Newspapers / The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.) / Jan. 24, 1985, edition 1 / Page 6
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Weeks To Come MUSIC BOOSTER - Hoke Co. Musk Booster Association meetings will be first Monday night of every month at Hoke High School bend room at 7 p.m. Parents and Mends of the music association are urged to attend. AIRPORT AUTHORITY -The Hoke/Raeford Airport Authority will hold its regular meeting at the Raeford City Hall on the secead Ttanday of each month at 7:43 p.m. AMERICAN LEGION -American Legion Post 20 of Hoke County meets the secoad Tuesday of each month at the Edinborough Restaurant at 8 p.m. Those interested in join ing are invited. COUNTY COMMISSION ?Members of the Hoke County Commission meet the first Monday of each month at 9 a.m. and the third Monday at 7:30 p.m. Pratt Building located at 227 N. Main St. in Raeford. The public is invited. CITY COUNCIL ?? The Raeford City Council meets the first Monday of each month at 7 p.m. in City Hall. The public is encouraged to attend. SCHOOL BOARD - The Hoke County Board of Educa tion meets the first Tnesday of each month at 7:30 p.m. st the board offices on Wooley Street. The public is encourag ed to attend. AL ANON - Meetings are held every Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the Library Conference Room. JAYCEES - Raeford Jaycees meet the 2nd and 4th Monday of each month over Howell's Drug Company on Main Street. Anyone interested is in vited to attend. Feb. 2 VETERANS BENEFITS ?Detailed explanations of the full range of benefits available to veterans and their families will be presented at an Infor mation Rally on Feb. 2 at the D.A.V. Chapter 46 Home, S20 Johnson Street, FayetteviUe, N.C. Sponsored by the Depart ment of North Carolina Disabl ed American Veterans - the D.A.V. - the rally is especially for veterans and dependents within commuting distance of FayetteviUe. tfcni March 10 SKY SHOW - The Fayetteville State University Planetarium will present the sky show "Cosmic Dimensions." This planetarium program brings in to focus the size of the Universe by discussing the relative distance from Earth to the Moon and other planets, then the star, galaxies, and the in tense, rapidly receding quasars. "Cosmic Dimensions" will be presented on Sundays at 3 p.m. through March 10. Admission is $2 for adults and Si for children and students with pro per identification. For more in formation call 486-1681 or 486-1650 between 8 a.m. and 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Jan. 28, Feb. 4 INTERVENTION WORK SHOP - As a public service. The Life Center of Fayetteville will present a new series of workshops for family members and otheK whose lives are af fected by the alcoholic/drug addict. This new series of workshops will be held at The Life Center of Fayetteville, 3425 Melrose Road, Fayet teville, NC 28304, on Jaa. 28 mud Feb. 4 from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. each night. To register, or for further information, con tact The Life Center, 485-7188. Jaa. 28 TUTORS NEEDED - A Laubach Tutor Workshop has been scheduled for Jaa. 28, from 6:30 p.m.-9*.30 p.m. in the Literacy Office on El wood Avenue. If you read weU, care about people and can spare just three hours a week please telephone 875-2145. Training and materials are free. Jaa. 3 t -Feb. 2 CRIMES OF HEART - The University Theatre of Pem broke State University wffl pre sent "Crimes of the Heart" by Beth Henley at the Performing Arts Center on Jaa. 31 through Feb. 2, at 8 p.m. Oeneral ad mission tickets are S3. Par more taformatkm call Ike Per forming Arts Caster at 521-0778. ?nM.? . AMADKUS - The Fafettevilk LMe Theatre prodwtWm at 1*1 >or three MMM. "P* Peh. J. Written by PeNr Shaf fer (BQUUS. KRAMER m. KKAMBR. B.T.), AMADBUS is the longest raining ikiM la netu Broadway hiilory. LwUn Um caat far thia pro duction will be May on Weeks of Fayatteriht as the cwnpoaer Antonio Salieri and Bill Allen of Chapel Hill as his rival, Wolfgang Aaadeus Mozart. Katie Johnston of Chapel Hill will appear as Conttanre, Mozart's wife. For reserva tions, please call the Little Theatre Box Office at 323-4233 between 4 and 9 p.m. after January 9. Feb. 1, 2, 3 TENNIS TOURNEY - Clover - field Tennis and Swim Club, 1719 Middle Road. Fayet teville. North Carolina, will sponsor the INS ClavcrfleM New Year's daarfc. This adult tournament, in its third year, is sanctioned by the United States Tennis Association, the Southern Tennis Association, and the North Carolina Tennis Association. The tournament is set for Feb. 1, 2, and 3 with a rain date set for Feb. 8, 9 and 10. Events include Mens and w omens Singles and Doubles and Mixed Doubles. Entry fee is $10 for singles, and S12 per doubles team. Entry deadline is Friday, January 23 at 6 p.m. We will not be able to accept telephone entries. Entry blanks are available at area tennis clubs or may be sent direct upon request. For more infor mation about the Third Annual Cloverfield New Year's Classic Tennis tournament call (919) 323-4446. March 14-lt INDIAN CONFERENCE -Indians from across the state will gather at the Bordeaux Motor Inn in Fayetteville March 14-16, 1983, for the Tenth Annual North Carolina Indian Unity Conference. The conference sponsor. United Tribes of North Carolina (UTNC), is currently finalizing plans for the annual conference which will have as its theme, "Memories of Our Past, Vi sions of Our Future." The con ference pre-registration fee will be S30 per person. The registra tion fee at the conference will be S35. Separate tickets for the banquet only will be available for SIS. Persons wishing more information about the con ference should contact one of the mtiubei organizations of UTNC, which includes seven North Carolina Indian com munity organizations and the N.C. Commission of Indian Affairs. CRAFT SEMINAR - Hoke County craftsmen will have an opportunity to learn some marketing skills at a Craft Marketing Seminar to be held on Thursday, Jan. 24, from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Elizabeth town. The seminar is open to craftsmen, shop owners, or anyone interested in marketing crafts. Dr. Robert Dahle, Extension Specialist in Business Management and Cooperatives with the North Carolina Agricultural Exten sion Service, will discuss how to price crafts. Other speakers will cover such topics as where to sell, recognizing quality, and how to display, package, and label crafts. The crafts market is very competitive today and craftsmen must not only pro duce quality items but use the very best marketing techniques to realize a profit. The crafts marketing seminar, sponsored by the North Carolina Agricultural Extension Service will be held in the Bladen County Agricultural Center. Complete information and registration forms are available from the Hoke County Exten sion Office on South Magnolia Street. Deadline for registra tion is January II. For more in formation, contact Alice Pettitt at 173-2162. ABUSE WORKSHOP - The Hoke County Oiri Scouts win sponsor a child abuse workshop for all girls from 5th grade through 12th grade on Jaa. 26. The workshop will be held at the National Ouard Ar mory hegtaaiac at 10 a.m. Parents are urged to attend the workshop with thdr daughters. Nob Scoots are wrfoooMd to at tend abo. There will he no charge for the workshop. For further iaforaatioa call 875-5237 after 6 p.m. KARATE TOWAIiDIT oat and waleh the action! . Thau ?fll ha tBapilRlan for mutton for spectators will be SI. Hm Soldier Entertainment Center it located on Butner load, bmiiu Collins and Gorham Streets, in the Old Divitioa area, For more infor mation, call the centcr at 396-3919. ON tl'V - Noted author Maya Angelou exudes her charactislic jo! de vivrt in the special "And Still I Rise: Maya Angelou. " This production of The Univer sity of North Carolina Center for Public Television airs Sun day, February 3. 10 p.m. (ET). DICKENS SEMINAR - Hoke County Agricultural Extension Service will be offering a free Humanities Seminar on the topic "Charles Dickens and America" which will begin on Jaa. 28. The eight-hour seminar will meet at the Lester Building on South Magnolia Street from 7-9 p.m. on Jan. 28, Feb. 25. March 25 and April 29. The seminar will be led by Dr. Elliot Engel, Pro fessor of English at North Carolina State University and Director of Humanities Exten sion Program. Dr. Engel will give seminar participants a detailed account of Dickens' life and writing career and then explore Dicken's visits to America which led to the writing of one of his greatest, yet now neglected novel, Mar tin ChuzzJewit. Seminar par ticipants will be reading and discussing the novel which Pro fessor Engel will distribute at the first meeting and collect when the seminar concludes. Anyone desiring to participate ? in the tern in ai should call (he Agricultural Extension Service by January. 