THE PILOT—Southern Pines, North Carolina Wednesday, May 27, 1981 Sandhills Scene Telephone 692-7271 Deadline for Wedding Picture, Tuesday noon The Pilot s Log sMond- ilumbii Wayne A. Ybarra, a s year student at the Coliimbia University School of Law, was recently awarded the Thomas E. Dewey Prize for submitting the tx'st written brief in the Harlan Fiske Stone Moot Court Finals. Ybarra, ilie son of Col. C.R. Ybarra of Southern Pines, receiv ed the prize which was establish ed in 1979 in memory of Thomas E. Dewey, a 1925 graduate and later (1947) honorary degree (LL.D) recipient of the Law School. The award honors the former Governor of New York (1943-1954) and is given annually to “the student who writes the best brief in the collective judg ment of the judges sitting in the semifinal round of the Harlan Fiske Stone Moot Ckiurt Competi tion.” Jackson of 120 Country Club Circle. While at Davidson College, she was a member of the Davidson Christian Fellowship and the college newspaper staff. She was also treasurer of the Public Interest Research Group. average of 3.9 or better on a. 4.0 scale, and Arthur McKimmon Webster. Mayo and Buddy Dotson spent last weekend at Hollins College in Virginia where they attended Mayo’s 50th Class Reunion. Joy Lynn Johnson of Southern Pines is among the approximately 45 members of the Summer Repertory Theater Company at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro. Miss Johnson is the daughter of Mrs. William E. Samuels Jr. of 140 Riding Lane, Southern Pines. A graduate student in drama at UNC-G, she has the role of Yum-Yum in the musical, “The Mikado.” This spring, she had the role of Nella in the opera production of “Gianni Schicchi.” Two students from Moore County have been selected to attend the N.C. School of Science and Mathmatics in Durham as a part of the junior class of 150 boys and girls. They are Andrew R.G. Baxter, Wallace O’Neal Day High School and Douglas K. Graham, Union Pines High School. The School is a state-wide, state-supported residential high school for students with special ability in science. It has a total enrollment of 300, drawn from 78 N.C. counties. Cadet David Francis Hartsell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry E. Hartsell of Pinehurst was promoted to the rank of SSG at the annual commencement exercises at Camden Military Academy, Camden, S.C. on Sunday, May 17. Best Conduct Award, Academic Excellence Award (90 average). Ashley Van Camp of Southern Pines, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Van Camp, East Conn. Avenue, served as a Page in Governor Jim Hunt’s offices in Raleigh during the week of May 11-15. Ashley is a Junior at Wallace O’Neal Day School. Winners of the Whispering Pines Duplicate Bridge Club games played Sunday night at the Southern Pines Civic Club building are: North-South - a tie for first and second places bet ween Betty and Dick Perry and Doris and Ed Smith; third, Kay Miller and Pete Brannon; East- West - first, Mary Lou and Dave Forrest; second. Gene Miles and Kay Pace; third, Fran LaMarre and S. LaMarre. Andrea Nicholas Stuart of Southern Pines, a student at the East Carolina University School of Art, has been named a winner in Creative Advertising (Challenge, a competition spon sored by McCaffrey & McCall Inc., a New York City advertising agency. She received honorable men tion in for art in the program which asked students to create an advertising campaign promoting their , own college. Twenty-four awards were given. According to David B. McCall, chairman and chief executive of McCaffrey & McCall, 232 students representing 81 colleges in the eastern United States took part in the competition. “The competition was developed after discussions with art and marketing chairmen at leading schools,” he said. Three Moore County students were among the 170 who made the Dean’s List at Pembroke State University during the spring semester. They were: Rebecca M. Bachman of Aberdeen, Brenda Lynn Auman of Jackson Springs, and Vickie LeAnne Bass of Southern Pines. The following were winners at the Country Club of North Carolina semi-monthly bridge tournament Friday: first, Bea Murray; second, (3race Edmund; third, Lois McVay; fourth, Adelaide Weaver; fiffe, Lois Hammet. J. Randall Sessoms of Southern Pines was among the seniors given certificates of recognition for service at the 45th annual Founder’s Day banquet of the Tau chapter of Phi Sigma Pi national honor fraternity at East Carolina University. Margaret W. Jackson of Southern Pines received the A.B. degree from Davidson (College during graduation exercises Sunday, May 24. Miss Jackson is the daughter of Mrs. E.N. Nothing Unimportant Ever Happens At Barkleys Natural Rattan Hi-Back Throne Chair Traditional Elegance IS Affordable Barkleys Colang furniture ilfoppe 205 Pinehurst Ave. Hours 10-5 Mon.