THE CHOWAN HERALD
■■'- ■;■ : - 1 ■ 111 ■'■
SECTION-B Edenton, North Carolina, Ifrursday, August 25, 1977 SECTION-B
Chowan SCA Welcomes Faculty
Call it apple polishing,
buttering up, or what you
wUl—the teachers liked itl
Call it service to mankind,
help to alleviate strain, or
enhancement of strong
fellowship,—the students
did it!
The Chowan High School
Student Council and the
Library Club started their
service project year off by
welcoming the 28 new and
returning faculty members
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DECISIONS, DECISIONS— Supt. John Dunn, John Guard,
Chowan’s new principal, and Coach Rob Boyce are offered a
choice of watermelon or homemade ice-cream by Kevin
Twine SCA president, during the cook-out. Hot dogs with all
the trimmings and then some were the menu for the SCA and
Library Club sponsored picnic to welcome Chowan’s faculty.*
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■I OF YOUR LUNGS?
gyRR It may surprise you to learn that a child has ■fl
pink tunas an adult gray or black lungs and the Sag
city dweller exposed to industrial smoke or fog |B
has darker lungs than those who Uve in 111
the country. The averare person breathes about |i
18 times a minute, which totals about 23,000 H
times each day. ■
Therefore, it is most important to take good IS}
care of your lungs. Have you had your physician E£
check your lungs lately? It is a wise precaution IB
to avoid future trouble. iy
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TOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when pf
you need a medicine. Pick up your prescription if Kfil
shopping nearby, or we wUI deliver promptly |l
without extra charge. A great many people en- RBI
trust us with their prescriptions. Slay we com- M
pound yours? Ml
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HOLLOWELL-BLOUNT i
REXALLDRUG STORE
FREE GIFT WRAPPING ||
482-2127 EDENTON fc
Tyler
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, *. ■.... v W. , A. M. Until 6 P.M. Phone 482-3221
and several administrative
personnel. When teachers
reported to work on August
15, Student Council mem
bers made themselves
available to help with
moving books, readying
rooms for student arrival,
and running errands. This
groups alsd provided
refreshments for teachers
during break time.
For several years, the
Chowan SCA has held a
luncheon for their faculty
prim- to school opening. This
year the Chowan Library
Club joined the SCA’s
preparations for their an
nual feast by holding a cook
out at the home of Mrs.
Elton Boswell, Jr., SCA
advisor.
Kevin Twine, SCA
president, explained that a
welcome for teachers has
become an annual event and
has been successful in
“promoting good relations
between students and
teachers, and getting the
year going good.”
Twine, Mrs. Boswell, and
Mrs. Ruth Mansfield are the
Chowan’s SCA president,
Senior High and Junior High
advisors for the coming
year. Sara Chappell and
Mrs. Ethelene Rascoe are
the Library Club president
and faculty advisor.
Last Burgers
Smiling Faces—You Bet!
And it wasn’t just the end of
another summer reading
program at Shepard-Pruden
Memorial Library that
brought smiles to our young
readers’ faces. They’re
happy, and we’re happy,
because they have also just
received one last Hardee’s
hamburger token for par
ticipating in our Books ’N
Burger reading program
sponsored by Hardee’s
during the past two months.
Several of the children
read 25 books or more, and
one outstanding reader,
Paul Bass, read 100 books.
Those children reading at
least 25 books and receiving
a special certificate for a
Hardee’s Big Twin sand
wich include the following:
Paul Bass, Sherri
Belfield, Laurie Ledford,
Jennifer Ledford, Chuckie
Ledford, Scott Ward,
Matthew Kane, Marva
Satterfield, Lilie Sellers,
Alicia Sellers, Susan
Peyton, Vicky Gardner,
Kay Gardner, Leslie Ervin,
Karen Stalls, Michael Stone,
Peter John Mitchener,
Angela Lewis, Tracy
Spivey, Shannon Spivey,
Sharon Caudle, and David
Johnson.
Keep up the good reading,
Kids! And don’t forget the
Library—even without the
burgers
MACKS OFFICIALS—SamueI J. Woroom, left, president,
and Truby G. Proctor, vice president of Macks Stores are
shown outside of corporate headquarters in Sanford.
