Newspapers / The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, … / Aug. 25, 1960, edition 1 / Page 3
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Hyde To Head Area Wake Forest Alumni Ed Hyde, Murphy attorney, has been named chairman of the Wake Forest College Deacon Club for Cherokee, Clay, and Graham counties. like Deacon Club is an organj zatiao of Wake Fore* alumni who are interested in the athletic and other activities of the College. As chairman of the three coun ty organization. Mr. Hyde will strive to organize and build up membership of the Deacon Club. Cherokeeans will be particular ly interested since a local player, John Morris of Murphy, will be starting at the halfback position on this year's Deacon team. A banquet for all Wake Forest alumni and friends will be held at the George Vanderbilt Hotel in Asheville, at 7 p.m. Monday, Aug ust 29. Anyone interested in Wake Forest activities is invited to attend. Please contact Ed Hvde for reservations. Eugene Olive, Director of Alumni Activities, along with Bill Gibson, Athletic Director, Billy Hilderbrant. new head coach, and Norman Sneed, Wake Forest can didate for All-American will be! on the program. Stephen Hembree To Jump At Fort Bragg FORT CAMPBELL, Ky. (AHTNC* ? Army Specialist Four Stephen C. Hembree, son of Mr. and Mrs. Noah W. Hembree, Rt. 1, Muphy, N.C., is scheduled to participate with other personnel! from the 101st Airborne Division! in Exercise Bright Star at Fort Bragg. N.C., Aug. 13-28. A massive airborne assault in volving 30.000 troops is scheduled as one phase of the Strategic Army Corps < STRAC) exercise. This single-man mass air-drop1 will surpass in numbers any sim ilar drop during World War 11; and the Korean War. STRAC's XVHI Airborne Corps, the 82d and 101st Airborne Di-j visions and selected support units will participate in the maneuver.; STRAC constantly maintains ani immediate readiness force for| airborne deployment to any area in the world. Specialist Hembree. a drafts man in Headquarters Company of the division's Command and1 Control Battalion at Fort Camp bell. Ky.. is assigned the role of a U.S. Army expenditionary force member in an assanlt on' a simulated aggressor force. Hembree, 21, entered the Army in March 1938. and completed] basic training at Fort Benning, Ga. A 1956 graduate of Murphy High School, he at' ended North j Carolina State College in Ral-, eigh. Area Men In Service FRANKLIN L. Mc SWAIN NORFOLK, Va. ? A three week period of amphibious war fare training was completed July 29 at the Little Creek Naval Am phibious Base in Norfolk, Va., by .Midshipman second class Frank lin L. McSwain. son of Mr. and Mrs. Holland McSwain of Mur phy, N. C. ? He is a member of the class; of 1962 at the University of North 1 Carolina, in Chapel Hill. During his stay at the base he was trained ashore for 17 days and afloat for four days. Class room instruction consisted of techniques of amphibious opera- 1 tions, practical work in the use of amphibious equipment, and small landing exercises on the beaches. While aboard the ships, he re ceived training in shipboard: drills, making an amphibious landing at Camp Pendleton, Va.,] July 28, being combined with a! Marine Battalion for the exer cise. On July 29. the Midshipman de parted tlie Nortolk area, bound: for the Naval Air Station in Cor pus Christi. Tex., where he will; receive three weeks of Naval air i training. GREAT LAKES. IU. ? Jerry C. McClure. son of Mrs. Mattie P. McClure of Route 1, Hayes ville, N. C.. graduated from re-; cruit training Aug. 13 at the Na val Training Center. Great Lakes. 111. The graduation exercises, marking the end of nine weeks of "boot camp", included a full dress parade and review before military officials and civilian dignitaries. In nine weeks of instruction, the "raw recruit" is developed into a Navy Bluejacket, ready for duty with the fleet. ftuv for evernone Om of the wVi nlliWi nlwhfc ...It-Mi ' * -? t - .?