Thursday, May 19, 1983 Amual Meeting Os American Heart Association To Be Held May 18-20 Hundreds of scientists, health professionals, and non medical Heart volunteers from throughout the state are expected to attend the 34th an nual meeting and scientific sessions of the American Heart Association, North Carolina Affiliate May 18-20 at the Winston-Salem Hyatt House and the Benton Con vention Center. The Bth an nual scientific session of the North Carolina Chapter, American College of Car diology will be held in con junction with the meeting. The mechanisms of cardiac cell death will be the theme of one session, with speakers Naranjan S. Dhalla, Ph.D., Professor of Physiology, University of Manitoba * Canada, who is Secretary General of the International Society for Heart Research; John L. Farber, M.D., Pro fessor of Pathology, Hahnemann University, Philadelphia; and Keith A. Reimer, M.D., Ph.D., Associate Professor of Pathology, Duke University Medical Center. Other sub jects to be presented include rehabilitation of the coronary patient, by Gerald F. Flet cher, M.D., Professor of Medicine, Emory University ; therapy for coronary artery disease, by Robert C. Schlant, M.D., Professor and Director of Cardiology at Emory; vasodilators and calcium blockers by James Muller, M.D., Harvard Medical School; and anti-hypertensive drugs, by Michael Moore, M.D. of the Danville (Virginia) Urologic Clinic. Additional speakers will be, from Duke, David Stand, M.D., Professor and Chief of Clinical Pharmacology, on THohhuu} 7 *7*o. Myrtle M. & Thomas K. Pritchard P.O. BOX 385, ELIZABETH CITY, N.C.-279P9 PHONE: 338-2272 Be sure to stop by our booth Saturday, May 21, during RIVERSPREE and visit one of TRAILWAYS’ finest buses, the EXECOTIVE"bus, the #Ht&VusTßftho3£'!lj>edflSl Chtftter*r'~' COMPLIMENTS of TRAILWAYS and CAROLINA TRAILWAYS, the official bus for all of MANNING TOURS, INC. bus tours. mmoYAts HUE fWO US. stums BOND WHEN YOU BUY 4 EUCtBUUNIROYAL THUS. Here's a great deal for you, and America, too. Just buy 4 eligible* Uniroyal tires at an y participating Uniroyal dealer. Then send proof of purchase , the special certificate, and your Social Security number to Uniroyal within 30 UNIROYAL days. You will receive your SIOO bond in the mail directly from Uniroyal. Or buy 2 Uniroyal steel-belted radials and get a SSO bond back. But hurry. This is a ■HHIHBH WWWAL STBEUBn UNIROYAL • High-Mifoagt •St»»/-B»tt»dß»di*l Sa^ rts LARtO ° Mfly 12 . High-Pvformance 'Eligible tires Royal SeU. Tiger Pew Plus. Flotation Btea • Tons protect Tiger Pew All Seasons Plus to deliver ana vet age of 20% more mileage than Michelm X Edenton Shell Service North Bread Street Edenton, N.C. 4824770 beta' blotters; Robert M. Califf, M.D., Director the Cardiac Care Unit, on the evaluation and management of .unstable angina; and James L. Cox, M.D., Associate Professor of Surgery, on the surgical treat ment of cardiac arrhythmias; from the UNC School of Medicine, Kenneth Popio, M.D., Associate Professor of Medicine, on angioplasty, and Leonard fessor of Medicine and Chief of Cardiology, on those at high risk after myocardial infarc tion; and from the Bdwman Gray School of Medicine, Wesley K. Haisty, M.D., Assistant Professor of Medicine and Cardiology, on physiologic pacemakers, and Jamfe MJ).;, ‘|*ro: fessor and* Chairman of Neurology, on the medical/legal aspects of pa tient management. Dr. Toole, who is a past president of the North Carolina Heart As Letter To The Chowan Herald Editor Dear Editor; •*% In our quest for information about North Carolina, we’ve stumbled across some small towns and “wide places in tbe road” that ~ soupd Very intriguing.' : <'!’> ’• - Was there really a Rose-Hill in Duplin county? or a Bonnie Doone? and whqt was Mag gie’s hist nairie?and who was Caroleetf? „ rE Cornelius? Everett? Fajlth? Julian? Lucia? MArsfcaJl? Norman? Olivia? and Penrose? I surely hjgra there is some one amongyttur readers who can fill ds; in on these in teresting personalities and places. V W We really would like to know. " - •• v..- ■' -. 