Newspaper Page Text
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THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
DAVID T. ESPY. Editor and Publisher
Published Every Thursday by the News Publishing Co.
Entered at Post Office at Summerville, Georgia, as Second Class Mail Matter
MESSER
The News Publishing Company will not be responsible for f i rms in advertising beyond cost of the
advertisement Classified advertising rate 3c per word, minimum 75c Card of Thanks, Memoriams,
etc , same rate as classified advert ising. Display advertising rates furnished upon request.
Subscription Rate $2.00 Per Year Plus 6c Sales Tax
II e Need Landing Strip
The Chattooga Aero Club is to be com
mbnded for its es forts to get a landing strip
in Summerville, and Chattooga Commis
sioner John Jones and the Chattooga Fair
Association are to be commended for their
cooperation.
The strip will be located at the fair
grounds with approaches along county
properly which has been cleared of trees
for the purpose. The sooner the final steps
are taken to get the strip into usable shape,
1 he bettei.
Such a strip will not bo just for the use
Hospitals Hare Problems
• Operation of a hospital must be one of
the most tedious of jobs. The aim is to pro
vide as fine facilities and services as pos
sible and at the same time keep the cost-; as
low as possible.
Such things as an abnormally low pa
tient load or an influx of “charity patients”
can wreak havoc with a hospital’s budget.
There is no way to plan for these things.
Chattooga Hospital's officials recently
met with a group of hospital experts in At
lanta to review the situation. The local
people wanted to find out, after some 10
years of operation, how the hospital stacked
up alongside other such facilities.
One thing they learned is that the room
Tales Ont of School
By BEBNICF McCULLAR
Director of Information — State Department of Education
DOFS YOUR TEACHER HAVF
SOCIAL SECURITY? There are
29 local .school systems in Geor
gia that do not yet provide so' ini
security benefits for their teach- -
ers. The State Hoard of Educa
tion deplores tills In fact, they
wrote a letter this week urging
those systems to provide social
security Many good teachers
are leaving these systems, and
the children are suffering from
this." says the letter Here :ue
the Social Security facts: 98
st stems provide it for both pro
fessional and non-pr dessional
staff; 69 provide it for non-pro
fLsional employees but not for
their teachers: and 29 do not
plovide it for any Two sjstems
are now in the process of setting
u|> social security benefits for
l|.eir professional people,
IS THE EIGHTH GRADE
IJIST’ The eighth grade is a
"lost grade”, said a letter from
all educator recently It has no
aiichor. and does not belong to
the elementary or to the high
sfliool Some parents say it is
oiily a review of the seventh All
these things came up at a State
Hoard meeting Chairman Janies
H Peters thinks he ought to pre
scribe a strong course of study
fir this grade More about this
aj the November meetings The
Hate Board has already decreed
that a year > good solid study of
Georgia history must go into
the eighth grade
I WHAT DOES YOUR BUS
lIRIVER MAKI There is now a
minimum wage scale for bus
culvers SI2OO tor 12 months
ypur local board enn pay them
more but can’t pay them less
Tliis new rule does not apply to
students oi teachers who drive
buses.
NEW CHAIRMAN Mrs Wil
liam Shelter of Atlanta is the
new PTA education chairman
fi-.e succeeds Mrs Robert Harley
ol Brunswick
jTEACHER HAD TO CARRY
WATER AND ('I FAN THE
CIVIL DEFENSE FACES
lallout i* tiin pines of dust and debris, which are made
fadioat tile by nuclear explosions. When a hydrogen bomb is
exploded dose to Hit ground, thousands of tons of these tiny
particles of dust and debris are sucked upward high into the
Jir. They help form the mushroom cloud which is always seen
pith one of these explosions.
