Page 6-B *: "The Carolina Review is.: MORE HIGHWAYS ... • -■•“Vote no gas tax or drop dead,” said one serious ; opponent to Governor Hunt’s highwey tax plan. '1 That comment was made ,'! in what was described as a ' “deluge” of opposition .tv arriving in the General 7: Assembly mail last week. i-..j The senator who received it :::. says he still supports the governor’s package. Ac •* cording to his secretary, the » mail was running in favor of - the proposed tax plan until 'f' ; last week, “when the Club got into jthe act.” In spite of growing op u.. position to the “Good Roads ts ■ Package,” the plan escaped the Senate Finance Com- SM mittee last week for direct action by the full Senate this --week. The bill made it out of “'committee by virtue of ia t several votes by members , who don’t necessarily ' support the legislation. ~. “I was obligated only to - get it out of committee” said one senator. sa.j But one strong Senate *"< proponent of the bill was feeling confident by week’s • v 'end. “Oh, we might put a f-“couple of small amend ' ments on it, but that’s all,” ;he said. ' “It depends on who you talk to,” said another who hadn’t made up his mind. “I’ve had a lot of .good people for it and I’ve ..had just the opposite. It’s a .pretty sticky situation,” he « -said. Either way, some North Carolinians might be able to ci 4-read the preliminary Senate ■-“•results on the bill at jhe rTEthlngCiosern OPEN Mondays & Thursdays 2:00 pm to 5:00 pm j) Located on North Broad Street next (T to the Chicken Kitchen Sponsored by all churches All items j j ftakiTtime OUT * Li FOR A TUNE-UP L, ! I GET A QUALITY 4 A TUNE-UP KIT AND n ; V SAVE V fS Get Your Car Ready For n :;y Summer! Let Us Check Your / J u » Air Conditioning, | fjj Plugs And Belts. »-M KEEP THAT GREAT [iWlI "gm quality |lST|| G' * DELING WITH GENUINE SSMCE PARTS |£J| - P ,u m ' jjliMn _ P Jijj s > _ same time they are reading this report. No matter. The House must also consider the same legislation (companion bill) - after waiting to see how the controversial plan fared in the Senate. House op ponents will have had even more time to organize and to measure public opinion against the proposals. After the House establishes its version of the road plan, then the two bodies must get together for concurrence. By the time that happens, then there ... well, right now anything can happen. INTEREST RATES ... Although it wouldn’t seem possible, the Senate has had time to act on a couple of other controversial bills recently. The ceilings on virtually all bank loan in terest rates were raised last week. Contract loans, second mortgage loans, and consumer installment loans were all included in the legislation. Most supporters of the bill said the rates would not rise immediately. One banker was quoted as saying that the rates “are not going to be controlled by legislation but by competition.” The legislation was passed under protest from some members of the Senate who felt Lt. Gov. Jimmy Green, as presiding officer of the Senate, had given favorable rulings on behalf of the banking lobby. HAZARDOUS WASTES ... The Senate also last week approved legislation regulating hazardous ,4k JZggSM*;*. ■ Tr " w HhHBk . * Wm - ATTEND WORKSHOP Five secretaries from the Albemarle Conservation District recently attended a state-wide