([ 1 ;u'f n,? luiiilg & West Craven Highlights • '• \fits h'nim Alima The Hanks Of Tliv iSi'iisr • > WA Veil * h'nmi Alim/i The Hanks Of The Meuse NAIIOUM iswswvn VOLUME II NO. 37 SEPTEMBER 15, 1988 VANCEBORO, NORTH CAROLINA PHONE 244-0780 OR 946-2144 (UPSP 412-110) 25 CENTS SIX PAGES North Carolina. The last 20 years were spent in the New Bern- Craven County Schools. Several people praised Mrs. Harris for her many years of "de dicated and outstanding service to education and the sommun- ity." The program, similar to ‘This Is Your Life,” was narrated by Pat Gavin, a college classmate of Mrs. Harris. Others paying tri bute to Mrs. Harris were: co workers from New Bern High School, Betty McKay; former co worker at West Street)F.R. Danyus School, Bernard Pick ens; Cove City community, Janie B. Oillahunt; Fort Barnwell com munity, Sudie S. Way; family members, Helen H. Hargett and Frances Harris; friends, Jennifer Kilpatrick and Maggie Blow. Leaton G. Harris, Mrs. Harris' son and a freshman at West Craven High School, read a spe cial tribute to his mother from his sister Nicole Harris, a student at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. In his closing re marks, he called her "the world's greatest mom." Rosetta Lewis presented the honoree an engraved plaque on behalf of the sorority. She wel comed Mrs. Harris to the Retire ment Club and the 26th day of every month. (This is payday for state retirees.) Mrs. Hargett, sisterof Mrs. Har ris, presented her a money purse from her nine brothers and sis ters. The recollections Rom fami ly and friends were affectionate, emotional and, at times, hila rious. Also appearing on the program were Mrs. Elizabeth Covington, soloist, and Mrs. Gladys Brown, chaplain. Robbie's Rib House was the caterer and Mrs. Way baked the retirement cake. The Christian Education De partment of Bryant Chapei (See HARRIS, Page 2) Teacher Honored For 32 Years In The Classroom Doris H. Harris, a veteran edu cator in the state's public school system, was honored Sunday with a surprise reception at the Jimmy Dillahunt Office Com plex in New Bern. Serving has hostesses were members of Iota Sigma Zeta chapter of Zeta Phi Beta Soror ity, Inc. Mrs. Harris retired Aug. 1 Rom New Bern Senior High School at- er 32 consecutive years of baching in the public schools of Festival Features Balloons NEW BERN — Imagine all the color and enormous scale of a hot air balloon. Imagine a mass of them moored to one site, dancing a graceRil ballet as pilots skillRil- ly adjust their altitude with the (Jumer. Now imagine one of those bal loons with your name on it—and thousands watching. You’ve got a glimmer of the spectacle a bal loon ballet will create in New Bern on Oct. 14 — and the excit- ment of being involved. The ballet will take place in Lawson Creek Park beginning at 5:30 p.m. as a major event of New Bern's three-day Chrysanthe mum Festival. The rain date is Oct. 15, at the same hour. The balloon is a dramatic medium that can reach a wide au dience, hence its popularity as a means of creating public aware ness of a sponsoring company or individual. Beyond immediate, on-the-spot recognition, there is the bonus of press coverage when the balloon is part of a com munity event such as the Chry santhemum Festival. The festival is being sponsored by Swiss Bear, the downtown New Bern revitalizatin corpor- ation,in cooperation with the Tryon Palace Restoration Com plex. Robert Bosch Power Tool Co. is underwriting organization al work of the balloon ballet, and invites other businesses and in dividuals to join in making it a tremendous success. A $500 full scholarship or a $250 co-sponorship insures name identification on a balloon and in the program of the Chrysanthe mum Festival. Also, sponsors will experience the thrill of rid ing the basket of a buoyant bal loon, and at the VIP reception will have the opportunity to meet pitots of participating craR Rom several states. For more information about (See MUMS, Page 5j Mrs. Doris Harris Shrimpers Discover No Battle Proposed Ban Is Opposed By Marine Fisheries Head Thirty to 40 balloons expected at Chrysanthemum Festival Angry commercial fishermen packed the Beaufort County Su perior Courtroom last week pre pared to combat a proposed ban of trawling and haul netting in local waters, including the Neuse River, but they found they had nothing to fight. The fishermen had learned that a report was to be presented to the Board of Commissioners proposing such a ban and they turned out in force to show their disapproval. But the commissioners said they had no jurisdiction to act on the report and the director of the N.C. Division of Marine Fisheries told the shrimpers that he opposed such a ban. The commissioners had set aside time to hear from Wilton Smith, one of three Beaufort County men who wrote the re port, and the large turnout forced the meeting to be moved from the meeting room to a cour troom. Commissioners Chair man Ledrue Buck said the meet ing was not intended to be a pub lic hearing on the proposal. Smith presented his report, which says that shrimping has caused declines in fish popula tions and recommends a ban on haul netting and trawling in local rivers and sounds, and said it “expresses the concerns of a lot of people." He said he and his co-authors were not scientists and had re searched and written the report out of concern for the area. He said their concerns were shared by many recreational fishermen, boaters and people who make their living from pound nets and crab pots in the sounds and rivers. Smith’s comments and those of other speakers were often in terrupted by outbursts from the