THE CHOWAN HERALD *'Y* 1 " 4 V’1' VT& <' 'V-‘ ‘ . 1 ' . . . I Published In The Most Beautiful Little City On The North Carolina Coast volume LLV - No. 10 Edenton, North Carolina, Thusday, March 9,1989 Single Copies 25 Cents i Time To Be Proud We take pride in Chowan for having carried away more awards than any other county in the statewide Pride in America competition held in Raleigh. It was a big victory for a small county. By nature, Chowan is a beautiful county and it is too bad that the necessity for a continuous effort to keep it that way comes not from nature but from our citizens. As a nation, we have reached the point where we generate so much refuse that it ; is becoming a major chal lenge to dispose of it in a safe way. Time was when most everything we used was biodegradable. Ferrous prod ucts would rust away. Paper would decompose. Wood would rot. And copper was too valuable to be thrown away. But then came aluminum cans, plastics of all sorts and rubber, all of which have a half life longer than the whole life of the throwaway genera tion that inherited them. And throw them away we do, along the highways, on the beaches, in the parks, wherever we happen to be at the time. To a degree, life has become pretty much a cleanup brigade after the circus. Whole com munities are having to orga nize volunteer groups to sup plement efforts by public san itation workers to keep the environment ek>oa;-«lSama»» times our best efforts seem inadequate. Chowan county and the Town of Edenton have been more successful than many other communities, a condi tion recognized at the state level. For that we are all Continued On Page 8 Large Crowd Gathers For Center's Opening A large crowd was on hand Sunday afternoon for the opening of the new Chowan Community Center and Swain Apartments, crafted from an abandoned school building a block away from downtown Edenton. The resurrection of the structure has been hailed as a unique example of cooper ation between government and business. County commission chair man Alton Elmore said that "This is truly a dream come true in Edenton and Chowan County. He said that the school, along with its 900-seat auditorium "came within a snap of being just like the hundreds of abandoned and deteriorated schools across the United States." Elmore lauded private de veloper Dewayne Anderson, County Manager Cliff Cope land and Copeland's As sistant, Nancy Morgan for guiding the project to its com pletion. Ross Inglis, retired developer, was thanked for his advice as the project got rolling. Applause met the intro duction of E.A. Swain, seated in the audience, the school's namesake. The classroom portion of the school was sold to An derson for $100,000. He then converted the building into 38 apartments for the elderly and disabled. The county used the proceeds of the sale, an N.C. Arts Council grant, a state grant, a CDBG grant transferred from the town and county funds to renovate the auditorium.. Anderson said that he cal culated that ten generations of citizens had been educated at Swain and "We're rededi cating this facility to continue to educate our children." He cited the project as "An outstanding example of how the public sector and private Injuries Sustained i Heavy rains Monday night contributed to a one car acci dent on N.C. 32 South at the intersection of Old Hertford Road. Edenton Police were call ed to the scene at 9:10 p.m. A report filed by Patrolman * W.D. Harris stated that a 1986 Oldsmobile, driven by Cor nelius McCray, 32, of Route 1, Roper, was proceeding into Edenton when McCray lost control. The car skidded around in a complete circle, struck a telephone pole and came to rest in the ditch. McCray and passenger Samelda Belcher, 31, of Ro per, were transported by the rescue squad to Chowan Hos pital. Ms. Belcher was treated and released. McCray was admitted and was listed in stable condition Wednesday. Another passenger, Jeffery Simpson, 21, also of Roper, was uninjured. Harris estimated that $2,000 damage was done to the car and $2,500 to the Carolina Telephone pole. The officer charged Mc Cray with driving too fast for existing conditions. sector worked together to make people's lives better." He also praised the federal Farmer’s Home Adminis tration "for believing in the project and providing fi nancing." On hand for the celebration were Rep. R.M, (Pete) Thomp son of Chowan and Rep. Vernon James of Pasquo tank. Thompson, commen ting on the auditorium said, "We should use it. The more we use it, the more it will mean to us." It did see its first official use Thursday evening when the Tommy Dorsey Band per formed before an almost ca pacity crowd. After speeches, a bronze plaque, commemorating the opening, was unveiled in the lobby separating the audi torium from the apartments. Apartments were open for public inspection and a ribbon cutting on the ground floor of the auditorium officially opened Chowan Arts Council and Senior Center areas. On hand during the fes tivities were entertainers throughout the complex. Theft Charged The Chowan County Grand Jury handed down embezzle ment indictments Monday morning charging Dorothy (Dot) McCray of taking funds entrusted to her as occupancy specialist and secretary at the Edenton Housing Authority. Edenton Police Sergeant McCoy Parker said that the charges contain "quite a few counts" of embezzlement. Acting Police Chief C.H. Williams said that an ex tensive investigation by his department began in late January. He said that Town Manager Ann-Marie Kelly and EHA Director Byron Ke hayes worked closely with po lice in the probe. Williams and Parker said that the investigation was complete and that they ex pected to arrest Mrs. McCray in the near future after a war rant has been prepared. They