rV uw rnvrmii trvmt. Susan By KATHY M. NEWBERN Susan Cox is a coach coach of a winning team. Mi. Cox, formerly of Hert ford and now residing in Williamston, is teacher and coach at Williamston High School. In her seven years there, she has made quite a tecord for herself and for her teams. Her teaching Job includes health and physical educa tion instruction for. ninth jprade. Her coaching job in volves several aspects of womens' athletics basket-.' .nail, softball and tennis. : Ms. Cox is perhaps best known in her capacity as basketball coach. Since tak ing that position, the girls' team at Williamston High has won five district cham pionships in five years; was State Runner-Up in 1974; has been to the State Play- Offs each of those five J years; has won six con- ference championships and six conference tournament I championships; and has a I seven-year record of 155 ; wins and 21 losses. That's f noteworthy in anybody's 1 scorebook. But Coach Cox is I quick to add that ac- complishments are not achieved alone. She said, "I've just been lucky in be ! ing there when there was a : lot of talent. A coach can't ; be successful if you can't get ! the students involved in the ' sport. And I can't be sue ; cessful without a coopera - tive administration." Ms. . Cox adds that her current situation is good. She said, "Williamston is sort of a Local Fanners Are Recognized A Perquim ans County farming team has been recognized and has received membership in the North Carolina 5000 Pound Peanut Club. Farmers Carroll Williams of Hertford and his son, Billy Williams of Tyner ,'Taised 5,637 pounds of I peanuts and received a $75 i cash award for the achieve Baseball Organized By TONY JORDAN ', The Babe Ruth League will hold tryouts next Sun- day afternoon at 2 p.m. on 'the Perquimans Co. High 1 School field. The purpose of -the practice is for the coaches (Senior division coaches are Carl Sawyer and Marvin Hunter; Junior division coaches are Brian Woodell and Ralph Jordan) 4o see the talent of the boys. Jt is very important that all that are going to play be at ihis tryout. If you have a registration form and haven't turned it in, please Ibring it with you Sunday. If you haven't received a .form, there will be some "available for you there. It is important that these forms be turned in because the teams can't be drafted without them. v We would like to thank the sponors of the teams because such an operation 'couldn't work without them. The sponsors are Woodard's Pharmacy (full team), Hollowell Oil Co., Winfall Ready Mix, Winslow Oil Co., .Hertford Hardware, Brinn Insurance, and Jackson's Wholesale. Head umpire, Roy Perkins, should be com plemented for his work in getting these sponsors, set King up the tryout and for a .number of other activities. b . Stone DSCOUNT.ON ALL HEALTH and C jAOij nut n.s.., i ttvrmff, April , nil Cox Views Coaching As Rewarding unique situation. The com-, munity is very sports minded and the administra tion at the school is behind athletics. If you need something, you can find someone who will help you out" She continued, "We also have a new school with fantastic athletic facilities, probably one of the finest in the northeastern part of the state." While girls' basketball may be big news at Williamston High School, softball is also an area that has received attention. Under the direction of Coach Cox, the girls' team has won two conference champion ships and currently holds a record of nine wins and one loss. The team also initiated a three-day Invitational Softball Tournament which is probably the only one of its kind in the state. Although it takes talent to make a winning team, the talent of Ms. Cox as a coach has also been recognized. Last July, she was selected to serve as Assistant Coach for the annual East-West All-Star Basketball Game. Her team, East, won the game by a score of 54-50 following a sound defeat the previous year. She said, "They came back to win and did so because of a lot of determination. I enjoyed do ing that (coaching the team) because it gave me a chance to coach some of the best talent available. And some of those players are now at major colleges and doing well." ment. That makes them eligible for club member ship which requires growers to produce 5,000 or more pounds on at least one measured acre.. The 5000 Pound Peanut Club differs from the Peanut Production Contest where the entire acreage grown by the grower is used in calculating yields. In other news, the order for the uniforms has been sent in and it shouldn't be very long before they are here. The league has decided on Mondays and Thursdays as the nights for the senior division games. The junior division will play Tuesdays and Wednesdays. The senior division will con sist of four teams; two from Perquimans Co. and two from Chowan Co. The junior division will have a six-team league; two from Per quimans and four from Chowan. Each team will play two games a week; one in Hertford and one in Eden ton. The games will start in early June and end in August. Activities during the year will include All Star games between Per quimans and Chowan, hopefully on July 4th, All Star teams to play in regional play against Washington, N.C. AU-Stars. (there will be four teams: 13-year-old, 14-15 year-old, 16-year-old, and 17-18 year old.) The Babe Ruth League is a national organization and the Babe Ruth World Series is held in Arizona in August. We urge any boy who is undecided as to whether he is going to play Babe Ruth to come out Sunday and see for himself what this league means. CHURCH I MARKET ST. V A0B3 HERTFORD Ms. Cox has had no formal training specifically in the area of coaching although she holds an A.A. degree from College of the Albemarle, a B.S. degree in health and physical educa tion from the University of North Carolina at