Kp loilg four Mwl Helms’ name graces agricultural grants Money to go to internship, leadership BY ERIN FRANCE STAFF WRITER Former U.S. Sen. Jesse Helms was honored Saturday with the establishment of an endowment catering to agricultural students in North Carolina high schools and eolleges. Funds for the Senator Jesse Helms Agricultural Legislative Internship Endowment will be split among a summer leadership program for high school students liosted at Wingate and Campbell universities and a Washington, D.C., internship for students studying agriculture at N.C. State and N.C. Agriculture & Technical universities. Justin Lowe, a junior double major in horticultural science and agricultural education at N.C. State, is the first recipient of the Washington internship, where he will serve as an aide to Sen. Elizabeth Dole, R-N.C. “I am elated,” Lowe said. “I’m still in that awe moment.” The endowment will provide enough money to send three col lege students each year, one per semester, to Washington. A smaller portion of the endow ment will be used to send a group Tobacco buyout helps N.C. family THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NEW BERN - With each spring comes renewed hope for the Hill family. They’re a dwindling breed of family farmers, which means that John; his wife, Theresa; and the two children do the work. With tobacco as his money crop and the weather always looming as the wild card, he knows each year of farming could be his last. This will be his 17th year. He’ll tend close to 30 acres of tobacco, along with 350 acres of soybeans this year on rented land in the Janeiro Road area southwest of Oriental. He’s had as much as 50 acres of tobacco, before government allot ment cuts came along. With allot ments now a thing of the past, he has contracted with Phillip Morris USA in recent years. The workings of a small farm are filled with good and bad times. He was down to 19 acres of tobac co last year, which he says was the bare minimum he and his family could get by on. This year, he’ll get about 10 more acres. Even as he and the family were putting seeds into the greenhouse beds last month, he already knew his price per pound this year would be about 40 cents less. But, on the flip side, with allotments gone, he’ll save about $6,000 in payments to the allotment owner. For him, the buyout, or Tobacco Transition Payment Program, has been a blessing. “That is probably the only thing that saved us, because they were talking this year, if they hadn’t passed it, they were going to cut tobacco 30 percent,” he says. “In other words, we would have had 10 or 11 acres. In other words, we would have been gone.” His hope is that with the buy out and direct company contracts, tobacco will rebound. “My best years were when I had right at 50 acres. At that time, that was sufficient money for a family,” he recalls. “It was good for three or four years and then they started cutting the quotas and we started losing 10 and 15 percent a year. We lost half of our crop in four years. You might as well say you lost half of your income in four years.” John grew up on a tobacco farm, and except for a few years as a trav eling musician, he’s only known the labor of the land. His father, Cecil, moved to Pamlico County 42 years ago, the year John was born. It was a dif ferent time in many ways: Tobacco was a crop that the state boasted about, a crop that was not under social and economic siege. But the small family farm prin ciple applied. “We worked a lot. That was when tobacco wasn’t so easy. It was getting up at three o’clock in the morning,” he recalls of life for him self, three sisters and a brother. Those were the days of the tobacco barns and tobacco sticks, mostly now crumbling ruins in local fields. “With the stick bams, he had 12 to 14 head he hired, because it took a lot of people pulling it by hand, and then it took just as many loop ing it,” he says. “They used to loop it on the sticks the old-fashioned way.” N.C. high school students par ticipating in the 4-H Club or the Future Farmers of America to the Free Enterprise Leadership Conference at Wingate and Campbell, both private colleges in North Carolina. Courtney Hughes, a 4-H mem ber at Crossnore Academy in Avery County, is the first recipient of the endowment and will attend the con ference at Wingate this summer. John Dodd, president of The Jesse Helms Center, said he hopes more agricultural students will be chosen to attend the summer pro grams, which usually draw hun dreds of high school students. “We’re hoping for 10 to 15 stu dents to attend,” Dodd said. The students are chosen through nominations by 4-H and FFA and will spend their time during the program managing a virtual agri cultural business, Dodd said. Other students will manage different sec tors of the virtual economy. Many donors said they hope students will gain experience dur ing the program and become more competitive in the job market. “Because of the internship expe rience, they could land jobs very quickly,” said Peter Daniel, assis His father had extremely good luck with the weather, he remem bers. There were dry spells, but the needed rain always came. Like the other farmers, he had his strict allot ment of how many acres to plant and how many pounds to sell. “He sold his pounds all 28 years Mama always said, you can never have TOO MUCH OF A GOOD THING Graduation t'VeeJceAc) m -> Mm -489-2848 yV jjml uww.spartacusrfstaunmt.com JsMSUm*''-''' Top 250 Salon in the Nation! • Gift Certificates Available • Day Spa