WarrentonMem.Library X 117 S.Uain St. Warrenton, N.C. 27 t Uarren Secorii Volume 89 25? Per Copy Warrenton, County Of Warren, North Carolina Wednesday, February 26, 1986 Number 9 Local Pupils Facing Longer Day Of School By KAY HORNER News Editor A state law requiring public school students to have at least 5.5 hours of classroom instruction each day beginning this fall will probably mean an additional 20 minutes in the school day local ly, according to Warren County Schools Superintendent Michael F. Williams. Williams said he will present to the County Board of Education at its March meeting a plan for im plementation of the law as em bodied in the Elementary and Secondary Education Act of 1984. Currently, classes in all nine county schools begin around 8:30 a.m. Elementary students are dismissed at 2:30 p.m., middle school students at 2:45 p.m. and high school students at 3 p.m. Although all students are now spending at least six hours at school, all of those hours are not spent in classroom instruction. Homeroom, lunch break, study hall, and recess are among the periods that do not qualify as in structional time, Williams said. He said he anticipated "no scheduling problem whatsoever" in gearing up for the lengthened day by the beginning of the next school year. Craft Fair Is Planned Here The third annual Spring Craft Fair will be held at the Warren ton National Guard Armory on Saturday, April 26, according to Mrs. Karen White of the fair committee. "The Craft Fair has become a favorite event in Warrenton," Mrs. White said. "There will be a variety of crafters present to once again make this an excit ing day with something for everyone, young or old." The fair, with no admission charge, will open to the public at 10 a. m., at which time country ham biscuits, sausage biscuits, homemade baked goods, bruns wick stew and hot dogs will be on sale. Brunswick stew may also be purchased for $3.50 per quart and carried home. There will be spaces for 58 crafters and the fair will close at 4 p.m. All crafters are urged to call Mrs. Karen White after 1 p. m. to reserve a space as soon as possible. Her number is 257-4145. Red Cross Bloodservices Chairman Alice R. Robertson is shown above with blood donor William Leonard, a Norlina town commissioner, at Mon day's Bloodmobile at the Lion's Den. A total of 101 pints of blood were donated in the local effort. (Staff Photo by Howard Jones) Directors Are Elected By Committee Of 100 Successful Red Cross Event Held The Warren County Committee of 100, formed last fall by in terested citizens to foster economic development in the county, elected a 22-member board of directors last week. The committee's goals for this year, announced at its inception, are a membership of 350, con tributions of $50,000 and location in the county of at least one in dustry employing 100 people. Elected to the board were: At torney Floyd B. McKissick, Jr.; County Commissioner Francis L. Alston; Warrenton Mayor B. G. White; BB&T City Executive Cal White; CP&L Area Manager James Parnell; James Cren shaw, D.D., with Crenshaw and Massey, P.A.; Robert U. Jenkins, owner of Fashion Cleaners; Jen nie Johnson Franklin, media supervisor for Warren County Schools; David Gardner of War renton Furniture Exchange; Ann Peel of Halifax Electric Member ship Corporation; Maybelle Hueber, manager, Leggett of Warrenton; Lewis H. Myers, assistant secretary, N.C. Depart ment of Commerce; Lake Gaston developer John T. Nelson of Nelson & Harris; James R. Hill, director of personnel and pur chasing, Owens-Illinois; Bonnie Stay; Warrenton commissioner and local businessman Eddie Q. Clayton; County Economic Developer Cathy J. Wilson; OmeliaSpruill; Bradley Carroll, vice president, First Citizens Bank; Dr. John Thomas with the Agricultural Investment Fund of Washington, D.C.; Joseph S. Len non, proprietor of Warren Nur sing Center; and Karl Hehl, owner of Carriage Fuel & Oil Co. As of Monday, a total of $10,081 had been raised. About 80 memberships have been recorded, according to Loria Dunston, secretary in the Economic Development office. Some individuals have signed up for memberships in both their and their company's names, Ms. Dunston said, and others have contributed over and above the fee required for membership. Some 42 Cases On Local Court Docket Forty-two cases are on the docket for Monday's criminal session of Warren County Superior Court, including those of two Matthews men charged with the shooting and armed robbery of Floyd McKissick, Jr. in January. Both David Matthews Horton and Robert Martin Keziah are charged with assault with a dead ly weapon and armed robbery in connection with the incident in which McKissick was shot in the arm at his family's convenience store at the Ridgeway exit of 1-85. Judge Donald Smith will preside. Monday's Red Cross Blood mobile was termed "very suc cessful" by Bloodservices Chair man Alice R. Robertson, with 101 donors giving a total of 101 pints. A. B. Hair and Broadus G. Ver non were given pins in recogni tion of their donation, to date, of four gallons of blood. John Andrews was awarded a pin for donating three gallons and Billie V. Proctor, Charles L. Powell, Clint L. Hege, Ruby W. Jones and James L. Gray were given pins for donating two gallons. Donors receiving pins for donating to date one gallon of blood were: Sylvia T. Green, Margaret Ann Brame, Betsy F. Frazier, David Proctor, Charles Duncan, James Macon Myrick, David Spence, Norma J. Pulley, Winnifred Thompson, Barbara Walker and Raymond Vaughan. Also, Tommie C. Thompson, Ruby Paynter, Cheryl R. Smith, Allen A. Kearney, Charles A. Hayes, Alice R. Robertson and Phyllis D. Holtzman. "We owe a special thanks to Beulah Hardy, LPN; Sadie Yancey, LPN; and Mary Groves, RN for donating their time to take blood pressures and to Hardee's for providing cups and napkins," Mrs. Robertson added. A total of 118 people volunteered to donate blood, but 17 were deferred due to low iron, Mrs. Robertson said. Thp npvt RlnnHmnhilp will hp Monday, April 28 at the Lion's Den from noon to 4 p.m. It will be sponsored by the Warrenton Woman's Club. Legislators representing Warren County last week presented each school la the public school system with a North Carolina flag, courtesy of the General Assembly. The flags were presented dor tag a meeting of the Warren Comity Education Task Force Thnrsday night at Warren Coonty High School. 