Some fallout spills <" t of the cloud near the explosion. Most
lif is carried by the wind for many miles Eventually it settles
t earth. It is called fallout and continues to give off radioac
i ity until it decays
lallout could settle anywhere. Winds could carry it to every
part of the country. You can seldom feel lallout. Otten you can't
txen see it. But if you are exploded to much of it long enough,
it can make you seriously ill ।aen if the radioactive particles do
not settle on you. It could kill you.
A moss of material between you and the particles is needed
I<V pro}' tion.
<Ki id this column weekly for facts on fallout and how you
Cari he • protect your family Ih th< event df nuclear war.)
The Summerville News
Is The Official Organ
Os Chattooga County
Address All Mail to
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS
P. O Box 310
Summerville, Georgia
<jif 6
LAMPS Cast your eyes over;
these rules for teachers posted I
on the bulletin board by a New
York principal in 1872.
1 Teachers each day will fill ,
lamps, clean chimneys, and
trim wicks.
2 Each teacher will bring a
bucket of water and a
scuttle of coal for the day's
session.
3 Make your pens carefully
You may whittle nibs to the
individual taste ot the pupil.
4 Men teachers may take one
evening eac it week for
courting purposes, or two
evenings a week it they go
to church regularly.
5 After ten hours in school,
the teachers spend the re
maining time reading the
Bible or other good books
6 Women teachers who marry
or engage in unseemly con
duct will be dismissed
7 Every teacher should lay
aside from each pay a good
ly sum of liis earnings for
his benefit during his de
clining years so that lie will
not become a burden on
society.
8 Any teacher who smokes,
uses liquor in any form,
frequents pool or public
halls, or gets shaved in a
barber shop will give good
reason to suspect his worth.
Intentions, Integrity and
honesty
9 The teacher who performs
his labors faithfully and
without fault for five years
will be given an increase of
twenty-live cents per week
in his pay providing the
Board of Education ap
proves
No RELIGIOUS BROADCAST
We have had a request to
allow the use of our new TV sta
tion at Waycross for the broad
casting of religious services on
Sunday The law under which
we operate forbids it Besides,
we will use only tapes on the
HERMAN BUFFINGTON, Advertising Mgr.
A Prize-Winning
Weekly Newspaper
NATIONAL EDITORIAL
of Aero Club members but will be available
to everyone. Industries, organizations and
individuals, which have planes will be free
to use the strip.
The Aero Club recently purchased its
own plane, but this is not merely a pleasure
craft. Instead, it will be used for instruc
tion purposes and for emergency use.
Completion of the landing strip and
the availability cf the Aero plane to the
community are just additional steps to
ward developing our county to its fullest.
rates arc lower than most which moans that
the hospital operates on a lower budget.
Not only are the rates lower, but the av
erage occupancy last year was only 61 per
cent which cuts' the income more. In addi
tion, the hospital loses $8.82 on each charity
patient, even after the county has made its
contribution toward the care of these
people.
Checking to see how other hospitals
solve their financial and other problems
seems like a good idea. Certainly, no facil
ity in our county is more vitlil than our
hospital and it must be operated as econom
ically and efficiently as possible.
Waycross station. We do not
have a studio there.
WHO GOES TO SUMMER
SCHOOL IN 1962? More and
more popular is the summer I
grant plan to help teachers pay
for graduate study at summer
school. Here are the two top I
priorities for 1962: ill any edu ■ I
cator who makes a high enough j
score on the National Teacher I
Examination and wants tc do
sixth year graduate study gets
first chance at the 1962 money
<2> Second priority goes to any
teacher of science, math, or
modern foreign languages (high
school of elementary! who wants I
to do fifth year graduate study
and makes the required score on
the National Teacher Examina
tion. After that, other teachers
and administrators The next
National Teacher Examination
will be given in Georgia on Jan
uary 20 Deadline for application
is December 19
A JOB FOR SHERLOCK We
arc looking for the 10 most in
teresting classes being taught
this fall in the schools of Geor
gia 1 would like to tell the news
papers and television people
about them and get the spot
light shining on good teaching
There are many such classes
The one I have already picked
tor Operation Spotlight is Her
bert Handley's Sunrise Science
Laboratory down by the sea -
shore at Brunswick Which is
the most interesting class YOU
know about?
