INSIDE TODAY Look for the Fitness and Health 2015 Edition "News from Next Door" JANUARY 21, 2015 - JANUARY 27, 2015 50 cents Waterway cleanup to start very soon BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Officials hope to start work soon clearing down trees along the New River in Perquimans County. Half of the $30,000 project is funded by the county and the other half comes from a grant. Some of the debris dates back to recent hurricanes, but a lot of it came after tor nadoes in April of last year, said Rodney Johnson, chair man of the Albemarle RC&D Council. The council serves Camden, Chowan, Cur-, rituck, Dare, Gates, Hyde, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Tyrrell and Washington Counties. Johnson said originally the RC&D lobbied for $99,000 to deal with problems in those 10 counties. Other counties also wanted help and the General Assembly eventu ally approved $250,000 to cover a 19-county area The fallen trees have ef fectively closed a boat ramp on the Little River in the Woodville area, Johnson said. “You can get a boat in there, but then you can only go 15 feet or so in one direc tion or 20 feet in the other.” The trees aren’t just a problem for boaters. John son said fallen trees could contribute to flooding up stream. The Little River flows Parkville to the Albe marle Sound. “It’s a drainage and flood prevention measure,” he See CLEANUP, 2 I STAFF PHOTOS BY PETER WILLIAMS McKinley Strother speaks to an audience Monday at First Baptist Missionary Church in Hertford. Young, old honor King at event BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor T hose who lived through the Civil Rights battles of the 1960s and some who weren’t even born yet remembered the con tributions of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. in Hertford Monday. A celebration service was held at First Baptist Missionary Church on Hyde Park Street. The guest speaker, McKinley Strother, thanked that or ganizers for letting a younger voice be heard. Strother, 20, is a junior at Elizabeth City State University and president of the Student Govern ment Association. He’s a native of Hampton, Va. “I’m about the youngest person here, and I’m oveijoyed and grateful. It means I know you’re listening and want to hear what I have to say.” Yet Strother said he wished the crowd was more diverse. “The ratio is off,’ Strother told the audience as he looked out at the Nasean Holley rests on the shoulder of a woman Monday during a Martin Luther King Jr. service in Hertford. crowd. It was almost all black and mostly older residents. Strother said King was the voice that woke up the nation and his ef forts live today in a life that is better for all. But the challenges remain, he said, and people need to cast off viewing things with race as their lens. See MLK DAY, 2 Schools look to recoup lunch fees BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Perquimans County stu dents who rack up more than $20 in unpaid lunch room fees will be served vegetables and fruit until the bill is reduced under a new policy. As of Jan. 15 the school system had 318 students who owed a total of $2,941. The school system al ready reaches out to parents to make sure they know of free or reduced-price lunch programs, but sometimes they only apply until after the debt mounts up. Under the new policy the school system will reach out to parents at least three times to get the overdue bill paid; The first will come when the debt hits $10, the second when it hits $15. The third is when it hits the $20 cap. Once the parent gets the third notice, students will get two portions of veg etables and two portions of fruit. Just what kind depends on what is on the menu that day. In the case of the Jan. 29 menu, that would be potato wedges, green beans, pears and fresh apple slices plus milk. The next day, the stu dent would get glazed carrot coins, green peas, peaches, a banana and milk. They will still be charged the normal lunch fee. About 52 percent of the 1,800 students in the Per quimans system qualify for a free lunch. Another 8 See PRICES, 3 Local farm named 2014s top cotton consultant BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor A Tennessee-based magazine has named a Belvidere man as the country’s top cotton consultant for 2014. Cotton Farming magazine has given the award since 1981 when a consultant in Arizona won it. Stan Winslow, 58, is the first North Caro lina resident to win it since Danny Pierce of Princeton captured the ti tle in 2003. He’s only the third win ner from the state. Texas has been home to seven winners, including the 2013 recipient from Plainview. Winslow deflected the praise to his wife, Lou Ann, his employees and his God. “I have 14 other full-time people besides myself in the company and they all do their jobs, they do a great job. And I couldn’t have done it without my wife.” The 58-year-old Belvidere native earned a bachelor’s degree from N.C. State University and then spent some time as a county exten sion agent and working for Peele Ag Consulting. In 1998 he started Tidewater Ag ronomics, Inc. Things have changed since then. When he started, cotton was the mqjor crop in northeastern North Carolina. “We did a lot more cotton work than we do now, and we did some potatoes, but they were no where near the major part of it: When we started cotton was the most profit able crop you could grow, but now that’s different. Com, soybeans, and wheat are in there, therefore the cotton acreage went down.” In the latest U.S.D.A crop report for North Carolina, soybeans were by far the biggest crop at 1.75 mil lion acres. Com for grain followed at 840,000 acres and cotton was at 460,000 acres. Tidewater scouts between 8,000 and 10,000 cotton acres, 40,000 acres of soybeans, 20,000 acres of wheat, 5,000 acres of potatoes, 5,000 acres of com and small number of cabbage, melon and peanut acres. The company started with three full-time employees and 18 part- time workers during the summer. Now Winslow has 14 full-time em ployees. “I really didn’t think we’d get to this point, but the Lord has a plan. I believe he’s put the team of people See TOP AWARD, 3 SUBMITTED PHOTO Perquimans County crop consultant Stan Winslow was honored as the top cotton consultant of 2014 in the January issue of Cotton Farmer magazine. Scout accomplishes his mom’s dream Program planned on historic portraits BY REGGIE PONDER Chowan Herald The path to Eagle Scout always is challenging, but for Larry Gutmann it took a tragic turn last fall. His mother, Janet Gut mann, died in October of last year of injuries suffered in an automobile accident. She was 52, a nurse — and a staunch supporter of her son’s Scouting endeavors. So as painful a loss as it was, he s^id the death of his mother in no way slowed him down in pursuing his goal of being an Eagle Scout. “It made me want to do it more than ever,” Gutmann said in an interview follow ing his Eagle Court of Honor Jan. 12 at the American Le gion Post 126 on Academy Street in Hertford. Gutmann, 18, is a senior at Perquimans High School. “She was always pushing me to make it and I knew that it would make her hap- py-” See GUTMANN, 2 John Lawrence Newby BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor An art conservator from Durham is scheduled to host a program on the res toration of historical por traits in Hertford on Feb. 1. The event will be held in the visitor’s center of the Newbold-White House on Harvey Point Road at 2:30 p.m. There is no admission fee, but donations will be accepted. The focus of the program will be on two portraits do nated to the Perquimans County Restoration Associ ation of area residents from the 1800s. The speaker is Janet Hessling of Hessling Conservation, LLC. The portrait of John Lawrence Newby was donated in 1962 by Mrs. George W. Bradshaw (Mary Newby White). The por trait had long hung in the Bradshaw’s family home in Belvidere, but its history is largely unknown. It is known that New by was born was born Nov. 15, 1796, likely at Belvidere Plantation, at the home of his parents, Exum Newby and Martha Lawrence Newby. In 1819 John Newby moved to Vir ginia and settled in or near Richmond. Little is known of his life in Virginia, ex cept that he returned to Perquimans in 1870. The latest donation is a See PORTRAITS, 3