Sil0!uiiey;;K0 BostdGDSs ilraito; Id Dead- KSort 4 1 J. - :f 5 r isi ft f i 4 -7.- COMMUNITY M FORT Members of the Stanley Road Community Group join in efforts toward raising money for the eventual paving of their road. By Lionel! Parker , Staff Writer After more than ten years of pot holes, during the wet season, rock dust during the dry, petitions, letters to and meetings with public officials and governing,! - t bodies, residents of the Stanley Road area in northern. Durham County are fed up with bureaucratic red tape. The residents of that area are about to get something done about, their road. .The communi ty residents, organized in to an interest group, have banded themselves together in a grassroots ef fort to raise money for the paving of their road. After forming an interest group ten years ago, the group began to write, petition and contact many officials in order to get something done about their plight. "We were just plain tired of the potholes in the winter and the dust in the summer. When it was time to scrape the roads in the area, it always seemed as though our road was the last to' get something done,' said John Daniels, a leader in the group. The f group began writing to then-Governor Holshouser in order to get some - action, but time "after time they were refer-. red to some other official. In . the current ad ministration, the group has contacted Governor Hunt and also Hunt's special assistant, Ben Ruf fin. "We contacted Special Assistant to the Governor, Ben Ruffin, and he said he would attend one of our meetings, but until this . time we haven't seen him yet," said Edgar Nunn, another resident in the area. After many petitions and meetings, the group was partially satisfied by the fact that their road would be rated for possi ble paving, however that was only a portion (.6 mile) that would be rated due to the different status -of portions of the road. According to the Department of Transpor tation.District Engineer, Robert A. Smith.the state adopted new laws govern ing secondary roads and the maintenance of those roads in 1957. The new rules allowed the paving of roads only after they have been rated and given a numerical priority accor ding to points. A portiuon ' of the Stanley road came under the rules that would allow the paving of the road. Smith said that two portions of the Stanley road were governed by rules that called for owner participation in the cost of the paving. He explained that two portions of Stanley road were added after the According to the Department of Transportation District Engineer, Robert A. There are lots of reasons why YouTl do better at AgP frs& rare 7n IASDJL INSPECTED FRESH wnmrmm Each of ttwM advartlaad km la n- qiiiad to ba readily available lor aata at rm Hamm m annum Mn nnea w aacn f J AAP Store azcapt as spaciflcaty notad at dus ao. mho rrn-rnvmimmnTnim rrmnirr nn mUHOHEHEO "OR SALE NOT AVABJIBLE TO OTHER BETAS. DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS . czjl o 621 Broad Street 1109 E. Main Street 3205 University Drive 3438 Hillsborough Road FRYER LEGS BREAST mm mm ! VM-aDoBattarWMiAa V tEAFOOOSHOP Do Bator WMi AF SMOKED MEAT SHOP CHICKEN LIVERS 78 I I TV TOESHPFTfER oSSom 39 ' ( s. f J-J ILSJUL MSPCCTEO FnESH I w "'J iVS -J I FRYER ?jS)af5 lb. J- l ' 1- WIDeBMrMkUri N ( Ybul Do Bator WM AP" J iv COUNTRY FARM PORK SHOP J BUTCHER SHOP J r WniI Do Bator WWi AAP-a SAUSAGE SHOP Vbul Do Bator WM AACt BUTCHER SHOP Mukt usmt urrm FISH FILLETS PERCH FILLETS FISH PORTIONS .urn UH 1 BLACK lZZ.u $128 MO. I SLICED BOLOGNA HOMKLmjeas COOKED HAM CMtm CUT OH UMaT 79c PORK CHOPS 99 PORK ROAST 1" SIRLOIN TIP sss ROAST CANNED HAM SS 5M UTTLlsisiER PORKBACK RIBS . 1M SNTIP $020 lb. aSa $048 LB. Mm J THOMPSON SEEDLESS, REO OR BLACK GRAPES 99i (AVEIto HOT ki-i Il Castyear Ra SOLID TENDER OREEN CABBAGE SCLfCTSV DRY MEDIUM YELLOW 19i UM. NO. ONE ALL PURPOSE m WHITE ONIONS POTATOES bao CAUPOHMU VALENCIA JUMaO . . 'IftfSH ROMAINt ORANGES 5 . am mi tfkiAiial ' v . .AaAaifal MCBTBllrtBIIATn MM ItlUIn APPLES Si 1 DRESSING tff 99' LETT UCE unoi BUNCH S,3 49 YOU'LL DO betlerwrT HASP'S grocery: products mm TbiMtiu. mu rmnrn www GREEN BEANS 3SS100 CRACKERS 2 .H90 PLASTIC WRAP VSt 99 FRUIT C0CKTAIL2SS! SPAM IS Y SAUERKRAUT 3SSS M00 DEVILED SPAM c2i 39 DRY MILK SULTANA itu Mart, w ANN MOE FRESH SALAD DRESSING POLISH PICKLES QUART JAR f MP COUPON ' "I AtfOR ANN MSB 52 11 (or I 1 iiSTUSKia. DURHAM AP COUPON .. -J I I I- I rfS-.QBANGE -JUICE v ssssr"'" btlt viy j YOU'LL DO better WITH MP'S action prices TISSUE AT '49 PAPER TOWELS 2 uSSt!00 YOU'U 00 better WITH MP'S dairy products BUTTERMILK 79 COTTAGE CHEESE ci? 1W i y MP COUPON 1 CONTAINS RKH BRAZILIAN COFRUS o-aocK HtiSTANT C0?F JAR ' 4 i '7 A J - I.. Joha Dsnids, kadcr of tkc comiBir croap, pitclicd m with tkc bafldiat of u raoraoas barbeqac pit nadc froai aa old oi taak. mm z LrWTT OBBt COUaXNl a I a'':...ia own! .!. DURHAM J YOU'LL DO better WITH MP S economy corner SHORTCNINQ $137 , KITCHEN BAGS 30 1M 55f ' M1! . APPLE JUICE $1M . Mart Hon mow CRSAUSR YOU'LL DO better WITH MP'S frozen foods ANNMOe TWIN POPS one OAaoca CHoa Tutaua oaacNa oa m I 9 COLLAR0S 2 mat I PEPSI-COLA - nOUtlTAIIl DEW 1-UTEI b-PACI IHUINAIll I0TTU PIUS DEPOSIT u PENCILS 89 BINDER Smith, the state adopted new laws governing secon dary roads and the maintenance of those roads in 1957. The new rules allow the paving of roads only after they have been rated and given a numerical priority accor ding to points. A portion of the Sunley Road came under the rules that would allow the paving of the road. Smith said that two portions of Stanley road were governed by rules that called for owner par ticipation in the cost of the paving. He explained that two portions of Stanley Road were added after the adoption of the highway maintenance laws of 1957. The portions of Stanley Road that do not fall under the state law that re quires the state to pave the road are covered under what is now called the sub division rule. That rule re quires that in order for the road to be paved, residents of the road must come up with the amount of $4.00 per frontal foot which must be forwarded to the state before any paving of the subdivision portion is ' done; ' However, there are alter natives to getting the pav ing done without com pletely having all the money prior to the paving. The county, if money is available, can come up with 25 per cent of the re quired amount and assess the residents in the area for that portion put up by the county. The county does require that 75 per cent of the cost be col lected before h can con sider financing. Residents of the Stanley Road area, after ex hausting all ends, decided to do what they could to raise the necessary funds since all the residents in the area can't afford to pay. According to Smith, the ? road, if not covered by : different rules, could qualify for full paving by the state. The rating system, as explained by Smith.is divided into three categories with various points assigned in each area. The categories are: Land Use and Public Service Characteristics, Traffic Characteristics,and General Route Characteristics. In the various categories, homes are given three points, schools-fifteen points, business and industry-five points, churches-five to fifteen points. If the road being rated is used also as : a school bus route, ten points are given, if a thoroughfare, ten points; and also the average an nual 24 hour traffic volume is added to the tal ly. After the points have been totaled, the road is ranked with the other road projects by the number of points scored. However, Smith cautioned that roads are not . automatical ... ly rated. TStfy are rated . only after tttions feave been received, and -acted upon. Residents of the Stanley Road area, after having exhausted every channel opened to them, have turned .to the grass roots efforts of fundrais ing, such as selling dinners to raise the necessary funds. "We are working peo ple and we aren't asking for handouts, but we do feel there has been some unfairrjajs handed out when itJcomes to our road being Wed," said one unidentified resident. The) residents of the road laid tney were going to do'everything necessary to get their road paved. Director Named To Howard University Hospital WASHINGTON. D.C. Haynes Rice, acting director of the Howard University Hospital, has been named director of the 500-bed medical facili ty, succeeding Dr. Charles Ireland who retired from the position on June 30. Rice becomes the hospital's chief executive officer after, serving as deputy director of the hospital and being respon sible for its adminstratton for the past three years. Rice becomes the hospital's chief ,executive officer after serving as deputy director of the hospital and being respon sible for Us administration for the past three years. Before coming to Howard, the hospital ad ministrator served as deputy commisioner - of the New York City Department of Health; ex ecutive assistant to the president of the New York City HeaUh-mnd Hospitals Corporation; and acting -a Vl.v T -V- . TV mT air i fTT, Csrvantn bagsn writing "Don Quixbta" whflt h was in jail executive director ot Harlem hospital. He has also been administrator of Norfolk Community Hospital. Norfolk (1966-70); Florida A&M University Hospital. Tallahassee (1964-661; and Jubilee Hospital, Hender son. N.C. 11961-64). Rice holds a master's degree in business ad ministration from the University of Chicago, where he received the Bachymeycr Award as outstanding student in the , school's hospital ad ministration program. In assuming his new position. Rice says that his main challenge will be "to provide efficient patient care that is effective and will allow Howard Univer sity Hospital to continue the growth that she's ex periencing." He believes Howard has "a unique opportunity to demonstrate leadership in providing quality health care for black Americans. -Nothing can bt dons saetpt .bV.llt.1'' v t aU.-J. DMWfaliiaa