audience. One fishermen laun ched into a tirade against almost every official at the meeting. William T. Hogarth, director of the Division of Marine Fisheries, said his agency had received a copy of the report in February and planned to have a response from the N.C. Marine Fisheries Commissions at its Sept. 14 and 15 meeting in Manteo. He said the division was “total ly opposed to a ban on shrimp- trawling," and he hoped the divi sion's view was shared by the Marine Fisheries Commission, which will make the final deci sion on the proposal. He said it had not been estab lished that trawling was causing the damage to the fish popula tions that the report indicated it had. He said a proposal to ban trawl ing as a solution to fish popula tion problems was “one that I would never recommend as long as 1 am director." Hogarth also said that any ac tion on the matter by the county commissioners would be invalid under state law, that it was the (See SHRIMPERS, Page 5) Bears Shut Down Eagles West Craven Falls To New Bern, 21-0 B, MIKE VOSS Editor New Bern's Bears sloshed over a rainy field Friday night to more than double West Craven's offen sive output to claim a 21-0 non- conference win over the rival .Eagles. ,.p.Robert Henderson paved the way with two touchdowns for the Bears and Shunard Brown added another touchdown on 21 carries and 131 yards rushing. The Bears finished with 196 yards total offense. Playing in a steady rain, the Eagles could not get untracked on either side of the ball. West Craven, which scored over 20 points in each of its first two games, was held to just 76 total yards on offense. Sophomore running sensation Lee Becton was held to 28 yards on 11 carries after averaging 233 after the first two games. The Eagles were unable to penetrate past the 31-yard line of the Bears and picked up only two first downs. New Bern picked up 11 first downs and enjoyed good field position most of the night in tak ing advantage of Eagle problems with the punting game. New Bern’s first score came with 9:24 left in the second quar ter, with Brown going 10 yards (See EAGLES, Page 2) Vanceboro Man Is Injured When Car Runs Into Train A Vanceboro man was hurt last Thursday when the car he was driving ran into a train. A report filed by Trooper Joseph T. Hofmann of the N.C. Highway Patrol identified the in jured man as Alton Earl Corey, 52. He was taken to Beaufort County Hospital, where his con dition was listed as satisfactory Friday, a hospital spokesman said. The report said that Corey was driving a 1975 Cadillac east on rural pavement 1476 in the Wil- mar community about 8 miles Rum Chocowinity when the acci dent occurred. It was just inside Craven County. The report said that as the train entered the intersection about 9 a.m., Corey was unable to stop his car and the car struck the train broadside. Hofmann charged Corey with driving while impaired and fai lure to yield. The train, a Norfolk- Southern operated by Joe Mar vin Plavec, 44, of Knightdale, suf fered $300 damage. The car suf fered $3,500 damage. Baptist Pastor Says Hope Lies In S.B.A, West Craven fan braves rain after game By MICHAEL ADAMS Special to the Weil Craven Highlighu The pastor of a large, moderate Baptist church in Charlotte said Monday that programs cut by ftindamentalists could be saved. The Rev. Henry Crouch, pastor of Providence Baptist Church, said in an interview that the mod erate Southern Baptist Alliance would fund programs that the fundamentalist-controlled con vention considered unworthy. Crouch was in eastern North Carolina visiting his son-in-law, the Rev. Keithen Tucker of First Baptist Church in Washington. Crouch was a founder and the first president of the Southern Baptist Alliance, which was formed in February of 1987. The alliance held a convocation in Nashville, Tenn., last week at which members resolved to fund moderate causes. He said the group was formed not as a political foe of fun damentalists, but as a group con cerned with furthering causes moderates find important. Fundamentalists currently control the 14.7 million member convention — and the coopera tive ftind to which member chur ches contribute. The cooperative ftind is used to pay for Baptist seminaries, presses, missionar ies and other programs. Crouch said that the fun damentalists have been cutting the Rinding of some groups and programs — programs that be nefit women who wish to be come ministers as well as medic al, social or political mission programs—and spent money on programs agreeing with their theological perspective. The principal difference be tween moderates and fun damentalists in the Baptist church is that the fundamental ists believe the Bible is without error, while moderates say there is room for interpretation. Crouch said the alliance offers the churches another outlet for their money, one that is a suppor ter of women ministers and broader-based mission prog rams. He said that churches can join the group by a vote of mem bers or by supporting it with con tributions. At the convocation in Tennes see, SBA members decided to pay for the publication of Folio, a magazine for Baptist women, to fund the construction of five houses under the auspices of the Habitat for Humanity program and to pay the salary of a female associate pastor in Louisville, Ky., who was rejected by the con vention's home mission board. Couch said. He also said the alliance had not yet agreed to pay the salaries of five other pastors rejected by the board, but would probably do so. The alliance also approved the trial use of new literature for Sunday schools. Couch said the material being printed by the (See BAPTISTS, Page 5)