'Buff' Is Home J. Edwin Bufflap is once again meandering along the Public Parade. He has returned to his home at 17 Queen Anne from Portsmouth (Va.) .General Hospital. “Buff’ is recovering from yet another in a series of operations to curb dreadful pain in his jaw and mouth. His latest enounter required that he be hospitalized over the Christmas holidays. “Buff’ is back home and geared up for the New Year. We are sure his host of friends join us in wishing for him a happy 1981. New Feature Today this newspaper begins a weekly column on passive solar energy. Passive solar energy systems use energy in the im mediate environment and the thermal mass of the building itself to trap, store and transport the sun’s energy far heating and cooling homes by natural rather than mechanical means. Not too far into the future, America’s homebuilders and homeowners will no longer be able to depend on non-renewable sources of energy for these pur poses, but must turn to energy alternatives such as solar. In recent years, scientists and engineers have developed a variety of solar energy systems and designs that can substantially reduce domestic fuel con sumption. Many of these systems are rapidly gaining public favor, and thousands of solar homes can now be found around the country. This newspaper series is designed to present consumers with information about solar energy, and specific examples of solar energy systems that have proven effective and efficient in everyday use, how they work, how they can be incorporated into new buildings and how they can be applied as retrofit projects. Some energy-saving passive solar ap plications can be used on vir tually all existing residential, and many commercial buildings in this area with savings of from 20 to as much as 80 per cent of current energy requirements. Because solar energy is a new subject to many people, the first columns in the series will be devoted to general solar in formation. Later columns will provide the reader with greater detail. Think! Over the years we have never been much for New Years resolutions. As we head into the second year of the new decade, it would be good if everyone along the Public Parade, throughout North Carolina and the United States resolved to be more caring ' and sharing. In an interview on Channel 2 in Columbia this week, Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr., called the lack of caring in Tar' Heelia and throughout the nation as being the one thing most responsible for our plight. This must be turned around, he went on to say, if any significant long range im provement is realized. Caring and sharing is nothing new. This writer can remember when some of the biggest business deals were consumated with a handshake. Ain’t true any more! The lack of caring and sharing has filtered down to pit family member against family in the struggle to excel. Individuals must begin to think; think in the plural rather than the angular. Then, and only then, will life along the Public Parade in general, and throughout the universe in particular, take on the meaning all of us feel deep down. Just to say these are perilous times won’t do the job. The treatment must be better than the disease. Inflation has become a word in everyone’s vocabulary. Even if the nation’s leaders, with our assistance, can get a handle on inflation, all the world’s ills won’t be cured. Partners along the Public Peerless Pressure Group Continues High Rates Battle By L.F. Amburn, Jr. Operation Overcharge, a citizen fueled movement without peers in Northeastern North Carolina, continues as a formidable foe to Virginia Electric Power Com pany. One of the early shock waves was generated by Edenton- Chowan Chamber of Commerce. The local contingent was well organized, well researched, and blessed with determined leader ship that doesn’t consider defeat a possibility. Time and time again the Stan Heges have bowed up to the task. Setbacks have seemed to make a tighter bond, a challenge underneath, a second wind, if you please. It has been by no means one sided. Vepco has been unrelenting, maintaining a high profile through redoubled public relations efforts. The stable of high paid attorneys, economists, and lobbyists have been able to cover the flanks and winning, rather than losing in ' '•’ '*■ *eW Wmm ■ V V ' . V; ~,. jyv '%:' |P^- mJBPbBI - ' ■ VOICES HEARD Among the voices heard in a continuing battle by a consumer group with Virginia Electric & Power Company are Stan Hege, seated, a member of the Executive Committee of Operation Overcharge, and Bill Norvell, a past president of Edenton-Chowan Chamber of Commerce. A petition drive in 1978 was spearheaded by the local chamber and