Newspapers / The Warren Record (Warrenton, … / Aug. 1, 1984, edition 1 / Page 6
Part of The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
Nev\s and Kxents of Interest To Norlina Readers Phone 456 3329 To Include Items On This Page Mrs. Nancy Auth and daughter, Amy, of Wichita Falls, Tex. are spending some time with Mrs. Auth's par ents, Mr. and Mrs. Lewis Gooch. Mr. and Mrs. R. V. Nash of Atlanta, Ga. and Mrs. Lucille Newman traveled to Tulsa, Okla. recently and while there visited Oral Roberts University and the City of Faith. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Draffin, Beth and Chuck of Raleigh spent the weekend with Mrs. Mar tha Draffin. Mrs. Gladys Perkin son spent several days last week in Cary with Mr. and Mrs. David Perkinson and family. Mr. and Mrs. 0. R. Baker spent Tuesday in Raleigh. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis returned home Thursday after spending a week at Emerald Isle. Phey were joined at the beach by their daughter and her family, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Hankla, David and Mark of Charlotte. Clarence Edward White and son, Coy and friend, Robin, of Houston, Tex. and Mrs. Ethel White returned home Monday after spending several days touring points and places of interest in Alexandria, Va., Washington, D. C., r iiiiiliiiiliiiilllliiliiilillliiiilllllllllMlilWWMWM Pennsylvania, Mary land and West Virginia. Thomas Harp of New port News, Va. visited Mrs. Onnie Harp over the weekend. Pat Draffin is attend ing basketball camp at N. C. State University this week. Mr. and Mrs. John P. Clarke of Chesterfield, Mo. and Mr. and Mrs. E. P. Clarke of Richmond, Va., were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Davis. Mrs. Lois Liverman and Mrs. Lillian Morris and Katrina of Roanoke Rapids visited M. A. Lyles on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Ron Baker, Norwood and Beth visited Mr. and Mrs. Edward R. "Pete" Simmons, Jimmy and Eddie in Burlington on Tuesday of last week. Sidney Weaver and children of Merritt Island, Fla. are spend ing this week with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ira Weaver. Joining them on Sunday were Frank Weaver and family of Greensboro and Walter Weaver and family of Rocky Mount. Mr. and Mrs. Wildon Price and son, Mark, of Kinston visited her mother, Mrs. Sudie Coleman, several days last week. On Wed nesday afternoon, the family gathered at the Coleman home for a cook out on the lawn. The Prices enjoyed sports activities at Kerr Lake on Wednesday and Thursday. Mrs. Charles Gupton of Alexandria, Va. is spending some time this week with her mother, Mrs. Nita Fuller, and other friends and relatives in the area. Norwood Baker Is Given Treat Norwood D. Baker whose ninth birthday is August 1, celebrated with dinner at a Louisburg restaurant on Saturday night. On Sun day, he was honored at a cake and ice cream par ty in the afternoon and dinner in the evening at the home of his great uncle, Early Dishmon, in LaCrosse, Va. The hosts to some 25 guests were his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Buster Dishmon. On Wednesday night, Norwood's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ron Baker and sister, Mary Elizabeth, will host a dinner party at which his grand parents, aunt and uncles will be the guests. The average 6 to 11 year-old spends over 25 hours a week watching television, according to a Neilson study. Recipes Offered By EMILY BALUNGER Home Extension Agent From time to time in dividuals have an abun dance of certain vege tables and fruits that they would like ideas on different ways to use them in food preparation. The following recipes are ones that you may like to try. Squash Pickle 4 qt. squash (yellow or zucchini) 2 qt. onions cup salt 5 cups sugar 5 cups vinegar lVfet. turmeric 11. celery seed 2 qt. cracked or crushed ice 21. mustard seed Wash squash and slice in ^4-inch slices. Peel and slice onions. Mix squash, onions and salt thoroughly. Cover with ice; let stand 3 hours. Drain thoroughly. Com bine sugar, spices and vinegar; heat just to boiling. Add drained squash and onion slices and heat 5 minutes. Pack hot squash and onions loosely into clean hot pint jars and cover with hot liquids Vi-inch from top. Adjust lids. Process in boiling water for 5 minutes. Remove jars and complete seals if necessary. Set jars