Vol. LXXIII, No. 6 Wednesday, February 8, 2006 Single Copies: 50c Ninth graders, teachers team up for success in coming school year BY GLENDA JAKUBOWSKI Edenton-Chowan Schools Edenton-Chowan Schools Board of Education members heard about plans to change the ninth grade high school experience at their February I meeting. John A. Holmes principal Bill Moore, hosting the meeting in the schpol’s media center, said incoming freshmen will be placed in one of two 1 teams, with core classes taught up stairs in the main building. “There are more lockers up there, and we know that ninth graders use their lockers more than the other stu dents,” Moore said. “Also the school nurse and resource officer are located on the second floor - it makes sense to put the teams there.” Experts have identified ninth grade as a “make or break” year for stu dents. School systems throughout the country have begun to address issues particular to ninth graders in an ef fort to ensure the students’ high school success, Moore said. The ninth grade students will be taught by teachers who have volun teered for the role, both because they are intrigued by the teaming concept and because they have a special love for the younger stu dents, Moore said. The stu dents also will take a character development class designed to build real world social expertise. Elective classes will be taken with the mixed high school population. Moore cited statistics to back up the Moore advantages of the team concept for ninth graders, including significant drops in tardiness and a 50 percent drop in fights among students. Other advantages include easier sharing of information among team teachers, flexibility in blocking class time, a common planning time for teachers, interdisciplinary learning, and more flexibility for parents wishing to meet with teachers. “Parents can meet with teachers during the school day now, if they wish,” Moore said. “Before, they had to wait until after school.” Ninth grade students will earn the same number of credits during the year as they did under the previous configuration, Moore said. Also under study for the high school’s future are an AP Spanish course and a “credit recovery” pro gram designed to help students who have not done well in portions of a course they otherwise successfully completed. In other board news, the system’s Teachers of the Year, Administrator of the Year, and National Board Cer tified Teachers were honored with a See TEAM On Page A2 Harriss: Vaughans named Main Street champs From Staff Reports On Thursday, January 26, Mayor Roland and Peggy Ann Vaughan were honored as 2005 Main Street Champions at the North Carolina Main Street Annual Awards Dinner in Salisbury, NC. The Vaughans were se lected for this spe cial rec ognition by Destination Downtown Edenton in appreciation for their exceptional contribu tions to the downtown revital ization process. Along with Champions from 31 other com munities, the Vaughans were presented certificates com memorating their designation by NC Assistant Secretary of Commerce Cleve Simpson, Di vision of Community Assis tance Director Gloria Ndnce Sims and Office of Urban De velopment Director Rodney L. Swink, FASLA. Each of the state’s active Main Street programs is given the opportunity annually to recognize a local Main Street Champion. The dedication and hard work of countless volun teers is required to make a lo cal Main Street program suc cessful, and the Main Street Peggy Anne and Roland Vaughan See CHAMPS On Page A2 Planning for growth Sean JaeksonfThe Chowan Herald Councilors Willis Privott, Jimmy Stallings and Steve Biggs listen intently during discussions on future growth as a Vision Statement containing goals for the future is fine-tuned. BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald With new housing sprout ing up in and around Eden ton — and with more poised to come in the near future — town councilors have added the growth issue to their an nually revised Vision State ment. During a meeting at the town-owned Northeast Part nership building on Jan. 31, councilors high lighted their goals for the new year. Han dling the projected popula tion influx, and its increased need for public services, was one of the hot topics at the four-hour session. The big question, Council man Steve Biggs said, is: “What are we going to do?” The town could have to ex pand its utility services, in cluding water and sewer, an issue officials have discussed over the past year. In addi tion, new retail businesses may also follow the new resi dents, Biggs, an economic developer, said Monday. Councilors are also discuss" ing how to manage any new business development