American Stock Exchange
Includes Macks Stores
SANFORD—SamueI J.
Woroom, 111, president and
chairman of the board of
Macks Stores, Inc. an
nounced the corporation
began trading August 23 on
the American Stock Ex
change under the ticker
symbol MKS.
According to Woroom, the
move to join the market
was, “a logical step in view
of our recent growth.”
“We consider ourselves to
be in an ideal market here in
the Southeast,” he
“and would like to take
advantage of the strong
market and economic
growth characteristic of this
region.”
Macks currently serves
over 90 locations in Virginia,
Georgia, and the Carolinas
selling toys, men’s, ladies’,
and children’s clothing and
shoes, tools, pets, health and
beauty aids and other items.
Sales figures for 1975 were
just under $35-million while
sales in 1976 approached S4O
- showing a 13.4 per
cent increase in sales and a
21.5 per cent increase in
Centralized
Lunch Menus
Centralized menus in
cafeterias of Edenton -
Chowan Schools for the next
week include:
Tuesday— Cheeseburger
on bun, french fries,
mustard, ketchup, tossed
salad, apple pie and milk.
Wednesday Fish fillet,
tartar sauce, macaroni and
cheese, cole slaw, green
beans, lime gelatin, corn
bread and milk.
Thursday Fried
chicken, mashed potatoes,
green peas, sliced peaches,
rolls and milk.
earnings.
Wornom said figures for
the first two quarters of 1977
reflect a continuation of the
trend of the past few years,
showing an increase over
the same period last year.
I Piano Tuning and Service I
I CALL KIM ROSE I
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T ** ru Sept. 4th
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quick! Replace! nails. Others to match decorator Warns you at first indica- C3Ch
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■ " I DISCOUNT I
I I W. QUEEN ST. EXT.-EDENTON I I
Lee Joins Institute Trustees
Goiv. Jim Hunt has ap
pointed Robert E. Lee of
Gatesville to serve on the
board of trustees of
Roanoke-Chowaji Technical
Institute.
Lee is the executive vice
president of Tarheel Bank
and Trust Co, He is vice
chairman of the Gates
County Development
Commission and is a past
director of the N.C. Bankers
Association. He is also a
member of the Endowment
Committee of Chowan
College.
The board of trustees is
composed of 12 members
four appointed by thfe
governor, four elected by
the local board of education,
and four elected by the
county commissioners.
Members serve a term of
eight years.
The purpose of the board
is to promote the develop
ment of the institution,
helping it serve the state in a
way that will complement
the activities of the other
Mrs. Hayman Taken In Death
Funeral services were
held last Thursday af
ternoon in Williford -
Barham Funeral Chapel for
Mrs. Myra Davis Hayman,
912 North Broad Street.
Rev. Mitchell Edwards
officiated and burial was in
Beaver Hill Cemetery.
Mrs. Hayman, daughter
of the late Isaac Newton and
Tina Simpson Davis, was a
native of Dare County. She
was 74.
A housewife, she is sur
vived by Cage W. Hayman;
two daughters: Mrs.
CUSTOM UPHOLSTERING
RECOVERING RESTYLING
REPAIRING
WIDE SELECTION OF FABRICS,
VINYLS AND SUPPLIES
Coll Samples shown
482-2476 In Your Home or Shop
Ivey Meadows Upholstery
409 S. Broad St. Edenton, N. C.
institutions and helping it
perform at a high level of
excellence.
Juanita Cozzens and Mrs.
Vivian H. Evans, both of
Edenton; a brother: Isaac
Newton Davis, Jr., of
Manteo; two sisters: Miss
Neppie Davis and Mrs.
Pearl Etheridge, both of
Norfolk, Va.; five grand
children and two great
grandchildren.
Mrs. Hayman was a
member of the Church of
God.
Pallbearers were:
Thomas Wynn Evans, Lynn
Evans, Marc Cozzens,
Carroll Perry, Jack Jordan
and Frank Pierce.