7' filiate, will join Anne M. Dell inger, Associate Professor of Public Law and Government at UNC, in discussing the topic. Support groups for car diovascular patients will be described by Charles Smith, Raleigh, president of the Wake County Coronary Club ; Carolyn Hales, Winston- Salem, a past president of Mended Hearts; and Lu Anne Kirchgassner, Raleigh, who works with stroke clubs. A new feature during the meeting this year will be a tour of the Arteriosclerosis Research Center laboratories at Bowman Gray, of which Thomas B. Clarkson, D.V.M. is director. Other events in clude the election of Affiliate officers and board members, the presentation of awards, a luncheon for representatives of local Heart units, a recep tion and dinner, and research and commercial exhibits. . And how about: Welcome to . Winter Park where the Rob bins take a Bath on Broadway near Bat Cave, while Alex ander in his Tuxedo, serves a Supply of Toast, walnut and Turkey to a little Vixen, full of Candor, waiting for the Com fort and Harmony of the Cashiers at the Gates of HoOkerton... I’m sure the real stories have a great deal of color. * Hoping you and your readers can be helpful in fulfilling our hunger for knowledge about your great state of North Carolina. Sincerely, Dorothy J. Loufek 6124 W. 104 Street Minneapolis, Mn. 55438 THE CHOWAN HERALD Michael Coughin Named Assistant Postmaster General For Finance Michael S. Coughlin, a career postal employee who has served in various management positions in the field and at headquarters, has been named by Postmaster General William F. Bolger to be Senior Assistant Postmaster General for Finance. Coughlin, who now serves as Executive Assistant to the Postmaster General, will assume the new position on June 1, succeeding Jim Finch, who on that date will become Deputy Postmaster General. While Executive Assistant to the Postmaster General, Coughlin has also served as secretary to the Postal Ser vice’s Executive Committee, in which rile he has teen a principal advisor to the Postmaster General on mat ters involving policy formula tion, organization and ad ministration. He also coor dinated meetings of the Board of Governors. Postmaster General 1 William F. Bolger said of his i appointment to head the Finance Group: “Mike Coughlin has held important management positions at the national, regional, district and local levels. He is thoroughly versed in postal policies and financial pro cedures. He is the ideal choice to maintain the fiscal integri ty of the postal system.” As Senior Assistant Postmaster General in charge of the Finance Group, Coughlin will have respon sibility for the Department of the Controller, the Office of the Treasurer, and the Rates and Classification Department. Coughlin entered the Postal Service in July, 1967 as a management intern and serv ed for three years in that posi tion in the Boston Region. He successively became a postal Service officer; chief of the Boston Region’s organization and management branch; Manager of the Portland, Maine, District; Assistant ■Postmaster General forSpp port, Northeast Postal Region; Regional Director, Customer Service, Northeast Region; Assistant Postmaster General, Mail Processing Department, USPS headquarters, and Regional Postmaster General, Western Region, un til May 29, 1983, when he returned to headquarters as Executive Assistant to the Postmaster General.' A native of Waterloo, lowa, Mr. Coughlin received a B.A. Degree from Loras College in Dubuque, lowa, in 1962, and engaged in further study in Business/Public Administra tion at Northeastern Univer sity in Boston. He also com pleted the Stanford Executive Program at Stanford Univer sity in Palo Alto, California. Prior to entering the Postal Service Coughlin was in the U.S. Navy from 1963 to 1966. He and his wife have two daughters and live in Burke Center, Virginia. "CharSe” Returns To Battleshp WILMINGTON—“CharIie” the alligator, resident mascot of the USS NORTH CAROLINA Battleship Memorial has returned from his winter hibernation. He was spotted by two sharp eyed third grade students from Brogden Primary School in Dudley, Katrina Oliver and Juanice Kearney. Katrinia and Juanice were with their class on a field day outing, touring tbe Battleship. A little suspicious that this might be another false start to the warm weather ahead (Charlie is most happy when the thermometer remains above eighty) the canny cayman was nearly invisible as only his eyes and the tip of his snout showed above the water. However, as the excited students called his name, he swam to the side of the ship and circled around hoping for a snack. When none was forthcoming, the disappointed amphibian headed back to the warm waters near the bank of the Memorial