Newspapers / The Chowan Herald (Edenton, … / April 23, 1987, edition 1 / Page 13
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P TREAT FOR SCHOOLCHILDREN—“Tarheel Tales”, with a cast of six professional actors, will be presented to Edenton-Chowan schoolchildren in grades 1-3 on April 27. The performance is being spon sored by the Chowan Arts Council. 'Tarheel Tales' Presentation Is Planned -Tarheel Tales”, a story theatre/audience participation ^ j {day with a professional cast of six 9 ^actors, will be presented on April ’27 to Chowan County ^schoolchildren in grades 1-3 as >part of the Chowan Arts Council’s ^in-school programming. The pro jduction is produced by the North Carolina Theatre for Young Peo ple and is being sponsored by the Chowan Arts Council. ; Five favorite folk tales from the P North Carolina mountains are in cluded in “Tarheel Takes”. They are, “Jack and the Northwest Wind,” “The Big Toe,” “Old Dry Frye,” “Wicked John and the Devil,” and “Jack and the Rob ber”. “Tarheel Tales” remains NCTYP’s most called-for produc tion. “Each new generation of North Carolina children needs the ) opportunity to experience these folk stories which are an impor tant part of their heritage,” accor ding to director Tom Behm. A tfllpfltpH Pflfit is nnrfrovinfl fKo Parkway Playhouse and has also played the leading roles in several UNC-G productions, including “Macbeth” and “The Hollow”. Steven Davis has performed two seasons with Parkway Playhouse in such roles as Dussel in “The Diary of Anne Frank” and Bill Ray in “On Golden Pond”. Elizabeth Edwards’ professional credits Include leading roles in the outdoon dramas, “The Liberty Cart” and “The Sword of Peace”. Mark March has performed pro fessionally with “The Lost Col ony” outdoor drama in Manteo and also two seasons with the well-known “Unto These Hills” in Cherokee. David Earl Roberts recently completed an engage ment with the Cumberland Coun ty Playhouse in Crossville, Tenn. E.G. Salerno hails from Penn sylvania, where he has perform ed‘ sev**%l seasons with the Theatre-By-The-Grove in Indiana, f-5 Pa. The 1987 tour marks the four teenth consecutive season for NCTYP which began in 1974. Each year as many as 160 perfor mances are given to audiences of as many as 68,000 youngsters. NCTYP travels over 7,000 miles across the state and region each spring. “Tarheel Tales” is directed by Tom Behm from the script he adapted. Hie set is by Becky Man ning and the costumes are design ed by Scott Boyd. The North Carolina Theatre for Young Peo ple is a professional program af filiated with the Department of Communication and Theatre at UNC-Greensboro. This performance is jointly sup ported by a grant from the N.C. Arts Council and the National En dowment for the Arts in Washington, D.C., a federal agency. - Conger To Discuss Antique Furniture The North Carolina Museum of History Associates will present Clement Conger, curator of the State Department Diplomatic Reception Rooms and the White House, for an illustrated lecture at John A. Holmes High School in Edenton on Monday, May 4, at 5:00 p.m. According to Museum of History Associates Chowan Coun ty Chairman Mrs. Jack Pruden of Edenton, "The Museum Asso ciates are delighted to bring a speaker of Mr. Conger’s inter national stature to this area.’’ Conger’s topic will be the beau tiful and rare 18th and 19th cen tury American furnishings in the State Department’s collection, valued at over 30 million dollars. The Diplomatic Reception Rooms are used by the president, vice president, secretary of state, and the president’s cabinet to receive visiting kings, queens, presidents, prime ministers and other offi cials, and they are furnished with the highest caliber of American art and cabinetmaking. “Mr. Conger’s program should be of special interest because of this area’s own history and the fine examples of antique furniture found here,” Mrs. Pruden said. vioucni umgcr The lecture will be followed by a cocktail reception at Pembroke Hall, the home of Mrs. W. B. Rosevear, and reservations are necessary. Membership in the North Carolina Museum of Mission Study Is Undertaken Countries of Southern Asia will come alive for Elizabeth City District United Methodist Women and other church members through a unique mission study under the direction of Mrs. Robert Turner of Jarvisburg, district mission coordinator. The study, to be presented in the form of a festival is being held in three locations. The first meeting was held Saturday, April ll at 10:00 a.m. at Ahoskie United Methodist Church in Ahoskie. Other locations include Edenton United Methodist Church Sunday, April 26 at 3 p.m. and Mt. Olive United Methodist Church Satur day, May 2 at 10 a.m. A marketplace setting with displays from the five countries to be studied, will feature arts and crafts, audio-visuals, drama and music. Handmade items from the countries will be displayed for sale. The sale items are available through SERV, a non-profit organization for distribution of crafts from underdeveloped countries. Countries to be studied and the 1 study leaders are: Nepal, Mrs. Lena Bird of Grandy; Sri Lanka, 1 Mrs. Orion Wallace of Edenton, 1 vho lived there for a number of fears; Bangladish, Mrs. Pat ramilar of Gatesville; Pakistan, Mrs. Elizabeth Zarbock of Eden Continued On Page 10-B . History Associates is also re quired, and memberships which begin at $15 