< ? !i ?WJBny III IN NHniVI RJrVfWN mod) oHofi WHff facility CMe* ot Aamlean or <o?ptm vmiutim ra> "== SAVANNAH,^ Writ* t*4?r far Mil Brtwlit ?mtoi *r m* ym Tiwl A?Mf; Help Insure Your Children's Future! Give Them The 1960 WORLD BOOK MCVCUKtU Now in 20 Volume Childcraft OM PI? * ? ' ' ? - WORLD BOOK WarM Baak/CMMetafl Dm at a hug ? Hfta|! Bath Hta }?t tit dam 1Mb I four yoaapttn will li*? and (row with the** mpor Un? edoeataoaa! works in y??r bona! Childertft offsra tb* wtj teal Mp in ddd training uid nrapa rotisk. WoridBook Kncy dopadjn ho Vm, bwn felt to aaUa. New, tfc* brilliant ? ! HBO W<?? Book ??. ? r favtoii, tottffiA* broujl.i frMtar tiIm tkM Tt\ I?)Wn today. CHILDCRAFT "? 16 Vol u sms ia hand^m* Heritage Binc.n* i INDIA Y A. WATVtf um um, mt <ii> m. c. Him im I q?i inlofwellwi ?* Aw l?60WffUlMiM?U(lMiA?v my *N. Nm. Jr.. ??.... ^i.., Recruit Donald R. Verner, son! of Mr. and Mrs. Cecil W. Verner! of Rt 1, Turtle town. Tenn.. Re-1 cruit Furman McConihs, ton of Mr. and Mrs. Zehe McCombs of Rt. 3. Murphy N. C. and Re cruit Jimmy W. Griffith, son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Griffith of Bos 91, Marble, N. C., are pres ently assigned to Company C, 3rd Battalion, 1st Training Regi ment of the U. S. Army Training Center Infantry, at Fort Jackson, S. C. where the are undergoing eight weeks of Basic Combat Training. Hiey will be taught rifle marks manship under the U. S. Army's TRAINFIRE program which en-; ables the modern soldier to be come a better rifleman in less time than previous methods. In this program, most of their train ing will consist of firing their rifles at pop-up targets at un known distances on terrain which will duplicate combat areas. Other highlights of their intensive training include squad tactics, bayonet and hand-to-hand com VERNER GRIFFITH bat. and crawling the infiltration course while machine gun fire is popping overhead. Many of their instructors are combat vet erans of World War II and Ko rean War. During their seventh week of training, they will live in the field under conditions similar to those in the forward areas of a battle zone. They move over rough terrain on foot and in tac tical vehicles and participate in numerous combat situations of a realistic nature. They learn the practical application of the skills and knowledge gained in all pre vious instruction. As a climax to this first pha>c oT training, they will march with their battalion in a review before the commanding general at Fort Jackson. TTiis ceremony is wit nessed by relatives and friends of the trainees who attend the "open house" held by each com pany on graduation day. SEAMAN JACK SUTTON Seaman Jack B. Sultan, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Sutton of Murphy is taking his basic training at Great Lakes, III. SAN DIEGO, Calif. ? Johnny A. Cearley, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Cearley of Culberson. N. C., graduated from recruit train ing Aug. 12 at the Naval Training Center, San Diego, Calif. The graduation exercises, marking the end of nine week of "boot camp", included a full dress parade and review before military officials and civilian dig nitaries. In nine weeks of instruction, the "raw recruit" is developed into a Navy Bluejacket, ready for duty with the fleet. JERRY NEWMAN SP/4 Jrrrj Newman. m el Mr. ami Mrs. T. L. Newmaa *f (ulhenio*, N. C. b aow servtag wit* the U. 8. Army la Sttt (Wi. Gfrmur. HI. wile and Uajkter. Detbbte rvaUt wtth her iwreaU la CepperMU. Teaa. frank Howard Speaks | Tip To Prep Gridders CLEMSON - High school foot ball teams have been in training now for around two week*. Their school sessioos will open in the near future followed quickly with the football season Coach Prank Howard of Clem son, who has been working with the nation's youth for 30 years, volunteered some advice this week to the thousands of high school athletes now in training that shouldn't be taken with a grain of salt. "The Baron" has not only done a pretty fair job of coaching but he has also observed the hab its of boys from all walks of life who have made up his football teams. Howard places football players in four categories: 1? there is the good football player who helps me and helps himself; 2? there is the boy who helps me but don't help himself; 3? there is the boy who helps himself but doesn't help me: 4? and there's the boy who doesn't help anyone. Naturally Howard would like to have