nearby, said Sonny Cohrs, Savannah-Chatham police spokesman.
Apparently, one of the teens had driven away from Orlando in his mom’s 2012 Cadillac without her permission on Monday. The car was located by its tracking system, and it was towed at the owner’s request, Cohrs said.
The two teenagers’ trip ended at Savannah’s Regional Youth Detention Center.
Anyone with additional information on the case is asked to call CrimeStoppers at 912-234-2020.
Numerous tips from Crime Stoppers led to Kristen Hicks, 31, being identified as the woman on surveillance footage firing multiple gunshots at a SunTrust Bank ATM on March 9, said police spokeswoman Darnisha Green.
Hicks was located at CCDC, where she was already serving time for a March 11 incident in which a discharged gun damaged a home. She was charged with aggravated assault (domestic violence act) and criminal damage to property to the second degree, Green said.
On Wednesday Hicks was served warrants and subsequently charged with one count of criminal damage to property in the second degree, one count of reckless conduct and one count of possession of a firearm during the commission of a crime.
The Chatham County Health Department has issued an advisory for Polk Street Beach on Tybee Island.
The area affected is the northern most part of Tybee Island at the mouth of the Savannah River from the end of the beach to the jetty.
The beach is not closed, but health department officials caution that contact with the water in the affected area may result in illness.
The Chatham County Health Department recommends you do not swim or wade in the water in the area under advisory. Fish and other seafood caught from this area should be thoroughly washed with fresh water and thoroughly cooked before eating as should fish or seafood caught from any waters.
The area will be retested and the advisory will be lifted when tests show the bacteria levels meet the Environmental Protection Agency’s recommended standards.
For more information about beach water advisories, go to www.gachd.org and click on the Environmental Health tab at the top of the page.
Jaimie Hebert, provost and vice president of academic affairs at Sam Houston State University in Huntsville, Texas, has been named as the finalist to become the next president of Georgia State University.
Kessel Stelling Jr, chairman of the university’s board of regents, and University System of Georgia Chancellor Hank Huckaby announced Hebert’s selection Wednesday afternoon.
Hebert has a doctorate, a master’s and bachelor’s degree in statistics from the University of Louisiana-Lafayette. He served as dean of the College of Arts and Sciences at Sam Houston State University from 2005-2011.
He has also been an assistant professor at Sam Houston State University and Appalachian State University.
The board of regents is expected to name the next president of Georgia Southern University at an unspecified future meeting.
UPDATE: Westbound lanes of 37th Street have reopened.
Earlier: An accident has closed the westbound lanes of 37th Street between Bull and Barnard streets, according to the Chatham Emergency Management Agency.
Drivers should avoid this area and expect traffic delays.
“I do not want to be this guy that just sold a bunch of cars.”
O.C. Welch, recipient of Ford’s 2016 Salute to Dealers award
HARDEEVILLE, S.C. — O.C. Welch Ford has been selected to receive the 2016 Salute to Dealers award from Ford Motor Co. in recognition of his community service as well as his business success.
Ford’s announcement indicated Welch was chosen as one of only three award recipients in the United States because he “consistently demonstrates Ford’s unwavering commitment to the community by supporting numerous organizations, many of which have impacted owner Ocie Clifton Welch III’s life personally.”
O.C. Welch Ford will receive the award today in Las Vegas in conjunction with the National Automobile Dealers Association annual convention.
Welch said he has always felt the urge to give back to his community.
“When I leave this world, I do not want to be this guy that just sold a bunch of cars,” Welch said. “People need help. As a good steward, you should do that as much and as often as you can,” Welch said.
Welch’s philanthropic efforts include donating more than $500,000 to Benedictine Military School, which he once attended.
“It is just incredible the amount of support that he has given us, and, for that matter, the role model that he has been for our students,” said the Rev. Frank Ziemkiewicz, headmaster at Benedictine.
Welch also spent $3 million to renovate the Bacon Park Municipal Golf Course, where he got his first job, and restore the original 18 holes to the design created by golf course architect Donald Ross.