TY COBB SCHOLARSHIPS
The great Ty Cobb, Georgia
baseball tycoon who died at
Emory hospital July 17. left 25'.
of his estate for scholarships A
few years ago he had set up the
Ty Cobb Educational Fund "for
the manual arts schools, tech
nological. professional or college
education of qualified boys and
girls who would otherwise be un
able to secure such education "
About 100 students have al
ready received these scholar-
WELCOME TO 20 NICE PEO
PLE We have 20 new curricu
lum directors (formerly known
as Instructional supervisors!
who will be working in Georgia
school systems this fall These
people work with the local sys
tems to build up vital, dynamic
programs of study for your child
Welcome them!
LOOK AT THAT MONEY'
Average salary of Georgia teach
er* next year will be S4OOC
Salary schedule for classroom
teachers will range from a be
ginning $3400 to a top $5500 fol
6 years of college and 9 year.'
experience. Os the 214 million
dollar budget. 1964 million goes
for teachers salaries They are
the important item in the school
budget, and they are better
qualified than ever for the Jobs
they do Let them teach Don t
Use them for janitors, book
keepers, clerks, banquet host
' esses, takers up of tickets, bank
' ers for the lunchroom money,
and PTA program chairmen Let
them teach That's what you
hired them for Let them teach.
THE SUMMERVILLE NEWS, SUMMERVILLE, GEORGIA
AN TALMADGE
Reports From
USHINGTON
1 774 .PEv :•
THE PERSON or persons who
selected the gambling casino at
Punta del Este, Uruguay, as the
site of the recent Inter-Ameri
can Economic and Social Con
erence must have had a pervert
ed sense of humor.
While the hosts tactfully
moved out the roulette wheels
f o r t h e meet
ing, the dele
gates could not
have done a
more thorough
job of taking
Uncle Sam to
the cl ea ne r s
with them. In
fact, he turned
v
MIA-' • *
but to be such a willing sucker
that the jackpot of “at least S2O
billion” put up by .Secretary of
the Treasury Douglas Dillon to
finance the so-called Alliance for
Progress in Latin America was
far bigger than that for which
most of them had dared hope.
According to the ultra-liberal
Washington Post which is an
apologist for bigger foreign
giveaways, the only reason the
ante was not raised higher was
that “Dillon doesn’t want to
sound as if he is aping Castro”
who two years ago called on the
United States to put up S3O bil
lion for just such an under
taking.
* * *
THE SUPREME irony of it
all is that the American people
thus were committed by an ap
pointiSl Cabinet member to foot
the bill for a 10-year program
of social and economic reform
in the Western Hemisphere at
the very same time that their
elected Representatives in Con
gress were emphatically refus
ing President Kennedy’s request
for authority to make such for-
(Nut prepared ur printed at government expense)
MAN KILLED
(Continued from Page 1)
Funeral Home Tuesday at 4
pin. with Rev. Roger McDonald
officiating with burial in the
West Hill Cemetery, Trion.
Cousins served as active pall
bearers. J. D. Hill Funeral Home
in charge.
Honorary pallbearers were:
Hershell Blackwell. Ralph Stan
ley, Leon Lenderman, Orval
White, Emory Alexander. Grady
Bryant. Charles Mitchell, Sher
wood Perkins, Joe Williams,
Bobby Brown, “Red” Green,
Vaughn Bishop. Floyd Seynroure.
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Agan were
injured Monday morning when
their car was struck from the
rear as it pulled into U.S. 27
from the Penn Bridge Road, ac
cording to the Georgia State
Patrol Mrs Agan was pinned in
the car for several minutes be
fore being released.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Agan re
mained in Chattooga Hospital
Wednesday.
Russell Smith, driver of the
other vehicle involved —a
cement mixer truck was not in
jured. Smith lives in Summer
ville.
