COUNTY NUMBER 43 TRENTON, N. C„ THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1970 VOLUME XVD FHA Supervisor Soys Belter Housing One Wuy to Step Rural Out Migration The rural to urban migration trend can be reversed accord ing to Walter L. Pippin, Lenoir County Supervisor of the Farm ers Home Administration. “Low to-modest-income families in all rural counties have a better op portunity now than ever before to own a home in a rural commu nity or small town,” Pippin stat ed. ' Fpr several years due to limit ed funds it was necessary for ap plicants to wait several months for applications to be process ed- However, adequate funds are now available through -the FHA to meet current and an ticipated demands for the next several months. There is a substantial num ber of families living in sub standard homes in every rural i county and many families are living under crowded conditions because suitable homes are not available. Many hundreds of new homes will need to be construct ed and others remodeled before the housing situation is signif icantly improved. ' ' Low-to-moderate-income fam ilies who cannot obtain the need ed financing through conven tional lenders may be able to fi nance a modest home through FHA. Persons who can obtain adequate financing through con ventional lenders are not eligi ble for such assistance. Lpan funds may be used for a variety of purposes including constructing new homes, pur chasing existing homes, remodel ing, repairing, and lot purchas ing in some cases in connection with constructing a home. The size, type, arid cost of a home financed for a family is deter mined on an individual basis and in keeping with the family’s needs and overall financial situa tion. New home loans are scheduled for repayment over a period of thirty-three years at an interest rate of, six and one-fourth per cent. Typical payments range from $55 to $90 a month not including taxes and insurance. Cosignors can be used in some cases when family income is not sufficiently dependable or is to low for the family to otherwise qualify for a loan. Other low income families may be able to obtain financing for a home with reduced payments through the FHA’s interest credit loan program. Under the interest credit terms the borrower’s pay ments are determined on family size and income. Adjustments in payments are made every two years as appropriate. Additional information may be obtained and loan applications filed at the Farmers Home Ad ministration office in the Feder al Building on East King Street, Kinston, or in the Federal Build ing in Trenton. :_.. Jones Candidates SHERIFF W. Brown Yates* Dan Killingswonth Joe Monette Osborne Coward COURT CLERK F. Rogers Pollock* Harold B. Hargett Jr. COMMISSIONER Osborne Mallard Charles Copeland Hoyal Miller Leslie D. Strayhorn James Rarbree* Theodore Hicks George B Franks Denford Eubank* Delmas Brown Horace B. Phillips* SCHOOL BOARD Kleber Bryant Raeford Becton Walter Ives* Marvin Philyaw* J C. West Jr.* CORONER George W. Davenport CONSTABLE Maggie Small S. A. Norris SENATE Charles Larkins Jr.* HOUSE Seat No. 1 Fitzhugh Wallace Guy Elliott* John Talbot Capps Harold W. Hardison Seat No. 2 Red Tingen Dan Lilley* * Denotes Incumbent Bold denotes Republican Eubanks to Lowery Airman Danny F. Eubanks, son of Mr. and Mrs. William F. Eubanks of Route 2, Tren ton, has completed basic train ing at Lackland AFB, Tex. He has been assigned to Lowry AFB, Colo., for training in the arma ment systems field. Airman Eubanks is a 1968 graduate of Jones Central High School and attended Atlantic Christian Col lege. Jimmy Fra nek Urges Ail Communities Enter Neuse Development Competition; April 15th Deadline, Many Benefits April 13 is the (leadline for communities to enter the 1970 Neuse Area Community Devel opment Contest. J. R. Franck, County Extension Chairman, said all organized communities in Jones County are eligible to en ter the contest. Communities may be entered in these categories — farm, rural village or small town. Entry forms and further in mation are available from the Extension Office in Trenton. In 1969 41 communities in the eight-county Neuse Area enter ed the program. Twenty-eight of these communities entered the area contest and1 were judg ed ' for their annual achieve ments. Franck urges all organ ized communities in Jones Coun ty to enter the 1970 contest According to Franck, the pur pose of community organization is to provide a community the opportunity to systematically an alyze, plan, develop and carry out a program which will make it a better place to live. The communities involved in the program have focused on generating income, providing better homes and improving sur roundings, sponsoring and con Mountain Counties Reaping Bigger Slice of Tourist Dollar; Better Roads and Accommodations Do It These figures are contained in the twelfth annual North Carolina Travel Survey. The survey is published by the North Carolina Department of Conser vation and Development, Trav el and Promotion Division, in cooperation with the Travel Council of North Carolina, Inc. Travel spending increased by more than 200 per cent in elev en North Carolina counties dur ing the last decade. Graham County led the in crease with a hike of 596 per cent from $400,000 to $2,782,000. Avery County recorded a 358 per cent increase, and Watauga jumped 291 per cent. Other counties showing increases were: Alleghany (246 per cent), Cam den (245 per cent), Cherokee (241 per cent), Currituck (231 per cent), Dare (225 per cent), Jackson (274 per cent), Macon (203 per cent), and Swain (265 per cent). It is interesting to note that all but three of the counties re cording over 200 per cent in crease were in the mountains. The money brought into the state by tourists circulates through business channels with a multiplier effect and stimulat es further economic activity. Merchants pass 90c out of each tourist dollar on to other com mercial enterprises to cover the cost of gods and services used in business operations. Alto gether, 34c out