Newspaper Page Text
14-A
— The Summerville News, Thursday, February 3, 2000
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Is this street sign for real? It is located in the
Town of Lyerly, across from Lucky’s super
market, appears unclear since it names one
street witfi two names. The key, of course, is
120 Names Drawn To Serve As
Chattooga Civil Court Jurors
The names of 120 people
have been drawn as prospective
jurors for Chattooga County Su
perior Court civil trials this com
ing week. The panel will convene
Monday morning.
Those drawn include:
Ella L. Adams, Menlo;
James W. Snow, Trion; Donna A.
Wright, Menlo; John P. King Jr.,
Summerville; Barry J. Woods,
Summerville; Stephen B. Pep
pers Jr., Summerville; Thomas
H. Brewer Jr., Summerville;
Ethan B. Hutchins, Summer
ville; Brenda G. Brown, Menlo;
Christy D. Broome, Trion;
AnFelina D. Manifava, Summer
ville; Sheila A. Rench, Ar
muchee; Boyce R. Dooley, Trion;
Donna M. Crouch, Summerville;
Fredda L. McCrickard, Summer
ville; Jennifer B. Johnston, Sum
merville; Gwenith L. Battles, Ly
erly; Roger C. Lamb, Rome;
Carol L. McCarley, Menlo; Darla
L. Petitt, Lyerly; Jessica L.
Arnold, Armuchee; John C.
Holder, Summerville; L. C. Love,
Summerville; Kelly D. Sanders,
Summerville; Penni L. Hunt,
Summerville; Jessie M. Willing
ham, Summerville; Otis N.
Shiver, Summerville; Pauline
Hayes, Trion; Carolyn A.
Spraggins, Summerville; Edith
A. McCollum, Trion; Gary R.
Broyles, Summerville; Johnny C.
Wynn, Summerville; Vicki M.
Johnson, Summerville; Christo
pher L. Railey, Lyerly; Imogene
T. Walker, Summerville; Tracey
A. Ledford, Lyerly; Anne O.
Bennett, Summen’il{e; Kimberly
S. Broome, Summerville; Effie
M. Scruggs, Summerville; Patsy
A. Thompson, Summerville;
Nancy W. Smith, Menlo; Wendy
L. Daniel, Trion; Dorothy B.
Pledger, Summerville; NanC{ g
Farley, Summerville; Samuel E.
Hall, Menlo; John H. Mize Jr.,
Lyerly; William J. Kimbrough,
Lyerly; Lucinda T. Chamblee,
Summerville; Billy J. Head,
Trion; James M. Ratliff, Lyerly;
Mary R. Woodall, Lyerly;
Victoria M. Butler, Summerville;
Jeanne L. Copeland, Summer
ville; Jill S. Durham, Menlo;
Greg L. Blevins, Summerville;
Dorothy W. Landrum, Lyerly;
April M. Adams, Lyerly;
Courtney A. Hosmer, Menlo; Joe
H. Cox, Summerville; Irene B.
Bishop, Lyerly; Steven T. Helton,
Summerville; Eula Amos, Sum
merville; Joyce A. Brown, Menlo;
Kathy P. Key, Cloudland; Tracey
A. Younce, Menlo; Brenda D.
Kinse{', Summerville; Leola A.
Daniel, Summerville; Demetria
L. Chaney, Trion; Donna L.
Griggs, Summerville; Kay G.
Bennett, Summerville; Helen C.
Hudson, Summerville; Carol(n
S. Johnston, Summerville;
Elaine Hudgins, Summerville;
Julianne M. %rleadows, Summer
ville; Elizabeth A. Davis, Ar
muchee; Charles E. Cook, Sum
merville; Burrell E. Henderson,
Trion; Kimberly A. Railey, Sum
merville; Charles E. Davis,
Menlo; Stacy L. Mason, Menlo;
Patricia A. Stanley, Summerville;
Hoyt P. Nations Jr., Trion;
Bobby Dooley, Lyerly; ThomasE.
Stewart, Menlo; Linda S. Mor
gan, Lyerlf'; Talya N. Pollard,
ummerville; Patricia K. Hamby,
Summerville; James A. Giles,
Summerville; Jeffery M. Lam
bert, Summerville; Kenneth A.
Brownlee, Summerville; Mary R.
Whitley, Summerville; Bever?;.l .
Wilson, Summerville; Secret M.
Hatcher, Trion; Charles F. Fran
klin, Summerville; Stephanie J.
McNeese, Summerville; GarY A.
Cummings, Summerville;
Howard D. Scoggins, Summer
ville; Charles E. Duke, Summer
ville; Lisa M. Combs, Lyerl‘yz
Janie S. Lowry, Lyerly; James
Hughes, Summerville; Marretta
J. Long, Summerville; Sherry H.
Allen, Armuchee; Brian T.
Which Road Is It, Anyway?
Shirley, Trion; David M. Shields,
Summerville; Catherine W.
Hughes, Summerville; Max R.
Jones, Lyerly; Phyllis A. Price,
Summerville; Hugh T. Watson,
Trion; Glenda K. Woody, Trion;
Brian P. Hardeman, Summer
ville; Lacev D. Haney, Summer
.
Trion Board Calls
&
Meeting For Tuesday
The Trion Board of Education has called a meeting for 6:30
p.m. Tuesday at the superintendent’s office.
At 7 p.m. the board will attend a mee(in% atthe Trion Recre
ation Center about Governor Roy Barnes’ education bill.
Representatives from the Georgia Schools Board Assn. and
the Georgia School Superintendents Assn. will be on hand at the
7 p.m. meeting.