slip. "Mott paopta jud*a man only by tuccats or by fortuna.” La Rochafoucautd Survey On directly ment agencies. is, undermin ing economic growth and the ability these businesses have to hire the unemployed. Respondents to the survey by the National Federation of Independent Business rated costs that are regulated by government agencies as more than half of the top 10 con cerns for small business; while the other concerns result from an unhealthy economy. > “Among the most serious problems small, firms iden tified were ‘payroll taxes,’ which have been hiked twice in the last nine months,” said Dennis Julian, spokesman fdk NFIB/North Carolina members, noting that independent-business owners see lawmakers holding the key. , The survey, conducted in November, asked the 20,980 random small-business CUSTOM UPHOLSTERY CUSTOM DRAPERIES Our decorating service will help you choose any style window treat ment* then personalize it with your * Selection, of quality.fabrics. Have your furniture upholstery to coordinate with your decor. selection of fabrics Wallpaper Hours Monday thru Friday 8 to 5 By appointment other hours Visit our wprkroom today or call 482-2476 Ivey Meadows Upholstery and Interiors Northside Shopping Center «A reasonable alternative to expensive imports. g. Joe H ' i r* thought that high on model. 5 ... ’ quality, people-packaging Best of all, you’ll find our I efficiency, and, good prices foi Buick luxury and economy were only Buick quality especially at available from expensive tractive. Come in, soon, imports, look again. and drive the 1983 Buick rW Specifically look over our Skylark or Century, two 1983 Buick Skylark and reasonable alternatives to Century. the expensive imports. Here are cars that boast front-wheel drive, roomy | seating for five, generous (’“if trunk space, and a choice 'jfir * i Jig of engines ranging from a 2.5 liter four to a new 4.3 TdWI 1 fV* liter V-6 diesel, depending J Dll J J HL* LA. 1 IMhAMI yon Ml|y ntacr have a'Bukk? pjj VISIT THE HOME OF THE GIANT «sTllfll/r MOTOR corf. f/\[ 111 IK li EDENTON4B2-8421 ff IIUNU Broad St. Ext. Small Businesses Discussed owners to rate 72 problems by severity. Interest rates were rated No. 1, but researchers attribute the responses to the abnormally high interest rates at the tfpie the survey was taken.' Responses were categoriz ed by industry to find specific problem areas. Manufac turers and wholesalers were more concerned with worker productivity than other in dustries, while transportation firms were harder hit by government paperwork re quirements. Small retailers, on the other hand, found elec tricity rates harder to Swallow than most and agricultural firms had a big problem with competition from imported products. “Small entrepreneurs in metropolitan areas see their problems in the same order, and with roughly the same in tensity, as their smaU-town twins,” said Julian, adding that rural employers were less burdened by finding and keeping good workers than were the urban employers. Small, metropolitan businesses rated payroll taxes, benefit costs and locating qualified employees as bigger problems than either small-city or rural firms. Problems were rated similarly regardless of what Edenton-Chowan Lunch Menus May 23-27, 1983 MONDAY-Breakfast- Orange Juice, Assorted Cereals, and Milk. Lunch- Hot Dogs/Bun, Ketchup/Mustard, Baked Beans, Fruit Cup, and Milk. TUESDAY—Breakfast- Orange Juice, Cheese Toast, and Milk. Lunch- Lasagna, Tossed Salad, Pineapple, Rolls, and Milk. WEDNESDAY—Breakfast- Apple Sauce, Sausage Biscuit, and Milk. Lunch- Pizza, Potato Rounds/Ketchup, Fruit Juices, and Milk. THURSDAY—Breakfast- Cup of Juice, Cinnamon Bun, FOR SALE State Rd 1204 By Owner * Brick Veneer Great Room Wall to Wall Carpet 2 Baths j Heat Pump 3 Bedrooms : Central Air Bui it 1979 Fireplace Large t ot Call 482-8769 Page 9-B state or region the business was located in, except when reflecting a public policy NFIB members ranked dii ficulties including good highways, adequate parking or public transportation at the bottom of their priorities list and Milk. Lunch Poik w/Gravy, Steamed Rice, Green Beans, Peaches, Holts and Milk. FRIDAY—Fruit or Juice. Doughnuts, and Milk Lunch Beef-A-Roni, Broccoli, But tered Corn, Prunes, and Mitk /Spsik Among the many , things that have been nianufac tured to coddle the own ers of pets are a pair of doggie sunglasses aiso dog gie pajamas.