Wednesday, May 6, 1981
THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina
Page 9-C
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May Travel Events
The travel season really
swings into high gear in May
with a widely diverse calendar
of events highlighted by the
World 600 auto race at Charlotte
Motor Speedway on May 24.
This event, which attracts
more people than any other
sports event in the state, will
share the spotlight in May with
highlighting the May calendar
are a Brick Festival at Sanford
May 9-17 noting the fact that
North Carolina is the leading
br^ck manufacturer in the
United States, a hang gliding
spectacular at Jockey’s Ridge
State Park at Nags Head
featuring competition among
pilots from aU over the United
another race-one which will be a States, and the Big Ivy Ramp
bit slower-on May 9. The Festival at Barnardsville in
Tanglewood Steeplechase will be Buncombe County north of
run over the course at Asheville.
Clemmons. It was originally There will be patriotic
reported to have been scheduled celebrations in May including a
in April but the date this year Memorial Day observance at the
was changed to May 9. USS North Carolina Battleship
Among the other activities Memorial at Wilmington May 25.
Moore Schools Groups
To Perform In Raleigh
Three Moore County middle
school musical groups are
scheduled to perform at the
Capital Square Arts Festival in
Raleigh during the three week
celebration May 4-22.
Pinehurst Middle School band
and chorus will perform May 5,
with the band playing at noon,
followed by the chorus at 12:30.
Southern Pines Middle School
band is scheduled to play Mon
day, May 11 at noon.
More than 50 musical groups
from elementary and high
schools throughout the state will
hold lunch hour performances
each weekday during the festival,
as part of the annual event spon-
Bookmobile
Schedule
Tuesday, May 12-Wedgewood,
Mrs. McCaskill’s, 9-9:15;
Hunter’s Glen, 9:20-9:40;
Southern Pines Social Service
Bldg., 9:50-10; Penick Home,
10:10-10:25; 300 Block E.
Pennsylvania Ave., 10:35-10:45;
Mary Dennis Manor, 10:55-11:25;
500 Block W. Vermont Ave.„
11:30-12:10; lunch 12:10-12:40;
Highland Trails, 12:55-1:30;
Bethesda Farm, Devonshire Dr.,
1:45-2:15; Bethesda Rd.-Mrs.
Peacock’s, 2:20-2:30;
Rehabilitation Center, Pine St.,
2:35-2:50; Crestline-Raeford Rd.,
3:05-3:35; County Line Road,
3:45-4:15.
Wednesday, May 13-S.E.
Hannon, 9-9:15; Sara Dunlap,
§:30-9:45; ®ig Oak. Church, 10-
10:30; Eagle Springs P.O., 10:45-
11:15; West End Nutrition Site,
11:30-12; lunch 12-12:30;
Sandhills Mental Health Seven
Lakes, 12:40-1:05; Seven Lakes
North Clubhouse, 1:15-2; Foxfire
Swimming Pool, 2:30-3.
Thursday, May 14-Carthage
Nutrition Site, 12:15-12:45;
Lunch 12:45-1:15; Open Door
Day Care Center, 1:30-2:10; Mrs.
Monroe-Murdocksville, 2:20-
2:30; Mrs. Neff-Eastwood, 2:40-
2:50.
Friday, May 15-Kiddie Korner
Day Nursery, 9-10; 6th & Crest,
10:10;10:35; North Poplar Street,
10:40-10:50; Sandhills Montessori
School, 11-11:50; lunch 12-12:30;
Piggly Wiggly, 12:30-1; Moore
Memorial Hospital, 1:30-2:30;
Manor Care, 2:40-3; Mrs.
Milliken’s Nursery, 3:15-4.
sored by the Division of Cultural
Arts of the North Carolina
Department of Public Instruc
tion.
In addition, during the festival,
student art work will be on
display, at the Superintendents’
Choice Art Exhibit, held in the
Old Capital Building.
An ink portrait drawn by Mar
cia Williams, an 11th grader at
Pinecrest High School, will be
displayed at the art show. The
drawing won honorable mention
at the art show at Town and Coun
try Shopping Center last week,
and was chosen as the piece to
represent Moore County schools
in the festival.
Anne Frank
Film Slated
At Library
Southern Pines Library will
present “The Diary of Anne
Frank” Saturday, May 9.
Showtime is 2 p.m. with free
admission.
Produced in 1959, “'The Diary
of Anne Frank,” adapted from
the book, “Diary of A Young
Girl,” is the story of the Frank
family, Amsterdam Jew:^, who
hid in an attic from the Nazis for
two years, in company with
another family of friends.