23 at 875-2162. Please help us spread the word on this seminar. MATH AND SCIENCE - The N.C. School of Science and Mathematics has opened its formal 1984-85 nomination process by mailing information books and application forms to high schools throughout the state. The school is looking for about 200 students to make up next fall's 11th grade. Applica tions must be postmarked by Jan. 31. Applicants must take the Scholastic Aptitude Test (SAT) no later than the Jan. 26 testing date. MICROWAVE WORKSHOP ? A microwave workshop will be held Monday, Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. at the Lester Building on South Magnolia Street. The workshop is sponsored by the Agricultural Extension Service and is free. The microwave workshop is for people who have a microwave, but do not use it to its full potential, peo ple who have questions on microwaves, people who just got a microwave or people who are interested in getting a microwave. Dr. Nadine Tope, Extension Foods Specialist from NCSU, will be conduct ing the workshop if twenty peo ple preregister. Interested per sons are asked to preregister by calling 87S-2162. JELLY SALES - Raeford Jaycees are oaoe again prepar ing for their annual Jaycee Jel ly Sales to raiae money for the North Carolina Jaycee Burn Center located in Chapel HID Lasting throughout the nouth of January, this year'* cam palpi ?i ha the 1 1th year of the Jaiy Sales. Jaycee chapters al across the state wfl be safi iaglhejanaf )eBy forSI each. COMMUNITY CHORUS -Efforts m being aatfe to oqabt a Haka County Cosa interested idtfti tfwiffMf ^ Job* n 1111 at wts-xrt. ftra Feb. 3 COOKIE TIMS ? Girl Scouts will be taking orders throughout our 20 counties **?? * ???. 3. Cookie delivery win be Feb. 24-March 1. Oirls will alto sell cookies ' directly from Feb. 24 through March 24. Cookies will be bak ed by Little Brownie Bakers. Louisville, Kentucky. There are seven varieties - all are praaer vative free and kosher. Cookies in Pines or Carolina Council *ell for S2 per box. Proceeds are used to support troop ac tivities and community pro jects. Troops keep 25' from encfa box sold. Oiri Scouts in Hoke County will be knocking on your doors starting January IS to take your orders. Enjoy yoor cookies and know that you are helping girls grow. If you are not contacted by a Girl Scout and wish to order cookies, call Shirley Ferguson, 875-4473. March 1 BEEF COOK OFF - If you have a beef dish that you're particularly proud of, now is the time to enter it in the Na tional Beef Cook-Off. You could win an expense-paid trip ' to Wichita, Kansas Sept. 24-26 where you'll represent North Carolina and compete for a top prize of $5,000. To enter, send a typed copy of your recipe (in cluding name, address, phone number and a brief statement about the origin of your recipe) to: National Beef Cook-Off, 444 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago, 111. 60611. Entries must be postmarked no later than March I. Recipes are judged in state-by-state com petition. State winners then travel to Wichita to compete in the National Beef Cook-Off. Prizes at the national level are: first place, $5,000; second place. $2,500; third place. $1,000; five honorable men tions, $300 each. Any beef recipe using chuck, round, fresh brisket, plate, shank and ground beef is eligible. All recipes must contain a minimum of one pound of beef and not more than five, and each serving must contain at least three ounces of cooked beef. Meat used must be ex clusively beef. Cooking time cannot exceed four hours. The recipe must be specific, with no use of brand names, and must state the number of servings and approximate preparation _Jime. All entries become the p*opoti.af the. American tional CowBelles, Inc. March 14-16 INDIAN ART CONTEST -An art contest to recognize the talent of American