declined to specify the amount of money taken. "The two officers assigned to the case, Sergeant Parker and Patrolman W.D. Harris, did an excellent job," Chief Williams commented. Kenayes said Wednesday that Mrs. McCray has been suspended from her job. I SOME CLASSROOM--Mary Elliott, who taught at Swain School, looks over an apartment kitchen that was once a classroom. She remarked that the classrooms had five windows while the apartments have three. The school building was converted into 38 apartments for the elderly and disabled. Town Absorbs 61% Of Rate Hike Electricity customers of the Town of Edenton may soon be receiving a rate increase. At a meeting of town council's utilities committee this week, members agreed on a rate hike of 2.9 per cent. The recommendation must still be FIRE SCENE—Not much remains of the home of the Ted Hurdle family on Wingfield Loop Rd. after a Thursday afternoon blaze. The fire took the life of three-year-old Tedrick Hurdle and seriously injured his mother and four-year-old sister. Fire Claims Life Of Three-Year Old By JACK GROVE A mid-afternoon fire last Thursday took the life of a three-year-old child and bad ly burned his mother and older sister. The fire, first spotted by Mrs. Emma Evans, a neigh bor, was at the home of Ted and Marion Hurdle on .. 1. BEST SPEECH-Gabrielle Webster, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Glen Webster, was the county, district and division winner of the American Legion's annual oratorical contest with the U.S. Constitution as the subject. She is flanked by her teacher, Maijie Hollowell, her mother and father and George Stokes, chairman of the contest of Edenton Post 40. The state'finals were held in Edenton Saturday with Brent Goff of Stantonsburg being named state winnpr. Miss Webster gave her speech for the benefit of Post 40 members at their meeting Tuesday night Wingfield Loop Rd. in the Tyner section of the county. Mrs. Hurdle was appar ently hanging out a clothes wash in the yard when the fire started. The children were in side. Ted Hurdle, who works at a meat packing plant in Smithfield, Va., was at work at the time. In an interview Saturday, Mrs. Evans said that she was going to her mailbox at the road when she saw smoke at the Hurdle home. She said that she ran to Walter Baker's house and asked him if he thought it was just a trash fire. He looked and said that the house must be burning. "He carried me down there in a car," she related. "The whole front of the house was afire when we got there. She (Mrs. Hurdle) was in the house trying to find the baby," her three-year-old son, Ted rick. Baker ran around to the rear and unsuccessfully tried v to enter the house. Mrs. Evans said that * Michele, 4, had been rescued e by her mother before re-en tering the burning dwelling. 1 Mrs. Hurdle emerged from the house "with her coat on fire and falling off of her and her slacks burned through." The witness quoted the mother as saying, "Get my baby out of there. I had his hand and he slipped out of it." The mother and daughter were placed in Baker's car and he returned them to his house where he called the fire department and rescue squad. First of emergency per sonnel on the scene was Deputy Sheriff Victor Lamb. He said that he tried to enter the house via a back window but was driven back by flames. Emmett Winborne, As sistant Chief of the Center Hill-Cross Roads Fire Dept, said that the house was en veloped in flames when he arrived and that the roof had Continued On Page 8 ratified by the full council at the Tuesday night meeting. Town Manager Ann Marie Kelly said Wednesday that a rate increase of 7.4 per cent will go into effect April 1 by the town's supplier of elec tricity, N.C. Eastern Munici pal Power Agency. She said that it is being applied to the town’s demand rate. Only part of this will be passed on to customers. "After we examined cur-; rent budget and next year's projected budget, we deter mined there would be an ap proximate revenue shortfall of $208,000. "With the operation of our peak generators, we sub stantially reduce our de mand load." The genera-tors were installed and went into operation last July. She said that the town would be able to avoid 3.5 per cent of the in crease because of the genera tors. The manager said that $108,000 of the shortfall would be accounted for by increas ing the appropriated fund bal ance from reserve funds. Part of the reserve came from a savings when the generators were installed at a cost substantially below esti mates. The rate increase of 2.9 per :ent accounts for the re maining $100,000 of the short fall. Ms. Kelly pointed out that the last increase in rates, two per cent, came in 1985. She said that in May of this year, Edenton's rates would be comparable to the neighboring Albemarle Electric Member ship Co-op's rates. For the average electri-city customer now using 1,000 kilowatts per month, the bill is $83. With the increase, that bill moves up to $85.40. If the increase to the town had been passed on in full to customers, the bill would have been $89.10. , Parties Plan Meetings The Democratic and Republican Parties in Chowan County nil each hold meetings during the month of March. Democrats will hold their precinct meetings on Thursday, larch 9 (tonight) at 7:30 p.m. at the regular polling places for ach precinct. Republicans will have their annual County Convention on londay, March 20 at 7 p.m. in the old Chowan Courthouse. Sites for the Democratic precinct meetings are as follows: Yeopim. .New National Guard Armory Rocky Hock.Rocky Hock Rescue Squad Building EastEdenton.Old National Guard Armory WestEdenton.New Rescue Squad Building Wardville.Gliden Rescue Squad Building Center Hill.Center Hijl - Crossroads Fire Department