as many in the first category as possible. Howard believes the main fault with high school athletes today is that many do not decide that they want to attend college until it's too late. "A boy mast realize in his first year in high school," Kwrard says, "that he is beginning to develop into manhood and should plan his future according- ; 'y "Nowadays a boy cannot play i tuotbali for the glory of it and let his classroom work go," the Clem son coach emphasized. "The scho lastic requirements to enter the nation's colleges are getting staf fer each year and a boy cannot wait until his senior year in high school to realize that some college might want his services as an ath lete and suddenly wake up to the fact that he has taken the easy way out in the classroom or that his grades will not permit him to enter a first class college." The Atlantic Coast Conference recently passed a ruling that all applicants for scholarships or grants-in-aid shall be required to stand the college entrance exam ination board scholastic aptitude test. The ruling further states that any applicant falling below the total score required by the con ference is not eligible to parti cipate. Howard elaborated on this rul ing by saying he thought it was a fine thing. "Used to be that maybe our minimum score might be higher than another member school which was a little unfair, but now all of our conference schools have to abide by the same score. The high school athlete now | planning to enter a conference school mast take the same test! as all of them and make the i same minimum score to be ac- 1 cepted. I "I see boys enter Clemson each ' year who did not properly pre- 1 pare themselves in high school for 1 college work," Howard continued. 1 "They find college work more dif ficult because they do not have the proper foundation. However. I find that we are getting fewer and fewer of this type of boy mainly because Clemson put in the entrance exam requirements ; about five years ago and the boys , we are getting today are better j prepared than in the past "My advice to alt boys in high i school athletics." How-aid said in conclusion, "is to make good in i everything you do. This habit will 1 1 not only help you through your nigh school and collegiate aca demic and athletic careers, but will put you one jump ahead of the 'just average person' when you get your college degree and enter the business world." To Sponsor Rummage Sale | ANDREWS ? The Ladies of St. Andrews Lutheran Church will sponsor a Rummage and Bake Sale Friday and Saturday, August 26 and 27. in the Heaton building next door to Hartmans market. The sale will begin at 9: A.A1. Cakes, candy and pastries will be in sale all day Saturday. The Cherokee Scout 6000 HUNTING SINCl 1999 Dial VC 7-2222 AMITONE* relieve* Upset Stomach the way Milk Relieves Ulcers 3 any Ami tone Ubleta actually hare the acid-neutralising power of a fall pint of milk I Tea Amltone's exclusive Olyclnc treats you to all of milk's sooth ing powers... with /eelable relief in seconds ...that lasts for hours! 34 tablets only 4M. MAUNEY DRUG CO. MURPHY. N. C I MURPHY READY-MIX CONCRETE CO. I NOW OPEN Save Time, Labor, Money VE 7-3506 MORE PROOF . . . From Your Neighbors ? WAYNE LUTHER - MARBLE, N. C SAYS: IT PAYS TO FEED PURINA!" Wayne Luther (right) is shown talking to' Calvin Stiles, local Purina d?aler. lO'/i- Week-Old Pullets Pullets Eating Purina Pullet Developer from Automatic Feeders. I ' COST RECORD * 1 Day To lOVi Weeks Breed: Arbor Ace Pullets Started 2,400 CHICKS 82c each At End Of 10J Weeks COCKERELS 1.57 each At End Of 101 Weeks Cost includes all Labor, Shavings, Electricity, Feeds and Sanitation. Stiles Produce Co. in Murphy, N. C. can prove to you how you can make MORE PROFITS. mo PURINA... YOU CAN DEKNO OH THC CMfCKCMO A?0 FO? hzrtt# turpi-' QUALITY service "Proof that it Pays to Feed PURINA" "For The Best In Seeds, Feeds and Fertilizer Shop At The Checkerboard Sign" Stiles Produce Co. VE 7-2519 MURPHY, N. C. ? v ? r -Mi ' * t ? .] ** nfPV .... Jt. .
The Cherokee Scout (Murphy, N.C.)
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Aug. 25, 1960, edition 1
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