prompted Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr., to call for an exhaustive study of Vepco management. The Chowan Herald Vol. XLVII - No. 1 Hearing Set On Telephone Rate Hike Knob Creek Recreation Center in Elizabeth City will be the scene of a public hearing January 6 on a proposed $25.5-million rate in crease by Carolina Telephone Company. The hearing opens at 7 P.M. On August 28,1980, the telephone company filed a rate request with the N. C. Utilities Commission. The request is to increase monthly local telephone service rates, plus certain other customer charges. The affected customers exceed 542,000. Carolina Telephone Company has said the request is a 13 per cent increase in the company’s intrastate operating revenue. Hie request has already brought a rebuff from the Public Staff of the Utilities Commission. Also, local governments have voiced objection to the increase, as well as chambers of commerce. The company simply states that inflation has increased the cost of doing business faster than revenues have increased. “We Boards To Meet In Joint Session Chowan County commissioners and Edenton-Chowan Board of Education will meet in joint session at 9 A.M. Monday. Following the joint meeting each board will hold regular monthly meetings. School officials had called the joint meeting in order to share a presentation on the Naval Junior ROTC program. Edenton- Chowan Schools wore approved for a NJROTC program this year but had to delay it a year because of funding difficulties. The meeting will be held in the Fourth Floor Conference Room of the Chowan County Office Building on East King Street. I Ri P IK ; J M hW. . JB. ;Wm if* f miS: mm mHBB S JcwAJ r | LICENSE TIME AGAIN As sure as January 1 rolls up on the calendar owners of motor vehicles have business with the license plate agency. The agent is Mrs. Jeanette H. Dowd, shown here at her office in the Trailways Bus Station on North Broad Street. Mrs. Dowd’s office will be open longer hours from now until February 15, deadline for obtaining plates and-or validation stickers. (Staff Photo by Luke Amburn.) teachers would be needed for the 1981-82 school term and about 1,360 for the 1982-83 school year. As its second concern, the board lists teacher daily student load reduced from 150 to 125 for reading-language arts and math classes in grades 7-12. More than 1,500 additional teachers would be required each year of the bien nium. The budget calls for expanding basic skills instruction for low achievers, grades 9-12, by alloting $283 per student for those in the bottom quartile of the 9th grade achievement test. The additional funds would provide remediation for the more than 65,000 low scoring students. It is estimated that an additional 85,000 students in secondary schools in North Carolina need and want vocational programs which are unavailable to them. The Board is asking the General Assembly for enough teachers to serve an additional 42,500 students each year of the biennium with financial support for equipment and materials. Improving the allotment for mulas for instructional support from one position for each 264 students to one position for each 200 is a major goal of the State Board. More than 1,000 assistant principals, guidance counselors, librarians, attendance counselors, social workers, nurses, etc. would be needed each of the two years to accomplish this goal. Additional funds for exceptional children amounting to S3O-million are deemed necessary over the next two years to provide needed services to additional children identified as exceptional. The board hopes to fund aides, clerical assistants, and custodians to midpoint of the state salary schedule and to establish a salary schedule for bus drivers providing an average wage of $4 per hour in Continued On Page 4 License Tag Sales Begin January 2 Mrs. Jeanette H. Dowd, manager of the Edenton license plate agency for the Division of Motor Vehicles of the N. C. Department of Transportation, has announced new operating hours during the 1980 license plate renewal period. “In addition to the regular hours, 9 A M. to 5 P.M. week days and 9 A.M. to 12:30 P.M. on Saturdays, our agency will be open from 8 A M. on weekdays and until 1 P.M on Saturdays through February 15,” she said. The agency is located in the Edenton Bus Station on North Broad Street. “We hope citizens will take advantage of our additional hours and buy their validation stickers and license plates early,” Mrs. Dowd said. Posters, counter cards and public service announcements carrying the slogan, “Get Yours Early.” are encouraging Edenton residents to purchase their stickers and plates prior to the end of the renewal period. The new license plates and stickers go on sale January 2.