West Craven Highlights News From Along The Hanks Of The Netise [fppr NUUNAL WWSnWfll AssooAiai VOLUME 12 NO. 16 APRIL 20,1989 VANCEBORO, NORTH CAROLINA PHONE 244-0780 OR 946-3144 (UPSP 412-110) 25 CENTS ' SIX PAGES Big Top, Big Fun, Big Time The 1989 edition of the Clyde Beatty-Cole Bros. Circus will bring its Big Top to New Bern for *W«l>erformances Friday, round ing out its stay in Craven County. The circus, which will finish its run in Havelock with two per formances today, will bring a variety of acts to New Bern tomorrow. Showtimes are 4:30 and 8 p.m. Friday and the same times today at Havelock. The new Big Top will be located at the fairgrounds west of New Bern near the Berne Restaurant and Nichols department store. Tickets are $8 for adults (age 13 to 64), $4 for children (12 and under) and $4 for people 65 and over. Reserved seats are$l extra. The public is invited to the tent-raising that begins about 7 a.m. Friday. A herd of elephants provide power to hoist the enor mous red, white and blue tent, Wliieh is larger than a football field. Robert Morton, marketing director, said this year’s show has been reworked from acts to equipment. Morton said several new acts have been added and crowd favorites from over the years have been retained. The new tent and new lighting add to spectators' enjoyment he said. While some circus-goers attend the show to unwind, one performer takes her moments under the Big Top to tie things up. Xochit), spotlighted in the center ring, displays stamina and coordination inherited from Aztec ancestors to create a dis play of body contortion. Clumsy, but cuddly, Welde’s Russian bears matcli wits with (See CIRCUS, Page 5) Town History To Be Drawn By Art Club Vanceboro Mural To Trace Major Events Of Community Finding a congress of comical creatnres means the circns is in town and it will be in New Bern for two performances Friday at 4:30 and 8 p.m. with animals, acrobats and aerial daredevils for ebUdren of all ages to see Leonardo Da Vinci is renowned for his Mona Lisa, Michaelangelo is known for painting the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel and Picas so’s paintings during his Cubist period are world-famous. Maybe some art students from West Craven High School will become famous for painting a wall in Vanceboro. The town may not be aware of it yet, but there will soon be quite a bit of activity down at the Van ceboro Flea Market. Some resi dents may have noticed the front wall of the building housing the flea market was painted in the fall. The purpose of the painting was to prime the wall for a mural. And what will be painted on the wall? The wall will become of portrait of Vanceboro. The mural already has a title although the composition has not been com pleted. “Then and Now — The Town Wall’’ explains the subject matter. The mural will be a chro nological history of Vanceboro. The mural will read from left to right — past to present. The idea for the project was ori ginated by Lori Shepley, the art teacher at West Craven High School. Mrs. Shepley said she has always dreamed of working on a mural, especially since her two-year stay in California where she saw many murals used for decoration on seawalls and sides of buildings. The project has been in the planning stages for about a year. Mrs. Shepley and her art club members have been discussing and planning the mu ral and the message it will tell. Mrs. Shepley wrote a proposal to accompany an applicatin for a mini-grant from Craven County. The proposal was approved and the money appropriated for the project. Current art club members are excited and eager to begin paint ing, but cannot begin until the composition is complete. The art club is asking area residents to located old photographs or prints that may give a good visual reference to draw from. Some photographs have been located but the club members feel other appropriate material may be stored in attics, closets and other locations. Anyone that thinks they may have useful material or informa tion concerning possible scenes for the mural is asked to contact Mrs. Shepley at West Craven High School. Recycling Solving Several Problems With Minimum Efforts As stories of environmental damage seem to multiply almost daily, many people wonder what they can do to help alleviate some of the problems. One of the best ways for anyone to help is simply to become aware of how much our typical daily activities add to pollution, and to cut back on those activities which pro duce the most unnecessary waste. Occasionally this may involve some personal inconvenience or change in habit, but there is one very positive step many of us can take that is not hard at all: recycl ing. In fact, recycling programs ^^^**filuminum, glass and paper have been started in several towns in eastern North Carolina (including Washington, Green ville and Kinston) and many other towns have private recycl ing centers where people can turn in recyclables on their own. Recycling provides a wide range of benefits, with the most recognizable advantage for a given community probably Analysis being the space saved in the local laiidflil. Every city in North Caro lina has a responsibility to dis pose of the trash of its citizens, and most cities use landfills to do so. This requires buying a large tract of suitable land for the land fill site, to which collected trash is hauled, dumped and covered with layers of dirt. But this method of handling trash not only has a rather li mited life expectancy, its en vironmental soundness is also questionable in view of the many toxic household chemicals that go out with tile garbage every day and wind up in landfills. Underground leaching of these chemicals into the water table and fires that produce toxic smeke are just two of the poten tial environmental hazards of landfills. Combined with the in- evitahle limitation of space they give us strong incentive for mini mizing landflll use. Recycling can offer flirther be nefit directly to the community if a recycling center is located in the town. A recycler provides jobs in an industry that is en vironmentally positive and puts little strain on community ser vices. Also, while few cities have a curbside collection program for recyclables, the expense of such a program is not as prohibitive as many believe. Some estimates show that, after factoring in the money earned for selling recycl ables, it costs about $25 a ton to collect recyclables, while the cost of hauling and landfilling trash runs about $50 a ton and the cost of hauling and incinerating trash is about $100 a ton. Of more importance