Page 14-B I lift ° m - ■■■■■ .JBM ■l -j| GfjeUC lyier starting Thursday, june ioi t 1 —-—y —~—vTß^nr^k —~*l «°V PRE-WASH ED UPHOLSTERY CORDUROY A FABRICS JEANS / \ \k\ Sizes 29 to 38 / \ # Solids ond Assorted Patterns / # .. , . to v , Values To sl4 / \ Values to $8 Yard DOORBUSTER! DOORBUSTER YOUR CHOICE e ««• FAMILY-SIZE OUTDOOR WILSON® HIGH VISIBILITY YOUR CHOICE BARBECUE GRILL! OPTIC TENNIS BALLS! 2.47,j 7.97„ sr-A AA jsk.l OT L, Jk /*k i »r_t^ HUNDREDS OF BARGAINS THURSDAY THRU SATURDAY, 3 DAYS ONLY! NO ' iELCC 'electric Rechargeable for longer usage. Hurry in and save while the selection lastsl w v \ v ** 11 -v DOORBUSTER! SPECIAL , S OUR'STATE PRIDE' MOToenin DOORBUSTER! dacron” bed pillows o oro . PAMPERS REDUCED! REGUIAR #> dd 44c y DOORBUSTER! rSTSTS 07 C ■■■ k 3" oHHeaA k V AS THE HIDING PLACE O J\J\ I A ,ie | £L O 0„ Vetoes to $lO ee. STAINLESS 100% POLYESTER FABRIC AT A SUPER M FuH or Double 5ize.. 2.94 FLATWARE PRICE! - __ Choose from Attractive Colors _ M in a fantastic selection of colors. ■ |K m To Accent Any Decor. King Size. 4.94 piece I. teresting weaves. Buy now while I _ ly /I SLIGHT IRREGULAR Kn.v., forß, and spoon, ond spying, lost, ■ % M YD. MONDAY THRU THURSDAY 9:30 AM. TIL 5:30 P. M. -- - FRIDAY 9&0 A. M., TIL 9H)O P. M. SATURDAY 9:30 A. M., TIL 6HK) P*M. ATTEND CONFKR KNCE-ESAA inter state conference parti cipants included Wilbur Pierce, ESAA projector; Mrs. W. B. Gardner, school community relations; Mrs. D. T. Ward, parent education for early childhood coordinator; Mrs. Russell Baxley, Holmes ESAA reading lab instructional aide; and Mrs. Ed Bryant, Holmes English instructor. THE CHOWAN HERALD ESAA Parent Education Add Reading Programs Termed Exemplary Two Emergency School Aid Act Projects, which are operating in the Edenton- Chowan Schools this year, .were selected to be included on the program of the nation’s first multi-state ESAA Conference at Myrtle Beach, S. C., May 25-27. Considered as exemplary ESAA funded projects, Edenton-Chowan’s Parent Education for Early Childhood and Individiualized Instruction in Reading Program were presented to teachers and school administrators from North and South Carolina. Representative sponsors from the U. S. Office of Education, Region IV, the North and South Carolina General Assistance Centers and the respective state education agencies were among the audience, as well as large program contributors, during the total conference. The conference included small special groups interest sessions with emphasis on the following; reading in the content areas; community education program; human relations in ; strategies for individualized reading; strategies for alternative education; cultural enrichment fine arts program; alternative strategies for counseling potential drop-outs and push-outs. In addition, there were opportunities to deal with topics such as the Federal Registers, Parent Education, Title IX, and Program Management. Mrs. D. T. Ward, coordinator of the Parent Education Program being conducted at Chowan High School and Swain Elementary School, gave a slide-tape presentation of the project as it operates inthe school system. Thursday, June 10, 1976 Mrs. Russell Baxley, reading lab instructional aide at John A. Holmes High School, also gave a slide tape presentation depicting innovative classroom management strategies for individualized instruction in reading. Individualized instructional reading labs are also in operation at D.F. Walker School and Ernest A. Swain Elementary School. Outstanding education leaders at the conference included Dr. Cecil .Yarborough, Region IV Commissioner of Education; Dr. Juse Coles, deputy state superintendent, S. C. State Deparbnent of Education; Dudley Flood, assistant superintendent for human relations and student affairs, N. C. State Department of Public Instruction and Ed Sullivan, ESAA Coordinator of Title IV for the East Coast. Those attending the conference from Edenton were; Wilbur Pierce, ESAA Project Director; Mrs. Gloria Bryant, John A. Holmes High School English instructor; Mrs. W. B. Gardner, school-community relations; Mrs. Ward, and Mrs. Baxley. The purpose of the conference was to strengthen the ESAA educational programs though cross fertilization of ideas, strategies, and practices located in North and South Carolina. Mrs. Tate Earns B. In Biology From Berea College BEREA, Ky.—Janet Hyl ton Tate of Edenton re ceived the Bachelor of Arts degree in biology at Berea College’s commencement exercises in Indian Fort Theater, one of 251 members of the Class of 1976. Commencement speaker was Wilma Dykeman Stokely, novelist, biographer and Berea College trustee. Dr. David Poling, Presbyterian pastor whose Syndicated articles on religion appear in 600 U. S. and Canadian newspapers, gave the baccalaureate sermon. Honorary degrees were awarded to newspaper executive Barry Bingham, Sr., of Louisville, Ky., and scholar Arlin Turner of Duke University. Janet is the daughter of Mrs. Frances Hylton of Cape Colony, Edenton. She is winner of Berea’s John Bangson Biology Award for outstanding scholarship in the biological sciences. A Dean’s List student, she is a member of the biology honorary Beta Beta Beta, the national Phi Kappa Phi, and Mortar Board, national women’s honorary. Janet has been a Berea College Country Dancer for four years. Her husband Glen Tate, also graduating Berea chemistry major, was also a Country Dancer. The Country Dancers were featured recently on NBS’s national “Today Show”. Berea Collegers a private liberal arts school offering tuition-free education to its students, primarily from the Southern Appalachian region. Officer Recovers Stolon Vehicle; Sospect Arrested m The alertness of ji policeman early May 29 resulted in recovery of a stolen vehicle and the arrest of a New Jersey man on theft charges. John Carlton Barton, 26, of Cherry Hill, N. J., was arrested for public drunkenness at 2:45 A.M. Saturday by Patrolman McCoy Parker. The officer saw Barton walking near a suspicious car at Edenton Marina. A check of the 1964 Chevrolet indicated that it had been stolen in Bethel' and was out of gas. Barton was then charged with the theft. 1 Sgt. G. W. Mizelle, who assisted Patrolman Parker in the investigation said Barton was turned over to Pitt County authorities.