“He grew up here — playing here and working here,” said Joe Shearouse, chief of leisure services for the city of Savannah. “So his commitment to restoring the course was personal, and it was meaningful to the community,”
In addition, Welch is a founding member of the 200 Club of the Coastal Empire, which provides financial assistance to the surviving spouses and children of police officers and firefighters who are seriously injured or killed in the line of duty.
As part of the award, the Ford Motor Co. Fund will donate $10,000 to a charity Welch supports.
Ford also commissions a portrait of each honoree that will feature a montage of the philanthropic and volunteer activities that led to the award. Duplicates of the portraits will join a Salute to Dealers display in the lobby of Ford World Headquarters in Dearborn, Mich.
The partners at HunterMaclean, a business law firm in Savannah and Brunswick, have elected Brad Harmon to serve as managing partner.
He succeeds Frank Macgill, who has served on the firm’s management committee since 2005 and as its managing partner since 2010.
As managing partner, Harmon will lead the HunterMaclean management committee, which guides firm strategy, sets long-term vision and directs firm operations. Harmon has served on the management committee for two years; Harold Yellin and Tom Cullen make up the rest of the team.
Harmon joined HunterMaclean in 2006, and, in addition to his service on the management committee, he has held other leadership positions within the firm, including deputy general counsel and chairperson of the logistics practice.
Harmon was recognized by Georgia Trend as one of 2015’s 40 Under 40 Outstanding Georgians, and the Fulton Daily Report has honored him as a Georgia lawyer under 40.
He has been named a Georgia Super Lawyers Rising Star and has been recognized by Business in Savannah as a GenerationNEXT Rising Star of Business.
“Brad is an outstanding attorney and a strong leader with a vision of how the firm can continue to develop and grow,” Macgill said. “He is dedicated to success for his clients, his partners and the firm as a whole. I am confident that his unique combination of innovation and experience will be of great value to HunterMaclean.”
Macgill will continue to practice in the firm’s Savannah and Brunswick offices in the areas of estates and trusts, taxation, corporate and nonprofit law.
In addition to Harmon’s role at HunterMaclean, he serves on the boards of Union Mission and Savannah Technical College Foundation and is recent past president of the Live Oak Public Libraries Foundation.
He was co-chairman of the attorneys division of the United Way of the Coastal Empire and is a graduate of Leadership Savannah.
Harmon graduated from the University of Tennessee-Knoxville with a Bachelor of Arts in political science and attended Mercer University Walter F. George School of Law.
Georgia Tech’s offense struck early Wednesday night as the 18th-ranked Yellow Jackets defeated Georgia Southern 6-1 at Russ Chandler Stadium. It was the 11th time this season the Yellow Jackets’ pitching staff held the opposition to two or fewer runs.
Georgia Tech (19-5) swept the season series with Georgia Southern (15-9), while improving its record to 12-2 in its last 14 games against in-state rivals.
Senior RHP Cole Pitts (2-1) earned his second win of the season, allowing one run on four hits with six strikeouts in 5.0 innings. Ben Parr, Micah Carpenter and Matthew Gorst combined to pitch 4.0 innings of no-hit relief.
Georgia Southern splits is softball
with Jacksonville
STATESBORO, Ga. – The Georgia Southern softball team dipped out of Sun Belt Conference play Wednesday evening to take on Jacksonville University in a doubleheader at Eagle Field. The Eagles split the midweek twinbill with the Dolphins, taking game one 3-2 before falling 3-0 in the nightcap.
The day’s first game started off scoreless through two and a half innings before the Eagles were able to strike pay dirt. Emily Snider first scored Haley Carter with a single to center field before A.J. Hamilton reached safely on a fielding error by the shortstop which also gave Lydia Witkowski enough time to race home and put the Eagles up 2-0.
The game then went scoreless for another two full innings before the Dolphins were able to draw back even with the Eagles thanks to a pair of runs in the top of the sixth. But GS proved once again to be resilient and retook the lead for good in the bottom of the frame. Macy Weeks hit a ground ball off the pitcher but was thrown out at first in a double play, but not before Hamilton cruised home to put the Eagles up 3-2.
