ALL-STATE BAND MEMBERS—Junior High All State
Band members from Edenton include, left to right, Allen
Downum, Reginall Satterfield, Steve Lane (standing),
Annette Partin, Ervin Alexander, and Herbert Hill.
Holmes Band Honored
. That the music
department in the Edenton-
Chowan Schools stands on
Its own merit has once again
•been established. The most
recent honor was bestowed
on six instrumental band
.students, who were chosen
to the Junior High All-State
Band.
Annette Partin, Reggie
Satterfield, Allen Downum,
Ervin Alexander, Herbert
Hill, and Steve Lane were
aelected locally to
participate in the
Northeastern Regional
Junior High All State Band
'.conference at Atlantic
Christian College on
February 26, 1976.
Based on their
performance, all six of the
students were chosen for the
Dixie Auto Parts
(Across from Northside
Sboppiog Colter.)
Auto Parts at Discouat Prices
Specializing in
Radiator Repairs
Plus
★ Turning down brake droms
aid disc rotors
ir Cylinder head reworked
482-2123
A
*OF QUALITY
liule mint has OecUeef) quality and Savings on our
hot dogs. we ape extending our gßeat offep to
■
give evepyone the oppoptunity to take advantage
of our 23c hot dog- We want you to declape (or
youpself the quality and enjoy the Savings we’pe
offeping.
MOT DOGS
IMfe
quint
: OFW 0000 AT WB*TTC»FATIN© STORKS ONLY
WiDOiTON—NORTH BROAD STRMT
All-State Band.
Over 300 students from the
Northeastern region
participated in the
conference. Otis Strother,
band director, accompanied
the Edenton group.
IhtQtdlimwi
“Juvenile delinquency is the
result of parents trying to train
children without starting out at
the bottom.”
Planning for the future is
the only way to improve the
future.
Candidacy Announced
RALEIGH Former
Chapel Hill Mayor Howard
Lee announced here
Wednesday that he is a
candidate for the
Democratic nomination for
Lieutenant Governor of
North Carolina.
In launching his
campaign, Lee said, “I am
not running because some
poll indicates that I will win.
I’m running because I
believe in my heart that I
have an equal chance to win,
and that the people of North
Carolina will respond to a
candidate who offers
progressive ideas and a
record of honest,
responsible public service.
“I have just finished a
third term as mayor of a
medium-sized North
Carolina community. I know
what it’s like to struggle in a
single day with problems of
water supply, decaying
housing, drug abuse and
public transportation. I
believe that state
government can and must
concentrate on helping local
government with these
problems. I promise to keep
reminding myself,
legislators and others in
Raleigh that government
wasn’t created by and for its
officials. It was created by
and for the people.
“If you elect me to the
lieutenant governor’s office,
you won’t come in and find
any special interests
sharing that chair with me. I
am not an enemy of big
business. But when it comes
to a conflict between big
business and the people, you
can expect to see me
walking with the people,”
Lee said.
Lee, 41, is the son of a
sharecropper family in
Lithonia, Ga. He is a 1959
honor graduate of Fort
Valley State College, Fort
Valley, Ga. Following
service in the Army, he
received his masters degree
in social work from the
University of North
Carolina in 1966.
Also in 1966, Lee was
named Director of Youth
Services at Duke
University; and in 1968, he
became Director of
Employee Relations at
Duke and Assistant
Professor of Sociology at N.
C. Central Univesity. He is
currently on leave from his
post as Duke University’s
Director of Human
Development.
Defying all odds, Lee was
elected mayor of Chapel Hill
in 1969 with 52 per cent of the
vote. He was re-elected in
1971 with 64 per cent,
THE CHOWAN HERALD
carrying every precinct in
the city; and in 1973 he won
a third term as mayor,
beating his opponent five to
oneq.
Lee has long been a leader
in the Democratic Party,
having served on the party’s
Legislative Committee
(1968-70) and as vice
chairman of the N. C.