GEORGIA’S T ey
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| Commerce Street (Hwy 27) - Summerville - 706-857-3481 I
that after Church Street ends, the Oak Hill
Road begins and doesn’t end until the
Alabama state line. (Staff Photo By D. J.
Laan).
ville; Alfred L. Perkins, Summer
ville; Margaret F. Yarbrough,
Summen‘ific; Tyree T. Morman,
Trion; Randy E. Mitchell, Trion;
Ruth Brimer, Trion; Betty G.
Moore, Summerville; Rebecca L.
McCary, Summerville; Robin L.
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4.-Hers Participate
In Judging Contest
Eight local 4-H’ers recently
attended the North District 4-H
Cotton 801 l and Consumer Judg
ing competition in Rome. These
members regresented Chattooga
County on both the junior (7-8
Frade) and senior (9-12 grade)
evels of this contest.
The local 4-H’ers involved
in the senior level of the compe
tition were Karla Hughes and
l(imberlibesperence from Trion
Hifih School and Leslie Knox,
As le‘y; Woody, Kasey Woody
and S ellz StranFe from Chat
tooga High School. Each of these
4-H'ers had to prepare and
present a three minute speech
about cotton for the Cotton 801 l
@ o
Historian
To Speak
At Berry
Pulitzer-Prize winning his
torian Garry Wills will deliver a
üblic lecture at 7:30 p.m. on
ll)‘uesday, Feb. 15, in the Berrf'
College Chapel. Wills topic will
be “Government and the Arts.”
The lecture, which is sponsored
by Berry’s Conson C. Wilson Lec
tureship Series, is open to the
public at no chag;e.
Wills is an adjunct professor
of history at Northwestern Uni
versity. The Atlanta native holds
abachelor of arts degree from St.
Louis University, a master's from
Xavier University of Cincinnati,
and a master’s and doctorate
from Yale. He was a junior fel
low at the Center for Hellenic
Studies from 1961 to 1962 and
associate professor of classics
and adjunct professor of hu
manities at the Johns Hopkins
University from 1973 to 1980. He
served as Northwestern
University’s Henry R. Luce pro
fessor of American culture and
public policy from 1980 to 1988.
Wills is the author of more
than 20 books, including “Lin
coln at Gettysburg” which earned
him the 1992 Ptfiitzer Prize for
Literature and the National Book
Critics Circle Award. His latest
book, “Papal Sin: Structures of
Deceit,” will be published later
this year. He is a member of the
American Academy of Arts and
Letters and of the American
Academy of Arts and Sciences.
5 GROOM'’S TUX
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portion of the contest.
The two Chattooga County
4-H'ers who competed on the
junior level were Jacqueline
Hegwood and James Elrod, who
are both students at Summer
ville Middle School. For the Cot
ton 801 l part of the junior con
test each 4-H'er had to perform
a 30-second commercial which
they had to develop to promote
cotton use. The( also had to
make an informal poster to help
illustrate their commercial.
PRACTICE
Both levels attended g/ll'ac
tice sessions taught by Mrs.
Becky Groce, Chattooga County
4-H Proirsam Assistant, for sev
eral weeks prior to the contest.
These practice sessions were to
help the 4-H'ers develop their
speeches, commercials, and to
learn how to make “smart” con
sumer decisions for the Con
sumer J~“dsifl‘.fi portion of the
competition. The 4-H members
were required to judge four dif
ferent classes of consumer items
in this part of the contest. A class
is composed of four “like” items
which the competitors must
rank from a best consumer buy
to the worst. The four different
classes which were judged were
backpacks, dry-cleaning ser
vices, khaki pants, and deli snack
lunches. All the competitors also
had to give reasons to a judge
explaining the reasoning behind
their choices for the class on
khaki pants.
A.fihough they did not win
top honors, the local 4-H’ers did
well at this event. The first place
team won awards and the oppor
tunity to attend the state contest
at Rock Eagle 4-H Center.
The 4-H Cotton Ball and
Consumer Judging Contest is
designed to help the participants
learn to make knowledgeabs)e de
cisions when purchasin%goods
and services, to obtain goods and
services to meet their needs and
reflect lifestyles and personal
values, and to increase their
knowledge of cotton products
and its impact on Georgia’s ag
ricultural economy.
EEEEESEENENSENEREEENOREGEEES
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Winners from Menlo Elementary School in
the recent Peanutrition Contest were, from
left, Mary Morris, Best Written and
4-Hers Enter Peanutrition Contest
Over 100 Chattooga County
4-H members turned in their fa
vorite recipe for a sandwich re
cently. The only requirements
were that it contain peanut but
ter as one of the ingredients and
that it was edible.
Every other year the Geor
gia Peanut Commission sponsors
this food and nutrition activitz
for 4-H'ers in the fifth and sixt
grades. The purpose of the activ
l?’ is to make the students aware
of the versatility of peanut prod
ucts and to learn about their nu
tritional value. Each participant
was asked to create and sugmit
a recipe for his or her favorite
peanut butter sandwich.
The Georgia Peanut Com
mission provifed T-shirts to be
used as prizes for the first place
winners at each school in this
contest. Plus, all the winners
were given University of Georgia
cups and pom-poms. The cups
contained an eigglt ounce bottled
Coke and bags of peanuts. These
roasted peanuts were provided
by Chattooga County Farm Bu
reau and given to each partici
pant of the “4-H Peanutrition
Contest”.
Recipes were entered in this
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Menlo Elementary Winners
contest by 4-H members from | and Trion Middle School. Win-
Lyerly, Menlo, Pennville, North | ners were selected at each of the
Summerville, Trion Elementary, | above listed schools.
»
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