Carter was perfect at the plate in game one, going 2-for-2 with a run scored while Witkowski joined her in collecting multiple hits. Witkowski went 2-for-3 at the dish with a run scored, as well. In total, six different Eagles recorded a hit in the game while five different Dolphins combined for Jacksonville’s five hits.
Freshman Dixie Raley (13-7) pitched her 13th complete game of the season, striking out five batters in the process. Victoria Brown (11-11) was the pitcher of record for Jacksonville and gave up eight hits and two earned runs in the loss.
The nightcap saw a different game as Jacksonville led things off when Victoria Brown hit a home run straight out to center field, scoring Danielle Baker in the process. The Dolphins got their final run when Allie McCourt laid down a sacrifice bunt to score Heather Roberts.
The Eagles battled hard throughout the rest of the game, getting eight runners on, but were unable to overcome the deficit. India Davis led the way in game two with a 2-for-4 batting performance.
Kierra Camp (5-8) pitched the complete game in game two for the Eagles while Taylor Rossman (3-6) claimed the win.
HIGH SCHOOLS
GIRLS SOCCER
CALVARY DAY 8,
BRADWELL 0
Reagan Glisson scored four goals and Sara Slingluff had a goal and three assists to lead Calvary Day over Bradwell.
Goals-Reagan Glisson 4, Jessica Arnsdorff, Jessica Lanier, Sara Slingluff, Nicole Crowley. Assists-Slingluff 3, J. Arnsdorff, Lanier, Sammie Arnsdorff. Saves-Bradwell, Amie Poindexter 10. CD, Alex Taylor 1, Tapanga Langnehs 3. Record-CD 12-1. B 1-10-1.
WINDSOR FOREST 2,
EFFINGHAM 2
Sia Karfakis and Mackenzie Macmillan scored for Windsor Forest in a draw with Effingham County. Molly Boone and Mackenzie Stewart scored for the Rebels.
Goals-WF, Sia Karfakis, Mackenzie MacMillan. EC, Molly Boone, Mackenzie Stewart. Assists—WF, Brianna Leckie 2. EC, Andrea Garcia. Saves-WF, Cheyenne Tolbert 13. EC, Sydney Martinez 4. Record—WF 8-1-2. EC 8-3-2.
BOYS SOCCER
BRADWELL 4, CALVARY 2
Ret Weeks scored a pair of goals for Calvary Day in a loss to Bradwell Institute.
Goals-CD, Ret Weeks 2. B, Tyler Dixon, Jamaal Duvall, Adwin Eliza, own goal. Assists-B, Jarvis Payton. Saves-CD, Jake Hamilton 6. B, Tayhlor Martin 8. Record-CD 3-5-2; Bradwell 6-6.
BOYS TENNIS
SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY 3,
SCREVEN CO. 0
Singles-Jarrett Karnibad d. Mason Oglesby 6-0, 6-3; Gabe Adler d. Gage Reynolds SC 6-1. 6-0
Doubles-Richard Chen/Alex Lynch d. Scott Williamson/Jenston Lollinc 6-3, 6-4.
Record-SCD 5-8
SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN 3, CALVARY DAY 2
Singles-Marc Biemiller (SC) d. Patrick Wilkins 6-3, 6-0; Nick Rogie (CD) d. Cole Goodwin 6-4, 7-5; Will Durrence (CD) d. Nick Jowers 6-7, 6-3, 10-8
Doubles-Champ Easter/Sam Bignault (SC) d. Nate Kelley/Dan Ruddy 6-0, 6-1; Zac Hancock/Connor Post d. Victor Jiang/Sam Xie 6-4, 6-4.
GIRLS TENNIS
SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN 4, CALVARY DAY 1
Singles-Lindsey Dixon (SC) d. Talia Hatch 6-1, 6-0; Kate Hoffman (SC) d. Abby Brunn 6-4, 6-1; Jinah Park (CD) d. Julie Petrillo 6-1, 6-1.
