. 'V I .^'V-^-i*-jS4i*3 4i ^*^|^, L SC 27g46 News & Advertising Deadline: Monday Noon Harnett County News Published Continuously Since 1919 THURSDAY, JULY 5.1979 TWENTY CENTS Susan Who? Library Staffer Relates biterestiiig Facts About New Dollar’s Namesake [Editor’s Notet Monday marked the debut of the new Susan B. Anthony dollaz colaa. So tax, they have been met with mixed reactkma at beat, ranging from "cute” to “ugly” and “convenient” to “nnlsaiice.” The most distressing comments, though, have been "Who Is Susan B. Anthony?” Harnett County library staffer ' Paula MofBtt agreed to shed a little light on the life of this remark* able woman, the Qrst to adorn American cnrreney.] by Paula Moffit ' A new coin was introduced this week to the public for circula- tion-the Susan B. Anthony dollar. The coin, with the obverse side bearing the profile of l^s Anthony and the reverse side the symbolic eagle of Apollo 11, is larger than a quarter but smaller than a fifty cents piece. It is a copper-nickel clad coin like all U.S. coins valued at 10 cents or greater. This compo sition has many advantages, such as superior surface wear and apperarance and relatively low cost to produce. Also, because of the unique clectricai resistivity and density of the laminate, it is very difficult to counterfeit or slug. The reasoning for the substitution of the dollar coin for the note is that it eliminates the need for removal of worn and tom bills from drculation. It reduces mistakes resulting from new currency being stuck toge ther or being mixed denomi nation. The new coin reduces teller verification time and speeds up teller transactions, while it reduces customer waiting time. It also eliminates jamitdng of currency counting machines. For the retailers, the new one dollar coins will save time and reduce errors at the cash register.. They are also easily withdrawn and dropped into the cash register, whereas doliar bills must be placed and straightened. The coins are quickly counted and handled and easy to separate by size. SUSAN B. ANTHONY Susan B. Anthony was a great American who devoted her life to securing the tight of women to vote. She stood firm on the belief that equality is the tight of every citizen, not the privi- ledge of a few. Bom in Adams, Mass, in 1820, Miss Anthony was r^ed in a family of Hicksrte Quakers. These people were often the backbone of liberal thought and action in nineteenth century America. She was fund-raiser and 'president of the local chapter of the Daughters of Temperence, one of the only organizations' open to women, and to them she delivered her first public speech. When she was refusetl) permission to speak at a mass-i meeting of the Sons of Temper ence, being told that women^' were there only "to listen and' learn,” she walked out to become the organizer of the first Woman’s' State Temperence Society in New York. Miss Anthony was a strong- vdlled person who didn’t give up easily. She often spoke up for working women and their plight, yet she was denied a delegate’s seat at the 1869 Convention of the National Labor Union. One trying moment came to her when at the first Women’s Rights convention in 1866, her life-long family friend, author Frederick Douglass and his male uti-slavery advocates announced that women must wait and be patient because this was‘Negro’s hour. ” This statement was a bitter blow for Miss Anthony because she had also worked for anti slavery. It was her dream that all citizens would have the right to vote, black and white, male and female. . The non-citizen status of women bothered Miss Anthony the most, and led her to the legal event for which she is best known: The case of the United States vs. Susan 6. Anthony. Throughout 1872, she had been urging delegates of the suffrage convention to test the theory that the Fourteenth Amendment did not exclude women frofn voting. Reading a newspaper plea urging all citizens to register to vote, she did not see anything indicating that the vote was intended for men only. On Nov. 1 she led a group of women to register to vote in Rochester, N.Y., armed with the 14th Amendment and the state election law which she read as proof that the text did not prohibit women from voting. The same 16 women returned to the polls on Nov. 5 and voted. All were soon arrested and pleaded guilty to voting. They were placed under bail of SSOO and ordered to appear before the Albany court where Miss Anthony’s bail was raised to $1,000. Miss Anthony was prepared for these actions and those about to follow. She spent months before the trial speaJdng in 29 post office districts of the county on the subject, “Is h a crime for a U.S. citizen to vote?” The trial, held in June 1873, was a mockery of justice. The judge was newly appointed by a senator known to be an adver sary of the women’s cause. The judge declared that Miss Anthony was not competent to testify in her own case and was not protected by law and did not have the ri^t to vote. He refused to have the jury polled, but rather dismissed them. ' He asked her if she had anything to say before sentence was passed. She replied, with many interruptions from the judge, “Failing to get this justice-justice, even to get a trial by jury not of my peers-I ask not leniency at your hands.’’ The sentence of the court was to pay a fine of $100 and the cost of the prosecution. Miss anthony refused to pay the fine. She never did pay the fine, but for 33 more years continued speaking, writing and coun seling her followers, who carried on her work and secured passage of the 19th Amendment in 1920. Miss Anthony never waivered in her effort to gun the vote and to record for history the many events of the women’s move ment. Today she is honored by being the first American woman, rather than a symix^c woman, to appear on .the circulating coinage of our nation. Board Hears Road Requests From Women HONORED FOR LONG AND DISTING UISHED SERVICE — These four women were presented with certificates of appreciation at the Monday meethig of the Harnett County Board of Commlsslooers. Retiring from the county offices on June 30 were: [from left] Mrs. Lillian Smith, after 17 years in the Clvfl Defense office; Mrs. Lottie Patterson, after 35 years in the Tax Supervisor’s office: Mrs. Alice Smincke, 33 years at the Tax Collector’s office; and Mrs. Rachel Blanchard, after SO years at the Auditor’s office. Mrs. Patterson was given her 35 year pin; Mrs. Blanchard was presented a 30 year pin. Fellow employees gathered afterwards at a party in the county office building to say good-bye to the women, who received high praise for commissioners. Tax Supervisor Thomas Allen, and Tax Collector Earl Jones. [Photo by Lud Uzzle.] Four women from the Churchland area between Buies and Erwin approached the county board Monday morning to ask that action be taken to improve the roads in their housing development. The board and department of transportation representative Taylor told the women that the roads, at this point, are neither the state’s nor the county’s Responsibility. ' V The state, Taylor explained, will maintain their roa& once they are accepted on to the state ^stem. But they are in such poor shape, they won’t meet state standards for acceptance until they are repaired. ‘‘The drainage and the pavement’s all tom to pieces,” siud Taylor, ”and there are large potholes.” The cost to get the roads in shape would be approximately $50,000 per mile. The stretch of road the women live on is about a half mile in length. “We cannot afford $25,000. There are 10 to 12 homes there. That would be $2,000 each, and we just can’t afford it," said Elaine Chance. The women .'aid they had been petitioning the highway department for several years to improve the drainage systems, .which flood over inlo the yards when it rains, and the potholes in the roads which knock their cars out of alignment. Commissioners told the wo- men-Betty Thompson, Elaine Chance, Kathy McNeill and Ella McLean-that they should first contact the developers of the plan, and then the Farmers' Home Administration for aid. This is not a real unique situation,” said chairman Jesse Alphin. “It’s all over the county. We’re willing to approve a petition to have the street added to the state system-we already have. The / problem is with the state and your developers.”. The women said they had not yet approached the develop- ers-Fred McCall, Jake Lamb, John WQboume and Currin and Dorman-to ask for help. In other business, the board: * Opted to readvertise for bids on the county's first machines. At the bid opening at -10 ajn. Mondayr'-onlyA one qompany-Valtec of Tulsa, Okla homa submitted a sealed bid for the 22 machines the county plans to buy. The Valtec bid will be left sealed untQ the August 6 meeting of the board. If there are no other bids at that time, it will be opened anyway. The Valtec Tally Box, a computerized unit that counts and stores hand-marked bal lots, was recommended almost unanimously by a team of registrars and judges from the Harnett Board of Elections. •Adopted a new personnel policy which will put county employees on a 40 hour week and which incorporates many policies the board has adopted since the last set of policies was adopted. (^unty employees have been on a 37Vi hour work week for several years. “The forty-hour week is more compatible with the functions „of. the, private^ sector, of Jihe economy," 'comment!^''Jesse Alphin. “I think it might be more acceptable to the people who pick up the bill, the taxpayers." Ambulance workers are on a 56 hour week, and law enforce-' ment employees are on a 60 hour week under the new pdicy. Mileage for county emplo yees is increased fium 16 cents to 17 cents in the policy- •Agreed to send a letter of ' intent to purchase liability insurance for county employees fium the Republic Insurance Company of Dallas, Texas. The letter is not a commit ment to buy the policy. County Manager Jack Brock recommended that if the policy is taken, it should be taken as a whole packet at a rate of $30 per he^. Brock expressed his reserva tions about the insurance. “Are we opening the door for lawsuit^ If you've got it, do ■you carie’if you’re sued? I don’t know,” he said. He added on the other hand, tht the mental health board had been sued on at least two occasions, that the board of education bad also been sued. Most counties, he said, are taking liability insurance on their employees - Local BPW Gets New Officers The IMn^n Business and Professional Women’s Club bad a good beginning'when the first meeting of the year was held at the home of the president, Mrs. Charlotte Renn. A covered dish meal was featured at the meeting as plans for activities during the year was discussed. Club members plan to jupport the Fourth of July Festival planned by the lilling- ton Chamber of Commerce. Carolyn Johnson, first vice president, announced she had presented the BPW scholar ship to Karen Sawyer, gradu ate of Harnett Central High School. Mrs. Charlotte Renn and Mrs." Sirens