Newspaper Page Text
Page 18
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DOROTHY HARDMAN of Newton Mgh was a member of the State
Senate of the Youth Assembly. She is shown at her desk in Atlanta.
Georgia’s Cmaylo
Unbeaten In
Tennis Play
ATHENS — Georgia’s Mike
Cmaylo, soph of Ft. Lauderdale,
Fla., is undefeated in seven sing
les matches for the Bulldog ten
nis team this spring. He has won
six matches at no. 5 and one
at no. 4.
He and his doubles partner,
freshman Norman Holmes of
Melbourne, Fla., are 6-1 doub
les, having won 5x6 matches at
no. 2 and one at no. 3
GARDEN DESIGN
The ultimate effort in garden
design is to create space that
serves a useful purpose and has
unity and harmony. T. G. Wil
liams Jr., head of the Extension
Service landscape department,
points out this is one of the un
der-lying principles of landscape
design.
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STATE FARM MUTUAL
AUTOMOBILE INSURANCE COMPANY
Home Office Bloomington, Illinois
Davis Pharmacy
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Covington Meadows
Shopping Center
(Best Coverage: News, Pictures, and Features)
Newton County High School Delegates To 1968 Youth Assembly In Atlanta Had Many Busy Sessions
New Members Os Oxford Circle K
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THE OXFORD COLLEGE Circle K, a service organization for men, sponsored by Kiwanis Interna
tional, tapped its new members during the College Assembly, April 8. The new members are; Herbert
L. Strickland, Michael J. Fitzsimmons, Sidney H. Shingler, Michael L. Hodges, William B. Nipper, Jr.,
Clifford K. Watts, Thomas G. DeLong, Danny L. Preston, Douglas S. McAdams, and James S. Hurst.
From left to right: Michael Fitzsimmons, Herbert L. Strickland, Clifford Watts, Thomas DeLong,
William Nipper, Michael Hodges, Douglas McAdams, James Hurst, Danny Preston, and Sidney 9iingler.
Rev. Thomas Speaks To Hi-Y Club
Reverend Charles 'Diomas,
pastor of the Salem Methodist
Church, presented the program at
the March 27th meeting of the
Newton County Iflgh School Hi-Y
Club. He pointed out that every
one has possibilities for good
and evil. People are the most
Important thing In God’s world.
A person may choose whether
he will work with material goods
or with people. He said that
people are in a habit of doing
everything they can for them
selves now and forgetting about
their future. He explained that
they should make the right de
cisions now, for these decisions
will affect their later years.
Slade Exley presided over the
business session. President Ex
ley announced that Christian Life
Conference will be held May
3,4, 5 at Rock Eagle and that
twenty boys from the Hl-Y club
would be allowed to go. Also
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• • .
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DAVID HENDERSON of NCHS presiding over a committee meeting
at the 1968 Youth Assembly at the State Capitol in Atlanta.
he said on April 20 the Miss
Northeast Georgia Teenage pa
geant would be held. On April
6, at the University of Georgia,
the Y.M.C.A. Is sponsoring a
Freedom Forum. President Ex
ley Invited all Hi-Y members
to go. He Introduced Mr. Gary
Adams who Is Mr. Burke’s stu
dent teacher. Also, he named
Tony Cordell, Johnny Gregory,
John Lamar Callaway, David
Henderson, Charles Bohanan and
Slade Exley as a nominating com
mittee for 1968-69.
Lynn Rainey, chaplain, held the
devotional period of the program.
He read Ephesians 2:1-10 as
scripture. He said one must
accept God’s forgiveness. His
repentance Is necessary also.
After these remarks, he dis
missed the club with prayer.
Read The Classifieds
Joel Dean Ward
On Oxford's
Merit List
Oxford College of Emory Uni
versity Is pleased to announce
that Joel Dean Ward of Coving
ton, made the Merit List on this
campus for the Winter Quarter,
1968.
This is a signal academic ach
ievement, equivalent to what Is
known as the Dean’s Liston some
campuses. The student, the stu
dent’s paretns, church and com
munity are to be congratulated
on the attainment of this honor,
according to Dallas M. Tarken
ton. Registrar
THE COVINGTON NEWS
MurlOl LLyr • v
, ll
s^M * W*.
