ti > ? ' JT "'** ~ i: 4 J ? I I^ m, M..,4M a^a3 rtrrnHMB 'II ? ^ ? J? ? I " JH 11 11 I ? H | _ M H I^bIVI I^H S^H ?^H ? ">. ? l L ^- ' f^H l^K H "* jjqj -r? I ? B III ^1 I ^v "* ? ?* S u u HI ?'f^B>'-'' ?;fl WHW* ^P,; y... 5 li. BS ' 'X:; a BbC^^ ?? fcJYI LI KB -P# s ? - f * ##- *S& 1 '*' . ?#?#? ]ftX% ^b ?-;>l flwi " ? WtJ fc ? l-V.jj&s../ -? .* W - [ K ?, V I V >. \ ? ' ;.sF 1ft I Hm ?PKl I I II IHKvVL" ''1&?#! ? ? ? -H? -r<#^&4 ;?2^^ lal fUSPSW^ - SBNANSV^NC^ MATP?, 16 PAGES THIS WEEK 10 CENTS FtOSTAK M y | Kl r SvmDnOnv TO i r|HP ? 9 , _ - . =ntertain Loco I Childron PUT !S Not evu^gWt can enter , [? tain hundreds of elementary F school students for an hour, g but the North Carolina ? Symphony Chamber i Orchestra can.. . and does. ? On Wednesday. May 23. fetf 10:30a.nuand t p.m.. the ^^?ehony will perform a I specially-designed education Duplin area. Admission to ? students selected by local ? school officials. The concert I will be held in the Wallace ? Rose Hill High School Gym mind Associate Conductor ? James Ogle will lead the orchestra. Parents and other interested members of the I community are invited to the Among the wort* ache i duled for performances are selection* from Mozart's v'Po?thorn" Serenade. I Vivaldi's "The Four "Classical Symphouy." Debussy's "Petite Suite." Walton's "Facade," and a Bach song and an English folksong. The concert will be the culmination of weeks of preparation on the part of the studenta and their tea chers. This preparation will have included creative dance exercises, listening A re cordings of the music.tfsmi liarjzation with the iastni merits and their sounds, and drawing and painting ^posters. pictures, and murals inspired by the' music. One of some 80 children's concerts performed this year by the North Carolina Sym phony and its chamber orchestras, the Duplin con cert will be the first exposure to a live symphony orchestra that many of the children in the audience will have had. Currently, the North Carolina Symphony travels ever 19,000 miles in North Carolina each year, per forming educational and adult concerts in more than 109 communities. It reaches over 280,000 adults and chil dren. including more than 200.000 children from over 800 N.C. schools. The edu cation program which costs over SI .3 million is made possible by an S8S1,0P0 grant-in-aid from the State of North Carolina and from pri vate contributions. Revenue from ticket sales to adult concerts also helps support the program. The Symphony is currently operating on a . S2.2 million budget and is recognized nationally as one of only 31 major orchestras ilithe United States. The North Carolina Sym phony concert is "made pos sible in part by contributions frqm Dr. and Mrs. Mett B. ji Ausley. Mr- and Mrs. Donald Bowman. Brewer Motof and Equipment Company. Mr. and Mrs. William S. Buckley. E & B. Oil Company (Mr. and Mis. TJ. Baker). Graham Drug Company (Mr. and Mrs. Irvin Graham), Dr. and Mrs. William R. Price, and Worsley Oil Company. This program will conclude the fourth annual Arts in the Schools project sponsored by the Duplin County Arts Council. Road Builders Break Water Lines In Warsaw . ? ? ? . ./ , ; BfaHf ^ ? __J By Joe Lanier The town of Warsaw faces an unexpected expense in replacement of waterlines broken during excavations for iimproving N.C. 24. The state is widening the highway through a portion of Wsray Included in the work n excavation and re moval of soil considered un stable for a roadbed and. replacement of it with more suitable material. However, the deep digging is rupturing the town waterlines. which run parallel to the highway. Thurman Gaster. main tenance supervisor, told the town board at a recent meet ing. he would have normally expected a cost of $500 for moving fire hydrants and changing some hook-ups into homes. He said that so far the town's cost for waterline repair has been $4,850. He predicted sharply higher repair costs before the high way project is competed. I A meeting of towfi officials and officials of Cumberland Paving Co. of Fayetteville and DOT engineers was scheduled to attempt to solve the problem by changing excavation procedures. Town manager Alfred Herring said the amount of excavation was not expected because of a lack of soil borings. He said the deep digging could cause an expensive problem with a forced sewerline pumping station. The entire road project spans 1.3 miles. m . ' TO. . * ; ?|| 3#; ? ?* * ? W? Highway Committee Reviews Presentation The W.Ci Highway 24 Improvement Asse liaee Casol Hawkins. pad Mr vSum inertia of You are invited to u warm . ?7^ . T** pucnino ' nw?- ? WHtlPlJ Entertainment. We gr^suie 1th. He?lth Systems Plan for Eastern ? North Carolina was approved -?? t ?>