Index M19K tails Books, 2-B; Carthage News, 1-4-D; Church News, 3-B; Classified Ads, 8- 15-D; Editorials, 1-B; Entertainment, 5-8-C; Obituaries, 14-A; Pinehurst News, 1-4-C; Sandhills Scene, 2-9-A; Sports, 9-13-C. k/y Robbia i^^^Glandon iiCTd PiaJolufpv raron ■ 2Vassl*l I ^Lakeviok/ lou+herri r ■ ines ^bardaen LOT ABC Board appointment stirs hassle at Commissioners meeting. See Page 10- A. VOL. 61, NO. 30 68 PAGES SOUTHERN PINES, NORTH CAROLINA 28387 WEDNESDAY, MAY 20, 1981 68 PAGES PRICE 15 CENTS 'jrr i PRESENTED AWARD — T. Clyde Auman (left) of West End is shown being presented the Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award from Associate Dean Robert Anderson (right) at the St. Andrews Presbyterian College Commencement on Sunday. Mrs. Ann McLean (center) accepted the award made posthumously to her husband, Dr. David A. McLean. Auman Given St. Andrews Award With McLean T. Clyde Auman, former member of the North Carolina House of Representatives from West End, was presented with the prestigious Algernon Sydney Sullivan Award at the May 16 commencement of St. Andrews Presbyterian College in Laurinburg. The Sullivan Award is conferred in recognition of spiritual and humanitarian quaUties practically applied to daily Uving. Another Moore County native. Dr. David A. McLean, was posthumously honored with the same award. His widow, Ann McLean, accepted the award. Auman is a peach farmer and an active member of the West End Presbyterian Church. St. Andrews President Alvin P. Perkinson, Jr. met Auman five years ago, and has high praise for the former State Representative. “Clyde Auman is an unusually fine person, a strong churchman and a first-rate human being. If anyone deserves this kind of recognition, he does,’’ said Whitaker Quits SCS For Regional Office Charles L. Whitaker, conserva tionist with the Moore County Soil Conservation District since 1978, has resigned in order to accept the position of resource conserva tion and development coor dinator for Region H Council of Governments. Whitaker will assume his new duties on June 1. In his new position the career conservationist will be coor dinating RC&D activities in the counties of Richmond, Mon tgomery, Anson and Moore. Region H was designated an RC&D area in February by the North Carolina Soil Conservation Service, an arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Major objective of the program is prudent use, management and protection of natural resources with consideration given to social and economic benefits to the peo ple. The seven active RC&D areas in North Carolina are among 194 across the nation which share in some $32 million (Continued on Page 11-A) Summer Music Program Is Coming To Sandhills There will be a new sound among the pines and greens of Pinehurst this sununer. For one month beginning June 26,80 musicians handpicked from the conservatories and univer sities of this country will attend master classes, rehearse and perform in preparation for a four week tour of Germany and Italy as part of the 15th Internationa Music Program of the North Carolina School of the Arts. This means that everyone within driving distance of the Sandhills has access to a month long music festival with a variety of musical events akin to that of the Spoleto Festival in Charleston, which proceeds it a few weeks. In keeping with the musical festival spirit there will be music everyydiere. Full orchestral con certs in the Cardinal Ballroom of the Pinehurst Hotel, Chamber Music in the pillared lobby of the original Pinehurst Country Club, outdoor jazz concerts by the gazebo at the hotel swimming pool, plus a free concert in the (Continued on Page 11-A) THE PILOT LIGHT LIQUOR BBUD-The folks in Pinehurst got the word from Raleigh last Friday that Rep. A1 Adams has withdrawn HBl from the ABC committee where it had languished and worried resort operators in Mineral Springs Township since the first day of the 1981 legislative session. Adams’ bill would have repealed liquor-by-the-drink legislation for the township, which includes Pinehurst, the Couptry Club of North Carolina, Foxfire and Seven Lakes. Adams’ explanation was that since the people in the township voted against Rep. Clyde Auman, who had introduced the bill allowing the mixed drink vote, they really didn’t want liquor-by-the-drink sales. In the meantime, however, the now-incorporated village of Pinehurst called a new referendum on mixed drink sales and the proposal passed overwhelmingly. People knowledgeable in the ways of the legislature knew, of course, from the beginning Biat HBl was not going to be approved by the legislators. GUN BILL-Senator Charles Vickery last week introduced