Weather Today’s rains eased forest fire threats in the Sandhills and from one to two inches were predicted before it ends tonight. The temperature at 10 a.m. was 50 degrees. UiqhCaUb ^ndor arcond GIcndon 10 qe Jodi ml tlltrbc Pin&lu AbCi'uaen LOT Index Book page, 2-B; Church news, 3-B; Clasislfied Ads, 7-15-D; Editorials, 1-B; Entertainment, 4-8-C; Obituaries, 11-A; Pinehurst News, 1-3-C; Sandhills Scene, 2-8-A; Sports, 1-5-D.. Vol. 59, Number 23 86 Pages Southern Pines, North Carolina 28387 Wednesday, April 4, 1979 86 Pages PRICE 15 CENTS 4 i $18 Million US 1 Job Gets Started In May Communications Proposal Gets OK-But No Money \ \ A K r SANDHILLS ABLOOM—Bees were buzzing, as shown above, as the Sandhills burst into bloom this week, with flowering dogwood and azaleas everywhere.—(Photo by Jim Kirkpatrick). Gras Usage Is Cut For County Units The current energy crisis has recipitated a cutback in Moore bunty’s gasoline allocation, the ounty commissioners were dvised Monday by Assistant ounty Administrator Martin hriscoe. The board agreed to Chriscoe’s 4.9% Jobless Moore County’s unemploy- lent rate climbed 0.5 percent in ebruary to 4.9 percent, it was sported by Frank Burch, lanager of the local mployment Security ommission office. This was slightly below the ate figure of 5 percent. The February civilian labor rce was placed at 21,640 with 1,480 persons listed as employed id 1,060 unemployed, his report lows. The January lemployment rate was 4.4 :rcent. recommendation that all county departments be asked to reduce gas usage by 15 percent. As of March 1, the county’s allocation has been cut from 10,500 gallons to 8000 gallons a month. Chriscoe predicted a cutback of from 95 to 90 percent but recommended the 15 percent reduction because of the possibility of even greater reductions in coming months. The allocation was cut by thei Gulf Oil Co., the county’s supplier. Chriscoe pointed out that almost 7000 gallons of the 10,500 is used by the sheriff’s department. He proposed that the best answer is to ask all departments to do their best to cut back 15 percent. Commissioner Tony Parker pointed out that some employes are driving county vehicles home at night, and he asked if a saving (Continued on Page 12-A) Preliminary work on a 12^nile four-lane e3q)ressway for U.S. 1 from Lakeview to Quail Ridge will get under way in May The first hearing on the project, estimated to cost $18,010,000, will probably be held in the Cameron school auditorium next month. Martha S. HoUers of Candor, member of the State Board of Transportation, revealed the long-awaited U.S. 1 project at a luncheon meeting of the Kiwanis Club of the Sandhills this past week. The No. 1 expressway is now in the planning stages, she said, and several hearings will be held before construction can be started in 1982. One important hearing will be the route the expressway is to take, but before that is held maps of five proposed routes will be posted in this area. Mrs. Hollers, who gave an overall view on North Carolina and Moore County road-building, said that “It takes seven years to get a road ready to ride on.” That would set the opening of the No. 1 expressway in 1986. “Environmental impact studies and various regulations are time-consuming,” 3ie said. The $18 million construction will be mostly borne by 60 to 70 percent from the U.S. govern ment. “We have the largest number of state-maintained highways in the whole United States,” said Mrs. Hollers. “There are over 75,000 miles of these roads in our State. Fifty-five percent of the people in North Carolina live on a paved road. This is an unusually high State average for our nation.” Among the secondary roads (SR number) in Moore County over 75 percent are paved. However, there are still 219 miles of unpaved secondary roads. “The total allocation of money for Moore County secondary roads is $429,398, but it costs $60,000 per mile to black-top an unpfived road,” said Mrs. Hollers. “If all that money is just used for paving, we can pave only seven miles this year. But there are many other needs including repairs and widening of roads. We are going to try to widen part of Midland Road to make it less dangerous.” Nine road projects are listed to (Continued on Page 12-A) BY FLORENCE GILKESON Informal approval of the concept of a central com munications system was voiced Monday by the Moore Ctounty Board of Conunissioners. Implementation of such a system appears to be some time away, however, and the proposal offered by the Communications Control Board carries no price tag at this point. The finances did not escape the board’s attention during the special meeting, held at the close of the commissioners’ regular all-day session Monday. Money was high on the list of attention-getters throughout the meeting. The commissioners received 1979-80 budget requests from the Department of Social Postmaster Asserts New Site Necessary VIobile Homes Will Make Up 25% Of Dwellings For Moore BY FLORENCE GILKESON Young couples get started in lem, older couples retire to lem. Mobile homes, of course. In Moore County an estimated )Q0 mobile homes provide )using for residents of all ages, ' varying social and economic anding. Most people think of Moore County as an area of golf courses, horse county, rich farmland, homes erected on spacious lots and condominiums overlooking a golf course. “They’re all over the countryside,” said the woman who ought to know, Estelle Wicker, county finance officer. That 25(K) estimate comes from Dewitt Purvis, county assistant tax supervisor, who has issued about that number of tax stickers for mobile homes. Of this number perhaps 300 are doublewide units, which, if they are 24 feet wide or larger, are taxed as if they were houses. Purivs does not know the exact (Continued on Page 9-A) -.ttess fttMNr ^ mmi r 1'. ■ I i m HOMES FOR MANY—A line-up of mail boxes signals a mobile home pork, one of many which accommodate hundreds of Moore County families. The county tax office estimates there are 2500 mobile homes throughout Moore.