School News
Sandhills offers health session
at Hoke Library on September 11
The Division of Continuing
Education at Sandhills- Communi
ty College, in conjunction with
Healthcare Services of America ?
HSA Cumberland Hospital - is of
fering a aeries of five seminars
dealing with current health issues.
Each two-hour session will meet
at the Hoke County Public Library
in Raeford from 3:30 - 5:30 p.m.
on five consecutive Tuesdays.
Sessions begin on September 1 1
and continue through October 9.
The series, entitled "Take
Five," will consider mental health
issues affecting parents, teachers,
and anyone interested in
understanding topics associated
with mental health.
Each session will be conducted
by a member of the professional
staff of the hospital and the Life
Center of Fayetteville.
The first session will consider
depression in students from
kindergarten to college, and will be
led by Dr. David Marcotte.
The following week, Dr. Robert
Blackburn will consider
"Alchoholism: The Disease of
Denial."
Week three will be devoted to
"Positive Addictions: Exercise,
Nutrition, and Relationships" and
will be led by Dr. Steven
Levenberg.
Session four is entitled
"Children Who Can't" (read,
learn, behave). Dr. Norman
Snyder will conduct this session.
The final topic addressed will be
"Avoiding Burnout" and will in
clude discussions of stress manage
ment in a two-career marriage,
problems associated with inter
nalizing children's trauma, etc.
Judy Potts, RN and assistant ad
ministrator of Healthcare Services
of America will lead this session.
These seminars will carry 1 CEU
of teacher recertification credit.
Students must register at the first
class meeting on September 11.
The registration fee is $10 for the
series. North Carolina residents
age 63 or older pay no registration
fee.
Adult testing program offered
Adults in this area now have the
opportunity to participate in a na
tional testing program designed to
help them evaluate their own
educational accomplishments and
to get recognition of these ac
complishments from their
employer or from a college or
university.
The tests, part of the College
Level Examination Program
(CLEP) of the College Board, are
given every month, except
February and December, by Dr.
Elbert Patton, Director of the
Career and Personal Counseling
Center at St. Andrews
Presbyterian College in Laurin
burg.
CLEP, according to Dr. Patton,
is designed primarily to serve men
and women who have furthered
their education by independent
study, correspondence courses, on
the-job training, evening school or
other "non-traditional" forms of
study.
Many colleges are also using the
CLEP tests to evaluate students
with more traditional academic
preparation.
Various employers and agencies
use the CLEP tests as a way to
recognize college equivalency for
promotion, admission advanced
training, licensing, or certification.
Those interested in taking CLEP
tests should check with the col
leges, employer or agency they are
interested in to learn how their
CLEP test results might be used.
The College Board, an associa
tion of about a thousand colleges,
universities and schools and the
sponsor of CLEP, does not itself
award credit or on-the-job recogni
tion. Such credit or recognition is
granted by the college, company or
agency that uses CLEP scores.
Two kinds of tests are available
within CLEP.
The General Examinations
measure an individual's achieve
ment in broad areas of knowledge.
They are not based on specific col
lege courses, but rather, seek to
cover the broad scope of studies re
quired of most students during
their first two years of college.
The General Examinations are
complemented by a number of
Subject Examinations which are
designed to evaluate an
individual's accomplishment in the
area of a specific college course.
Tests are offered in subjects
ranging from Analysis and Inter
pretation of Literature to Com
puters and Data Processing.
Registration materials are
available at no charge from the
College-Level Examination Pro
gram, Princeton, New Jersey
08541 , or from the Career and Per
sonal Counseling Center at St. An
drews College.
Lewis promoted
Charles E. Lewis, son of Charles
G. and Gale S. Lewis of Rural
Route 1, Shannon, has been pro
moted in the U.S. Air Force to the
rank of first lieutenant.
Lewis is an electronic warefare
officer at Barksdale Air Force
Base, Louisiana, with the 596th
Bombardment Squadron.
He is a 1982 graduate of North
Carolina State University, Raleigh.
Pre-Lab&r Bat ?on?irt
South Hoke Review
South Hoke Community
Formerly The Old Jaycee Hut
PRESENTS
MOTOWN'S OWN
Roy "C"
SINGING HIS LATEST RECORDINGS:
"/ Shot The Man"
"I Want To Be Where You Are "
"After Loving You "
"Leaving On The Morning Train"
"If / Could Love You Forever"
WITH
* COUNTRY STEELERS *
CAPTAIN PUNK
Sat., September 1, 1984
TWO BIG SHOWS
First Show 8-12 p.m. Second Show 12-4 a.m.
Advanced Tickets $7?? Door *8??