a bill in the State Senate that would prohibit any person convicted of a crime in North Carolina or any other state from obtaining a permit to purchase a pistol. Vickery’s bill also would outlaw the possession, sale or manufacture of cheap handguns known as “Saturday night (Continued on Page 16-A) Some Budgets Approved But Schools ‘Awe’ Officials Perkinson. An awards committee spokesman described Auman as a person of “nobility and unselfish service to his fellow man. “Auman’s qualities have expressed themselves in every facet of his life-family man, peach farmer, church leader, (Continued on Page 16-A) Memorial Day Some offices will close and some will not in observance of Memorial Day on Monday, May 25. State and federal offices will be closed, as will the Post Office. The banks will also observe the hoUday. Schools will be open and so will county and municipal offices. In Southern pines the Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 7318 will hold Memorial Day services at 3 p.m. on Sunday at Mt. Hope Cemetery. The public is invited to attend. Dr. Bruton To Speak At Finals The chairman of the North Carolina State Board of Education will be the main speaker at the 31st commencement at Sandhills Community College May 29. Dr. David Bruton, a Southern Pines pediatrician who has been head of the state education board since 1977, will bring the conunencement message to the 250 graduates at 7:30 p.m. in the courtyard of the college. J. Edwin (Tausey, chairman of the Sandhills Board of Trustees, and Dr. Raymond A. Stone, president, will preside at the ceremonies. Several awards will be given out during the evening. Parents and the general public are invited to attend. The evening service will follow an afternoon nurses’ dedication seiYice at the Village Chapel in Pinehurst. The 30 candidates for graduation will hear an address by Dr. Charles A.S. Phillips, a Moore County surgeon who is also chairman of the Moore (Continued on Page 16-A) BY FLORENCE GILKESON In a surprising show of unanimity the Moore C!ounty Board of Commissioners agreed Monday night to approve a series of budget proposals, including the coroner, the Cameron school project, social services, and the fire service districts. The board also voted unanimously to approve a wastewater treatment budget which will mean a 92-cent rate for Southern Pines, Pinehurst and Aberdeen. The rate, which is charged per 1000 gallons, represents an increase of more than 10 cents. Recreation and youth services budget requests were presented, but no action was taken. Thursday, May 28, was set as the date for the presentation of the budget message by Ck)unty Administrator Larry Moubry. The meeting will be held at 4 p.m. in the courtroom of the old courthouse in Carthage and will be devoted only to the budget message, which will be a summary of county departmental needs and other budget-related matters. Amid speculation that the board might abolish the constitutional office of coroner simply by eliminating the coroner’s budget, the board went ahead and approved a $4,230 budget request from Coroner A.B. Parker. This budget, one of the smallest in the county, has been separated this year from the larger budget covering the expenses of the medical examiner system, which includes the $50 fee paid per case to medical examiners, set by state law,and autopsy expenses. Dr. (diaries PWlIips, board chairman, expressed himself in favor of abolishing the office altogether but commended Parker for his work. “The reason we keep the coroner is because of the fine work of A.B. Parker. He’s worth every penny and is to be commended for his work and this budget,’’ Phillips said as the board approved the budget. The coroner pointed out that Moore Group Backs Good Roads Program Proponents of Gov. James u. Hunt’s highway improvement program are becoming more vocal as they boost legislation which includes, among other things, a three-cent gas tax in crease. A Moore County delegation went to Raleigh Thursday for a rally of the North Carolinians for Good Roads. Headed by Bob Hunt of Pinehurst, the Moore countians learned that without additional funds from some source, this county will face long delays in completion of popular highway projects. At the top of this list is the long- awaited four-taning of U.S. 1 from Vass to Sanford, a 12-4nile stretch to cost an estimated $20 million. Moore Delegation Among the Moore countians at tending the rally in the Rale^th Civic Center, in addition to Bob (Continued on Page 16-A) Memorial Day Death Toll Of 16 Predicted For NC The N.C. State Motor (Hub, estimating 16 people could lose their lives in traffic accidents on North Carolina streets and