-Fri. Closod Saturday 692-4970 Southern Pines Madonna Dunn, daughter of Ms. Ellen Dunn of Midlothian Drive in Southern Pines, was selected to participate in the President’s Leadership Award Program held at Converse (College receitly. Madonna, a student at Wallace O’Neal Day School, was nominated by her high s^ool principal based on leadership qualities. Two Moore (^unty students are among the 178 students, the largest class in history, to receive degrees at the 18th commencement service at North Carolina Wesleyan (College in Rocky Mount on May 9. They were: Richard Mel Johnson of Southern Pines and Jesse Andrew Wimberly of Aberdeen. Both received B.S. degrees in fish and wildlife. The monthly dinner-bridge was held at the Elks Club on May 14. The winners were: Mr. and Mrs. Edward Malzone, Mr. and Mrs. (jreorge Kirkendale, Mr. and Mrs. Donald Bahr, Mr. and Mrs. James Bruton, Mr. and Mrs. David Forrest, Mrs. Thomas Johnson and Mrs. Peter Piestrak, Mrs. CSeon Goodrich and Mrs. W.F. Apel, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Blue, and Mr. and Mrs. John Orr. The traveling prize was won by Mrs. Peter Piestrak. The next dinner-bridge evening will be held on June 11. Degrees were conferred on three students from Moore County Sunday at Western Carolina University at Cullowhee. They were David Wayne Monroe, general management, of Pinebluff; Mitchell Ray, physical education, of Pinehurst; and Sally Hayes Thompson, 265 Arbutus Road, Southern Pines, nursing. Two residents of Southern Pines were among the 577 students who received degrees from The University of North Carolina at Wilmington on May 16 during the university’s 32nd commencement program. Students awarded the Bachelor of Arts degree were Tammy L. Marker graduating summa cum laude, having completed her studies with a grade point Guilford College awarded 263 baccalaureate degrees and 19 two-year associate of arts degrees during conunencement exercises May 9. Graduates included: Mary Margaret Thonq)son, 415 Orchard Rd., an A.B. degree in Spanish; and Samuel Long Morton, an A.B. degree in history, both of Southern Pines. Dr. R. Bruce Warlick Honored Efr. R. Bruce Warlick, local dentist with offices at 653 Broad St., Southern Pines, was the recipient of the 1981 North Carolina Dental Society Preventive Dentistry Award. The award, presented annually by the Society’s Preventive Dentistry Committee, is in recognition of outstanding contributions in the area of preventive dentistry. Dr. Warlick was honored at the Dental Society’s 125th annual meeting held May 17-20, in Pinehurst. In his presentation. Dr. Mit chell W. Wallace, Spring Lake, outgoing Society President, singled out Dr. Warlick’s service as a volunteer faculty member at a series of Dental Society preventive dentistry workshops held for dentists and dental auxiliaries throughout the state. Noting his role as a member of both the Preventive Dentistry Committee and the Steering Committee for a Preventive Dental Health Program for North Carolina Children, “he has spearheaded preventive dental health statewide, and has assited many dentists and dental hygienists in making preventive dentistry a day-to-day practice both personally and professionally,” Dr. Wallace said. Other highlights of the Dental Society’s 125th annual con vention included a keynote ad dress by Dr. Robert H. Griffiths, President-elect of the American Dental Association and the election of State Society officers. Installed as officers for 1981-82 were: Drs. Walter S. Linville, Wilson, President; William A. Current, Gastonia, President elect; James A. Privette, Kin ston, Vice President; and Robert M. Wilkinson, Winston-Salem, Secretary-Treasurer. Offices of the Dental Society are at 1001 Hillsborough Street, Raleigh. Auxiliary ‘Poppy Day’ Slated Here On Friday Mrs. Douglas Vernon Easterling Volunteers from Unit 134, American Legion Auxiliary, Southern Pines will be on the downtown streets Friday, May 29 for their annual Poppy Day. The poppy as the memorial flower for American war dead is a tradition which began in the they can. Poppy Day will begin about 8:30 a.m. and continue until 5 p.m. Easterling-Brogden Pair