Troopers Investigating the
। wreck were J J. Martin. J. E.
; Bagby and H. Hardison.
COl NTY TO GET
PORTABLE HOSPITAL
(Continued from Page li
large building It is not ex
pected to arrive here until after
the first of the year. Mr. Hogg
said.
The hospitals are being made
available to all Georgia counties
and although Chattooga County
doesn't have a working civil de
fense program. Mr Hogg has
been named and Summerville
and Trion each has a CD pro
gram organized.
let them teach, let them teach'
Then you won't have to be com
plaining a few years from now
that your child didn't learn
enough arithmetic to go in a
thimble There are 31.900 state
paid teachers for next year and
about 1500 or more locally paid
ones
MAKES A BRAVE MAN
, SHUDDER' Teaching is the
biggest and most important job
in the world today except the
job of being a parent In fact,
it is such a responsible Job
that Dean Francis Keppel, who
directs teacher education at
Harvard, said. ’ The very idea of
teaching is enough to make a
brave man shudder "
DOWN THE HILL Just a hop
| skip, and holler away from
where I am writing these lines
। to you is the Atlanta City Hall,
where press rooms are being set
। up for the newsmen of the world
who will coifeerge here about
the time you read this to cover
the entrance of Negro students
, into white Atlanta schools Get
| down on your nyloned knees and
do a little praying for us that
we may be able to handle this
situation--which is not of our
■ own choosing — with dignity,
wisdom, and courage.
eign aid commitments on a mere
five-year basis.
Since the Dillon pledge was
written into the charter signed
at the conclusion of the Confer
ence, the question is raised as to
whether it will have the effect
of a landing treaty obligation
beyond the control of Congress.
The Supreme Court already has
held that executive agreements
entered into by the President,
although they do not come be
fore the Senate for ratification,
have the force and effect of
treaties.
This is a flagrant example of
the degree to which the Ameri
can people have lost control over
the manner in which their tax
dollars are spent through execu
tive and judicial usurpation of
the authority of Congress.
* * *
THE STATED objectives of
the Alliance for Progress are to
eliminate unemployment, in
crease wages, raise living stand
ards, build decent houses, wipe
out illiteracy, end inflation, sta
bilize agriculture and trade and
stimulate private enterprise.
Those are worthy goals and a
case for helping Latin Ameri
cans attain them could perhaps
be made if they already had
been achieved in the United
States and this nation were not
saddled with a public debt great
er than all other countries com
bined. But to persist in giving
away money we do not have to
do for people in other countries
what we cannot or are unwilling
to do for our own citizens here
at home is to indulge in the in
sanity of committing national
suicide by slow strangulation.
TARGET DATE SEI
(Continued from Page 11
against him. The board con- ;
tended that he had been in- 1
formed of the charges, notified i 1
of the hearing held on Dec. 6. j
1960 and that he did not appear i
for that hearing. Board Attor- i
ney T. J. Espy Jr. told Mr. Sin
clair that he had the right to i
appeal within 30 days of that I
hearing to the State Board but |
that since he did not do so it
was his opinion he had exhausted I
his rights of appeal. |.
Other matters taken up at the ■
board meeting were as follows:
• The possibility of converting
the heating system at Summer
ville Elementary from natural
gas to coal in an economy move
was discussed. Supt. James
Spence noted that the heat bill
for that school alone was sll.- 1
200 last year. An engineer and
a contractor appeared before the
board stating the total conver- |
sion cost would be about $14,950,1
that the boiler could be handled
on a lease basis and that the
board could pay for it in a three
year period with the savings.
• The Subligna gymnasium
trustees were ordered to present I
within 10 days a financial state- i
ment, proof of insurance of
building and a list of rules and
regulations concerning opera
tion of the gym as a community ;
center. Complaints have been:
voiced, it was stated, that the j
center is not being operated on ;
the basis the board had intend
ed. The board has provided that
if it is not properly operated as
a community center, the building
will revert to the board.
