tyatoHfod - QoyMcti %»3n
Mary Elizabeth Daven
port and Joseph Kenneth
Bozievich of Potomac,
Maryland were united in
marriage May 29 at
Mulberry Hill, the home of
the bride, by the Rev. T.
Joseph Gaul, Pastor of St.
Anne’s Catholic Church.
The bride is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Lynwood L.
Davenport of Mulberry Hill,
Edenton. The bridegroom is
the son of Mrs. Antoinette
Mrs. Joseph Kenneth Bozievich
The bride was given in
marriage by her father. She
wore a wedding gown
featuring a bodice of ap
pliqued lace, scooped
neckline and cap sleeve. The
skirt was silk organza with
the appliqued lace con
tinuing down each side. The
dress had a chapel length
train edged in lace. She
wore a cap of appliqued lace
and a chapel length veil with
scalloped edges.
Miss Suzanne Davenport,
? sister of the bride, was maid
: of honor. Bridesmaids were
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June 29, 1982
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—
Bozievich Buxton of
Potomac, Maryland.
The Rev.’s William L.
Davenport and C. Rodolph
Davenport, uncles of the
bride, assisted Rev. Gaul in
the double ring ceremony.
Wedding music was
provided by Mrs. Taylor
Brown With Mr. Ron
Williams rendering special
selections. Mrs. Gerald K.
Walton, Sister of the Bride,
was mistress of ceremony.
cousin of the bride; Miss
Elizabeth Woolard,
Edenton; Miss Clare
Bozievich, Potomac,
Maryland, sister of the
groom; Mrs. Neil Bozievich,
Alexandria, Virginia, sister
- in - law of the groom.
Junior bridesmaid was Miss
Carin Cataldi, Hartly,
Delaware, cousin of the
bride.
The groom had as his
bestman First Lieutenant
Theodore Twigg of Fort
Rucker, Alabama. Ushers
were ' Nell Bozievich,
Alexandria, Virginia;
Mil—<i‘liiiiiiiih l mWmtr,.
Maryland; Chris Strawser,'
Manteo, brothers of the
groom; Coy Thomas,
Bethesda, Maryland and
Paul Seiberlich, Richmond,
Virginia, cousin of the .
groom.
After the wedding, a
reception was given by the
brides parents on the back |
lawn of their home, I
Mulberry Hill, overlooking 1
the Albemarle Sound. After
the reception the couple left
for a honeymoon on the
Outer Banks. They will
make their home in Towson,
Maryland.
The bride attended East
Carolina University,
Greenville. The groom is a
graduate of the University
of Maryland, College Park,
Maryland and is a civil
engineer with the Kidd Co.,
Towson, Maryland.
Following the rehearsel
on Friday evening, the
grooms mother and step -
father, Dr. and Mrs. Rex
Buxton, entertained the
bridal party and out of town
guests at Tuck’s
Restaurant, Elizabeth City.
otevS (Boole. JSiat (R«£eaa«d
The Library has received
the following new books:
Adult Fiction
“Winners” by Donna
Ball; “A Lion in the Way” by
Elizabeth Cadell; “Murder
at Buckingham Palace” by
T.E.B. Clarke; “The
Replay” by Michael Curtin;
“Fly Away Home” by
Carolyn Doty; “An Im
portant Family” by Dorothy
Eden; “The Man From St.
Petersburg” by Ken Follett;
“Marital Rites” by
Margaret Forester;
“Distant Relations” by
Carlos Fuentes; “ ‘A’ If For
Alibi” by Sue Grafton;
“Chance” by Sara
, McAulay; “Wild Seed” by
Paige Mitchell; “Boom
town” by Larry D. Names;
“Scattershot” by Bill
Pronzini; “A King’s Ran
som” by Victor Suthren;
“One Big Happy Family”
by Irene Tiersten; “Dinner
At The Homesick
Restaurant” by Anne Tyler;
“Fugitive Summer” by
Jane Wallace; “Palimp
sest” by Meg E. Atkins; “As
Continued On Page 10-A
4wou.t Wom en
Thursday, June 3, 1982
i >v <
JMBbNT • “ i liH
SMB*
Mrs. Paul Robert Kaufmann
°ljo«33tncj, °DotflA &xcsicuru^cl
Helen Goodwinn Pruden
and Paul Robert Kaufmann
were united in marriage on
May 8 at the Belmont Hill
School in Belmont, Mass.