Say Vows In Celo Garden Lucinda Marshall Brogden and Dou^as Vernon Easterling were married at noon May 23 in a garden wedding at Celo by the Rev. Charles Meek of Pinehurst. The bride is the daughter of Mrs. E.O. Brogden Jr. and the late Mr. Brogden. The bridegroom is the son of Dr. and Mrs. Vernon Easterling of Crawfordsville, Indiana. The couple entered the garden together.. Ann Joyce of Asheville played an oboe solo and some 50 relatives and friends attended the wedding. The bride wore a wedding dress of eyelet embroidery with ruffles around the neckline and the hem of the A-line skirt. She wore her mother’s pearls and carried a bouquet of magenta rhododendrons. Following the wedding, the bride’s mother held a buffet luncheon at Vernon’s Cabin. That evening, friends gave a lasagne dinner. The night before, the bridegroom’s parents gave a barbecue. The bride is a graduate of the University of Wisconsin at Crawfordsville, Indiana with a degree in fine arts. Her husband is a graduate student in quan titative psychology at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The couple will live in Chapel Hill. first World War. Veterans return ing to their homes in this country remembered the wild poppies which lined the devastated bat tlefields of France and Flanders. The soldiers of all nations came to look upon this flower as a living symbol of their dead comrades’ sacrifice. But many persons came home from wars disabled and they too made important sacrifices. These also are honored by the memorial poppy and the monies donated by an appreciative public are spent entirely for help to them and their families as well as for the families of deceased veterans. The poppies themselves are made by disabled veterans con fined to VA hospitals. These peo ple are paid a small sum which they can use for personal needs. Ihe poppies are not sold; those who accept a poppy are invited to contribute whatever they feel BABY DAUGHTER Mr. and Mrs. Michael F. McMillan (x-oudly announce the birth of a daughter, Margaret Taylor, born Saturday, May 23. The Pilot (USPS 432980) is published every Wednesday for $7.50 per year by The Pilot, Inc., 145 W. Penn. Ave., Southern Pines, N.C. 28387. Second-class postage paid at Southern Pines, N.C. Subscription Rates Moore (bounty: One Year..$7.50. Six Months..$4.50. Three Months..$2.75. Outside Moore County: One Year..$9.00. Six Months. .$5.50. Three Months..$3.50. POSTMASTER: Send Change of Address to The Pilot, Box 58, Southern Pines, N.C. 28387. tv The Slim Gym Women's Fitness Center ntnct* Guest Rates - Whirlpool - Sauna Daily or Weekly ■ Workout Equipment !Graduation Special! Graduates of Any School Are Eligible For Our Graduation Special Two Months For *60.00 Available Only May 20 to Jane 5 550 S. Ashe St. 692-2825 Mon.-Fri. 0:30-8:30; Sunday 1:00-5:00 There was a tie for first place Thursday when members and guests of Midland Farm Country C3ub met to play duplicate bridge. Margaret Schulz and Reg Armstrong tied with Elizabeth Stimi and Helen Armstrong. Other winners were: third, Fran LaMarre and Gene Miles; fourth, Stella Smith and Eleanor Volante; fifth. Marge Scott and Delano McIntosh. V' A - •«4 A fOR. CMli-OAlhl fOVA BElWiooiw 4- ThAEF pEs/ . fi.oOn\ A,uio moBtsl KiTUiBlJ lO iecrio»J ' ^ % SjU Oatry UOOELL- US.HKMvJnyotie .soorH SouTHOAN PiNS.9 Rf^ALTORS hoerifLe. usT»*jfc. (Atuiics. Bobby Jones of Southern Pines was among the 372 who receive degrees at the 114th commencement exercises at Fayetteville State University. DINNER COMMITTEE — Members of the committee to plan the cocktail party dinner dance to be held the week of the Third Annual Almaden Grand Masters Tennis Tournament at CCNC Sept. 10-13, met May 20. The tennis tournament this year is being held to benefit the Duke Comprehensive Cancer Center. The dinner dance will be Saturday, Sept. 12. Members of the committee are: Pidgie Chapman, Joan Drexel, Barbara Rulon-Miller, Ellen Jordan, Bertram Hall, and Betty Browne. Not shown are Kay Emmert, Jane Howell and Connie Kubisch.