8hown shore are (front row, left to right): Warren Cenaty High Principal James WOkerson, Vanghan Elementary Principal Shirley White, iwruMKie rjemeniary iTtncipai IMT Bad District Rep. John Church; South Warren Principal Lochias Hawkins and 7th District Rep. Frank Ballance; (second row) Hawkins Elementa ry Principal Joe Richardson, North Warren Princi pal Costel Evans, John Graham Principal W. T. Ramey, 2nd District Sen. J. J. (Monk) Harrington, Nortina Middle School Principal Clint Hege, and Martam Boyd Principal Walt Sweeney. (Community Schools Photo by Mary Hunter) Home Is Emptied Of Its Furniture A Warren County home near the Vicksboro community was broken into recently and almost completely emptied of furniture, according to a spokesman with the Warren County Sheriff's Department. Marie Cheek Johnson of Rt. 2, was away from her home visit ing relatives between Feb. 5 and 20, and sometime during that period thieves entered her house and made away with a variety of household goods from telephones to antique furniture. The burglary was one of several reported recently in the county in which antique furnish ings have been stolen. There is no evidence to link the most recent break-in with the ones preceding it, but the de partment spokesman said the investigation was continuing. Deputy J. M. Alston investi gated the incident. (Continued on page 3) Warren To Join In Consortium With 3 Others BY KAY HORNER News Editor Warren County commissioners last Wednesday night authorized Warren County's participation with Franklin, Granville and Per son counties in the Kerr-Tar Job Training Consortium for the distribution of government funds and administration of programs as designated for the four-county area under the Job Training Partnership Act. The four counties constitute a "service delivery area" for ad ministrative purposes and each county is represented in the con sortium, Neil Mallory, executive director of the Kerr-Tar Region Council of Governments, told county commissioners. There are 26 service areas in the state which administer the Job Training Program under the auspices of the N.C. Department of Natural Resources and Com munity Development and the N.C. Job Training Coordinating Council. Eva M. Clayton, chairperson of the commissioners, was named to represent the county in the consortium. The board also authorized the county's continued participation in the Kerr-Tar Private Industry Council. The council is composed of 21 members from the four-county area. Appointed to the council were: Jim Hill, director of personnel and purchasing at Owens Illinois; James Parnell, area manager with Carolina Power & Light Co.; and James Wilkerson, principal of Warren County High School. In other business, the board: ?Approved a resolution pro claiming 1986 "A Year of Part nership for the Public's Health," as presented by County Health Director Dennis Retzlaff. The proclamation is part of a year long emphasis recently approved by the County Board of Health; ?Approved an agreement with St. Augustine's College in Raleigh to provide technical assistance to the county in application for a Community Development Block Grant, conducting a countywide housing survey and planning Investigation Under Way In House Fire Investigation is continuing in a fire in which arson is suspected at an unoccupied dwelling in Warren County last Wednesday night. Warren County Sheriff's Deputies Lawrence Harrison and Mack McGowan are heading the investigation locally, assisted by agents from the State Bureau of Investigation. Chief Deputy Bob by Dean Bolton said on Tuesday they are awaiting reports from the SBI lab. The four-room house, owned by Mrs. Hargie Andrews and located on the Baltimore Road, was not occupied at the time of the fire shortly after 8:30 p.m., according to Kenny Clayton of the Warren ton Rural Fire Department. Clayton said the house had been empty since an earlier fire on Dec. 29 in which firemen had assumed a refrigerator to be the cause. The fire last week resulted in substantial damage to the in terior of the house, but the wood frame is still standing, Clayton said. When firemen arrived flames were in three of the four rooms and coining out the sides through the windows, he noted. There was no electricity in the house at the time of the second fire. economic development stra tegies. The services have been available to the county through a grant from the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Develop ment. ?Appointed Bettie Richardson with the Warren County Council for Senior Citizens, to the Domiciliary Home Community Advisory Committee. ?Voted to have only one meeting during the month of March, on the 10th. The board had to reschedule its March 3 meeting because of the atten dance of County Manager Charles J. Worth, Mrs. Clayton and Commissioners Francis Alston and J. T. Fleming at the 1986 Legislative Conference of the National Association of Counties in Washington, D.C. Warren Bridge Closing Listed The Division of Highways of the N.C. Department of Transportation (NCDOT) has closed a section of Shepard Road (Secondary Road 1133) between Vicksboro and Elberon for replacement of a bridge over Shocco Creek. NCDOT has contracted with Sanford Construction Co. of San ford to build the new structure. During the construction, traffic is being detoured over Vicksboro Road (Secondary Road 1134). The detour is five miles long. According to Board of Trans portation Member Jim Peden of Raleigh, the estimated cost of construction is $284,000. Comple tion is expected by September. BRYANT Active Jaycee Award Received Ricky Bryant, a director of the Warren County Jaycees, was recognized Saturday as one of the five most active Jaycees in North Carolina for the previous three months. Bryant received a plaque from State Jaycee Presi dent Jerry Wall during an awards ceremony in High Point and was named a member of the "GO TEAM." Bryant's accomplishments during the quarter included 106 percent participation in local dub projects during the holiday season and contributing to meetings and attendance as i as membership growth retention. Attending the High Paint < with Bryant i club president, Stamper, <