than eco nomics, however, is the general principle of resource conserva tion that is promoted by recycl ing. Whether a resource is renew able or not, plentiful or not, any stress we can take off any re source these days is good. Paper, for example, is of course generally made of “virgin pulp- wood” from trees. While pine cut for this pulpwood can be re established fairly quickly, the same is not true of the tropical rainforests whose trees provide huge amounts of paper for im porting countries like the United States. The United States imports nearly 800 million pounds (400,000 tons) of paper a year from Brazil, most of it made fiem rainforest trees, despite the fact that at present rates of destruc tion rainforests worldwide may be eradicated by the year 2050. Yet for every ton of paper we recyele — about one garbage dumpster’s worth — we save 17 trees. If the paper used in print ing one Sunday edition of the New York Times were recycled we could save 75,000 trees (that would be nearly four million trees a year). In addition, making reeycled paper uses only half the energy and produces only a quarter of the pollution generated in mak ing paper from virgin pulp. When we think of the air cleansing and habitat retention provided by this, we ean understand more clearly the longer-range benefits of recycling. Similar statistics can be ap plied to aluminum and glass. Aluminum is made from bauxite ore, a non-renewable resource which the United States must import to meet current needs. Yet we throw away enough alu minum every three months to re build our entire commercial air fleet. Recycling aluminum also uses 95 percent less energy than making aluminum from bauxite, and it ^uces our need to import the ore as well. As for glass, estimates are that Americans throw away enough glass containers every two weeks to fill both World Trade Towers. While the resources needed to make glass are plentiftil, recycl ing glass saves landfill space and requires less energy and pre serves habitat that would be de Mariners’ Rally Hands West Craven 7-6 Setback jpr the second game in a row. Vest Craven’s baseball and soft- ball teams were swept by Coastal Conference foes. Last week Havelock's Rams swept the Eagles. This week the Eagles were sunk by the Mariners of East Carteret Havelock remained unbeaten and in sole possession of first place of the Coastal Conference softball lead Tuesday night while North Lenoir moved into second and East Carteret ended a two- game losing streak. In softball, Havelock topped D.H. Conley 8-7 in eight innings and North Lenoir pulled out a 4-3 victory over West Carteret. East Carteret defeated West Craven 9- 3 in the other game. In baseball. East Carteret ral lied with four runs in the bottom of the seventh to edge West Craven 7-6 while West Carteret ended a three-game losing streak with a 13-1 romp over North Lenoir. Havelock blanked D.H. Conley 5-0 in the other league tilt. HAVELOCK — On a two- strike pitch, pinch-hitter Denise Elliott sacrificed Qretta Diedrich home with one out in the bottom of tlie eighth inning as the Lady Rams rallied past D.H. Conley. Diedrich had doubled to lead off the eighth and Brenda Max well sacrificed her to third, set ting up the winning sequence as Havelock emerged 4-0 in the Coastal and 7-0 overall. Conley fell to 0-2,4-4. The Valkyries were down 3-0 before rallying with five runs on three hits and three errors in the sixth, havelock took the lead, 7-5, with four runs in the bottom of the sixth only to see Conley tie the count with two in the seventh. Diedrich (3-for-4 with a dou ble), Dee Godette (2-for-4 with a double), Brenda Maxwell (2-for- 3) and Niki Griffin (triple) led the Lady Rams. Nikki Adams and Tracey Stancil both batted 2-for- 4 to lead Conley. MCMiq sm m »—I Sinhtl IN IN 11 —• LaGRANGE — For the second straight game, Kim Mahone sing led home Tabilha Cantey with one out in the bottom of the seventh — this time against West Carteret — as North lAcnoir won its third straight conference game by beating West Carteret. The l^dy Hawks (3-1,5-4) were led by Cantey, who went 2-for-3, and Tisha Jones and LaQuita Moore, both of whom batted 2- fur-4. Mahone added one hit for the winners. Shelly Brice and Marie (See EAGLES, Page 2) Firehouse Facelift While fire stations are not necessarily known for their cleanliness, most firemen take pride in keep ing their firehouse in order. And that often means making sure the outside is attractive to passersby. The Vanceboro Volunteer Fire Department re cently got a facelift of new siding to improve appearances. With the Strawberry Festival- Rescue Day coming up next monty, the firemen probably decided to give the public a flesh look when viewing the station. Hopefully, the firemen remembered there were people on the ladders and where the ladders were before taking the engines out on a fire call. (Terri Jamieson photo) graded in obtaining the materials needed to make “virgin” glass. Yet for all the benefits of re cycling, the idea is only now starting to gain momentum in the United States. Smaller coun tries have had innovative and successful recycling programs for years, as witnessed by South Korea’s making of 40 percent of its paper from imported waste paper, or Japan's 40 percent re duction in the amount of landfill space it now needs thanks to re cycling. The range of recyclable mate rials also has expanded to in clude iron, steel and plastic. As with other, more easily recycled products, these are gradually finding more markets and be coming more economically vi able as recyclables. A strong commitment to re cycling by towns, states and even countries could not only pre serve natural resources and re duce energy demands, it could (See RECYCLE, Page 5) Panel Asks Label River ‘Nutrient Sensitive’ By BETTY CRAY Special to the Weal Craven HigMighta RALEIGH—Staff members of the N.C. Division of Environ mental Management recom mended last week that the Pamli- co-Tar river basin be declared “nutrient sensitive.” If approved, it would give the river the same status and afford it the same protection now afforded to the Neuse River. Both rivers empty into the Pam lico Sound. Both rivers had undergone extensive study in re- cent years and have been targeted by environmentalists for protection. The Neuse re ceived its nutrient-sensitive sta tus about two years ago. The recommendation was part of a report that the staff made to the Environmental Management Commission’s Water Quality Committee, which met in Raleigh. The committee scheduled a hearing on the recommendation for Thursday, June 15, at East (See NUTRIENT, Page 5)