—(Photo by Liz Huskey) Dr. and Mrs. Albert W. Hargrove of Raleigh visited Monday with his brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. George F. Hargrove. Dr. Hargrove attended the Dental Convention this weekend at the Pinehurst Hotel. Lammers-Dunn Pair Wed Lynn Daeke SANDHILL DRUG Southern Pines, N.C. PHOTO DEVELOPING In Episcopal Ceremony Caroline Hodgkins, executive director of the Sandhills Arts Council, has returned from a Memorial Day weekend trip to New York City where she and eight others visited the Metropolitan Art Museum, saw “Evita” and other per formances, and in general toured the “Big Apple.” Among those in the group was Jennifer Caldwell of Fayetteville. Joanna Steed Hancock, Director of Volunteer Services and assistant director of Samarkand Manor attended the 7th annual Spring Training Conference for the North Carolina Association of Volunteer Administrators. The three day event was held at the Montreat Conference Center near Black Mountain on May 20, 21 and 22. On Tuesday evening. May 19, the Sandhills duplicate bridge group participated in the American Contract Bridge League’s international fund games. Across the United States, other players were faced with identical hands, which were chosen for their challenge and interest, then analyzed by a panel of experts. Proceeds from (Continued on Page 8-A) Charlotte Smith Dunn and Edward William Lammers, Jr., both of Pinebluff, were married Saturday, at four in the afternoon at Emmanuel Episcopal Church, Southern Pines, in the presence of their families, closest friends and co-workers. The Reverend Nicholson B. White, rector, performed the double ring ceremony along with a celebration of the Holy Eucharist. Mrs. Susan Long was the organist. The bride was attended by her sister, Emily S. Smith of New York City. cWlie H. Armstrong of Pinebluff was the groom’s best man, and Larry Campbell of Southern Pines served as the usher. The bride’s other sister, Melanie R. Smith, of London, England, assisted Mr. White as an acolyte. Following the wedding, a garden rec^tion was held at the new home of the bride and groom. The new Mrs. Lammers is the dau^ter of Mrs. F. Parke Smith, Jr., of London, England, and the late Reverend Mr. Smith. Her maternal gran^arents are Mr. and Mrs. J.W. Baugher, Pinehurst. Mr. Lammers is the son of Mrs. Russell A. Baker, Melbourne, Florida, and the late Edward W. Lammers, Sr. The bride is a graduate of The University of the South and the National Center for Paralegal Training. She is listed in the 1980 Young edition of Outstanding Women of America. Mr. Lammers is retired from the United States Air Force and is employed by Carolina Power & Light, Aberdeen. Will Marry Teresa Fox Piano Recital Helena B. Neill of Carthage presented her piano students in the annual spring recital at the First Baptist Church in Southern Pines on Monday, May 25 at 7:30 p.m. The following students par ticipated: From Southern Pines, Lexi Newsome, CSieri HaU, Missy Robinson, Sonia Ross, Gwen. (jehweUer. From Pinebluff, Ashley Keith. From Aberdeen, Lori Van Dyke, Kelly Mofield, Scott Wit ter, Angela Thomas. From Whispering Pines, Jen nifer Parks and Kristin Parks. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph J. Fox of St. Paul, Minn, announce.' the engagement of their daughter, Teresa Lynn, to Lynn Ellis Daeke of Langley AFB, Va. The date of the wedding is October 3. The couple will be married in Chapel 1, Langley Air Force Base, Va. Terri attended Frank B. Kellogg High School in Roseville, Minn., graduating in 1973 and the University of Minnesota, Qass of 1977. She is a First Lieutenant in the Air Force, and a computer {xogrammer. Lynn graduated from East Southern Pines High School in 1965 and the U.S. Air Force Academy in 1969. He is working with the MITRE Corporation, as a member of the technical staff at Langley Air Force Base, Va. COUPON From Wedgewood, John Mc- Caskill and Tammy Vaughn. From (Carthage, Travis Blue. From Vass, Leslie Bums, Joey Patterson, Angela Frye, Patricia Johnson, Jane Frye, Beth Blue, Dale Buie, Susan Frye, Joanna Crissman, Sherry Lane, Chris Stewart. From Cameron, John Ellis, Darnell Hendrick, David Ellis, Terry Keith, Tony Keith. Pins were presented to the students who participated in the National Guild auditions. Senior Banquet The Moore County Recreation Department will sponsor the May Senior Citizen Banquet on May 28 in honor of Older American’s Month. This is the second year of the banquet an due to the large number of people who attend, persons will need to make reser vations in advance. There is a small fee of $1 for the banquet, which is at 6:30 p.m. at Sandhills Community College. COLOR! W PRINT RLM DEVELOPING & PRINTING (C-41 process only) 12 exposure roll $1.88 20 exposure roll $2.88 24 exposure roll $3.38 36 exposure roll $4.38 20 slides or movies $1.18 36slides $2.28 Limit one roll with this coupon. Offer expires 6- 1 -81 , 587

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