Newspapers / The Duplin Times (Warsaw, … / April 26, 1973, edition 1 / Page 1
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Z- p;|p: HIGHWAY REORGAWZATION BILL LE ADERS? Key members of the House Roads Committee discuss legislation the improve the operations of the Highway Department. %g&t to right Represenatives TJ. Baker, Duplin County: James C. Green, Bladen County; Larry Eagles, Edgecombe County: and J .P. Husklns, Iredell County. Baker Helps Author Hwy. Bill orgaoizatioiftneuuU last Fri day 87-22. "The bill is landmark legis lation. It provides the Gover nor'with the machinery to car ry out his campaign pledges to . clean-up the highway depart ment, to pave not to politic," Biker said. "It makes the highwaw op erations more responsi/e to die will of the people. It piakes highway officers more accoun table for their actions " J Baker, a member of theHou ^ se Roads Committee, served as chairman of a subcommittee with responsibility to study and this session. Final flbor debate Was last week and now the bill goes to the Senate for final ac tion. "The people of N.Carolina want the highway department re organized. The Governor asked for it in his inaugural address, and we are now presenting this legislation to him to implement," the representative said. : Under the House bill, a Ho* ard of Transportation would be created along with a Secondary Roads Council.The Board would consist of 12 tagnbers and have authority in all Highway matters. The Council Would consist of 14 members, one from each hi work programs^ stamrimry roa4s. JSI Festival Off Arts Planned j For May 6 The Continuing Education De- V; pert mem of JSI has completed plans for lu third annual Dup lin County Festival of Arts which will he held on Sunday, May 6, 1973, from 1 until 6p.m. M on the Institute campus. The Festival is held annually to display various works of art and crafts made by the stu- M dents enrolled in Continuing Education classes and by o ther individuals throughout t he county. Efforts have been made th roughout the school year to select outstanding articles for display. As a result, this ye ar's Festival should prove to be the biggest and nu<st in teresting thus far. Displays will include articles from classes such as: cera mics, art, knitting, crocheting, sewing, furniture refinishing, cake decorating, woodworking, millinery, handicrafts, and .ma ny others of interest. The highlight of the Festival will be a performance by se veral choirs led by JSI cho rus instructors, John Watling ton of Pink Hill and Mrs. Ca rol Mogre of Warsaw. A fas hion show will be presented by the sewing students of both oqfend off-campus classes, and guitar students and Instructors / dents co?M*tly invite the pa-' bile to asmod A-; ?* '? V*'9 ' >4kJ '???h Hunt Taylor Selected To Pharmaceutical Convention ! Hunt Taylor Hunt Taylor, UNC Pharmacy - student in Chapel Hill is one Livestock Show And Sole Duplin County 4-H'ers par ticipated in the Coastal Plait Livestock Show and Sate belt recently in Kinston. Louis Howard's steer plac ed second in the lightweight division and received a Choice USDA grade. Louis is a mem ber of theKenansvllle4-HClub Other participants who show ed Choice steers Include Rouse Ifey, Oak Ridge 4-H Club: Ro ger Kornegay, Pleasant Grove 4-H Club: and Kelvin Korne gay, Pleasant Grove 4-H Club. ? The show and sate was high ly successful with the beef ani mals from Duplin County sell Ing for an average of 96S.0C per hundred pounds Sponsors of the show from Duplin County were Wsccsmaw Bank and Trust Co, Kenans - rille, Beulavilte, RoeeHUl; Co astal Production Credit Asso ciation, Kenansville; Mt. Olive P mt 0*1 ve: Wallace Fe eder Pig Market. B 4 R Fro zen Foods, Blsoohard and Far rlor Warehouse, Waited. noir, Greene, and Pin. ? 'Tin !. <?". ;v of two students who has been selected by the pharmacy fa culty to attend the American Pharmaceutical Convention to be held in Scotsdale, Arizona April 34th to May 4th. Hunt, a 1971 James Kenan graduate is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Taylor of Warsaw. He also has been chosen fay the UNC Dept. of Family Med icine to work this summer in the UNC Appalachian Health Program. ECU Academic Honors GREENVILLE-A total of 2,400 East Carolina University stu dents earned places on the U niversity's official honor lists for the winter term. Most elite among the ECU honor students are those who made all A's. Next are those f who made the Dean's List by earning a solid B-plus aver age with no grade below C. The Honor Roll includes th ? ose students who made a B A i verage with no grade below C. I Duplin County students nam ed were the following: Rhonda . Kaye Outlaw, Honor roll: Al [ bertson, Patricia Ann Chase, Beulaville, Honor roll; Sylvia . Jane Thlgpen, Beulaville, Br ans list; Alta Kir bye Whaley, Beulaville, Honor roll; Karen i Loretta Davis, Calypso, Honor > roll: Brenda Kaye Maready, Chinquapin, Honor roll; Ro? nald L. Sharpless, Chinquapin, Honor roll; Ethel M. Boyette, Faison, Honor roll; James H. Thornton, Faison, Honor roll; Earl Dudley Rouse, Rose HU1, i Honor roll: Kathleen Moon Bt ?. Wallace, Honor roll; Su> Anne Towns end, Wallace, ? Deans list: Margaret Jane W ells. WaUace, Deans list. Local 15? sales and use tax , collections by