hAl lOttw# PROGRESS SENTINEL I VOL. XXXXV NO. 5 USPS 162-860 , KENANSVILLE, NC 28349 JANUARY 31.1980 10 PAGES THIS WEEK 10 CENTS PLUS TAX > Judge Williamson Seeks Re-Election Stephen M. Williamson Judge Stephen M. 'Steve" Williamson, 42, of plenansville, has filed with State Board of Elections to succeed himself as District Court Judge of the 4th Judicial District, which is comprised of Duplin, Jones, Onslow and Sampson counties. Judge Williamson was elected in the Nov., 1976 general election for a four year term and has served in this capacity since that time. He is married to the former Nancy Alphin and they have three children: Steve, Jr., 18, David Gilbert, 13, and Nancy Eva Margaret "Nan", 11. They are mem bers of the Kenansville United Methodist Church, where Williamson is the chairman of the administra tive board. He is presently serving as assistant Scout master. Also he is a member of the executive board of the Tuscarora Council for the 1 Boy Scouts of America, Duplin County Law Enforce ment Assoc., Warsaw Kenansville Rotary, and the N.C. District Court Judges Association. Mobile Office To Visit Duplin Congressman Charlie Whitley's Third District mobile office will be visiting in the county on Wednesday, Feb. 6. It will make stops at the following times and lo cations. Wednesday, Feb. 6 - Beulaville, 9:30-10:30 a.m.. Post Office; Greene vers - 11-12 noon. Town Hall; Faison - 1-2 p.m., Fire Station. Rodney Knowles of the Congressman's staff will be manning the mobile office and will be available to any one having matters that they wish brought to the attention of Whitley. All schedules are subject to pre vailing weather conditions affecting travel. . Ill I IWMBk.. I. i...ll.lli|...ilUMii.i.i..ii . Jim i ..,i,.,,.. THE NEW RQSE HILL DIAGNOSTIC LABORATORY on U.S. 117 north of town. The new laboratory will be complete as soon as a well and septic tank have been installed, said Dr. Hugh Powell, D.V.M., director of the laboratory. In the new lab work will be expanded from primarily poultry to include all types .of animals and to -m.et the demands of the new area will be Dr. Wayne Koski, D.V.M., who will specialize in mammals. The Photo by Emily Killatto lab is part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture and works in cooperation with area veterinarians and poultry producers in detecting, controlling and eradicating contagious diseases in the animal population, said Powell. The lab is presently located on the corner of Church and Pine Streets in downtown Rose Hill. Dollar Days In Mount Olive I Friday & Saturday i 1 Hardison Speaks At ? District Board Meeting Senator Harold Hardison was guest speaker Thursday night at a meeting of the Fifth District School Board Association, com posed of eight city and county school systems in Southeastern North Carolina. The meeting was held at East ^puplin in Beulaville. Hardison, whose district includes Lenoir, Duplin and Jones counties, spoke on inflation. He is chairman of the Senate budget com mittee. The educators divided into small groups for discussions of North Carolina's open meetings law, energy con servation in the schools, a proposed statewide school bond referendum, and new techniques in school disci pline. Carsie K. Denning, direc tor of the division of plant operations for the N.C. Board of Education, talked about energy conservation in the schools. N.C. schools will spend $50 million for energy this year, Denning said. Of that amount, $34 million will pay for electric power. An esti mated $6 million worth of electricity will be "need lessly wasted," he said. Energy management is needed throughout the schools to avoid such wastes, he said. New Procedural Requirements Discontinued The new procedural re quirements which recently became effective for obtain ing worthless check warrants will be discontinued. Effec tive immediately, the magis trates have been asked to issue worthless check war rants without requiring compliance with the new statute passed by the Legis lature. The statute was enacted and implemented with good intentions. It was rot a change in the substantive law of worthless check vio lations. It was merely a procedural change to sim plify proof of a worthless check violation at trial when the statutory require ments had been met. The problem was that the paperwork required to com ply with the statute made it more trouble than it was worth. Prosecution of worth less check cases without the procedural assistance of the new statute is simpler and easier than complying witf the paperwork requirements of the statute. The result is that worthless check warrants will be issuec and prosecuted in the samt manner as they were befort the new statute was passed. Duplin Arts Council Sponsors Quintet 9 The Duplin County Arts Council will sponsor "Matrix." a brass quintet from Winston-Salem, throughout the school system Jan. 31-Feb. 8. Already this school year, the Council has sponsored the N.C. Dance Theatre, N.C. Little Symphony, ^Shelton and Ellis Mime Duo. ^Tiompi Quartet from Duke University, and has assisted Valorie McCoy in her musical production of "Scrooge." In Jate February, the N.C. School of the Arts Sr. Company will present two plays and a mime production in the county. . The performance schedule for "Matrix ' is given below and we encourage all interested parents and citi zens to attend these concerts so they may see what the Duplin County Arts Council is doing for the school chil dren. These programs are partially funded by a Grass roots Arts Program grant given through the N.C. Arts Council, a state agency. Matrix Schedule Jan. 30 - Chinquapin 1, 9:30 Jan. 31 ? North Duplin High/Ele. 9:30; North Duplin Jr. High. 1:30; Feb. 1 - Warsaw Jr. High, 9:30; Warsaw Ele. - 1:30; Feb. 4 - Warsaw Ele - 9-30- Feb. 5 - Chrity Middle - 9:30; James Kenan High School - 2:00: Feb. 6 ? Chinquapin IIK - 9:30; Rose Hill-Magnolia Ele - 11:15; Feb. 7 - E.E. Smith Jr. High - 10:30; Kenansville Elementary - 1:30; Feb. 8 - B.F. Grady Ele. ? 