of each tourist dollar circulates as personal in come, the survey pointed out. The travel industry in North Carolina rose to a record $752 million during 1969. Some 38 million out-of-state visitors trav eled to North Carolina. Copies of the Travel Survey may be obtained from the Travel and Promotion Division, Raleigh, North Carolina Utility Poles are Favorite Targets of Tar Heel Drivers There are far more trees than utility poles along streets and highways of North Carolina, but Tar Heel motorists prefer utility ducting activities for youth de velopment and providing better community services and facili ties. Relative to increasing income, Franck said educational meet ings wore held all during the year, new enterprises were add ed, crop demonstrations were conducted, home gardens were promoted, and soil and water drainage and conservation pro grams were carried out. In non-'arm related achieve ments, job opportunities were identified and individuals were encouraged to obtain the train ing needed for these jobs. This training was obtained through adult education courses that were offered by the different ed ucational agencies within the area, especially through the Community College system. One of the more popular pro jects in home improvement was remodeling which included the adding of rooms, baths, and wat er. Clean-up, fix-up, and paint up campaigns were conducted, proficiency in the management of family income was promoted and land-scaping was spot-light ed. Franck said much activity in volved the youth. Many com munities sponsored youth groups such as 4-H clubs, Scouts, church youth groups and school groups. They organized and sponsored recreational programs such as little league, teen and pre-teen clubs. Community facilities and ser vice projects included con structing community buildings, remodeling, repairing, and paint ing present structures, the add ing of night or street lights, im provement and renovation of churches, church grounds and cemeteries, community landscap ing, and general clean up cam paigns. “This is a contest in which everybody wins,” concluded Franck. poles when it comes to hitting some fixed object with their cars. During 1969, the state’s driv ers crashed into an average of 15.1 telephone poles every day as compared to only 10.7 trees. That’s a total for the year of 5,524 poles and 3,927 trees. Sign posts were the next most popular target for erring driv ers. A total of 2,316 posts were ularity with a daily average of slightly more than 6.3 per day. Fences were fourth in pop ularity with a daily avergae of 4.6 and a total for the year of 1,708. The figures were drawn from the 1969 Fixed Object Analysis, continued on page five CROWD PACKS LENOIR COURTHOUSE AS FIGHT TO SAVE SCHOOLS GAINS MOMENTUM by Jack Rider A capacity crowd Tuesday jam med the Lenoir County court house as the effort'to save Kins ton schools asthey presently exist gained considerable mo mentum. * The effort kicked off a week ago at the meeting of the Grain ger High School Parent-Teacher Association is aimed at persuad ing the city school board to con tinue the operation of Grainger and Adkin high schools as they are during the current school year and to abandon the plan ' now set to begin in the coming school year. , The proposed plan grnuld see gration, but it would impose a considerable burden on parents and students because there is no plan to provide free school buses to transportthestudents involved'in this mass transfer ral. > Speakers from both races at the Tuesday night meeting sup ported a true Freedom-of-Choice plan, but all spoke against forc ing students against their will and the will of their parents to attend schools for non-academic reasons. Mrs. Jerry Kyle Mooring, one of those initiating the effort, re ported) that 2178 persons had signed petitions to the school board prior to the meeting and at the meeting many more sign ed and a considerable group took additional petitions for fur ther circulation. , , Republican Legislative Candi date Fitzhugh Wallace spoke and said when all petitions are in the next step would be to ask the sehool board for a hearing on the matter. Former School Board Chair man Norman Dickerson was present at the meeting and ans wered numerous questions about the overall school situation. (In the course of the meeting it was pointed out that only three of the seven school board mem bers now serving were on the board at the time the 1970-71 school plan was worked out. The consensus was that the school board as presently constituted should have an opportunity to vote on what everyone agreed to be an extremely critical issue. ! Hopes Bolstered Leaders in the Kinston effort recognize that they are getting organized very late in the day insofar- -as-their opposition- is. concerned, but their hopes have been bolstered this week by the supreme, court’s apparent will ingness to slow down and take a little closer look at such mas sive forced transfers of students as that ordered by a district court judge in Charlotte, who was using a plan concoted by an “expert” from-Rhode Island. Along with this small ray of hope from the supreme court is the announced opposition of the Nixon administration to quota type transfers to bring about racial integration and taking children from their neighbor hood schools many miles into strange new schools. These two developments tied to the unusual breath of logic coming out of congress recently, where plu-perfect liberals such as Connecticut! Senator Abe Ribicoff have openly confessed that they and their northern as sociates are hypocrits on the is sue of segregation, since they are willing and even eager to force the south to do things in the realm of racial integration that they refuse to do themselv es. (None but the most rosily opti mistic of those involved in this belated efforts expects total suc cess in their petition to the school board, but one expressed it fatalistically: “We’ve got to start somewhere, and perhaps this is as good place as any to begin!” WS8$: ■ ' : ' ■: