Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / March 18, 1982, edition 1 / Page 8
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Page 8-A Youth Awareness Day Slated Youth Awareness Day has been proclaimed for March SS in Chowan County. Sponsored by die Chowan County Task Force, the special day is designed as a kick-off for beginning a Positive Youth Develop ment (PYD) program in Chowan County. A meeting to discuss the neetfc of youth will be held at 7:30 P.M. at the Edenton Municipal Building. Bob Thornton, chairman of the Chowan County Youth Task Force urges all concerned adults and youth in the community to support this effort to improve conditions for youth. Highlighting the evening meeting, Vivian Lord, a member of the state Positive Youth Develop ment training team, will present an overview on PYD programs and relate how they can help youth in Chowan County. A representative from Dare County, which is serving as a pilot PYD area, will be present to explain their efforts. A slide presentation of a successful PYD program in Davidson County will be shown. Mack Livesay, field represen tative for Community Based Alternative program in this region, will give a brief report on the 2nd annual N.C. Conference on Delinquency Prevention. To help publicize the Youth Awareness Day Activities, the local Youth Task Force sponsored a Poster Contest for school students. Winners will be announced at the meeting, For All Os Your Insurance Needs Contact Allen B. Harless, Jr. Ml Kellogg-Morgan Agency, Inc. EDENTON. NORTH CAROLINA 27932 PHONE 9I 9 - 482-448 1 A V jV Save Now On These Rugged Radials For Your U 9" f Truck Or RV! Wrangler Radial... All Season, I Ml All Terrain, All Wheel Position tAAOR <*’»*B • Gas-saving ec ° n ° m y with easy-rolling radial construction Jma I IjH . . I It • Strength, plus the cut and bruise resistance of steel ▼ w Q ® pus ,11 cord belts $3.96 FET ■ •We race and win on Wrangler Radials BLEM wW sate m march 31 JL-rn g FREE WESTERN VEST] 1 SOO7J \ JPSI . with purchase of 4 WRANGLER RADIALS 1 »l § 1 Save money on a set of tour branding and stitching are dark } 1 >ia .> 1 Wrangler All Season Radials and brown Get yours tree with purchase 1 1 Ift llit 11 get this western style vest free of four Wrangler All Season Rackets § I lffVl 111* 1 Its made of leather-1 ike suede Or. buy two Wrangler Radials I er»WAA»“ 1 The color is buckskin tan. and there s and pay iust $lO 95 Stop at any f iHHn a full shepherd lining with exposed participating Goodyear Store or ' ■ IHH trim on both pockets. The decorative dealer for complete details I I \WtWm Get your vest white they last! 1 GOODYEAR H CREYWOODOILCOMPANY B m* An., Edentoo "Serving You With Pride” \ its. m evens, tie* I Ptom4S2-7401 P*ow7>Mßt | also, and awards given. Positive Youth Development (PYD) is citizen participation and community development activities that have been going on in North Carolina for years. PYD is the active process of thhugs better for young people in every community and adds a new thrust to dehquency prevention. The Positive Youth Development efforts in North Carolina will be different from those of the past, however, because of its statewide scope and its top level support by Governor Jim Hunt and hte newly created Executive Cabinet on Juvenile Affairs. This group is composed of leaders from the State Department of Justice, Public Instruction; Crime Control and Public Safety, Humanities Series Continues “The Human Dimension” humanities series will continue Tuesday (Mar. 23) evening at 7:30 at College of The Albemarle. Dr. Charles H. Haws, director of the Institute of Scottish Studies at Old Dominion University, will present the fourth lecture in the six-part series. His topic, “The Trials of Faith,” will emphasize the focus on religion as a central theme of Renaissance life. During the period, the Roman Catholic Church, as the prime religious in stitution of a thousand years standing, was split per- Correction, Human Resources, the chief justice' of the N.C Supreme Court and the chairperson of the Courts and Crime Com- The keys to PYD are using currently available com munity resources mure creatively and to involve young people in looking at conditions as they exist for cooperative planning with adults for solutions on a local level. A Chowan County Youth Task Force was first ap pointed by the Chowan County Commissioners in February 1979. The local membership is composed of representation from social services, law enforcement agencies, health depart ment, schools, mental health, vocational rehabilitation and court counselors. manently by the reforms of Luther, Calvin, and Henry vm. The lecturer has been the recipient of several teaching and Scottish studies awards. In 1990, he received the Jean Keith Memorial Award for Encouraging Scottish Heritage and Traditions. He was honored for excellence in teaching and service by the A. Rufus Tonelson Award in 1979. Since 1964, Haws has received 10 research grants and awards from six sources. The most recent was in 1981 from the Car negie Trust for Universities in Scotland. He is the author of two books, “The Scottish Parish Clergy at the Reformation. 1540-1574,” and “Scots in the Old Dominion. 