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section b
Williams To Be Guest Performer On Tour
Michael Kerry Williams,
nine-year-old son of Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Williams of The
Eyrie, Route 4, Elizabeth
City, has been selected as
one of three American guest
artists to join the Paducah
Boys Choir of Kentucky and
Rill:.
Jl 1 ]
Michael Kerry Williams
Michael, a boy soprano,
was invited by the
k America’s Boys Choir
w Federation on the basis of
his singing, community
concerts, acting in Virginia
stage shows, and his high
rating in the call-back
auditions for the New York
opera, “Amahl and the Nigh
Visitors.” Michael, referred
to as “Kerry” by his
manager, has rated first,
ft second or third in voice and
acting performances in all
his auditions to date and
therefore was recom
mended as special delegate
because of his fine singing
combined with “ex
traordinary ambassadorial
qualities.”
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Joe Lee Co., of Edenton
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Edenton, North Carolina, Thursday, March 13, i 960
famed talent manager, John
B. Shallenberger, of Pitt
sburgh and New York, in a
concert tour of Europe,
April 3-21, and an official
exchange tour with the
world re reknowned Vienna
Boys Choir.
Michael plans to invite the
Belgium, German and
Vienna Boys Choirs to
perform in his hometown
and several of the university
towns in North Carolina. He
will distribute postcards and
brochures of central and
eastern North Carolina, the
Outer Banks and Tidewater,
Virginia.
In just three years the
Paducah Boys Choir, under
Tony Whitfield, has earned
a diploma from the In
ternational Boys Choir
Federation and is men
tioned in the same breath
with the Vienna group.
Michael will join this
remarkable group to visit
Augarton Palace, the home
and school of the Vienna
Choir Boys, to see how they
train and rehearse when not
on tour.
The American boys will
first fly from New York to
Lossines, Belgium, to
perform with the “Hit
Parade des Enfants,” a
group which not only sings
sacred and classical music
in churches all over the
world, but also sings at disco
dances, and services
organiations. Michael will
be a guest in the home of
Belgian chorister. Jonathan
Steele, of Denver, Colo., and
Roy Lee Tripp, 111, of
Greenville, are the other
guest artists joining Michael
on the tour. The group will
visit Paris and travel to
Cologne, Germany, for a
musical exchange with the
famour Cologne Cathederal
boy singers who are
directed by Rev. Richard
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March, American musician
and theologian. In Regen
sburg they will visit the
Regensburg Demspatzen,
“Cathedral Sparrows,”
whose recordings are widely
known in the U.S.A.
After several days visiting
the Vienna boys Augarten
Palace, with its 400-year
tradition, the Americans
will return byway of
Salzburg, Austria, to
Dinkelsbuhl, Germany,
where they will visit and
perform with the world
famous Dinkelsbuhl Boys
Band. On April 19, they will
visit the tiny principality of
Luxembour and then make
their return flight via
Brussels to the U.S.A.
Michael must raise $1,600
to cover expenses of the trip.
He is selling stuffed animals
and has already received
pledges and donations sent
to Mrs. Judy Watson and
SECTION B
Roy Askew of the
Pasquotank Arts Council
and Dr. Jerry Goldschmidt.
His talent, voice control and
stage presence were
discovered last summer by
his mother, Lynda, a
dramatic soprano, formerly
Continued On Page 3-B
Attends
Agent School
Roy Forehand, a Home
Security Life Insurance
Company representative,
recently attended a Agents’
Intermediate Sales School
at our home office which is
located in Durham, North
Carolina.
Roy was selected to
participate in this school on
the basis of his outstanding
record with the Home
Security Life Elizabeth City
District.
Helms Introduces Ag Bill
WASHINGTON - Senator
Jesse Helms has introduced
legislation to minimize the
adverse effects of
agricultural trade em
bargoes on U.S. farmers.
Helms said his bill is
“designed to provide cer
tainty and predictability,
when agricultural em
bargoes are imposed,
without exposing farmers to
market disruptions and
economic chaos.”
Helms is ranking Minority
Member of the Senate
Committee on Agriculture,
Nurtition, and Forestry. The
Committee held a series of
hearings this week on
various legislative
proposals seeking to
respond to the President’s
embargo of grain to the
Soviet Union folowing its
invasion of Afghanistan.
Calling his bill “com
prehensive,” Helms said it
would “give the Secretary of
Agriculture authority to
establish temporary gasohol
feedstock and food security
reserves whenever an
embargo was imposed on
export sales of agricultural
commodities.” The reserves
would be used to isolate
from the market a specified
producer prices to pre
embargo levels.”
Grains stocks placed in
the gasohol feedstock
reserve would be sold to
alcohol fuel producers at a
price that would permit
gasoline-alcohol mixtures
using a alcohol produced
from an agricultural
commodity to be com
petitive with the wholesale
price of non-leaded gasoline.
Stocks placed in the food
security reserve would be
released only for use in
emergency food assistance
programs.
Senator Helms em
phasized that the proposed
gasohol feedstock and food
security reserves would not
be permanent reserves that
would hang over the
market. “Under by bill,
once the acquired stocks
had been disposed of they
could not be replaced unless
another embargo were
imposed These reserves are
designed to help the farmer,
not hurt him,” Helms said.
Another feature of the
Helms legislation is a pay
as-you-go revolving fund to
encourage commercial
export sales of U.S.
agricultural commodities.
“Congress wouls establish
over a period of three
successive years a $6-billion
capital fund from which
export credits would be
made available without
artificial government
imposed annual lending
restraints,” Helms said.
During the Agriculture
Committee hearings,
Governor Arthur A. Link, of
North Dakota, Chairman of
the National Governor’s
Association Committee on
Agriculture, said further
legislation is necessary to
clarify the precise actions
that should be taken to
protect farmers in future
embargoes.
Helms explains, “My
legislation is designed to
work with market fun
damentals, that is, the
isolation from the market of
an amount of a commodity
equal to the supply em-
Continued On Page 2-B