9:30; and Beulaville Ele. - 1-1:50 and 2-2:50 Williams Dies In Fire Near Magnolia | Reginald Williams, 22, died early Saturday morning when fire swept through his residence about two miles north of Magnolia, said Magnolia Fire Chief J.D. Quinn. Quinn said the blaze was reported at 2 a.m. Saturday. Fire was coming out of all the windows in the flve-room brick house on State Road All 14, and had broken ^through the kitchen roof by the time firemen arrived. Cause of the blaze has not been determined, but Quinn said a three-burner oil stove was found charred in the kitchen where the fire ap parently started. Quinn said the house had no electric or gas service. Firemen had extinguished the major portion of the fire by 2:45 a.m. Quinn esti mated the damage to house and contents at $10,000. Rose Hill Animal Disease Diagnostic Lab To Move In New Building By Emily Killette The Rose Hill Animal Disease Diagnostic Labora tory will soon be moving into a new building on U.S. 117 north of town and will ex pand their work to include all types of animals, said Dr. Hugh Powell, D.V.M., di rector of the laboratory. Powell said the lab started work in 1960 primarily in the area of poultry and has continued doing 99% of all its work on the diagnosis of poultry diseases and recom mending treatment. The pri mary purpose of the lab is to assist poultry and livestock producers in detecting, con trolling, containing and eradicating contagious dis eases in the animal popu lation, commented Powell. However, he emphasized that the lab. which is a part of the U.S. Department of Agriculture, prefers to work through local veterinarians whenever possible, especi ally in areas other than poultry. Pesticide Workshop On Monday, Feb. 4 at 7 p.m. in the Agricultural Ex tension Building in Kenans ville. a workshop will be held for certification in restricted pesticide use by Snodie B. Wilson, agricultural exten sion agent. If you have already been certified, this workshop is not for you. Federal law requires that all persons who use restricted pesticides must be certified. Restricted pesticides are those pesticides which have been so designated by the Environmental Protection Agency, and bear the state ment "restricted-use pesti cide" on the product label ing. In order to be certified, you must attend four hours of classes. You do not have to pass a test. If you know someone who needs to be certified, invite him to this certification meeting. You ' are asked to be on time so the | meeting can start promptly 1 at 7 p.m. Also, it is a must that you bring your social | security number, and a pencil or pen. Call or drop by the ? office if you plan to attend. The number is 2%-19%. h According to Powell, there are no veterinarians for the poultry population across the state, so the lab in Rose Hill works closely with poultry producers to detect diseases and prescribe treatment. In the case of other livestock such as hogs, local veter inarians will be involved in the process. The local vet eranarians will have the opportunity to work through the Rose Hill lab, using it to assist in the diagnoses of diseases or as a second opinion, but treatment will be prescribed by the local practitioner, said Powell. "We are here to assist with the diagnosis or to back up the local practitioners' diagnosis. However, treat ment will be prescribed by the practitioner," Powell said. Because of the expanded services of the new lab, Powell said the staff will double. In charge of the additional area of services is r Dr. Wayne Koski, D.V.M., f who will primarily be work- l ing with mammals, said t Powell. Koski is a graduate < of Texas A & M University ( and has spent the last eight f years in private practice in ( Knoxville, Tenn. He came to Rose Hill in January and has been in the process of meet ing local vets and livestock producers to discuss the new services the lab will provide. "We are not here to replace the local practitioner, but to assist with diagnostic problems," Koski said. "In fact, we will prefer to work through the local practi tioners and will contact both the producer and veterin arian with our diagnosis. A treatment will be left up to the local practitioner. And, it is our hope to educate the livestock producers in ways to utilize the professional help of the local practi tioner," Koski said. Another service the lab I )rovides is monitoring the , lealth of the animal popu ation, Powell said. To test he health of poultry and )ther livestock, the lab re- ? quires several animals from a he flock be submitted for j examination. However, | Powell stressed that any animal submitted to the lab for tests would not leave alive. During a post-mortem examination of animals, several tests are done, such as some bacteriology, bac teria tests; parasitology, study for parasites; hemotologv, blood tests; micology, study of mold and fungusO and some toxi cology, tests for poison. Even with the expanded services, the Rose Hill Lab will still be a limited service laboratory, said Powell. However, additional work, which may be required in some cases, can be completed in the Raleigh laboratory^ According to Powell, the Rose Hill lab is >ne of eight limited-services diagnostic laboratories in the state, four of which are mainly used for poultry ? 'Rose Hill, Shelby, Robbins ind North Wilkesboro. 'owell said the Rose -iill lab handles about a third of the poultry work in the state, and with the expansion into mammals at the new lab, he feels the percentage will be the same for the new area. According to Powell, the new lab was designed for future expansion and he is optimistic that the facility will be expanded in the future to a full-service diag nostic laboratory. Powell said the new lab will be ready as soon as a well and septic tank have been installed and hooked up to the building. The old laboratory is on the corner of Church and Pine Streets in downtown Rose Hill. J a EPILEPSY AWARENESS WORKSHOP ? The Employ ment Security Commission sponsored an Epilepsy Awareness Workshop at James Sprunt Technical College Jan. 22. The workshop featured special guest speakers Louise Denmark of the N.C. Division of Health Services; Dr. Earl Trevathan of the East Carolina School of Medicine; Robert Marker, vocational rehabilitation counselor. Robert Reilty, N.C. Assistant Attorney General; and Jack Cottle, pe>sonnet officer at J.P. Stevens it Photo by Emily KIIMto Company. The workshop was attended by local Employ ment Security Commission counselors and nursing students at JSTC. Pictured above, left to right. Dr. Trevathan, Louise Denmark; Elizabeth Grant, manager of the Employment Security Commission for Duplin, Sampson and Southern Wayne counties; and Hugh Ebert, handicap specialist with the N.C. Employment Security Commission. *