upright on a wire rack or folded towel to cool. Place them several in ches apart. note; Sugar may be reduced to 3 cups for less sweet pickle. Spiced Cantaloupe 4 cantaloupes (about 9 10 pounds) 4 cups granulated sugar 2 cups distilled white vinegar 1 cup water 4 (3-inch) cinnamon sticks 1T. whole cloves 1T. whole allspice Quarter melons; remove seeds and rind. Cut crosswise into V4. inch thick slices. In saucepot, combine sugar, vinegar, water and spices tied in cheesecloth bag; sim mer 5 minutes. Add melon and simmer 20 minutes, stirring oc casionally. Remove spice bag. Continue simmering while quickly packing one clean, hot jar at a time. Fill to within inch of top making sure vinegar solution covers melon. Cap each jar at once. Process 5 minutes in boiling-water bath. Make 5-6 pints. Quasars' Power Astronomers have observ ed certain objects beyond our galaxy which are so powerful that not even the combined fusion energy from billions of stars can account for their prodigious output of light and other types of radiation. Working with both obser vations and theories, astron omers have attempted to de velop a model of the "engine" that powers these quasars and active galaxies. The model, which is most widely accept ed, holds that a black hole lies at the center of the quasar or galaxy and is surrounded by a whirlpool of gas and dust, a so-called accretion disk. LoagWalk To burn off the calories from one piece of apple pie, you need to walk for about an hour and 15 minutes. New Visiting Artist Mm irwin Chapel Hill Resident Gets College Post Kim Irwin of Chapel Hill, a mixed media visual artist, has been selected as the visiting artist at Vance-Gran ville Community College for the 1984-85 academic year, begin ning in September. In that capacity she suc ceeds Ned Gardner, trumpeter / cornetist, who concluded his work at the college in June. The visiting artist program is a cooperative venture between the Depart ment of Community Col leges and the N. C. Arts Council and is jointly funded through an Arts Council grant. Its pur pose is to stimulate an interest in and an ap preciation of the arts in communities served by the Community College System. Mrs. Irwin's work is abstract, and she has progressed from paint ing to fiber work to three-dimensional con structions, in which she includes readily available materials found in the city or rural environment. Included in her works is a collec tion of batik-dyed ab stract quilts. A graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill with a bachelor's degree in fine arts, Mrs. Irwin served as an instructor in color and design and art appreciation at East Carolina University while completing her master's degree in fine arts. She has been an in structor in beginning painting and painting on fabric at the Art School, Carrboro, and in fiber crafts at N. C. Central University, Durham. In 1980, the artist was awarded a full scholar ship to participate in the six-weeks Fibre Inter change Program at the School of Fine Arts, The Banff Centre, in Banff, Alberta, Canada. Later, in the spring of 1982, she completed an outdoor sculpture commission for Artsplosure in Raleigh. Mrs. Irwin was one of four recipients of the 1982 Artist Fellowship Awards made by the N. C. Arts Council. The award is an unrestrict ed grant of $5,000 to each artist. This grant provided the funds for a residency from January to May of this year at the Michael Karolyi Memorial Foundation in Vence, France, where Ms. Irwin created and exhibited her work. Ms. Irwin's work is in the permanent collec tions of the Mint Museum of Art, Char lotte, and the IBM Headquarters in Char lotte. Her work has been included in exhibitions at the Renwick Gallery, Smithsonian Institution, Washington, D. C., the Mint Museum of Art, Charlotte (1978), at SECCA, Winston-Salem and the Walter Phillips Gallery in Banff (1980). The visiting artist will be available throughout the year to present her works and to discuss her art form free of charge to schools, churches, civic clubs and other community - oriented organizations. Coordi nators of all such organizations may call Ms. Irwin at Vance Granville Community College to schedule pre sentations.
The Warren Record (Warrenton, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
Aug. 1, 1984, edition 1
6
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75