—(Photo by Florence Gilkgson). Postmaster Robert E. Peele of Southern Pines said that needed space by the Post Office cannot be obtained by remodeling or expanding at the present location and a new site must be sought. Peele issued a lengthy statement, in which he said: “The Postal Service badly needs new facilities to relieve the congestion at present location, and to provide adequate working conditions for its employes. More room is immediately needed to work an ever-increasing volume of mail for a growing community. A part of mail received each day is worked on outside on the docks. There is inadequate parking for employes and during business hours of day, there is inadequate parking for our customers. “The Postal Service is attempting to plan and build facilities that will not only relieve our present conditions, (Continued on Page 12-A) Truancy Problem Faced In Different Ways Here BY JENNIFER CALDWELL The word “truant” is obtrusively outdated; in part because actions taken against the children who skip school have changed so much. Today, a child cannot be taken to juvenUe court for skipping school, fiistead, his parents may be charged with the misdemeanor offense of their child’s skipping. In neighboring Richmond County, parents have been placed on probation following a court session where they were charged with their offspring’s truancy-defined as five or more consecutive days absence from school without a medical reason, or frequent inclusion on the absence list of his school. The truancy policy used in the Moore County public schools is one set by the state. The truancy officer for Moore County is also the public relations liaison. Bob Dalton. Dalton in this particular capacity must visit each school once a week to check attendance records. He said there is no maximum number of days a child can miss before he is detained a year. “The first step we take with a truant is throu^ the teacher,” he said. “If a child is out excessively she can write the parents a note telling them the child is out...” and ask them udiy. At this point, Dalton said, (Continued on Page 12-A) Council Meet The Southern Pines Town Council will meet April 10 at 8 p.m. with several items for discussion being continuations of past business. A public hearing was continued from the March 13 meeting in regard to a conditional use permit for the Terminex Company to construct broadcai^ing equipment on top of the town’s water tank. Services-up $216,666 from the initial unamended budget for this year-and the Sandhills Mental Health Center, Inc., the latter with a $103,447 request which is approximately double the amount sought last year. No action was taken on the two budget requests, which will be considered at later meetings, along with other departmental budget materials. The board did take action on a special equipment request from Sheriff Jerome Whipple, in keeping with a previous promise. The equipment, to cost more than $10,000, will be paid from the remains of various funds, with some coming from next year’s budget. Ctounty Finance Officer Estelle Wicker was instructed to find the funds. She reported that the sheriff’s department will probably end the year with about $3000 to spare in salaries and there “is a little left in con tingency.” The remainder will be logged against the 1979-80 budget. Assorted Equipment Equipment described by the sheriff includes everything from raincoats and short-sleeved shirts to fingerprint kits and riot gear. The list includes riot sticks and batons, riot helmets, two megaphones (for crowd control), fla^ights, fire extinguishers, first aid kits, gas masks, spotlights, tear gas grenades, shotguns, walkie-talkies, bulletproof vests, and binoculars, among other things. Sheriff Whipple said his department has almost no equipment for use in time of emergency, such as the radiation (x-oblem at Harrisburg, Pa. or in case of riot. He noted that the patrol car which was destroyed by fire last week might have been saved if the deputy had had a fire extinguisher available. Whipple added that he hopes the federal Law Enforcement Assistance Administration will pick up the cost on some of the equipment. (Continued on Page 16-A) ''ri'- ^sufrnm-'i FIRES—N.C. Forestry Service fire are shown trying to control one of FIGHT fighters several fires along the raUroad tracks this pa7t week. This one was near the Hyland Hills Golf Course.—(Photo by Glenn M. Sides). Fires Sweep Area During Dry Spell A rash of fires throughout southern Moore County were partly attributable to dry conditions in the area before Tuesday’s rain. Lester Graham, Southern Pines fire representative, said March and April are in the fire season when brush fires in particular often take place. Two brush fires were reported on March 27, one along the railroad tracks at Morganton Road, the other in the early evening in a yard at 251 N. Hardin Street, which did not approach a house. Similar brush fires were reported March 29 between Aberdeen and Pinebluff and along the railroad tracks near Hyland Hills Golf dkiurse, which was answered by the Vass Fire Department and the Forestry Service. The next day another fire occurred b almost the saihe (Continued on Page 16-A) Holshouser Is Elected To UNC Governors Board Baker Leaving Work Is Under Way Here •f Talmadce .5 Ri Talmadge S. Baker, chairman T'n IVTaUa r^friccirirvc of the Moore county Agricultural -1-Lf iTXctJVt!