Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / April 9, 1981, edition 1 / Page 9
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The chowan herald SECTION B 1 sMBBH llflr e -%. « . ''mt ’SHI Hi tHU ft ■> .By H'" j* ’•dl o v *• * if /j 11$ 'MV % WCW \ </ . * . \ Jfe" jJHL/ ■ISr nw JOE TOWE Local Racquet Men Provide Experience, Depth ROCKY MOUNT Mark Noneman of Edenton is in his sophomore year at N. C. Wesleyan College and is beginning his second season of intercollegiate tennis. Joe Towe of Hertford has begun i his third year for the Bat tling Bishops. Noneman is in the number five singles spot and plays -either number two or three doubles. Towe, a junior, has moved into the number two singles spot and also plays number two doubles. After a rugged start, ) Noneman has come on to PLANTERS OIL MILL, INC. 1004 Cokey Road Rocky Mount, N.C. 442-0193 We have recently completed the renovation and expansion of our Solvent Plant and are now able to fulfill all your needs for 44% Protein Soybean Meal. Any Size Order Accepted. Available Bagged or Bulk. No Appointment Necessary for Loading. Delivery Service Available, Including Auger Trucks. We are also buying soybeans. Call (919) 442-0193 For Price Quotations f "An ounce of prevention f U is worth a pound of cure!" y •S „ l U If Change 'll! Ilf ALIGN ](j U ♦ I Smith I II FRONT M V ILPLUGSJ 111 EIVD Jj f Q Bring Your Car Home | n To George Chevrolet 1 I n U For Expert Service. | filter I nil llrtKß g* quauty wn|! ■ JiliPl saMct Hum L MOTORS RAJTTS DTVTSJQIN | ■ • I ■!—mAUS * SLUBI W t • < • ▼ - v * i " 3. y «tPr * Edenton. North Carolina, Thursday, AprU 9, 1981 win his last two matches, one a conference tilt against Methodist College and the other a tune-up against Mount Olive College. “Mark provides depth for our team this year,” says Wesleyan coach Ken Burgess, “and we expect he will continue to improve as the season moves along.” Noneman’s next match will come against Averett College with Pembroke State University and UNC- Wilmington yet to be played as well as the majority of the Dixie Conference teams. Noneman is the son of Mr. MARKNONEMAN and Mrs. Walter Noneman of Edenton. Towe, a huskie six-footer is currently undefeated in Dixie Intercollegiate Athletic Conference com petition, having jvon in singles and doubles in matches against both St. Andrews College and Methodist College. “Joe is our team captain and we expect a lot from him in terms of leadership as well as play,” says Coach Burgess. With the heavy part of the conference schedule drawing near, Towe will have his work cut SECTION B out for him. Regular season performance will determine seeding in the DIAC Tournament which will be played April 23-25. Towe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Joe Towe of Hertford. XJ!iW% Atlantic" salmon are able to leap 15 feet high. Chimney Sweep Free Estimates Rick Brady 26 Westover Heights Edenton, N.C. 919/482-4558 jjj r imtm * ' mm mm,m f Jr-- ■KIP - A rich uncle will give y oll a big income tax deduction There’s still time to open an Individual Retirement Account at Peoples Bank and deduct the contributions from your 1980 federal income tax. If you re not already covered by a pension or retirement. This could mean extra savings profit-sharing plan where you work, open an for you because you'll probably be in a lower Individual Retirement Account at Peoples tax bracket by then. Bank. You’ll be saving for the future while r- ~ .... , , DA . . Uncle Sam gives you a tax break. You can Easy-to-fill-out IRA account forms are avail make deposits in any amount and contrib- €at °^ lce Peo P* e s Bank. And ute up to $1,500 a year to your personal e^_^ )een pre-approved by the govem pension plan. Then you can deduct these ™ ent to ave P° ou l [ Tll^ s out on contributions from your federal income tax ls "T'P o^^ tax break, well, thats the for that year. In fact, if you open a Peoples cook,e cmm b ,es - Bank IRA account before April 15.1981, you m « c ZT£* tan your 1980 federal Beopies Bank Your IRA savings will earn high interest. And & TniSt CfMTIP&nV you won't have to pay any income tax on **"" b « FD ' c a J the interest until you withdraw the funds at The bank with your name on the door. RBderal law requires a substantial interest penalty for early withdrawal. I The Carolina Review I State Follows Fed’s Lead In Cost Cuts . MUCH ADO... Recent reports from Raleigh have ■ suggested that the N. C. General Assembly, in a drastic cost cutting mood, has earmarked major state programs for extinction. Because of the probability of major federal funds cutbacks, the Legislature