Byrd will be delegates to the National BPW meeting in Boston in July. The theme for BPW for the /ear is “Decade for Decision: Together We Aspire, Together We Achieve." In addition to a strong focus on international issues, their impact on women and on going programs such as individual development plans and young career women, BPW programs for the new year will deal with issues important to working women; Health and retirement plans. sex-stereotyping in education and the. changing nature of family life. New dub officers and committee chairmen are: President - Charlotte Reno; Ist vice president, Carolyn Johnson; &d vice president, Dorothea Stewart; secretary, Ruth Knight; treasurer, Daphine Crews; parliamentari an, Dr. Theo Strum. Program Chairman, Carolyn Johnson; Foundation chairman, Margaret Randall; legislative chairman. Flora J. MQtoo; public relations chairman. Ester Johnson; finance chair man, Cramer Davis; Yoimg Careerist chairman, Dorothea Stewart: membership chair man, Sirena Byrd; and calendar chairman, Elizabeth L. Mat thews. I Accidents Reported An accident involving two out-of-town motorists was re ported by the Lillington Police Department on June 29. Investigated by Officer Qyde Pate, the aeddent occured on South Main Street and involved Ceartlinied oa PageA THE NEW OFFICERS, eommittee chairmen of the lillington Business and Professional Wmben’s Club are, I'T: Sirena Byrd, membership; Flora J. Milton, legislation; Dorothea L. Stewart, second vice president: Carolyn T. Johnson, first vice president; Qiariotte L. Renn, president; Ruth J. Knight,- secretary; D^thlne W. Crews, treasurer; Cramer T. Davis, finanee chairman; Elster Johnson, pnblie relations. Not pietnred are Margaret Randall, fonndatiMi; Elizabeth Matthews, calendar; Theo Stnun, parliamentarian. [Photo by Steve Plummer) New Rotary Officers Installed The lillington Rotary Cub installed a new sated of officers at their regular meeting June 28 at Speedy’s Restaurant. On hand for the installation ceremony was the past district governor A. B. Johnson of Dunn, current district secretary. Johnson conducted the cere mony, swearing in Glenn Hood as the club’s new president, replacing I^prold Uojd, who assumed a poshioo on the board of directors as past president. The other new officers were Dan Spangler, vice prerident and -Larry Currin, secretary- treasurer. The officers are also serving as members of the board of directors. Other directors sworn in Thursday, in addition to those already mentioned, are Reid Ross, Steve Skinner, Ray Gilchrist and Roger Johnson. A. B. Johnson also conducted the induction ceremonies of the two new members, Joe Boone and Tom Edwards. Noting that this year marks the 75th anniversary of Rotary International, Hood emphasized hts theme for the new year, ' ‘Rotary Effectiveness. ’ ’ Hood reflected on the influence of the Rotary organization on his own life, beginning with his childhood when he first came into contact with the group through school-related activities. Hood said he would like to see the local dub become more visible in its community and school projects and emphasized the need for an active member ship. MBA Names Promotions NEW ROTARY CLUB OFFICERS for 1979-80, installed last week, are 1-r, Larry Currin, secretary-treasurer; Glenn Hood, president; and Dsn Spangler, vice president. [Photo by Dr. J.K. WlDifordi Vincent B. Lane, t^ratora ‘manager of the Lillington plant of MBAssociates, has been promoted to divisional vice president by Robert Main- hardt, president and chief executive officer at the firm’s headquarters [p San Ramon, Cal. Lane is a pioneer in the employment of passive radar countermeasures for aircraft protection and is well known throughout the electronic war fare community and in the Assodation of Old Crows. He resides with hb wife in Raleigh. Mainhardt also announced that Eston E. Melton Jr. has been named divisional vice president for all manufacturing operations of MBAssociates. Melton is responsible for all manufacturing operations at San Ramon, Camden, Ark. and lillington. Coathined oo Page 4 Around Town —Bt STEVE FLUHMEB ““ BOOSTER MEET The Trojan Boosters, the athletic booster club for Harnett Central High School, wiU hold its monthly meeting July 9 at 7:30 p.m. This meeting will replace the regularly scheduled meeting on the first of the month. The meeting wfll be held in the school cafeteria. Club president Rudy Brown invites all persons who are interested in the school’s athletic program to attend. Adoption of the club's by-laws and projects for the coming year will be the main items of business. BONANZA DAY The Western Harnett Recre ation Department will host a Recreation Bonanza Day Satur day and Sunday at Johnsonville Elementary School on N.C. highway 27. Bob Edison, recreational director for Western Harnett, said several activities will be held, including parachute exhi bitions by the HALO team from Fort Bragg. Jumps are sched uled at 11:30 a.m. and 2:30 p.m. A T-ball tournament wfll begin at S a.m. and 10 a.m. The championship game will be at S p.m. At 9 a.m. will be the adult horseshoe tournament, the children’s bicycle rodeo will be at 1 p.m. and the chOdren’s turtle race will be at noon. At 1 p.m. will be the high school "Everything Goss" con test, follow^ by the adult version at 3 p.m. The events in these unique contests will be the same for both divisions, with about five or six in each. Possible events wiD be old eggs collector, liigh stepping Continued on Page 4