Doubles-Makenzie Tramell/Claire Durden (SC) d. Elizabeth Barber/Krista Jacobs 6-1, 6-0; Hannah White/Adriana Simon (SC) d. Abbey Slingluff/Lindsey Walker 7-5, 6-4.
SCREVEN CO. 3,
SAVANNAH COUNTRY DAY 2
Singles—Patti Tao (SCD) d. Hannah Kumjian 6-3, 6-1; Allie Bazemore (Screven) d. Michelle Liang 7-5, 2-6, 1-0; Britt Buisman (SCD) d. Pamela Dixon (Screven) 6-7, 6-0, 1-0
Doubles-Kristen Thomas/Ansley Dirst (Screven) d. Maggie Shehane/Grayson Rhangos 6-3, 6-4; Kate Bazemore/Ansley Thompson (Screven) d. Anna Muller/Angela Young 6-0, 7-5
TUESDAY
BOYS TENNIS
ISLANDS 5, SAVANNAH CHRISTIAN 0
Singles-Adam Thompson d. Marc Biemiller 6-3, 7-5; Reid Bennett d. Cole Goodwin 6-0, 6-0; Alex Warner d. Nick Jowers 6-0, 6-0
Doubles-Shane Allen/Alex Lambright d. Champ Easter/Sam Bignault 7-5, 6-3; Dylan Waldron/Connor Rowell d. Zac Hancock/Connor Post 6-1; 6-4
Record-Islands 10-2
Mr. Johnnie Baxter, Savannah, GA
Janet Francene Beecher, Baxley, GA
Mrs. Marilyn Bennett, Swainsboro, GA
Mrs. Dorothy Brinson, Tarrytown, GA
Mr. Gerald J. Burks, Hinesville, GA
Grace Silva Cabaniss, Savannah, GA
Deloris Cadogan, Savannah, GA
Mr. William Park Callahan, Savannah, GA
Mr. Marvin Campbell, Savannah, GA
Patricia Ann Rogers Curry, Savannah, GA
Mr. Kadeem HaShaun Davis, Savannah, GA
Ms. Rita Smith Gannaway, Savannah, GA
Mr. George Godbee, Statesboro, GA
Mr. Leonard D. Griffiths, Jr., Savannah, GA
Jesse Hargrove, Jesup, GA
Angela D. Hernandez, Claxton, GA
Stella Anander Lamas, Savannah, GA
Mr. Gerald M. Lawson, Savannah, GA
Mother Mamie Alice McNeil, Baxley, GA
Ashley Nicole Melton, Port Wentworth, GA
Rita Conner Morris, Pembroke, GA
Parker Nue Mullis, Sr., Jesup, GA
Lois Ann Natolly, Jesup, GA
Ms. Annette Roberson, Sylvania, GA
Velma Twele Schuur, Baxley, GA
Mr. Charles Shuman, Jr., Pembroke, GA
Sallie Simmons, Savannah, GA
Mrs. Florence Louise Smalls, Savannah, GA
Mr. Owen C. Strickland, Savannah, GA
Mr. Doy Swain, Hazlehurst, GA
Mr. Joseph A. Taylor, Savannah, GA
Master Leroy S. Teague, Ellabell, GA
Sallie Mae Tigner, Glennville, GA
Mary Lee Trowels, Darien, GA
Mrs. Dorothy Burnett Vaughn, Savannah, GA
Velma Arlen Wallace, Vidalia, GA
Mr. Thomas E. White, Sr., Savannah, GA
Robert E. Wilensky, Savannah/Claxton, GA
Mrs. Evelyn D. Wilkes, Pooler, GA
Mrs. Lillian Bonds Williams, Savannah, GA
The Savannah-Chatham police department arrested a 15-year-old boy for armed robbery at 3:15 p.m. Wednesday near the Truman Parkway overpass at Bee Road and East Anderson Street.
The suspect, armed with a handgun, reportedly robbed a 17-year-old male who was on his way home from school, said Sonny Cohrs, spokesman for Savannah-Chatham police. The suspect was apprehended in the 1100 block of East 32nd Street after a brief pursuit.