has indeed made a con certed effort to identify and categorize state programs . that might be reduced under dire financial cir cumstances. Actions so far have concentrated only in identifying and categorizing such possibilities. Since no reductions or program eliminations have occurred, all of the defen sive posturing and noise by state officials and other lobbyists for state money might have been “much ado about nothing.” Either way, the “spender defenders” have been especially busy during the first three months of this budgetary session. They haven’t had far to look for expenditures to defend. Virtually every segment of North Carolina’s “base” budget has been reviewed and categorized for potential cuts. Such a review has not taken place since 1975 when legislators were faced with a S3OO million shortfall in GOLD is up... SELL NOW! WE PAY IN CASH! WE BUY: • wedding bands, • class rings, gold coins • gold teeth, • scrap gold, • sterling and silver coins— Regardless of condition ... Anything marked 10K, 14K, 18K, 22K g 0t Paying even higher prices for fine jewelry! No Gimmick, no green stamps, no coupons ? < JUST PAYING YOU HIGH PRICES BASED x s ON NEW YORK COMMODITY MARKET, > O THUS Paying ONE of the HIGHEST PRICES AVAILABLE IN NORTH CAROLINA m ANYWHERE! HOURS - 10:00 - 5:00 - DAILY. -JEXCEPT WED. - CLOSED COLONIAL COTTAGE SALES 205 S. BROAD ST. AQO ACQI\ EDENTON, N.C. ‘WZ'TOoU funds. The basic tool used in this review has been a conglomerate of five joint sub-committees on ap propriations-each dealing with a separate area of state spending. The screams of agony over possible cuts have been loudest surrounding the Joint Appropriations Base Budget Sub committee on Education the area that touches more North Carolinians and more North Carolina dollars than any other expense item. The Education Sub committee, in action similar to the other four Sub Committees, have categorized possible cuts in educational spending into three distinct priorities. Even under the severest cuts-utilizing all three “degrees” of priorities- the respective areas of educational spending in North Carolina (public schools, community colleges, and higher education) would lose only six per cent funding of their overall budget. More than likely, the only cuts if any will take place in education will be in the Priority I category. Priority I entrees are defined by the Sub-Committee as “having minimal impact on the quality of the educational programs.” The potential loss to public schools would be about one half of one per cent over two years, higher education might lose one and one quarter of 1 per cent over two years. The “big” loser would be community colleges which stands to lose as much as 2M> per cent in the biennial budget. According to the Sub committee definitions. “Priority II means that the budget cuts so identified will result in moderate im pact on the quality of the particular programs.” “Priority 111 means that the budget cuts so identified will result in serious impact on the quality of the par ticular programs.” The Sub-Committee has recommended that Priority II cuts take place only if absolutely necessary and recommends against Priority 111 reductions. Category 111, according to one senator in ttie deliberations, was created for use “only if the bottom falls out.” Unfortunately when a 50 per cent reduction in teacher aides in grades 1-3 was discussed and categorized in Priority 111, a lot of people thought the reduction had taken place for next year. Obviously, the teacher aides reduction is extremely unlikely. The.teacher aides screech is just one example of the noise caused by the Legislative review-an exhaustive exercise that probably should take place more often. Most people are forgetting that Gov. Hunt supposedly sent to the General Assembly a balanced budget with room for ex pansion or “new” spending in excess of SBO-million. Maybe the “spender defenders” should travel to Washington-that’s where the real cuts will occur. ‘Changing South’ Conference Topic GREENVILLE - What is happening in the South today and what problems and opportunities the change presents will be studied at a conference on “The Changing South” at East Carolina University on April 13. Directions and dimen sions of the currents of change in the South will be discussed by the main speakers. The interested public is invited to the conference which opens at 10:30 A. M. at ECU’s Willis Building.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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April 9, 1981, edition 1
9
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