are available from any member of the Associates Chowan County Committee. Along with Mrs. Pruden, those serving on the Chowan County Committee are William T. Cul pepper, Mrs. Richard Dillard Dix on, Arch Edwards, and Mrs. T. B. H. Wood. Facility Top Rated Britthaven of Edenton has received a superior rating from the North Carolina Health Care Facilities Association Peer Review Survey Team. 1116 intense survey was conducted Thursday, March 26, by a team of nursing home professionals from various parts of the state. Craig Miller, administrator, commented on how very proud he and the Britthaven Company are of the staff at Britthaven of Eden ton. “As a whole, they (the staff) are without a doubt the best group Df devoted and dedicated health care professionals I have ever had the pleasure of working with,” he said. Miller added, “The community )f Edenton and surrounding Chowan County should be equal ly proud and delighted to have >uch a quality-oriented nursing lome within their midst. ” He con :luded, “We consider ourself the Best of Britthaven’ and we are :ommitted to maintaining this eminent distinction. ’ ’ FIND IT FAST on The Chowan Herald's Classified Page! vivid characters of these stories. Ellen Bell has appeared at i 5 Kilometer Race Certified For the first time since the in ception of the Nags Head Woods Run in 1984, the course layout of the 5-Killometer race will be cer tified and the Run sanctioned for 1987 by The Athletics Congress. | Race Co-Directors Larry Gray and Robert Wells met with TAC officials Saturday morning to check the requirements necessary for. the formal approval. The finish line setup will be coor dinated by Jim Young of the North Carolina Road Runners Club. Scheduled for Saturday, May 30, the fourth annual running of this | event will be over hard packed w sandy roads in the Preserve. Co-hosts for the race are the Nags Head Woods Preserve, a unit of The Nature Conservancy, and the Outer Banks Chamber of Commerce assisted by the Dare County Jaycees. Awards will be given to the top three male and female open win I nttfe and to the top three finishers “ id each age group. Information concerning age grouping and registration may be obtained by phone at919-441-2525 or by writing The Nags Head Woods Preserve, V; CsaB-»4 Os P»|« 108 f MATTHEWS ' Carpet & Upholstery Cleaning ' y'Tfw Bitterness of Poor Quality" " ' Remains Long After <*.' ■ the Sweetness of Low Price is Forgotten" INTRODUCING EQUITY LINE. If you’re like most people, the big gest investment you’ll ever make is the one you’ve made in your home. It’s a good investment, because if you’ve been in the same house for long, it’s probably worth a lot more than you owe on it. That’s equity, and it’s as good as money in the bank, because it could qualify you for up to $100,000 of revolving credit through Equity Line from Southern Bank. YOUR HOME COULD BE THE RICH UNCLE YOU'VE BEEN WAITING FOR. Equity is a funny thing. It grows on you; quietly, and sometimes dramatically. So your home could be worth much more than you suspect. And Southern Bank can give you credit for up to 75% of that wor th—from $3,000 to as much as $100,000. You’d need a rich uncle to get that much from conventional revolving credit, and at conventidnal interest rates, it could cost you a fortune to use it. But with Equity Line, a powerful line of credit is available to the average homeowner, at rates as low as prime plus 1%. Here's how Equity Line interest works: APPROVED INTEREST LINE OF CREDIT RATE 13,000 to $4,999.*Prime + 2%% $5,000 to $8,999.Prime + 2% $10,000 to $14,999..Prime + 1%% $15,000 to $100,000...-.Prime + 1% WOULD YOUR OWN HOME MAKE YOU FILL OUT AN APPLICATION EVERY TIME YOU NEED A LOAN? No, and neither would Southern Bank. You just apply for Equity Line once. Once your line of credit is ap proved, getting the money you deserve is as easy as writing a check. And you can use Equity Line for almost anything, no questions asked. Buy a new car. Take a vacation. Remodel your home or send a kid to college. It’s your money. HERE'S A KIND OF CREDIT THAT'S GETTING REALLY HARD TO FIND: TAX CREDIT: Tax deductible interest is an en dangered species. Under the new tax law, the interest paid on credit cards, installment loans, and certain kinds of consumer credit is no longer deductible. But technically, legally and otherwise, Equity Line is a se cond mortgage, so depending on your situation, most, or even all of your in terest could still be deductible under the new law. So if you have a kid to send to col lege, a car to buy, or even if you just want a line of credit at an interest rate that makes sense in today's economy, call Southern Bank and ask about Equity Line. It’s about time the roof over your head put some money back in your pocket. Before making your decisions it would be wise to consult your tax ad visor. EOUAl HOUSING I cunco * Bank's "Prim* Rata" it a rata of intorast index and it not a rapratantation that tuch rata it tho lowatt or mott favorable rata of intaratt offered by the bank. NO LOAN FEES ★ FRIENDLY SERVICE ★ EXPERIENCED LOAN OFFICERS PROMPT CREDIT DECISION ★ CONVENIENT LOCATIONS Member FDIC... And Your Community w Get all the details at any of our 31 locations.
The Chowan Herald (Edenton, N.C.)
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April 23, 1987, edition 1
13
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