Winners Of Annual Leadership Contest . Among Student Body The annual Elk’s youth leader ship contest was won this year by Charles Taylor. He received a $50 savings bond as frist prize. Taylor is also active in many extra curricular activities in and around BHS. He is co-editor of the annual staff, president of the Key club and Teenage center, member of the debating team and active in 4-H. Floyd McCall, another out standing student at BHS, won sec ond prize and received a $25 sav ings bond. Capturing third honors in the boys’ competition was Brevard’s outstanding athletic scholar, Jerry Cabe. He and McCall were almost tied with Taylor for the winner’s award. In Rosman high school, Sarah Whitmire was the first place win-i ner in the girls’ competition and received a $50 savings bond. Each contestant prepared a fold er containing his record and recom mendations. The awards were giv en on the basis of youth leadership in the school and community. All students entering the contest will be able to compete for the State and National scholarships. Brevard’s winner last year, Doug I Page, won the state grand prize of. $500 PLAN OF ROOD (Cont’d from Front Page 2nd Sec.) to be flooded on an average of about once in ten years. AJ1 roads leading out of Brevard, with the exception of the Asheville road, are flooded on an average of 3 times annually, sometimes for as much as 24 hours. Land used within the flood plain area is limited by the frequency of flooding. Land that floods on the j average of one to two times a year is used for production of vege tables. even though complete losses occur frequently. Land that floods more frequently, but is not sub ject to severe scour, is used for pasture and hay. Areas that flood most frequently are also subject to ■ severe scour from flood water and are therefore returning to pe rennial woody vegetation. Numerous farmers spent from ten to fifty dollars per acre reshap ing and leveling flood plain land as | it is damaged by the sediment de position and scour resulting fromj flooding each year. Data is not available as to the average annual dollar value of damages caused by flood water, sediment, and flood plain scour; however, farm lead ers estimate that the annual loss is in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. Approximately three-fourths of the water shed is in forest cover and, in addition to the crop losses referred to, sizeable losses are be ing incurred in damages to timber and grazing areas. Improved for est management is one of the ma jor needs on the water shed and would be one of the major accom plishments of the flood control plan. These are the physical factors with which the flood control plan will deal. We are now ready to consider the objectives of the plan. (To Be Continued) SENATOR SAM (Continued from Page Four) country a written constitution. It is incompatible with the primary object of all law. These men. the Founding Fathers, “were not vis ionaries toying with speculations or theories, but practical men, dealing with the facts of political life as they’ understood them.” Chief Justice John Marshall de clared in his great opinion in Gibbons vs. Ogden that “the en lightened patriots who framed our Constitution and the people who adopted it must be under stood ... to have intended what they said.” Court Role Clear It is as clear as the noonday sun that the role of the Supreme Court as the interpreter of the Constitution is simply to ascer tain and give effect to the intent (f its framers and the neople who adopted it. The meaning of the Constitution was fixed when it was a denied. The changes that experience would teach should be made were provided for by Article V. In this matter there is no judicial usurpation. (From Front Page, Second Sec.) Scottish Rite Bodies, urge all mem bers to attend this important meet ing and hear this outstanding speaker talk on this new product now being manufactured in the Buck Forest section. Mr. Noble also states the annual election of officers for the lodge of Perfection and the Consistory will take place following the program. ■f- * V j I '1 V/HOV-E o» _ HAV.F s>HK$ ICS1^3 T - BicfllllS *3£^* -Q km *«ke,c' K-,n9^'U<. - c, cteo^s 3^ Me- |. *.5 49^ «# — ', Moo.—- «* U»* t 8. to* - 0e,i(? fQ ^e,‘°l 4 VI !rf~- f.«- He0 «* for 5^ S?!?4 “ 39< fi9bV, 40. CSJtt* „ t0< BfO^- - «!??£-=<“# “ g~ ‘SS lass oSs -J? u> 59*, u ^9* 89* Ik ■ ■ II « W ™ ^ --ore purchase. Ill ■ » * ,ua $5.00 M m ■ ■ «. choice with r 71 of customers cn JB ■ S Limlt i 3-Lb. Ctn. #1 %m JeWo, *** 3-Lb C0" U-oz Jar butter candy Sponish Bor a7-ox Pkg 39 c STARC^ X* 9^3 W TUNA Vi Gal 35^ 55^ 35*. 8*oz Can No-V* Can %* r"i> C fc* A- ^ r - Doy .nst.nj C*EI~T ao/coffee 6-OZ Jar j&iarr--4* «5' CATSUP 7,3 * C 14-ox Btl. 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