The teen was transported to the Regional Youth Detention Center without further incident, Cohrs said.
This investigation is ongoing. Anyone with information on this case should call CrimeStoppers at (912) 234-2020 or text CRIMES (274637) using the keyword CSTOP2020. Tipsters remain anonymous and may qualify for a cash reward.
A confidential tip line also is open directly to investigators at (912) 525-3124.
Police say they’ve arrested a 28-year-old Savannah man known as “Yamacraw Slim” who was wanted on suspicions of several crimes, including shooting a building late St. Patrick’s Day.
Undercover officers and K-9 units following up on a tip found Jamal Davis in the 300 block of West 54th Street about 9:30 p.m. Wednesday, said Darnisha Green, Savannah-Chatham police spokeswoman.
A search of his vehicle revealed a stolen handgun and drugs, Green said.
Police suspect Davis of firing shots near the 1200 block of West Broad Court March 17. Two women were in the line of fire but no one was injured. A building was hit.
Davis was taken to the Chatham County jail on several outstanding warrants. His charges include two counts of aggravated assault, one count of possession of a firearm by a convicted felon, one count of possession of marijuana (less than an ounce), one count of theft by receiving stolen property (firearm), one count of failure to comply/pay child support, one count of contempt of court, one count of failure to appear and one count of reckless conduct.
This is Davis’ 18th booking into the Chatham County jail since 2004, Green said. He was arrested in August and November of last year for being a convicted felon in possession of a firearm.
Police say someone tried to shoot a man near downtown Wednesday morning and a bullet hit an occupied Savannah College of Art and Design building.
A 27-year-old man was walking through a Fred Wessels Homes courtyard by the 100 block of East Broad Street about 10:45 a.m. when a male suspect walked up to him with a gun.
As the victim passed by, the suspect started firing, said Sonny Cohrs, Savannah-Chatham police spokesman.
The victim got away safely, but a stray bullet struck Norris Hall at East Broughton and East Broad streets. No injuries were reported.
The investigation is ongoing.
Police ask anyone with information on the case to call CrimeStoppers at 912-234-2020.
The Chatham Emergency Management Agency says northbound Interstate 95 is shut down at mile marker 111 due to a vehicle fire.
Drivers should avoid the area if possible. Traffic will be backed up.
Voters who live within Georgia House District 162 will be voting again in the special election to fill the remainder of the current state House term.
None of the three candidates running to fill the seat vacated with the February death of Rep. Bob Bryant garnered the necessary 50 percent plus one vote during the March 29 special election to win the remainder of the post outright.
Candidates Alicia Blakely and Rev. Carl Gilliard earned the most votes in this week’s special election, and will therefore be the candidates in the runoff.
The Chatham County Board of Elections announced this week a runoff has been scheduled for April 26. Any voters in House District 162’s 19 precincts can cast ballots in the runoff, as long as they were registered to vote by March 7.
These precincts include:
1-09 Immanuel Baptist
5-01 Bartlett Middle School
5-06 Seed Church (previously at Wildwood Methodist)
5-07 Elks Lodge
5-08 Savannah Primitive Baptist
5-11 Largo Tibet School
6-01 White Bluff Presbyterian
6-06 The Light
6-08 Savannah Commons
7-01 Garden City Senior Center
7-05 Woodlawn Baptist Church
7-14 Coastal Cathedral
8-03 Silk Hope Baptist
8-07 Woodville Tompkins Technical Institute
8-08 Resurrection of Our Lord
8-09 Moses Jackson Center
8-10 Carver Heights Community Center
8-13 Savannah Christian School
8-15 Garden City Recreation Center
Next for Chatham County voters will be the May 24 primary. In addition to the next two-year term of House District 162, Chatham County will be electing the rest of its legislative delegation, the county commission and other county posts.
The Chatham County Board of Elections recommends that local voters confirm their registration status in advance, especially if their address has changed.
This can be done by calling the Chatham County Board of Registrars at 912-790-1520.