Indian artists in North Carolina will be one of the many features of the Tenth Annual North Carolina Indian Unity Conference to be held March 14-16, at ihe Bordeaux Motor Inn in Fayet teville. The North Carolina Commission of Indian Affairs, a member organization or UTNC, will coordinate the contest. For more information on contest rules and regula tions, contact Teresa Em manuel at , the commission, P.O. Box 27228, Raleigh, N.C. 27611 or call 919-733-5998. CALLING IT QUITS - ' Call ing it Quits" was the theme of the 1984 American Heart Association anti-smoking public service announcements. "Smoking has been called cool, hep, groovy ... Now, let's just call it QUITS." A smoking cessation packet is available for $1.00 from the American Heart Association, North Carolina Affiliate, P.O. Box 2636, One Heart Circle, Chapel Hill, N.C. 27515-2636. Start the New Year out right by "Calling it Quits." TAX INFO ? North Carolina taxpayers having questions when preparing their 1984 Federal income tax returns may use one of several telephone numbers in addition to the toll free system, the Internal Revenue Service said. The system is called "Tele-Tax" and is available 24 hours a day, seven days a week. It offers more than ? 140 information tapes on subjects including Til ing requirements, itemized deductions, Social Security tax ation, tax credits, types of in come and adjustments to in come. "Tele-Tax" is available only to owners of push-button telephone*, who have a choice of seven numbers to call for taped messages. The number in FayatteviRe is 4*3-0735. These numbers and a listing of tapes by number are included in the tax forms package mailed to in dividuals and in IRS Publica tion 910. When one of the numbers it called, a message will be heard giving instruc tions on how to use the system. THESE ARE NOT TOLL FRB9 NUMBERS. Bill Lowlm, Chief of the IRS Taipayer Service Division, remarked, "Last year we raafodafeoM 10,000 calls am the "fete-Tax" system. We HfMyn II M lad k for thoaa the toll-free system, or who aead am '^formation during ' wwfap or waefc?di ." No time for rocking With temperatures dipping to minus 5, there were not any takers for these inviting rockers of this Magnolia Street house. JaZftJband to perform at Sandhills . The Sandhills Community Col lege Jazz Band and Choir will per form at the Southern Pines Perfor ming Arts Center on Thursday, February 7 at 8 p.m. The Jazz Band will open the per formance with eight "big band" selections. Included on the program are such standards as Gershwin's "Rhapsody in Blue," Duke Ell ington's "Moon Indigo," The Glenn Miller Orchestra's version of "A String of Pearls," Sammy Nestico's arrangements of "On the Sunny Side of the Street," and "Show Me the Way to Go Home." John Barry's "Bone Case Full O' Blues" (featuring the trombones) and "The Curly Shuffle" ("a vaudeville-style number that's as much fun as a three Stooges movie") round out the first part of the program. Next, the Jazz Band will be join ed by vocalist Alison Lawrence Smith to perform "Quiet Nights of Quiet Stars," "The Nearness of You," "Moonlight in Vermont," and "Tuxedo Junction.", Under the direction of SCC vocal instructor Frances Wilson and accompanied by Barbara Williams, the Choir will then per form choral selections from the musical "Oliver." The singers will also present an arrangement of "Boogie Woogie Bugle Boy." Jazz Band Director Timothy Haly predicts the best program ever and invites everyone to come and enjoy the duel performance. This concert is supported in par ty by The Arts Countil of Moore County with funds from The Grassroots Arts Program of the North Carolina Arts Countil, a state agency. HEARTY i ~ "2 We Specialize In Fresh Cut Meats 70 POUND BOX OF CHICKEN 3920 FRESH ns 59!*S Limit 1 Bag w/?10 Qroccry Onto HOLSUM BREAD till 99< SIRLOIN STEAK 2". T-BONE STEAK 2". EATWELL MACKARELi APPLES 15 oz. can I 3 lb. bag W? AcCODt WIC VOUCHERS FOOD STAMPS FATBACK ARMOUR TREET 12 o?. can 1* WALDORF TISSUE \t HOURS: (AM. ? 10 P.M.' ?UN. *30 AM. ? 10 P.M. WE HAVE WHITE KEROSENE ? ? Wockffch, N.C. I
The News-Journal (Raeford, N.C.)
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Jan. 24, 1985, edition 1
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