• Students already enrolled at
Summerville but who live in oth
' er areas will be allowed to con
tinue. it was decided.
• Re-arrangement of the bus
schedule in the Gore area was
planned. A station wagon will
be purchased for hauling some
14 students in order that the
James Dawson bus will be able
to decrease its route length The
route presently requires at least
one and one-halt hours. Supt.
Spence reported Putting on an-
I other bus would cost the county
another $1,200 for salary, it was
stated, but the addition of the
station wagon would not neces
sitate this much salary inasmuch |
as the state does not require sl.- '
200 salary for drivers of smallerl
vehicles
• Chattooga High Principal
was granted his requests for
SIOO for the physical education
program, additional janitorial
help and additional secretarial
help for two hours a day. In ad
dition. the board increased the
assistant principals supplement
from ssoi’ to S6OO a year
• Approval was given for Mrs
F H Boney, principal of Sum
merville Elementary School, to
have a full-time secretary in
stead of a half-time secretary
It was noted that the accredit
ing commission strongly recom
mends full-time help for princi
pals of such large schools
• Board briefly discussed a rul
ing of Attorney Gen Eugene!
Cook that those annexed into
Trion recently will not be re
qthrea to pay general taxes into]
POLICE BEAT
Grady Allen, Negro, 7th Street,
Summerville, and Robert Mos
teller, Negro, Lyerly, were in
volved in a collision at 8 a.m.
Friday on 7th Street, police rec
ords show.
Allen and his wife reportedly
received minor injuries, and
were dismissed from the hospi
tal after first aid.
Hoyt Nelson Roberts, Sum
merville Route 1, has made bond
after being arrested on charges
of driving under the influence.
Russie Mack, Menlo, has been
charged by Summerville police
with driving under the influ
ence.
Nathan Jones, Negro, sth
Street, Summerville, has been
charged with driving under the
influence, speeding, resisting ar
rest and failing to yield right of
way. He was released on SIOO
bond.
LETTERS TO
THE EDITOR
Mr. D. T. Espy. Editor
The Summerville News
P. O. Box 310
Summerville, Georgia
Dear Mr. Espy:
May I take this means to ex
press my sincere appreciation
for the kind words of your recent
news article and editorial con
cerning our leaving Summer
ville. Your fine cooperation with
me in connection with my work
with the Game and Fish De
partment and also work with
Chattooga County Wildlife Club
had a great deal to do with the
success of these two programs.
Although we have been away
from Summerville only a short
time, both my wife and I look
forward each week to receiving
the News so that we might keep
up with what is happening at
uome”. Again may I say that I
appreciate all you have done to
keep the people of Chattooga
County informed as to the Game
and Fish regulations and Wild
life Club activities.
We would like to invite all our
friends in Chattooga County who
are ever around Fort Valley to
be sure and stop to see us at the
Game & Fish Building here.
Yours very truly,
Robert S. Baker
District Chief
Dear Sir:
Due to comments in last week’s
News, we find it necessary to
speak in our defense concerning
the proposed gymnasium or
swimming pool preference.
The Negro committee did ask
for the gym as planned, but the '
answer was in the negative be
cause of some financial prob
lems. So whoever wrote “prefer
pool to a gym" made a .slight er
ror on their assumption.
Thomas C. Scott,
Chairman of the Colored
Advisory Committee
Greenwood
Fills in At
Trion High
A last-minute resignation in
I the Trion High School science
department has been tem
porarily filled. School Supt. A.
J. Strickland said this week.
J. W. Greenwood, director of
, the Trion Recreation Depart-
I ment. will fill the vacancy until
a permanent replacement is
found. Mr. Strickland said.
Arthur Prince had been re
elected to fill the position. How
ever, he accepted a position in
Texas at the last moment.
Davis to Open
Office in PO
Congressman John Davis will
open an office in the Summer
ville Post Office Building when
Congress adjourns.