Rev. Ann Fields officiated.
The bride is the daughter
of the late Mr. and Mrs.
James Norfleet Pruden, Jr.
of Edenton. The bridegroom
is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
Robert J. Kaufmann of
Belmont, Mass.
Honor attendent was Miss
Susan Gravely of Chapel
Hill, N-C, Toby Decker of
Brighton, Mass, served as
best man.
A reception was hosted by
Mr. and Mrs. J. Norfleet
Pruden, 111 and Mrs. Robert
J. Kaufmann at the Kauf
mann home. After a wed-
Sociefcu 01-evto
Mrs. Hector Lupton and
Miss Minnie Hollowed spent
last week at Annapolis,
Maryland to attend the
graduation of Mrs. Lupton’s
grandson Angus McColl
from the Naval Academy on
Wednesday and on Saturday
his wedding in the Naval
chapel. Angus McColl is the
eldest son of Mrs. Sharon
Lupton McColl of San Diego,
Calif.
Dr. and Mrs. George J.
Ellis, Jr. of Winston Salem,
will be the weekend guests
of her aunt, Mrs. Cornelia
Privott of 125 Blount St. in
Edenton.
Page 3-A
ding trip to Bermuda, the
couple will make their home
in Belmont, Mass.
The bride is a graduate of
St. Mary’s College and the
University of North
Carolina. She made her
debut at the 1970 North
Carolina Terpsichorean
Debutante Ball. She is now
an account executive -
writer at the advertising
firm of Robinson Associates
in Boston, Mass.
The bridegroom is a
graduate of Beloit College,
and received his MBA at
American University in
Washington, D.C. He is a
finance manager at Digital
Equipment Corp. in Hudson,
Mass.
Mr. and Mrs. Danny
Earnhardt announce the
birth of Matthew Blake
Earnhardt, born Saturday
May 29 at Rochester, NY.
Mrs. Earnhardt was the
former Rita Manning of
Robersonville. The grand
parents, Rev. and Mrs
Earnhardt of Rose Hill were
former Edenton residents
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RALEIGH- Thousands of
North Carolinians,
representing counties
across the state, will
converge here for a rally in
support of the Equal Rights
Amendment on Sunday.
The North Carolina Rally
for ERA is sponsored by
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr.,
North Carolinians United
for ERA (NCUERA) and the
ERA Countdown Campaign
to demonstrate public
support for the ERA and
urge its passage in North
Carolina.
Supporters will assemble
at 1 P.M. at the corner of
Wilmington • and Lane
streets and march past the
legislature to the Capitol
Building. Following the
tradition of the historic
suffrage marches, par
ticipants are urged to wear
white and walk in
processional style carrying
organizational banners.
A rally at the Capitol will
feature North Carolina
leaders for ERA. Including
Gov. Hunt, and possibly
national celebrities.
The rally comes at a time
of increasing support for the
ERA in North Carolina.
According to a recent Harris
Poll, 61 per cent of all North
Carolinians favor the Equal
Rights Amendment, with
I democratic Campaign
I (Being OtaioeS
• The Democratic Women’s
Clubs of North Carolina
have joined forces with the
Democratic Party to raise
campaign funds for
Democratic candidates,
according to an an
nouncement hy Martha
Speed of Louisburg,
chaiupan of the special
fundraiser.
The Democratic Women
are hosting a $lO per ticket
breakfast at the Party
Headquarters in the
Historic Goodwin House on
Hillsborough Street in
Raleigh. The event is
; scheduled for Saturday,
June 12, the same day as the
Party’s State Democratic
Convention.
’ Tickets have been mailed
to county chairmen and to
1 presidents of Democratic
| Women’s Clubs. Proceeds
will be used to finance the
’ Party’s campaign activities
in the 1982 general election.
On the same day, the Party
is sponsoring a SIOO per
y couple Unity Gala in the
e evening at the conclusion of
e the State Convention.
y Reservations for both
events may be made
e through the Party
if Headquarters in Raleigh or
l- by contacting county
». chairmen or the presidents
e of local Democratic
» Women’s Clubs.
only 30 per cent opposed.