The film captures the book’s
terse, claustrophobic suspense
and the ingrown drama of the
two families’ enforced
togetherness. Their courage is
here along with their sufferings,
caught in this small piece of
brutal history.
Starring are Millie Perkins
Joseph Schildkraut, and Shelley
Winters in roles that are
surprisingly well acted and
totally believable. George
Stevens directed the film, openly
copying the Broadway hit in his
sets and scene divisions.
This story has been told as a
book, a play, a film, and in
several versions on television.
Still, its impact is not dulled by
the repetition. It remains a
stark, touching drama of
personal triumph and family
love.
On May 16, the library will
feature the 1938 suspense hit,
“Night Must Fall,” starring
Robert Montgomery in one of his
most engaging roles.
AT MAGIC SHOW-Children at the magic show
presented by Magic Time USA, buy puzzles from
members of the tour group. The show, presented
at the Southern Pines Middle School Monday
evening, raised over $1,500 for the Southern
Pines Rescue Squad.—(Photo by Liz Huskey).
NOW PICKING!!
GROWN ON STRAW MULCH
STRAWBERRIES
PICK-YOUR-OWN BRING-OWN-CONTAINERS
Open At 7:00 A.M.
—Centrally Located—
5 Miles From Southern Pines, 6 Miles From Pinehurst,
1 MUe From Whispering Pines, 7 Miles From Carthage
Located on'Highway 22, 2 Miles North of Southern Pines
Airport (Towards Carthage). Look For Sign.
MAC FARMS PHONE 949-2730 ROBERT McLEOD, OWNER
Union Pines
Band Starts
Activities
BY BARBARA DANLEY
As the crowd watches in awe,
the band strikes up a tune. The
music inspires various feelings
and reactions-happiness, sad
ness, smiles and sighs, snapping
fingers, patting feet and even
quiet tears.
However, Union Pines Band
Director David Seiberling says,
“people don’t see the hours and
weeks of performance and
practice” which goes into the
fifteen or twenty minutes of
musical delight or countless
other duties which are a must to
a successful band.
Sandwiching money making
projects between parades and
football field show per
formances, the Union Pines
Band and Band Boosters worked
especially hard funding a trip to
Ft. Meyers, Florida in February,
where Union Pines participated
in the Edison Pageant of Light,
one of the largest and most
outstanding tributes to any single
American-Thomas Alva Edison.
With these activities behind
them, the Union Pines Band
begins preparations for the
coming year, and according to
Seiberling they are busy doing
those thousand of things “that
people never see.”
In an effort to pull together
talented students for the coming
year, recruiting and auditions for
Flag and Rifle Corps have topped
the list of necessary duties,
which began more than a month
ago.
Two or three members of the
Auxiliary Corps or Color Guard,
as it is known to many, were sent
to each of the four “feeder
schools,” Cameron, Carthage,
Sandhills Farm Life and Vass
Lakeview, to work with in
terested girls. From the sixty
girls auditioning thirty-two were
chosoi to serve as next year’s
Color Guards.
Last week, recruiting
programs began for prospective
fifth grade band students and
high school drum majors. Four
or five were expected to try out
for Drum Major during the
audition period, which be
held two days each week for
three weeks.
In Seiberling’s three years at
Union Pines he says he cannot
remember ever having a band as
large as this one, which is
shaping up for next year.
“I know it’s been over seventy,
and I think, it’s been over eighty,
but to the l^st of my knowledge,
never over ninety,” he com
mented as to the size of combined
playir^ and non^laying band
members.
Next year the Union Pines
Band is expected to be composed
of more than sixty playing
members, whereas this year’s
record was forty-six. The
Auxiliary Corps wUl increase
from nine to thirty-two mem
bers; while two or three Drum
Majors will be added to the past
year’s total of two.
Not only is the Union Pines
Band growing by leaps and
bounds so are the Junior High
Bands. According to Seiberling,
“students are picking up on band
at the sixth grade level and
sticking with it.”
Junior High Band students
from the four schools meet bi
monthly to play together. Both
Union Pines and the Junior High
Bands have consumed much
time recently practicing their
parts in preparation for the
annual Spring Concert scheduled
for Sunday, May 17, in the Union
Pines High School auditorium.
The hardest work is performed
during the quietest times. Thus
we might conclude, in any group,
organization or profession good
people make a task look easy:
but seldom is the hard work
behind such tasks seen.
Show Repeat
The “North Carolina People”
television program featuring
interviews by Dr. William
Friday with James Tufts of
Pinehurst and Sam Ragan of
Southern Pines will be repeated
Sunday at 6 p.m. on Channel 4.
The first showing of the
program in which old and
pesent-day life in the Sandhills
is discussed was on Tuesday
night.