Democratic Party (1970-72).
He is currently a
Democratic National
Committeeman.
Lee has served on the
governing boards of many
organizations and
institutions: The National
Association of Social
Workers, the Southern
Regional Council, the N. C.
Heart Association and the
Board of Trustees of Wake
Forest University. In 1971,
he was awarded the
Honorary Doctor of Laws
degree by Shaw University.
Lee is a former deacon of
the Binkley Baptist Church
in Chapel Hill, and has
served as a leader of the
church’s Boy Scout troop.
Lee is married to the
former Lillian Wesley of
Savannah, Ga. The Lees
have three children:
Angela, Ricky, and Karin.
William J. Taylor
New Service
Being Offered
The Edenton Employment
Office has recently
introduced an additional
service to the public. A full
time employment counselor
to work with people in
solving their job-related
problems is added.
Mrs. Alice W. Bond,
manager, announced that
William J. Taylor, formerly
an accountant with ARPDC,
has joined the Employment
Security Commission in
Edenton and will work as a
counselor. Taylor was born
in New York and received
his education at Columbia
University. He resides with
his parents at Route 2,
Edenton.
Anyone who has a job
related problem is eligible
for counseling and there is
no charge for the service.
The employment counselor
will also service the Gates,
Perquimans, and Tyrrell
counties on a flexible
schedule.
Persons who are having
trouble getting or keeping a
job, or those who are not
satisfied with the work they
are now doing could benefit
from employment
counseling.
Workers who are not
physically able to continue
their regular line of work, or
young people who have not
yet chosen a permanent
vocation could benefit from
Employment Counseling.
Housewives who have
been out of the labor market
for a long time and would
like to go back to work, and
workers who have been
unemployed for a long
period and would consider
re-training for some other
type of work could benefit
from employment
counseling.
Recently separated
veterans, or veterans of
previous eras, who would
like assistance in deciding
the best way to utilize their
G.I. educational benefits,
are urged to apply for
counseling.
Our counselor, William J.
Taylor, is available to help.
If you have a job related
problem, just call 482-2196
for an appointment for
employment counseling.
»§§> BRAND QUALITY
PRODUCTS
SAI£
• PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., MARCH 13TH
• NONE TO DEALERS
• WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
IIIIIIIIIIIHIIH ® BRAND SLICED •
r | BOLOGNA
\ •SALAMI - I your CHOICE
:,™r- s , 9k(v
© BRAND
US FRANKS
YOUR CHOICE UiBV
• REGULAR 1-LB. W
©BRAND
PICKLE &PIMIENTO
LOAF am
IlHed pkl:
© BRAND SLICED
Wk BOLOGNA
YOUR CHOICE MMV
8-OZ.
11111111 l II —M PKG '
f YOU SAVE 40c
I ® BRAND (§> BRAND I
I SLICED COOKED SLICED COOKED 'CpT' W
HAM S 2 S9 IPICNIC s2 49^j
l —-—^
© BRAND WHOLE HOG f ' UIU
SAUSAGE \
$<g 29 s**49 \ BRAUNS
1-LB. ■ 2-LB. CQO \
ROLL ROLL , R \
©BRAND 1 7
• REGULAR OR BEEF FRANKS jBSSL I micfic AND l
• REGULAR OR BEEF BOLOGNA EH °G /
/ "■* um. /
YOUR CHOICE MJL /
~» 79
nS
TWELVE 3-LB. 1 1-LB.*- oZ O| a # \
4-OZ. SERVINGS gQ X 1 PK Q - * ~
© BRAND I (Sk 7
BEEF SAUSAGE I beep srS [
ilb 2lb i /. s °° $1,99 1
ROLL H /_ Ill|l|,|„„
NOMNSIDE SHOPPING CENTER GiORGE DRAWOY
EDENTON, N.C MANAGER
Thursday, March 11, 1976