Warrentonllem .Library X 117 S .Main St. larrenton, N.C. 27589 She Harrat iUcorfo Volume 89 25c Per Copy Warrenton, County Of Warren, North Carolina Wednesday, April 30, 1986 Number 18 Two men were killed in a fiery collision Thursday morning near the ramp leading from U.S. 1 at Wise onto the northbound lane of 1-85. Firemen are shown above extinguishing the flames that engulfed a paltry truck, which rear-ended another truck, shown in the background. After the collision, the pastry truck burst into flames. (Staff Photo by Howard Jones) School Board Races To Be Determined By Warren Voters All Warren County voters, regardless of party affiliation, will be eligible to vote In Tues day's primary election on two races for the county Board of Education, a constitutional amendment on elections and a statewide referendum on nuclear waste. In the non-partisan Board of Education race, incumbents Henry T. Pitchford, Jr. and Yar borough Williams, Jr. are facing opposition from Sonny A. Peoples and Loree Strickland Harris, respectively. Pitchford is seeking his second full term as Warrenton's representative on the board. He was appointed in 1981 to fill the unexpired term of Dr. L. B. Henderson, who resigned. Pitch ford was then elected to the board in 1982. A foreman at Peck Manufac turing Company in Warrenton, Pitchford is a 1960 graduate of John R. Hawkins High School. He is president of the Warren County Chapter of the NAACP (Continued on page 10) Senate And House Seats Up For Grabs Tuesday Facing Democratic voters in Tuesday's primary election will be races for the District 2 N.C. Senate seat and District 7 N.C. House seat. Warrenton Attorney Frank W. Ballance, Jr., who has represented District 7 in the House for two terms, is now seek ing the District 2 Senate seat held by J. J. (Monk) Harrington of Lewiston. A native of Bertie County, Ballance earned both his undergraduate and law degrees from N.C. Central University. He came to Warrenton in 1966 as law partner of Attorney T. T. Clayton. That partnership was dissolved in 1979, and since that time Ballance has had other law partners and now has offices in both Warrenton and Weldon. Prior to coming to Warren County, Ballance was a librarian and professor at South Carolina State College School of Law in Orangeburg. A member of Greenwood Bap tist Church, Ballance has been active in politics locally and has served as attorney for the War ren County Board of Education and chairman of the county Board of Elections. He is chairman of the Second Congressional District Black Caucus and is on the Board of Governors of the N.C. Associa tion of Black Lawyers. He is also vice chairman of the Warren County Political Action Council. He and his wife, Bernadine, also an attorney, have three children. Harrington, resident of Lewiston, has served in the Senate continuously for 23 years and is the first ranking member of the Senate in seniority and in continuous service. Now serving as Senate presi dent pro tempore, the third ranking position in state govern ment, Harrington represents North Carolina at the National Conference of State Legislatures (NCSL) and the Southern Legislative Conference (SLC). He is a member of the SLC Ex ecutive Committee and the NCSL Legislative Organization and Management Committee. In the Seventh District race, Hamilton agribusinessman Roy Everett faces Enfield attorney Thomas Hardaway for the seat now held by Ballance. Everett, who operates a fami ly farm equipment business, now serves as mayor pro-tern of the Hamilton Board of Commis sioners and is in his third term on the board. Everett, who attended Atlantic Christian College in Wilson, North Carolina State University in Raleigh and East Carolina University in Greenville, served as a delegate to the district and state Democratic Conventions in 1984. He has helped to obtain Com munity Development Block Grant funding in excess of 81 million for the Town of Hamilton. He is married to the former Vickie Powell of Gold Point. They have two children. Hardaway, a native of Halifax County, is a graduate of Howard University and N.C. Central University School of Law. A former law partner of Ballance in Weldon, Hardaway has been engaged in the solo practice of law since 1984. He serves as an at-large member of the Halifax County Economic Development Com mission and as second vice (Continued on Page 10) Commissioners And Clerk Destinies Will Be Decided Warren County Democrats will decide the outcome Tuesday of races for clerk of Superior Court, county commissioners from Districts 3 and 4, and sheriff. Incumbent Richard E. Hunter, Jr., in his fifth year as clerk of Superior Court, is being chal lenged by Robert D. Kirk, Jr., a park ranger at Kimball Point on Kerr Lake. The son of Edward and Louise Hunter of Warrenton, Hunter is a graduate of John Graham High School. He holds a B.S. degree in business from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill and also attended Louisburg College. He was first appointed clerk in 1981, following the death of then Clerk Anne F. Davis. Prior to that. Hunter served for seven years as administrative assistant to the district attorney for the Ninth Judicial District. A former member of the War renton Town Board, Hunter is a member of Wesley Memorial United Methodist Church. He is married to the former Mary Lang of Farmville, and they have two sons. A native of Salisbury, Kirk received his undergraduate degree in recreation from N.C. A&T University in Greensboro. He also holds a master's degree (Continued on page 10) Lawmen Investigate Lake Gaston Break-Ins Two break-ins at homes in