while maintaining the town’s qual ity of life, Biggs said. Mayor Roland Vaughan, one of five council members who joined Town Manager Anne-Marie Knighton for the afternoon meeting, said the town’s future would unques tionably be affected by a larger population. Especially businesses. “I think the challenge for Edenton is how we can ac commodate the new growth so the businesses in Edenton get the first look from these people who come out to spend their disposable in come,” he said. Biggs agreed, adding that modern shoppers like conve nient, nearby places to shop. “We’re now the kind of people,” Biggs said, “we want (everything) now.” See GROWTH On Page A3 County election filing period opens Monday Sheriff says he has no plans to seek re-election BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald Three county commission seats and the Chowan sheriff’s job will occupy the ballot slots for the May primary elections, with the filing period for those races set to open Monday (Feb. 13). Board of Commissioners Chairman Wayne Goodwin’s District 1, Seat 2 post will be joined by positions held by commissioners Louis Belfield (District 3, Seat 2) and Jimmy Alligood (District 2, Seat 2) on * the May 2 primary ballot. All three commissioners are Democrats. Sheriff Fred Spruill has said he does not intend to seek re-election, opening the door for a new Chowan County sheriff. In addition, Chowan County Clerk of Superior Court Mike McArthur is set for ■another re-elec tion bid. ' The filing period opens at 12 p.m. on Monday, and will close at 12 p.m. on Feb. 28. Edenton-Chowan Board of Education posts will not be on the May ballots, as they are non-partisan posi tions. The filing period for school board posts will open in July. Cocaine kilos confiscated BY EARLINE WHITE The Chowan Herald Two kilos of cocaine were intercepted on their way to Chowan County Thursday night at approximately 8 p.m. through a multi-agency effort bust in Alamance County. Francisco Avila of the Greensboro area was arrested and is currently being held in the Alamance County Jail un der a $60,000 secured bond for 2 cpunts of trafficking. The kilos found were estimated to be worth $72,000, but could range in value from $24,000 $200,000 depending upon how it was broken down for street sale. A 380 handgun, along with $100,000 in US currency, was also seized. Trafficking is a class D felony punishable by a mandatory See COCAINE On Page A2 INSIDE Calendar.. C2 Church.C7, 8 Classifieds.D1 -4 Editorials.A6 Obituaries.C6 Society.C3 Sports.B1-4 Contact us Call 482-4418 02006 The Chowan Herald All Rights Reserved < Chowan Hospital brings hi-tech screenings home $1.4 million spent on renovations, technology needs - BY SEAN JACKSON The Chowan Herald No longer does the radiolo gist at Chowan Hospital have to place an X-ray on a light screen to diagnose what ails a patient. All Dr. Williams C. “Skip” Hope IV has to do is view the image on a computer-style monitor. The Picture Archiving and Communication System, or PACS, is just one new facet of Chowan Hospital’s revamped radiology department. A new CT scanner machine and nuclear medicine camera also provide better service to pa tients, to what was already a V good system at the hospital, Hope said. “I think we’re real lucky in this community,” Hope said, “to have this hospital, and this equipment. Most (smal ler) hospitals don’t have equipment like this.’’ Hospital president Jeff Sackrison agreed that the $1.4 million renovation — in cluding the purchase of new equipment — enables the hospital to better serve the community by eliminating the need for some patients to travel out of Chowan for hi tech exams. “This is state-of-the-art equipment,” Sackrison said. Hope and his staff work in a new radiology suite that provides comfort, swiftness, and hi-tech servicse. The new space Includes renovated I mm i rooms that formerly housed ad ministrative staff. In aD, the upgrade has doubled the size of the hospital’s radiology depart ment. ISlBKiillHUiWraHiiiilMSiiil) V Sean Jaduon/Ihe Chowan Herald Hope, the chief radiologisi at Chowan and Bertie Memo rial hospitals, lives in Edentor with his wife, Virginia M Hope, and their three children Dr. William C. “Skip” Hope IV talks with a patient about to undergo a CT scan in the newly renovated Radiology Department at Chowan Hospital. Dr. Hope serves as chief radiologist for both Chowan and Bertie County Memorial Hospital. He is board certified. In addi tion to the new scanning ma chines, Hope feels the PACS will boost the quality of care radiology patients receive. * “It’s faster, it’s more effi J1 cient,” he said of the PACS See HOSPITAL On Page A2 l.