Gov. Hunt has charac
terized the change of
climate as one of the most
dramatic to take place
during his life in public
service.
Among state
organizations participating
in the North Carolina Rally
for ERA are : Church
Women United, League of
Women Voters, National
Organization For Women,
N. C. Association of
Educators, American
Association of University
Women, Women’s Political
Caucus, Business and
Professional Women and the
YWCA. Local chapters of
these and other
organizations are arranging
publicity and transportation
for the rally in their com
munities from many cities
throughout the state.
Thirty-five states have
already passed the Equal
Rights Amendment. Three
more are needed to ratify
the Amendment before its
deadline on June 30. To
dramatize ERA support and
urge ratification, marches
are also being organized for
June 6 in Florida, Oklahoma
and Dlinios. Marchers will
call upon the conscience of
legislators in these key
states where campaigns
have been underway for
many months.
The Equal Rights
Amendment states,
“Equality of rights under
the law shall not be denied
"Whoever gossips to you
will gossip of you."
Spanish Proverb
DR. A. F. DQWNUM, JR.
jjp M OPTOMETRIST
Eyes In Error: Astigmatism
If you have a vision be nearsighted or farsighted
problem, you have lots of astigmatism. Or it car. be a
company. An estimated one combination of both,
out of every two people in the If you’ve noticed a blurring
U.S. also have eye problems, of vision when looking at
One of the more common is objects dose up or far away,
astigmatism. you may have an
This is caused by an im- astigmatism. Corrective
perfectly shaped cornea. This eyeglasses or contact lenses
is the window of the eye can take the blur away and
through which light passes to make your vision clear again,
the lens, where the image is All it takes is an examination
focused. If the cornea is out of by your optometrist to find
shape, the image will be out how.
blurred. Instead of rays of
light coming together at one . .... . .
print, they come together at of better vlslon
two points, creating two from she office of
separate images instead of
one. A. F. Downum, Jr., O.D.
■me kind of astigmatism w Eden street
you have depends on where
the points of focus are. It can EDENTON
482-3218
Views On Dental Health
j Richard N. Hines, Jr.
\ Fellow of The Academy
’ fr °f General Dentistry
Changing Your Facial Contour
Although the human tissues resulting in facial
body continues to change features that can be
throughout life, changes unattractive and
in the adult occur much downright unpleasant,
more slowly than in the In the older person, loss
child and are called of the bicuspids and
“maturing features”. In molars (back teeth)
most people, the middle, accentuates the hollow
autumn and later years of configuration of the
life are characterized by cheeks and deepens the
a thinning /and sharp- natural lines and
ening of the facial wrinkles. You only have
contours. During these one face. Don’t let
years, the support negligence keep t from
provided by intact teeth looking as young as you
is critically important in are for life. Replace any
maintaining a sym- missing teeth now!
metrical and pleasing
facial appearance.
The teeth, especially
the front teeth (incisors)
and the eye teeth
(canines), provide direct A public service with the
support to the shape of “ im °* Promoting better
the lips, corner of the dental health en
m/witk vironment. From the
office of; RICHARD N .
the cheeks. If these teeth junks, jr „ d.D.S.. 437
are not replaced im- south Broad St., Edenton
mediately, their loss can phone: 4K2-2776.
cause or accentuate
folding, drooping and
hollowing of the facial
"We Cater To Cowards"
or abridged by the United
States or by any state on
account of sex.”
I
X §
t
Donna Lin Darnell
outotan3ing G?ema£e
Donna Lin Darnell,
graduating senior at
Lawrence Academy, was
presented the 1981 - 82
Outstanding Female
Scholastic Athlete Award
and trophy at the School’s
Athletic Banquet held
Friday May 28th.
Miss Darnell graduates
with honors Friday, June 4.
A member of Who’s Who
among American High
School students, monogram
club, annual staff, Beta Club
and student council, Miss
Darnell also served as a
marshal her junior year.
1 She lettered in tennis,
basketball and softball
during her high school
. career.
Miss Darnell is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
James E. Darnell of Morgan
Park.