1685-1800 “ The scholar has had five articles published, and etfted two journals. A recent article, “The Urban Areas at the Reformation The Scottish Experience,” has been submitted to the “Sixteenth Century Journal" for publication Several' other works are in progress, in cluding a history of Scotland for American students, and a treatise on Scots in Maryland and Delaware during the Colonial period. "H« who serves his coun try w«ll has no need of ancestors." Voltaire THE CHOWAN HERALD v " iPllßlilli' « . ' ■ ' ■ ■ • ’nwo* V ' '£ ‘‘-Tlf * H mm h a# <9 WORK IS DONE TO SCHOOL GROUNDS Thoaoa Junior High School Principal. John Guard, left, dhcmi the grading and shaping week bring done an the achnri grounds with Preston Nixon, neighboring Perquimans County farmer. The Soil Conservation Service amirtnit the school with the plans and layout which called for the smoothing of approximately 3.5 acres on the mkitleg ac tivity field. Surface drains were constructed with the entire area scheduled for a fertilization and rer swing program. When completed, the field will be set up especially for community softball leagues as well as school recreation. Joe Hollowell. an alumnus of the school and a dose neighbor, assisted with the work by furnishing men and equipment Edenton Named Tree City RALEIGH - Fifteen North Carolina cities and towns have been named as TREE CITY USA com munities by the National Arbor Day Foundation, according to Joe Grimsley, secretary of Natural Resources and Community Development Six of the towns are receiving their third award: Brevard, Edenton, Farmville, Highlands, Laurinburg and Wake Forest. Eight of the communities are receiving their second award: Asheville, Charlotte, Graham, Jacksonville, Lumberton, Southern Pines, Washington Park and Wilson. The Robeson County ccrmatmity of Red Springs ’ is receiving its, firs? award. The Nebraska-based Foundation honors com munities with a TREE CITY USA designation upon recommendation by the state forester. The cotn • munities qualify after meeting standards which include: adoption of a city tree ordinance, creation of a legal tree governing body, implementation of an active and observance of Arbor Day, which is March Ml TREE CITY USA com munities receive a flag with the program’s logo and a walnut-mounted plaque. This year, winners will again receive TREE CITY USA community entrance signs. The signs may be used by the communities for five years. Maple leaf stickers on the signs in dicate additional qualifying years, said John Rosonow, Foundation Director. “Trees add much to our towns and cities. They provide beauty, help heating end cooling hills, increase “property values and ugfcnce the economic vitality of bmhnss areas,” according to Rosonow. “TREE CITY USA recogritian is an excellent indication that community tondorstotettiMraMnidpal Tub ZS SATURDAY, '-25Tf ;\ ® 1 MARCH 2Oth MONOGRAM 1 I MARATHON jraUDi ji 9JO A.M. UNTO. S PJM. ON OUR MONOGRAMS 3 SMALL INITIALS OAA LETTERS FOR 4*UU I 3 MEDIUM INITIALS O LETTERS FOR O-lAI fi 3LABGE INITIALS MAA f LETTERS FOR A# JF ' pdMMlmaiaNMnm,Mi|*- \ \ / / »on>Of aMaofNM yaw gaamaM pm appsrtmfeyMHMmiiMl ?■' V wadwwM fihawMh and Mm* up»“ O ONE DAY ONLY! i SaAMday fe3B AJVL tMN 4 PJVL Pfcaao 48S-3MI Or 48Y-4S3S. | ECHSA Agenda Is Revealed ! hriTri Thunder, March 35, MM at 7*9 PJL aft the Thomas WUUsi^RegioaalHDvrriep briaZtba Mritad to review of the fofovhg proposals: SUBSTANTIVE REVIEWS: 1) Rarity Meant* San itarium - proposed St - bed fipierien of oaefflary areas; DPRft County Grasp Hamm - proponed S - bed KF - MR tadMy in Pitt Oomty , 3) Our Homos, - proposed 5-bodlCF -nMR facility in Lenoir County; 4) Noah General Hmpßri - cioriractten of teri door wih 75 - hod iidiMlioo. and 5) naspHri Corporation of Americn - ropiermnsri of Edgecombe General Hoqpitri; NON - SUB STANTIVE REVIEWS: 1) Hyde Rural Health Cor poration - Sth Year Rural , Aerobic Dance Classes < v Ladies' Aerobic dance |< ( classes, directed by Marsha T. !< ( Gordon, will begin on Monday, i } March 22. An Aerobics I class f ) for beginners will be offered on i [ Monday and Thursday ! f evenings from 6:45 until 7:45 l , and Aerobics II classes will be j from 8:00 until 9:00on the same ! [ evenings. ( The six-week session will be | [ a total fee.of $20.00. All persons | > interested must register by \ l phone. Contact Marsha Gordon I ( at 482-8239. i Health Initiative Con tinuation Grant ; 2) Greene County Health Care, Inc. - Rural Health Initiative rmHmtellnn Grant; and 3) TriOomty Health Services - 7th Year Rural Health Initiative Continuation Grant. If requested, 30 ntinrias will be set aside for M’S? public hmtg affords the public an opportunity to comment on the proposed projects to be considered in die review **]?«* additional In formation on project reviews, contact: Director of Project Review, Eastern Carolina Health Systems Agency, 391 S. Evans St, Minges Building Suite 405, Greenville, N.C. 27934 (919) 759-1372. The public is invited to attend this meeting- The Eastern Carolina is a private, non - profit cor poration funded by the U. S. Department of Health and Human Services. This Agency works with Thursday, March 18, &2 _ f w» _ _t »« i» w. (H fiasiem in onn Lttrounaso carry out three mamr responsibilities: 1) Planning to gu^|e X) Developing needed services and locating personnel by working wfh tin communities; and g 3) Reviewing and makiig recommendations to DHfiS on proposed changes in the health care system. Stone Makes * Dean’s List KINSTON There 115 students at Lenoir Community College who qualified for the coveted President’s List for the Winter Quarter, according to Dr. Jesse L. McDaniel, LOC pressident. To qualify a student must have a 3.6 grade point average and carry a full load of classes. Technical Division -r Mark A. Stone of Edenton.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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March 18, 1982, edition 1
8
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