high ways over the long Memorial Day weekend, urged motorists to drive with care during the holiday period. The state will count its toll over a 78-hour period from 6 p.m. Friday, May 22, untU midnight Monday, May 25. Last year 17 fatalities and 817 injuries were recorded for a similar period of time while 18 died in 1979. Crime Control and Public Safety Secretary Burley Mitchell has announced that North Carolina will again join 47 other states this Memorial Day weekend in implementing Operation CARE (Combined Accident Reduction Effort). Mitchell said, “Memorial Day unofficially marks the beginning of sunimer and brings with it heavy holiday traffic. The recent Easter weekend, in which the number of traffic deaths were less than half the number killed during the same weekend in 1980, proves that with the cooperation of the motoring public and the hard work of the Highway Patrol (Continued on Page 16-A) Japanese Educators Pay Visit To Region Today A group of six Japanese pre- fectural education leaders will visit the Sandhills today (Wednesday). In October of 1980 a United States education delegation that included State Superintendent A. Craig Phillips and State Board of Education Chairman H. David Bruton visited Japan. This return visit is sponsored by the Japan-United States Friendship Conunission, the Na tional Association of State Boards of Education, the Council of Chief State School Officers, and the Na tional Congress of Parents and Teachers (PTA). Their hosts and hostesses. Chairman H, David Bruton, Southeastern Regional Educat ion Center Director Mrs. Gladys Britt, Moore County School Superintendent R.E. Lee and Moore County School Arts Educa tion Director Mrs. Billiegene Gamer have planned an i^or- mative and representative tour of the Sandhills for the distinguish- (Continued on Page 11-A) Water Mystery In Village The water situation at Whisper ing Pines has cleared up, but Carolina Water Service, which owns the village water system, apparently is no closer to solving the mystery of how chlorine showed up in the golf course sprinklers. CWS has sent letters to the ap proximately 650 customers rescinding an earlier order call ing for the boiling of drinking water. (^emical and bacteriological tests of the water system have revealed no evidence of con tamination, according to one spokesman for Clarolina Water Service. With the tests showing a consistent lack of contamination, the Moore County Health Depart ment has advised CWS to withdraw the “boil water” order. Dave Demaree, CWS vice- president, has said that his com pany will continue to test the water in an effort to solve the mystery. The “boil water” order came about the same time that the village was faced with a drou^t crisis in which an odd-even sprinkling schedule was authoriz ed. This was in early May. However, the chlorine mystery and the drought crisis are not regarded as related. CWS issued the “boil water” order on May 1 because of evidence the sprinkler system had leaked into the drbtking water system. For two weeks the company tested and dug holes in golf courses, only to find no intercon nectors between the two systems. At no point throughout the testing period did any of the tests in dicate contamination. In late April CWS noticed what (Continued on Page 16-A) the budget does not incluae payments for trips to testify in court, covering his time and mileage, nor does it include the camera which he owns and uses to take photographs at death scenes. He does charge the county for the film and other expenses for the photography work. Parker explained that the old camera own^ by the county is no longer usable, and he bought one of his own to use in his work. The pictures are needed by hospital pathologists in certain death cases. The $4,230 budget includes $3,260 in death call fees and operating expenses. The coroner is paid a set fee of $35 per death call. Parker reported that he has answered 93 death calls, including 50 natural deaths, 23 accidents, 13 homicides, and seven suicides. (Continued on Page 13-A) County Refuses To Pay Bill; Carthage Board To Retaliate BY WOODROW WILHOIT The Carthage Town Board at their regular meeting Monday night unanimously voted that beginning July 1 they would cut off the street lights around the Moore County Courthouse, stop garbage pickup at the county buildings, and unless the remainder of the costs for the current year is paid fw these services then court action would be instituted to collect it. It was also voted that since the new Court Facilities Building is not owned by the county but the private Pioneer Corporation tliat an appraisal be made of the building and taxed in accordance Farmers Market