For Advanced Tickets Call 277-0289 or 843-2198
Tickets On Sale:
B&F TV and Record Store, Mexton
Carolina Indian Voice, Pembroke
LRDA Office, Raeford
Receives doctoral
Linda Kay Barlow, a native of
Park ton, received a Doctor of
Philosophy degree this month
from the University of North
Carolina at Chapel Hill. Barlow
was awarded the Ph.D. degree
in English after completing a
dissertation on " Musical Im
agery in the Poetry of Keats. "
Dr. Richard Harter Fogle,
University Distinguished pro
fessor emertlus at UNC-CH,
directed her dissertation work.
The daughter of Edith Black
Barlow of Parkton and the late
Dewey Foch Barlow, she receiv
ed her B.A. degree from UNC
Greensboro in 1970 and her
M.A. from UNC-CH in 1974.
Both degrees are in English. She
teaches in the Department of
English at Meredith College in
Raleigh.
Sandhills deans lists
honors Hoke students
The following area students
have been placed on the Dean's
List at Sandhills Community Col
lege for the Summer of '84
quarter.
To be placed on the list, a stu
dent must achieve a grade point
average of 3.3 on twelve or more
hours of course work.
Those honored are:
Lou V. Chambers, Stephen C.
Ellis, Annie R. Harris, Jennifer L.
Manning, Mary P. Sappenfield,
and Cynthia J. Wilson-Banks, all
of Raeford.
Three county students
honored at Robeson Tech
Three Hoke County students are
on Robeson Technical College's
Dean's List for the 1983-84 Sum
mer Quarter. (These students ob
tained a 3.0 grade point average.)
Jo A. Allen, Anita B. Phillips,
and Mary G. Wilson, all of
Raeford, were named to the list.
Money course for women
slated for Sandhills
A course entitled Financial Plan
ning for Women will be offered at
Hoke High School through Sand
hills Community College this fall.
Instructed by Bruce E.
Holdridge, a Certified Financial
Planner associated with Wheat,
First Securities in Southern Pines,
the course will address various per
sonal financial issues including
assest accumulation, risk manage
ment, investment alternatives, tax
management, gifting, retirement
planning and estate planning.
The objectives of the course are
to provide the financial planning
techniques and methods necessary
for the student to analyze their cur
rent financial posture, delineate
specific financial needs and objec
tives and develop their own per
sonal financial plan aimed at satis
fying those needs and objectives.
The course will meet on
Thursdays from 7-9 p.m. from
September 6 - October 1 1 .
Cost for the course is $10.
Seamanship, boating skills on tap for continuing ed
The Division of Continuing
Education at Sandhills Communi
ty College will offer a course entitl
ed "Boating Skills and Seaman
ship" this fall quarter. The class
will meet on Tuesday and Thurs
day nights from 7-10 p.m. in room
106 of the Kennedy Building on the
SCC campus. The course begins on
September 1 1 and will continue for
six weeks.
The course instructor is Roger
Cram, Power Boat Squadron, US
Coast Guard Auxiliary. Those
who complete the course will be
rewarded a certificate. An optional
exam is available at the end of the
course. A passing score will result
in 15% savings on boating in
surance premiums.
Topics to be considered during
the course include general safety,
legal requirements, navigation
rules, piloting, marine engines,
marlinlike seamanship, sailing,
weather, radiotelephone, and
maritime buoyage system.
The cost of the class is $10.
Students may register on the first
night of class (Sept. 1 1) or on Con
tinuing Education Registration
Day August 28, in the Student
Building on campus. North
Carolina residents age 6S or older
are not charged tuition.
For more information about this
Continuing Education opportuni
ty, contact Ben Pate at 692-6185.
To learn how to "bird-proof"
its planes, the U.S. Air Force is
hurling dead chickens at airplanes,
reports the National Wildlife
Federation. The four-pound
chicken carcasses are shot into
engineer windshields and landing
gear from a 20-foot cannon to re
enact birds smashing into jets,
which can cause serious accidents.
GoU'i, ^
Food store
COMET
RICE
2 lb. bag
59?
FRESH
LEAN
HAMBURGER
99? r,
LIBBY'S
CORNED
BEEF
1 2 oz. can
19
RINSO
DETERGENT
129
49 OZ. I
GENERIC
PAPER
TOWELS
2/100
LUZIANNE RT ^ QQ
COFFEE 1 1 99
KRAFT DELUXE
MACARONI &
CHEESE
DINNERS
*|09
JEWEL
SHORTENING
179
42 OZ.
PILLSBURY
CAKE MIX
Ass't flavors
79c
WHITE
POTATOES
159
10 lb. bag
LUX or DOVE
LIQUID
DETERGENT
22W99C
FRESH FISH DRESSED DAILY