Duplin County for March, 1973 report was; $94,469.33. UNABLE TO MAKE CURVE ? A 1969 Inter national Tractor-Trailer loaded with insulation for a new hospital in Jacksonville hit a telephone pole and turned over in front of the Post Office in Kenansville at 6:30 A. M. Wednesday morn ing. The truck was driven by David Watkins of Woodleaf, N. C. and owned by -Eamharet Lum ber Co. of Goldhill, N. C. Damages were esti mated as follows: Carolina Power and Light Co. $500; The truck and contents, $13,000. Police Chief, Tyson Bostic said, "This was the 7th truck to turn ove^at this curve in the last 8 years. Most of the trucks accidents occur because the trucks are traveling at a high rate of speed." According to Bostic, "The driver was not hurt but would be charged." (Photos by Winford Howard) Rose Hill Girl Killed In Wreck On N.C. 54 The News * Observer Two person were killed and throe others were injured about 7:# a.m. Tuesday on N.C. 54 two miles west of Morrisvflle in a head-on colli sion, the Stat* Highway Patrol reported. The dead were identified as Mis. Elizabeth Fusseil Bell. B, of Rose Hill, and Jimmy Ray Allen, 22, of Rt. 10, Injured were Jesse E. Allen. 40, of Club Plan, who was in critical condition at Wake Memorial Hospital; his two sens, William Everett ABon, Smy^AHenT llf ?Tthe Old ^MmrO?nj*o ajwl Jeeoe E. Alien is also the father of Jimmy Ray AUen. State Trooper Don Leazor said Leaxor mid the Aliens w*i? MM! all in an automobile being driven west by William Allen when their car was struck by an automobile being driven east by Mrs. Bell. Leazor said Mrs. Bell ran off onto the shoulder of the road, cut back onto the pavement, crossed the center line and struck the Allen car. No charge was filed, Leazor said. The accident slowed traffic on the busy highway for an Mrs. Fuss ell was employed as and advertising artist. Graveside services we re held Wednesday at 4 p - m.,Rockfish Memorial C emetery, the Rev Clark P orter III, Chaplain James E. Rogers and the Rev David '? ? Smith. il ? and Mrs. Horace PusssB of Rene Hill; two staters, Mrs. Richard Burroughs of Ross Hill and Mr*. Everett* Gobble of Wilmington; two brothers, Horace Jr. of Rose Hill and William D. Fundi of Raleigh; maternal grandmother, Mrs. J. D. Fussell of Roae H11L Phormocy Students Talk on Drug Abuse Several members of the St udent-to-Student Drug Abuse W roject of the School of Phar macy of the UNC held conf erences with students of the Chinquapin Jr High School la st week. This was a "straight . from the shoulder" presentat ion giving the high schoolers an opportunity to freely dis cuss the drug abuse situation. Experts believe the most ef fective way to reach teenagers today regarding drug abuse is through peer group discussions. The UNC School of Pharmacy is recognised as a pioneer in this with its Student-to-Student Drug Abuse Program. ? In the last three years. 960 schools and organisations we re visited by this group of ad 3:1i$ ,iL vanced pftarmacy stuoencs mm had received special training in the dangers of drug efause. Oner 100.000 N.C. secondary lad junior high studsata have heard their presentations. The project was so aoeoaaaM that it received much statewide as well at national attention for its efforts la tfcty field. Js$ ? More than <0 pharmacy st srSS: Welfare and U available at oc OOJt tO N?C? I'*'. /V. a i ? irli 5 ; K- - CAROLINA READERS THEATRE IN KENANSVILLE-Thelr stage I' barren, their costumes somber black, but their words bring to life the rich pageantry of literature. The performers are professional actor-readers, North Carolina's first They ere members of the Carolina Readers Theatre which to begin ning a ten-city tour of North Carolina. The group will-appear in E.E. Smith Cafeteria in Kenans ville at 8 p.m. on April 27, 1973. They will present "Hooey and .Salt," an invigorating investigation into the nature of love, both sacred and profane, gleaned from 2300 years of literature on the world's favorite subject. The Carolina Readers Theatre, funded by the NX. Ana Council, will play its regular seasbn from March 24 until April SB. The tour schedule will take the company Into the far reaches of the state: west to Mars Hill and east to Eden- 1 ton, north to Greensboro, and south to Wrlghtaville. lbs company has in repertory three shows, "37 Octobers," "A Wilde Nig}*." and "Honey and Salt." "Honey and Salt." scripted by Dr. Howard Doll who to also director of die Carolina Readers, sutes three kinds of love. Romantic love telle of the first bhisb of love; cynical love moves into the disillusionment that occurs when the honey moon to over and the rosy glow fades: and finally, mature love grows after the lovers have lived together for a whfln, , accepted the proHwne which come and realised their love for each other. The script is framed by Mark Twain's "Di ary of Adam and Eve" and includes excerpts from the an- ;j dents. Aristophanes and the Jerusalem Bible as well as the Modern e e cummlngs and contemporary writer John Cheever. The performance here la sponsored by the On Stage Players I';!#'. * , A .... / ? ??" 'Ji'M ' ..Sfel M&; ,?
The Duplin Times (Warsaw, N.C.)
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April 26, 1973, edition 1
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