This will be the Seventh Dis
trict Congressman's headquar
ters.
The office is now being reno
( vated in preparation for his oc
: cupancy.
FAIR SCHEDLLED
i Continued from Page 11
spreads and cakes, breads and
candies.
Theme of the flower show will
be America, the Beautiful” The
Chattooga and Cherokee Rose
Garden Chibs will present the
show Mrs. M. M Allen Jr. and
Mrs James Adams will be chair
man and co-chairman.
Details of the rules and pre
miums may be found on page 8
the county this year but that
they will have to pay on the
bonded Indebtedness which was
incurred while they were living
outside the city and In the coun
j ty.
• Granted permission for A C
Carter School to play football.
, provided there is no expense to
'the school board. The PTA has
Jagreed to provide all equipment.
|it was stated.
i YOUR CONGRESSMAN
J 1
EMn 'll
nMiEP wIIM
The Russian decision to re- j
sume nuclear testing raises some
awesome considerations, and has
led to various theories here in
Washington. Some think it was
a decision reached suddenly to
counteract the more determined
stance which our own country
has taken of late in the form of
stepped up arms and the aug
mentation of our troops on ac
tive duty. This explanation holds
that the Russians found it nec
essary to terrorize the world at
the height of the crisis over
Berlin.
Another theory, and the one
which impresses me as being
more probable, is that of Arthur
Dean, the President’s represent
ative at the disarmament con
ference, who thinks that Russia
has long been itching to resume
such tests but that she has held
off up to now in the hope that
she could provoke the United
States into a resumption of tests
before she renewed her own.
When it appeared that the
United States tould not be
prodded into this action, Russia
then dived head first into a re
newed testing program designed
to enable her to catch up with
the United States in nuclear de
velopment.
That Russia will have to pay
dearly for this step is beyond
question. The British referred to
the action as “terrorism” and
said that Moscow appears to be
trying to ’ frighten the neutral
nations into asking the United
States and her allies to make
concessions to Khrushchev.
Lord Home, the British For
eign Secretary, points out that
all during the recent disarma
ment talks the Soviet Union
must have been busily preparing
to resume testing and that al
though Russia is committed to
further discussion next month
with the United States through
the medium of the United Na
tions, nevertheless the Soviets
were not even prepared to wait
for the outcome of this discus
sion.
At the very least, the neutral
countries should be able to see
clearly that the whole Soviet
propaganda for both a nuclear
test ban and total disarmament
was only a gigantic hoax per
petrated on the world. Time and
again the Soviets have sabo
taged every effort toward con
trolled testing, disarmament,
and all other forms of negotia
tion leading toward a peaceful
world. They have denounced
controls as espionage, have
walked out of conferences and
have consistently dodged all
bona fide efforts toward settle
ment. Now they have torpedoed
the Geneva conference, ended
the three-year moratorium, and
have undertaken to thrOw the
entire world into a state of ter
rified shock with their an
nouncement that Soviet scien
tists have “worked out projects
of creating a series of super
powerful nuclear bombs” with a
♦
■
Robbye Lee Haines |
* '* -- 5 - ' ' * ' '‘"S
Like every one else, I read The Summerville News from front
to back and consider the advertisements one of the main attrac
tions. However, as an honest writer, I must report that The News
is sadly lacking in one field; that is an interpretive social news
report. You have all read interpretive news reports, where a re
porter states the news then analyzes it and gives his interpre
tation of what it all really means In the following you will find
; examples of how I would handle this job if asked. All names and
' actual incidents are flat lies, though similar to actual happenings
i in this county.
News: It is with great pleasure that Mr. and Mrs. P. D.
Quack announce the engagement of their daughter. Miss Quina
Quack, to Bucky Landlacky . . .