workshop for Soil and Water Conservation District Secretaries held in Raleigh. Those attending were (from left to right) Shelby White, Chowan; Elizabeth Winslow, Perquimans; Nancy Webb, Pasquotank; Phyllis Timmerman, Camden; and Susie Pratt, Currituck. The three day training session on the management of Soil and Water Conservation Districts was conducted by the Division of Soil and Water Conservation in the N. C. Department of Natural Resources and Community Development. Around forty-five district secretaries from across the state were present for this workshop which included sessions on program development, communications, administrative mat- ECU Honor Students GREENVILLE - Students earning academic honors at East Carolina University during the spring semester represent 92 of the state’s 100 counties, 29 states and the District of Columbia and 16 foreign countries. Robert Timothy Lane, Route 3, Edenton, and Mary Jill Copeland of Tyner, made all A’s. Dean’s List students in cluded: Kenneth A. Berry, 406 North Oakum Street; Edward C. Goodwin, Route 3, Edenton; Nancy D. Phthisic, 35 Queen Anne Drive; Jill Diane Stutzman, Country Club Drive; Zachary B. Valentine of Edenton; and Vickie Lynn Modlin, Route 1, Tyner. On the honor roll were: Carolyn F. Ervin, 400 North Broad Street; Karen F. Lawrence of Edenton,;. Kenneth I. Riddick, Route 1, Edenton; Charles B. Smith, 14 Queen Anne Place; Vanessa Lee Spivey, Route 3.Edenton; Elizabeth K. Frances of Greenville; Eric Bradley Evans, Route 1, Tyner; Carroll S. Perry, Jr., Route 1, Tyner; and Joanna Spruill of Virginia Beach, Va. A total of 3,261 ECU students earned places on the university’s official THE CHOWAN HERALD honors lists for the semester, compared to 3,107 for the fall semester. Most elite of the honors is all A’s. Those making the Dean’s List have earned a B plus average with no grade below C. The Honor Roll includes students with a B average and no grade below C. "Compete, don’t envy." Proverb i . . ji| Attend The Church Os Your Choice This Sundays F H - | HOW THE BISLE NAMEPAPOG! “ w ‘ THE FIRST SCHOOL FOR TRAINING DOGS TO GUIDE THOSE WHO ARE BLIND WAS FOUNDED IN 1929 BY ITS FIRST PRESIDENT, DOROTHY HARRISON EUSTICE, AND MORRIS FRANK WHO HAD BEEN BLIND SINCE AGE 16. -1\ kTHE PM RASE WHICH GAVE l HE SCHOOL, AND THE DOGS, rS NAME WAS TAKEN FROM : "HE 818 LE".... THE SEEING l •YE THE LORD HATH MADE....^ FOR MORE THAN HALF A \ CENTURVTHESE PATIENT, : (NTELLIGENT“SBEING EYE’DOGS HAVE GIVEN GREATER FREEDOM • TO BLIND PEOPLE IN EVERY | : STATE ANDAAANVCOUNTRIES/ ; MR. FRANK CALLS THE DOGS OIFTW IJ«WE>.S.' I | ; » * N6XT WB£K' LEGEND OF THE DOGWOOD TREE ! SAVE THIS FOR YOUR SUNDAY SCHOOL SCRAPBOOK Copyright, 1978, John A. Lehti Distributed by Linage-Plus, P.O. Box 884 Middletown, N. Y. 10940 Z ! ! These Messages Are Published Under The Sponsorship Os The Following Business Establishments! Byrum Implement & ' ' ' Edenton Tractor & Leary Bros. Storage j Truck Co. Inc. A Servicenter Equipment Co. - . For Happy Motoring •*/*•*% Oi PeonuS Soybeans A*k< I International harvester Dealer Friend c~o"y *■*” Exxon ProducU-Atlas ouitxw* s»<i«r> oi ft*,*, And m j Phone 482-2151, Edenton Ttrw And Bettenex US 1 7 South, Edenton N. C. Phone 482-2141,482-2142- Mitchener’s Pharmacy Edenton Savings & w - E- Smith GRelkTulcr A prescription