Lake Gaston subdivisions have been reported in recent days to the Warren County Sheriff's Department. On Saturday, Leslie Randolph Bass of Nashville reported that his home in Hunter's Creek Sub division was entered and equip ment valued at $1,000 taken. Commissioners Sit As Board Of Review Warren County commis sioners, sitting last week as the Board of Equalization and Review, heard complaints fronts 24 county residents on their tax listings. The board granted no requests for changes in the valuation of land, but approved 17 requests for corrections in listings, ac cording to Tax Supervisor Janice Haynes. Those requests involved such items as corrections in the( number of acres listed, Mrs. Haynes said. Missing were two 19-inch color televisions and a 35-millimeter Canon camera, flash, lens and case. Entry, which was made by kicking in the front door, ap parently occurred sometime be tween April 15 and 26. On Tuesday morning, James Harrison Boyles of 55 Gub Road in Wildwood Point Subdivision reported that the front door of his home had been forced open while he was away, but nothing ap peared to be missing. According to reports, Boyles left home at 9:45 p.m. Monday and found the door open when he returned at 12:30 a.m. Deputy J. A. McCowan In vestigated both incidents. On April 14, larceny of almost $4,000 worth of items was reported by Paige Lamberson of 445 Timber lane Drive, Littleton. Included in the items were a typewriter, vacuum cleaner, video recorder and encyclo pedias. Two Men Killed In Truck Wreck On Interstate 85 Two men were killed early Thursday morning in a fiery col lision on Interstate 85 north of Wise. Ben Wilburn Young, 47, of Lewisville and Dallas Benjamin, 29, of Charlotte died after the truck in which they were travel ing went off the highway, struck a parked rig and burst into flames. According to a Highway Patrol report filed by Trooper R. T. Futrell, the truckers, who were hauling pastries, were north bound on the interstate about four miles north of Wise when the ac cident occurred, shortly after 1 a.m. From all indications, the pastry truck ran into the rear end of another rig parked near the end of a ramp leading onto the interstate. The occupant of the parked truck, Richard Lewiski of Nashville, Tenn., was not serious ly hurt, according to reports. He had apparently pulled to the side of the road to fill out a log book when his rig, which was car rying 50-pound bags of pine-bark chips, was rear-ended. One fireman estimated the rig was parked about 200 yards beyond the base of the U.S. 1 ramp left ding to the interstate. According to Bruce Perkinson, chief of the Hawtree Volunteer Fire Department, the fuel tank of the pastry truck apparently rup tured on impact, igniting the gasoline. When firemen from Hawtree arrived at the scene, the pastry truck was in flames and the vic tims were still inside the cab. Their bodies were removed and and carried by the Warren Coun ty Ambulance Service to the N.C. Medical Examiner's Office in Chapel Hill. About 1,200 gallons of water was required to extinguish the Tax Collections Placed At $49,725 Warren County's net collec tions from the one-and-one-half percent sales and use tax during the month of March amounted to $49,725.24, according to a recent report by the North Carolina Department of Revenue. Collections statewide totaled $33,685,031.18, the report indicated. Collections by neighboring counties for March were: Franklin, $89,381.63; Granville, $124,046.73; Halifax, $242,728.88; and Vance, $186,131.26. blaze and clean the spilled fuel and oil from the roadway. The pastry truck was com pletely destroyed. Damage to the other truck was estimated at $10,000. Perkinson said firemen spent almost three hours on the scene. Both lanes of 1-85 were blocked for a brief period and traffic had to be rerouted for approximate ly two-and-one-half hours. Members of Hawtree Fire Department returned to the scene later that morning after the fire rekindled. Construction Work Started In Wise Area Construction work has begun in the Wise area to relieve telephone facilities, according to Carolina Telephone Company spokesper son Richard R. Barnes, Jr. The work order will place ap proximately 22,700 feet of buried cables. In addition, the proposal includes placing in service one Subscriber Carrier System equipped with 182 lines initially, with provisions for expansion to 310 lines as needed. Plans are to abandon 44,951 feet of air core cables in order to avoid service troubles and high maintenance costs. Some of the cables have been in use since 1966, Barnes said. By placing underground cable, Carolina Telephone avoids setting poles to support aerial wire and cable, thus enhancing the environment of the area. Underground cable also is not damaged by winds, or storms and provides more reliable service. There are at present 294 lines and stations working in this feed area, Barnes continued. A recent development forecast indicates an increase to 306 lines and sta tions by cutover in June 1986, in creasing to 506 lines and stations by June 1996. The Subscriber Carrier System and cable proposed on this work order, along with additional subscriber carrier and channel additions, will provide for the 10-year forecasted requirements in the area and also condition the subscriber network for new services. Barnes said the project is part of Carolina Telephone's 1986 pro gram of expansion and improve ment and will cost about $83,000. A pastry truck was reduced to a smoldering heap following its collision early Thursday morning with another rig on 1-85 near Wise. Volunteer firemen mi HBR?