Culver Kidd Jr.

Edwards Culver Kidd, Jr. (July 17, 1914 December 4, 1995) was an American politician.

Culver Kidd Jr.
In office
1947–1953
In office
1957–1963

Kidd was born in Milledgeville, Georgia. He went to Georgia Military College and graduated from Georgia Institute of Technology. He served in the United States Army during World War II and was commissioned a major. Kidd was the owner of a drug store and was the president of a small loans company in Milledegeville, Georgia. He served in the Georgia House of Representatives from 1947 to 1953 and from 1957 to 1963. Kidd served on the Baldwin County, Georgia commission from 1955 to 1964 and in the Georgia State Senate from 1962 to 1992 and was a Democrat. His son Rusty Kidd also served in the Georgia General Assembly and his daughter Tillie Fowler served in the United States House of Representatives from Florida.[1][2]

Notes

gollark: Some languages are just slower than others, but most of the time it's negligible.
gollark: It has a bunch of performance-reducing things like weak types, arbitrary-size integers by default, and lots of indirection.
gollark: Also, you won't have to hand-write some assembly, which is a bonus.
gollark: If you use an optimized library someone else has written for your task, it can be faster and more reliable than some hand-written C or assembly.
gollark: The testing thing was, if I remember right, only proposed for lasery and chemistry stuff.
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