The 252-room Hotel Indigo joined the ranks of Savannah’s boutique hotels with a ribbon-cutting ceremony Wednesday to mark the opening of the hotel, at 201 West Bay St., on the site of what once was the Guckenheimer tobacco warehouse and grocery, a nationally registered landmark built in 1850.
The property was more recently known as the Inn at Ellis Square until it was sold to Atlanta-based Noble Investment Group in October 2014 and underwent a complete face-lift.
“We are excited to welcome guests to the Hotel Indigo Savannah Historic District in the heart of City Market at Ellis Square,” said Kellie Lindner, hotel manager. “You will taste the local flavor on our menus and see it in the art and photography displayed on our walls.”
The building was returned to its original historic shell during the face-lift. Builders preserved century-old materials and historic details, including exposed brick and unearthed structural timber beams, which are visible throughout the property.
Students at Savannah College of Art & Design submitted various art pieces to be featured in the hotel, and the winning piece is displayed in an art installation on the east end of the building. Several murals throughout the hotel are replications of original advertisements from the Guckenheimer warehouse and market.
The hotel features The Five Oaks Taproom restaurant, offering breakfast and dinner, which sources ingredients from within 90 miles of Savannah, whenever possible.
The Hotel Indigo joins Savannah’s growing market of boutique hotels such as the Cotton Sail, Andaz, the Bohemian and the Brice.
For more information or to make a reservation, go to www.hotelindigo.com.
Savannah-Chatham Metro police will be operating radar hot spots along Crossroads Parkway.
Police remind drivers there is zero tolerance for speeding in school zones.
Deacon Edward L. Akins, Guyton, GA
Levone Renee' Baker, Claxton, GA
Deacon Solomon W. Brock, Statesboro, GA
Mary Hamilton Brown, Jacksonville, FL
Mary S. Byrd, California City, CA
Lemuel V. Conner, Thunderbolt, GA
Nellie Faye Carter Conner, Baxley, GA
Mr. Kadeem HaShaun Davis, Savannah, GA
Mr. Harold Donaldson, Metter, GA
Ms. Marsha Lynn Donaldson, Rock Hill, SC
Sister Claudia S. Ellison, Savannah, GA
Adrian Fletcher, Baxley, GA
Mr. Robert L. Ford, Sylvania, GA
Ms. Rita Smith Gannaway, Savannah, GA
Ms. Dorothy J. Grant, Savannah, GA
Mr. Leonard D. Griffith, Jr., Savannah, GA
Serenia W. Hendrix, Glennville, GA
Beulah Merle Smith Hodges, Savannah, GA
Mr. Lawrence Hopkins, Savannah, GA
Odell Smith Lewis, Hazlehurst, GA
Ms. Dorothy H. Lopez, Savannah, GA
Cedric A. Lundy, Claxton, GA
Mr. Richard Carlyle McCorkle, Claxton, GA
Mr. Harry McKever, Jacksonville, FL
Mamie McNeil, Sylvania, GA
Mr. Larry McPherson, Savannah, GA
Ashley Nicole Melton, Pt. Wentworth, GA
Barbara J. Mitchell, Ludowici, GA
Mr. Abraham L. Moore, Savannah, GA
Leacy B. Moore, Metter, GA
Mr. Michael F. Newsome, Savannah, GA
Mr. Stephen Richards, Vidalia, GA
Raleigh Roberts, Savannah, GA
Theresa S. Ryan, Savannah, GA
Mrs. Florence Louise Smalls, Savannah, GA
Mr. Gregory B. Smith, Savannah, GA
Mr. Jack Spell, Sr., Alamo, GA
Mr. Owen C. Strickland, Savannah, GA
Mrs. Ida Mae Sweatmon, Savannah, GA
Sallie Mae Tigner, Glennville, GA
Mrs. Dorothy Burnett Vaughn, Savannah, GA
Mr. Walter M. Waters, Statesboro, GA
Mr. Kenneth L. White, Sr., Savannah, GA
Robert E. Wilensky, Savannah/Claxton, GA
Mrs. Evelyn D. Wilkes, Pooler, GA
Mrs. Lillian Bonds Williams, Savannah, GA
Mr. Paul Williams, Savannah, GA