The Moore County Farmers Maricet will open on June 2 at the same location as in previous years in Southern Pines. The hours of operation will be from 9-5 on Tuesday and Wednesday, 9-6 on Thursday and Friday, and 8-2 on Saturday. The venders will have an opportunity to rent seasonal spaces this year. If venders are interested in renting seasonal spaces, they should be at the Farmers Market meeting at the local on Friday, May 29, at 10 a.m. E.T. Baker has been employed as manager of the market. The rules and regulations have been revised by the Farmers Market Advisory Ck)nunittee which was appointed by the Moore County of County Commissioners. For a copy of the Rules and Regulations, persons may contact the Moore County Extension Office at 947-5371. with state statute. The move by the Carthage Board resulted from a letter received last week from the County Administrator to Town Oerk, Mrs. Waitsel Deese, in which he stated that the county would not pay for these services any longer and that the remainder owned for this fiscal year 1989-81 would not be paid. The county has been paying $6,987 annually for various services, Mrs. Deese stated. Mrs. Deese said that before Mrs. Estelle Wicker retired as County Finance Officer that she sent a check to the town for $3,500, and a week ago she, Mrs. Deese, sent a statement for the remainder for the period Jan. 1 through June 30 of this year. Then last Thursday morning, Mrs. Deese stated that she received the letter from County Administrator Larry Moubry saying that the county would not pay for these services. The text of Moubry’s letter to Mrs. Deese, dated May 13, reads as follows: “I am in receipt of your invoice of May 8, 1981 concerning payment for services from January 1, 1981 through June 30, 1981. The Board of County Commissioners in the general cutbacks last month decided not to pay the towns that we are in contract with at this time for services which have (Continued on Page 11-A) Step Taken On Manager ; Abortion Issue Delayed On a 3-2 vote Monday night the Moore County Board of Commis sioners took the first step toward establishing the county manager form of government. The action may have the effect of abolishing the position of coun ty administrator, presently held by Larry Moubry. Conunissioner Tony Parker brought up the subject near the end of a five-hour meeting and asked if other conunissioners were interested in pursuing the county manager form of govern ment. At 12 midnight Parker also ask ed for passage of a resolution sup porting the abortion parental notification bill which has been introduced into the legislature. Action was not taken because this matter had not been included on the agenda, and it was deferred until the June 1 board meeting. On the county manager matter Parker made a motion to instruct the county attorney to draw up the necessary papers and to pro ceed with a statewide advertising schedule seeking qualified ap plicants. Conunissioner Ckwlidge Thompson seconded the motion. When it came time to vote, Conunissioners Lee Williams and Arthur Purvis cast no votes, and the chairman. Dr. Charles Phillips, broke the tie with a yes vote. The board’s action precedes the completion of a study being conducted of county government by a team of volunteer manage- (Continued on Page 10-A) Pinecrest Senior Is Killed When Thrown From Auto Here A 17-year old Pinecrest High School senior died late Thursday morning when she was thrown from the vehicle she was driving on Morganton Road near the school. Kelly Dawn Anderson jvas taken by the Southern Pines Rescue Squad to Moore Memorial Hospital, where she was pronounced dead on arrival. She resided at 110 Montford St., Aberdeen. Trooper J.T. (Covington Jr. of the State Highway Patrol reported that Miss Anderson ran off the road in a sharp curve and struck an embankment, traveling 625 feet before overturning another 175 feet. Her body was thrown some 48 feet from the vehicle. Death was attributed to a broken neck and massive head in juries. The patrolman said that the driver was headed west on Morganton Road in the direction of U.S. 15-501 and was traveling at a high rate of speed. He ex pressed the opinion that she pro bably would have survived if her seat belt had been fastened. Scene of the 11:30 accident was 0.2 mile east of the Pinecrest High School Road. The Volvo stationwagon was described as a total loss. (Continued on Page 16-A) ■ ft* DEATH VEHICLE — Southern Pines Patrolman Ronnie Atkins and Trooper Ted Derr of the State Highway Patrol investigate the vehicle which crashed Thursday on Morganton Road, causing the death of 17- year-old Kelly Dawn Anderson of Aberdeen.—(Photo by Glenn M. Sides)