Atmosphere c„ 1 • Brand New Ultra High Pressim Rids • Medium Pressure Beds and Booths • Sunless Express Airbrush Tanning ' ’ f - UNC Students show your UNO ID for a discount . , Designer Skin • Licensed Collegiate Handbags l~ NEW CLIENTS ~1 E~ APRI~SPECIAi~ ~i TiFbTjShTaNnTngl 2cUf>u *7&**u*f S*t** 105 A Rams Plaza • 968-3377 Perfect trips for your*European Adventure The Biq 3 Mediterranean ■ Explorer ■’ 10 nights „ 10 nights London Prom Barcelona, 1 ' a-:;L, 4491 $551 i i UK & Beyond Eastern Europe Experience 10 -lights , ■ , ■ " V/ London, , ■ ■ . NOjughts ..V vfront ... Edinburgh (C A] Prague, Vienna JZ/ TKi I f \ “T* J% V ■ II ■ ■ #iV ’ I J News tant to the president of the N.C. Farm Bureau. Other donors said students could inform legislators on agri cultural issues. “One of the best ways to estab lish a rapport with legislative mem bers is through staff members,” said Jim Wilder, executive vice presi dent of the N.C. Soybean Producers Association. Although agricultural work ers only account for 2 percent of the workforce in North Carolina, Wilder said Helms always appre ciated the farming community. “Senator Helms has been a strong advocate for farmers,” Wilder said. Keith Oakley, president of the agricultural foundation at N.C. State, said Helms deserves to be the award’s namesake because of his influence on the recent federal tobacco buyout. “It allowed many farmers in America to stay in agriculture,” Oakley said. No specific events are planned to raise more funding, though Oakley said talks are continuing with the three largest donors, who might share Helms’ name on one of the internships. Contact the State & National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. and that’s incredible,” John says, adding that his own luck has not been so fortunate. “I’ve sold my pounds out of 16 years not many years,” he admits. “There’s something constantly happening with the weather. I’ve had a bad string of luck with the weather.” N.C. emergency response effective, report affirms Communication needs some work BY ASHLEY SIMMONS STAFF WRITER The explosion at Kinston’s West Pharmaceutical chemical plant in 2003 that killed six and injured 37 people prompted UNC Hospitals to explore the state’s ability to respond to emergen cies. UNC Hospitals admitted 10 patients to its Jaycee Bum Center after the blast, and seven survived their injuries. The evaluation, which was released Friday, was meant to cri tique past responses and look for improvements to be made in the future, said Bruce Cairns, associ ate director of the Jaycee Burn Center. “The biggest issue is effective communication both at the scene of the accident and among hospi tals,” he said. “In these situations, commu nication lines frequently break down.” During the initial moments of the Kinston explosion which occurred Jan. 29, 2003, when a combustible dust used by the plant accumulated above a sus pended ceiling and ignited hos pitals across the Triangle area, including UNC Hospitals, were mistakenly informed that the incident involved a plane crash, he said. Staying In Chapel Hill This Summer? Work At The Rathskeller! Now Hiring Servers, Hosts & Bartenders Call <919) 942-5158 Open 11 :00-9:00 Sunday-Thursday; 11 :00- 10:30 Friday & Saturday The award-winning DTH sports staff will commemorate the road to the final 4 in a special magazine style format. 9 But even with the erroneous reports, hospitals were able to execute emergency plans effec tively, successfully treating most patients. “We were very pleased with our overall coordination and our deci sions during the incident,” Cairns said. He said the conclusions of the report show that North Carolina is well-equipped for responding to catastrophes, but added that there always is room for improve ment. State officials say they have similar goals concerning North Carolina’s ability to handle large scale emergencies. Kenneth Taylor, director of the N.C. Division of Emergency Management, reported in December that the state has a strong working relationship with hospitals, which should make the road to better communication less painstaking. “We strive to be a knowledge able, professional and prepared emergency management team who coordinate and implement preparedness,” he stated in the report. “We exercise programs that will respond and recover from terrorist incidents and other threats.” On the national front, there is a concern with communication during fire disaster situations, but officials hold that tremendous improvements have been made since the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist “The biggest issue is effective communication ...at the scene and among hospitals.” BRUCE CAIRNS, jaycee burn center attacks. Courtney McCarron, com munications affairs manager of the Association of Public Safety Communications Officials International Inc., said past mis haps on both the national and state levels help provide stability for the future. “We need examples to help us first prevent these disasters when we can,” she said. “And if that’s not possible, then they can help us develop better methods.” Cairns also said experience is a major part of North Carolina’s ability to handle emergency situ ations. “A lot of us at UNC saw the chicken-processing plant incident of ’9l, Pope Air Force Base plane crash in ’94 and then Kinston in ’03,” he said. “North Carolina is one of two states said to be the best in emer gency management. We just have so many people with vast experi ence.” Contact the State & National Editor at stntdesk@unc.edu. 9