Interpretive report: Great Pleasure is hardly sufficient to
express the P D Quack's feelings at this moment. At last report
they were positively jumping up and down and there were real
tears in P. D s eyes. Tears of relief, that is. Quina is fast ap
proaching thirty from the wrong side and P. D. had about given
up hope of ever getting rid of her. When Quina graduated from
high school, P D. told her graciously. I've fed and clothed you
for eighteen years and I guess I can do it for eighteen more.’
But of course he didn't really mean it. Although Quina has a
face that would not only stop a clock, but turn it backward two
or three years, P D did hope that sending her to the cooking
academy would pay off. Surely there was some man who would
close his eyes to Quina s looks and marry her for her culinary
abilities I understand that at present. P. D. and wife are having
a hard time eating and dressing with all their fingers and toes
crossed They are fervently hoping that young Landlacky doesn't
| develop an ulcer before the knot is securely tied.
News item: Mrs Spry Spreckles motored to Chattanooga on
business this week
Interpretive report: If you know Mrs. Spreckles very well,
you will know that it wasn't her own business for which she
made the trip As usual, she has her nose in every one else's af
fairs.
News: Ellis Higgenbottam and family of Tampa. Fla., made
a surprise visit to his sister and her husband. The Leadlock
Books', of this county.
Interpretive report: I'll say Leadlock was surprised. The fact
is. he very nearly had a heart attack when Higgenbottam came
dragging in. out of a job. and planning a prolonged visit with
his unwilling in-laws Rumor has it that Leadlock has given his
wife an ultimatum, and she i.s out getting the other relatives to
draw straws to decide who will have the Higgenbottams to visit
next
This will give you a general idea of the Interpretive report
I propose for this paper If anyone has any social news hence
forth which you would like given a conscientious interpretation,
you know where to reach me.
. Piaaw ur l derstan^4^a.wy u that ,Qn.Ure jhjy. cQLprrtn.i_
j are printed. I will prudently remain out of town.
THURSDAY'S EPTEMBER 1, 1961
yield equivalent of up to 100 mil
lion tons of TNT. The announce
ment darkly added that the
same rockets which carried
their astronauts into orbit could
deliver these bombs to any point
on the earth.
The President has taken his
stand at Berlin, exposed as
Berlin is. He has promised to
protect the freedom of the West
Berliners. But what is really at
stake, and what has been at
stake all the time as the world
can now see clearly, is the free
dom of the entire western world.
MISSIONARIES
(Continued from Page 1)
The public is invited, the Rev.
Mr. Crowe said.
The Rev. Mr. Enlow began his
missionary career in 1956 in
Peru. The first phase of his work
was teaching in the Theological
Institute and Bible Academy in
Huanuco, a large Indian village
in the Andes mountains. The
second phase of his work was
traveling in the regions sur
rounding Huanuco. He took
these trips by car, truck, mule
and often times by foot. He
held Bible conventions, Rural
Bible Institutes, evangelistic
■ campaigns and brief visits to
each church in the given areas.
He will show some of the
curios, native costumes and pic
tures of the people to whom he
I ministered.
The other missionary, the Rev.
Mr. Lay, went to Indonesia in
1952. During his first term there,
he served mainly as advisor and
counselor to the Dyak District
Committee and conducted short
term Bible schools for the Dyak
pastors. In 1957, he was ap
pointed to the faculty of the
Long Bia Bible School in East
Kalimantan. The school garden
is now able to more than pay
the cost of operation besides
providing work for the first-year
class.
The Dyakes were formerly
head hunters and many tribes
still worship evil spirits.
NEW HOPE CHARTER
(Continued from Page 1)
degrees must have such certifi
cates, he said.
Ernest S. Sinclair, a former
teacher at Menlo High School,
obtained the charter in June,
listing his name, his wife's and
the names of several educators
as applicants. Sinclair has be
come a controversial figure fol
lowing his dismissal at Menlo,
his plans for the “University”
and his aborted plans for a
Chattooga County Chamber of
Commerce. The C. of C. plan fell
through after the City of Sum
' merville denied him a permit to
I solicit funds.