MARCIA ELIZER, floor leader of the House of Representatives,
introduces a resolution to that body during the 1968 Assembly.
CLOSED SEASON ---
(From Page 17)
into the woods on murderous
forays.
Even so, we’re talking about
animals that act on natural in
stinct, animals that are not in
telligent enough to think, to un
derstand the need of conserva
tion, or to care for themselves
otherwise.
Now we come to the dead
liest killer, the most intelligent
predator of all...the one that
causes all the difficulty in main
taining wildlife populations in
the first place.
The kill-hungry man, the man
that cares nothing for conser
vation and less for laws. He
cares not that his brother, his
neighbor, even his own son and
grandson will have no wildlife
to enjoy next fall cr in future
years.
He cares not one bit that hunt
ing season has long been over,
and that he has already long since
passed his season bag limit. He
probably keeps very little, if
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any of his kill for his own per
sonal meat. Perhaps much of
the meat he sells. The rest
he wastes. After all, he’s not
killing for sport or for the need
of meat.
He’s merely bloodthirsty.
Kentucky Lands
2 On Georgia’s
All-Foe Team
ATHENS — Coach Ken Rose
mond has announced Georgia’s
all - opponent basketball team
which consists of the All-SEC
first team plus Phil Wagner of
Georgia Tech; Pete Maravich,
LSU; Neal Walk, Florida; Tom
Hagan, Vanderbilt; Dan Issei,
Kentucky; Mike Casey, Kentucky;
and Phil Wagner, Georgia Tech
(tie). Georgia players voted
on the team.
ATTEND CHURCH
SUNDAY
■ Ih »
SLADE EXLEY of Covington was a delegate to the House of Repres
entatives during the YMCA Youth Assembly meeting in Atlanta.
Telephone
Talk
•y
RAY REECE
Your Telephone Manager
THE TRAVELERS ... In at least one state, we’re told,
there are six phones that just won’t stay put. Which is all
right, because they aren't supposed to. These six are al
ways off to fairs, conventions, sporting events, wherever
people gather. Actually, they’re public telephones that
travel on wheels, towed by a trailer truck. It’s their job to
relieve the communications jam in places where coin
telephones are in heavy, but tem-
11 1 — |\\ porary, demand. Every day, of
ol ~T>Tr^— course, people are head
wad in g for public
Hn n ®i phones. But
ibf'MgnS, & a I it’s not so often
<o> that Public
f SLWi <6 phones head
* * • l° r people!
BIG MYSTERY, SMALL CULPRIT . . . Bell Telephone
Laboratories, a few years back, was asked to analyze a
tacky film deposit on the contact points of a telephone re
lay that wouldn’t operate properly. The film, they dis
covered, was partly composed of an insulating varnish nor
mally used on such relays. But there was another sub
stance they couldn’t seem to identify—until further investi
gation turned up an ant nest hidden in the relay box.
So, for the good of science, several of the ants were pain
lessly done in, dried, ground into powder, and subjected tc
infrared analysis. Sure enough, the powder matched the
mysterious substance on the relay. Apparently the culprit
ants, bent on the theft of varnish flakes, walked between
the contact points and were electrocuted.
* * *
ON EASTER SUNDAY, THE BELL TELLEPHONE HOUR will
present a very special broadcast “Going to Bethlehem”
is a film portrait of the famed Bach Festival of Bethlehem,
Pennsylvania, and its all-pervasive effect on the lives of
the townspeople. Musical highlights will include the Bach
Choir singing selections from the Bach “B Minor Mass,”
and a concert of sacred music by the Central Moravian
Church Choir featuring Metropolitan Opera stars Judith
Raskin and Cesare Siepi. The program closes with an
Easter sunrise service and the Moravian Trombone Choir.
“Going to Bethlehem” will be seen in color on Easter Sunday
evening, 6; 30 - 7:30 p.m. ET, over NBC-TV.
Thursday, April 11, 1968