Loan general merchandise j v/ Friend PHARMACISTS where You So*e DOES »oc«> «x« Yn'jr Haooy ShooDin* Center Make A Difference' Phone 482-3711. Edenton Edenton. N.C Phone 221-4031 Edenton Montgomery Ward Western Gas & Parker-Evans Hobbs Implement Co 401 s Broad s« -Phone 4.2-4469 Fuel Oil Hardware Company your John deere A Edenton N C *•«—' **■ GLEEM PAINTS £i I ¥oyr Farm Equioment I I Friend jfl R D. Dixon, Jr. Agent Phone 482-4483 Phone4B2-4401, Edenton I "The most useful virtue is patience " John Dewev “IF YOU WANT TO DRINK... that’s your business, BUT if you have a drinking problem, we want to help.” ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS AND AL-ANON MEET MONDAY NIGHTS AT 8 PM. AT EDENTON PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Honor Roll Is Released Lawrence Academy is pleased to announce it’s Headmaster List and Honor Roll for the fifth six weeks grading period. A student must earn at least a 93 average in each class for the grading period to be on the Headmaster’s List. To be on the Honor Roll a student must earn at least a 90 average with no grade below 85 in any subject. Headmaster List 4th Grade: Anissa Roberts, Rinda Pack, Lora Askew, Shannon Alligood, Tres Pittman, Fulton Roberts, Amy Cobb, Kim Jackson, Stacey Johnston, Toni Nobles, Melanie Reel, Elizabeth Thompson. sth Grade: Chris Carraway, Thomas Boyce, Lynette Swain, Libby Daniels, Emily Kilpatrick. 6th Grade: Dee Brown, Molly Lane, Michelle Phelps, Katie Romanet, Nicole Swain, Brian White, Beth Boyce, Chris Grimes, Ann Jones. 7 Grade: Tracy Lindsey, Sallie Ann Attkisson. Bth Grade: Robin Spruill, Buck Spruill, Amy Romanet. 9th Grade: Lindley Chappell, Kim Daniels, Jon Powell. 10th Grade: Mary Dee Carraway, Amy Hamilton, Susan Hassell. 11th Grade: Lynne Daniels, Treavis Taylor. 12th Grade: Jeanne Clyde, Karen Davenport. Honor Roll 4th Grade: Susan Myers, Reada Evans, Jenny Duns tan, Greg Ashley, Billy Perry, Torrey Phelps, Adam Brown, Michael Cowand, Sheila Gunnells, Julie Lindsey, Blake Roberson, Rex Stotesberry, John Whitlow. sth Grade: Marty Spruill, Wayne Cole, Kristy Spen cer, Susan Woolard, Jason James, Dean Wrightson, Don Gurkin, Rene Collier, Ray Tetterton, Kyle Barnes, Glen Ambrose, Doug Gregory, Lisa Joyner, Nolan Kirkman, Ingrid Lee, Gary O’Brien, Armistead Perry, Kenny Perry, Erik Smith, Greg White, Kim Yates. 6th Grade: John Brown, BINGO EACH THURSDAY 8 P.M. , AT ST. ANN’S % CATHOLIC CHURCH I TWO JACKPOTS s2oo°° EACH: Thursday, June 4, 1981 Tammy Bundy, Amler Cantrell, Jay Carawan, Dee Harrell, Ned Heckstall, Jolene Morris, Wefltdy Perry, Jackie WillifUrd, Ellen Thompson, Jarafaee Alexander, Missie Ambrose, Shirley Brown, Jennifer Gaylord, Melissa Modlin, Mike Oliver, Geralding Swinson, Leigh Woolard. Robert Williford. 7th Grade: Wendy Miller, Kinnan Lane, Phil Woolard, Hope Dail. -r --Bth Grade: Kris Barnes, Tammy Yates, Snead Gillam, Tim Griffin, BMck Harris, Lewis Hoggard, David Vick, Barry Cobb, Shawn Sawyer, Jeff Powell, Dana Dunlow, Kathy RaWls, Marla Styons. 9th Grade: Chris Horsier, Tammy Nobles, BYkd Brown, Annalisa Carawan, Emily Rascoe. 10th Grade: Rose Baker, Jan Brown, Connie Cole, Jennifer Jernigan, Cheryl Pierce, Dawn Robertson, Shannon Sawyer, Kim Elliott. Continued On Page 7-B;

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