HALIFAX AUDITIONS
Robert Caprio, Director of
“The First For Freedom”
outdoor drama, staged in
Halifax, announces that open
auditions will be held on May 17
at 2 p.m. in the Joseph Montford
Amphitheater in Halifax. The
cast of approximately 30 includes
mostly men who will be
portraying historic characters in
our Revolutionary War. Reading
material will be furnished. The
drama season opens June 25 at
8:30 p.m. and plays Wednesday
though Saturday evenings,
closing on August 1.
VIEW OF PRESS
“Inside Story,” the first
nationally televised examination
of press performance, will
premiere Thursday, May 7 at 8
p.m. on center Channel 4. This
series of eight weekly half-hour
magazines will feature Hodding
Carter, former Assistant
Secretary of State for Public
Affairs, as its anchorman and
chief correspondent. “Inside
Story” will utilize film, tape and
commentary to illustrate and
examine how the press-
including television and radio
news, newspapers and news
magazines-handle develop
ments in the news. Each
program will concentrate on how
well the news consumer was
served by press coverage.
WRITING WORKSHOPS
Writing is a skill that everyone
has and yet everyone can
improve. A series of three-hour
workshops offered by Duke
University Office of Continuing
Education is designed to help
people in a variety of careers to
write concisely, attractively, and
efficiently. The instructor is
Lucy Knight, a freelance writer
who now works as Coordinator of
Research Support at Duke.
Individual sessions will meet
from 6 to 9 p.m. in the Vivins
Building on Duke’s East
Campus, beginning June 23.
CHAPEL HILL EXHIBIT
The work of New York artist
Lloyd Goldsmith is now on view
through May 31 at the Ackland
Art Museum at the University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.
The exhibition of Goldsmith’s
four, large graphite drawings is
part of the Ackland’s mini-series
“Facets,” created to explore the
widest possible variety of work
being done by contemporary
artists.
THEATER ON TV
Masterpiece Theater will
celebrate its 10th anniversary
with a 22-week “Festival of
Favorites,” a selection of
highlights of a decade of
programming which will air,
beginning May 3, at 9 p.m.
On the restrospective schedule
is Balzac’s “Cousin Bette”
(1972), the story of a woman’s
revenge that is generally
considered the first of the
naturalistic French novels.
YOUTH CONCERT
A showcase of young musical
talent was featured during a
free Greensboro Symphony
Youth Orchestra concert on
Tuesday, May 5, 8:15 p.m., at
Weaver Education Center, 300 S.
Spring St. Joining the
Greensboro Symphony Youth
Orchestra was the 50-member
Chapel Hill Young Peoples
Orchestra, the 50-member Page
High School Choir directed by
Sam Doyle, four UNC-G
vocalists, and pianist Bill
Dameron, winner of the
Symphony Guild-sponsored 1981
Young Artist Competition.
FINAL CONCERT
The Youth Symphony of the
Carolinas will give its final
concert of the season on Sunday,
May 17, at 3 p.m. in Dana
Auditorium on the campus of
Queens College. The winners of
the Young Artist Competition-
Gary Chapin, Stefan Gabriel,
and Dale Jarrett-will be the
soloists for this program.
NCSU Finals
Set On May 16
North Carolina State
University will hold its 1981
commencement Saturday, May
16, as thousands of students,
faculty, relatives and other
friends fiU the William Neal
Reynolds Coliseum.
Although definite totals cannot
be given until after exams, NCSU
officials estimate more than
3,000 men and women will be
awarded their degrees during
the ceremony which will start
with the academic procession at
9:15 a.m.
Dr. Frank Rhodes, president of
Cornell University, will deliver
the principal address. UNC
President William C. Friday,
NCSU Chancellor Joab L.
Thomas and representatives of
the graduating class also will
give brief remarks.
Chancellor and Mrs. Thomas
will open the commencement
weekend with an open house
from 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, May 15,
for the degree-winners and their
families at the chancellor’s
residence.
Using too much dishwasher
detergent may cause a film on
stainless steel tableware. This
film can be removed with silver
polish.
CONTEST WINNERS — Winners of the McDonald’s Day contest held
last week are: (L to R) John Ebbert, third; Keith Vest, first; Betsy
Tate, second; and Tony Oxendine, manager of McDonald’s; (back row)
Sally Hyde and Allison Crumpler, honorable mention. Not pictured are
Wendy Webster and Anthony Floyd.
The LOB
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A trip to the Salad Bar.
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special beverage.
ALUfOR n
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'jJi’iS Thursday
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(from 6 PM to 11 PM)
We Offer All Types of Catering To Your
Home Or Office Call 692-3503
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