/ V>4l' Extension Service sbce 1970, has Railroad cross-gates have been going up for the past week at the crossings in Southern Pbes that already had some sort of signal. An arrangement was made whereby if a crossroad already had some sort of warning, it would be upgraded, said Mildred McDonald, town manager. The crossing at Massachusetts Avenue and New York Avenue have already been done. SimUar bars, which fall bto pbce to prevent cars from passbg at the approach of a tram are bemgi installed at Pennsylvania, New Hampshire, Connecticut and Vermont Avenues. Mrs. McDonald said a crossbg for Illbois Avenue is not in this particubr process because there was no warning signal prior to this round of projects. She said that crossbg probably will not be b pbce until this time next year. The railroad crossings systems are funded by the f^eral government to 90 percent of the completed cost. The Town of Southern Pines will be billed at a bter date for 10 percent of the cost. Funds were admimstered for tlus project b the state by the North Carolina Department of Transportation. resigned to accept a similar position b Randolph (tounty. Hb resignation becomes effective May 15. Baker made hb decbion public at the Monday meeting of the Moore County Board of Com missioners. Chairman Lee Williams responded that the board b accepting hb resignation “with deep regret but we wbh you the best just the same.” Later b the meeting, at the request of Commissioner Cbrolyn Blue, the board agreed to pass a resolution recdgnbbg Baker for hb out standing service to the coimty. (Continued on Page 9-A) Former Governor James E. Holshouser Jr., of Southern Pines has been elected to the Board of Governors of the Umversity of Norb Carolba. Hobhouser said this week he was pleased and honored to be chosen for the board and a Umversity official declared, “He will be bvaluable as a member, and hb dedication to the Univer sity system is well known.” * Holshouser, as a member of the Legisbture, played a key role b the establishment of the University system and tbs week he said, “It was probably the best tiling I have done for the state.” When the consolidation of the 16 state supported campuses bto one system was under con sideration by the General Assembly during the ad- James E. Holshouser Jr. minbtration of Governor Robert Scott, Hobhouser went at hb own (Continued on Page 12-A) THE PILOT LIGHT People Here Are Drinking Less Restaurant and club managers b the area that are now licensed to serve liquor by the drbk all agree that tiie new law is good for the area. Accordbg to Tony Borrelli of the Southern Pbes (Country Club, the guests are defmitely drbkbg less. “When they drink less, they’re better behaved,” he stated. “It’s hard to tell if sales are up because this is our biggest season, but sales have defbitely been better sbce the law was passed.” Mid Pbes reported that as they were basically b the room and golf busbess and had not allowed brown bagging b the dbbg room anyway that they had seen little change b the drinking patterns of their guests. John Warren, dbbg room manager at Pbe Needles, stated that as their dinbg facilities are just for guests they had seen no change b beer or wbe sales as some establishments reported. “JFR Bam had a drop in beer and wbe sales at first but that has leveled off now,” said manager Lee Thomas. “It has all been very smooth. It hasn’t really made that much difference because we’re still b the food busbess first. It has,” he contbued, “cut down on people trying to fbish up a tiottle before they leave, so it has de finitely helped in crowd control.” Holiday Inn, The Sheraton, Cheese ‘N Thbgs all agreed that the law has not changed their clientele and they had not had any problems. LEGISLATURE - Rep. T. ayde Auman’s bill (HR 631) to amend the local option mixed beverage law ran bto opposition on the floor of the House on Tuesday. Auman succeeded, however, in gettbg the bill referred to the House ABC Commitee before a vote was taken. The House committee had given approval to the bill last week. The bill would allow Pinehurst to vote on the sale of liquor-by-the-drink, which it is not permitted to do under present legislation. The bstitute of Government sees the Auman bill as “the one with greatest significance” of aU mixed drbk bills introduced tlus session. _ Two local bills btroduced by Rep. Auman some weeks ago have now passed the Senate after House approval. They would amend the Pbebluff charter, and set new terms of office for the Robbins mayor and commissioners. LIQUOR-Motel and hotel owners gathered b (Charlotte last week and got a report on the first few months experience with liquor-by-the-drink sales. Bill Hester, administrator of be State ABC Board, said bat 22 cities or counties have bus far approved mixed drbk sales and ei^t have voted bem down. Of 520 estabUshments bat have been licensed to sell mixed drbks, 156 are b Mecklenburg and 65 are in Wake County. Hester estimated that wibin a year be state will have licensed 850 establishments. Most of bose present said bey have had no problems wib mixed drink sales, it has helped busbess and bere are fewer (Continued on Page 12-A)