Greensboro, and recently added a Master's degree from East Carolina Univer sity. She said what she has learned about coaching came from playing the game, watching, reading and a "lot of hard work." While at Perquimans High School, her alma mater, she was a member of the girls' basketball team she de scribed as "not very suc cessful." However, that ex perience gave her an understanding of qualities more important than win ning. Those qualities are evident in her work. She said, "I demand a lot as a coach and I try to teach something besides basket ball. I try to give kids a little self-discipline, loyalty to team mates, and an understanding of team play. I just hope if I've ac complished anything it will be that my players will know more about basket ball, softball or whatever sport than I did. I also want them to know the enjoyment of playing the game as well as how to lose. And I want them to learn something about honesty, loyalty and team work. I want to teach them to be a student first and an athlete second." Concerning her role as a Sponsored by the N.C. Agriculture Extension Ser vice and the N.C. Peanut Growers Association, membership in the club now totals 43. The club was organized in 1968 and has annually offered cash awards and certificates to contest participants. Tobacco Comment WASHINGTON, D.C. Congressman Walter B. Jones has announced the defeat in the House of Agriculture Com mittee by a record vote of 28 to 10, an amendment in troduced by Congressman James P. Johnson of Colorado, which would have deleted tobacco from the provisions of PL 480, The Food for Peace Program. The effort on the part of Congressman Johnson to delete tobacco from the provisions of this Act is another move on the part who would destroy the entire program said Jones. ; Under The Food for Peace Program, the federal govern ment transfers American agricultural commodities to underdeveloped countries thoughout the world. Sometimes the recipient countries are allowed to finance the pur chases; sometimes the transfers are outright contributions. However, tobacco is classified under Section I of The Food for Peach Program which involves only cash transactions. These cash transactions are monitored carefully by both the USDA and the Department of State. The Food for Peach Program is important for our farmers, Jones added, because the government purchased the commodities at the going market rates this provides both income and ex panded markets for the farmer. Jones stated, "The tobacco interests continue under at tack by many segments of our society without sufficient justification or documentation. Without the dedicated ef forts on the part of those few Members of Congress representing tobacco producing areas, I am fearful of the ultimate consequences should these vicious attacks continue." T0WE MOTOR COMPANY HERTFORD, N. C Where Service Is A Pleasure " THE BEST IN USED CARS Phone: 426-5661 DIXIE AUTO PARTS HAS ENLARGED THEIR SERVICE DEPARTMENT PHONE 426-5716 DISC BRAKES REPLACED TURt ROTORS REPACK FRONT BEARING REPLACE SEALS no 95 : MOST CARS WE MAKE EXHAUST & TAIL PIPES, DU.1 EXI1.VJST KITS we repaih & clea:i n:.:::J03S & TUtxl C... ..E iS i CiimiiY Ft..... C..-.. .J TlnES Ci C..TTEr.iI3 v female coach, Ms. Cox said, "The men I work with are behind women's athletics. We know we have to help each other. But it's not like that in a lot of places where the female is on the outside looking in." She admits that she is fortunate in having cooperative department members who unite efforts for the sake of students in terested in sports. : Even though Coach Cox views the athletic program at Williamston as outstand ing, she admits there's room for improvement. She sees the need for a volleyball pro gram, an upgrading of the track program, and the need for another female physical education instructor "at least on a part-time basis." She added that she has en countered some problems while coaching. One of these, she said, was the change from the, 2A to 3A conference. The resulting problem was that many of the 3A schools lacked pro grams in athletics for females. She said, "It took ' four years, but now they have softball, track, and basketball for girls on the conference level. But Title IX had a lot to do with it." When asked to elaborate on the effects of Title IX, which basically calls for equal opportunities in athletics, Coach Cox said, "Title IX has its advantages and disadvantages. It . depends upon the situation you're in. It can definitely give some impetus for im provement. But in physical The yield of 5,637 pounds per acre by Carroll and Billy Williams represented the third highest yield ever by an individual member since the club began. The highest yield to date is 6,317 pounds per acre grown by a Como, N.C. farmer, E.W. Evans Jr. in 1970. QT Mufflers Installed $17 95 CLAMPS AND PIPES EXTRA education to put boys and girls in the same classes is fine in some areas, but I think it's unrealistic in other areas. Title IX can be car ried to the extreme : and some people have done that It's something we're all go ing to have to work into gradually." Ms. Cox holds to the basic philosophy that anything worth obtaining is worth working for and she takes that same attitude in regard to Title IX. In addition to her teaching and coaching respon sibilities, Ms. Cox is in volved in community ac tivities. She is a member of the Williamston Recreation Advisory Council and con ducts basketball and soft ball clinics for the recrea tion department. She will also be working in the recreational summer pro gram. One of her future goals is "to get into a college coaching situation." , Coach Cox summed up her career attitude like this, "I enjoy doing what I'm doing. I think you have to enjoy what you're doing to really be successful. Teaching by itself is a full-time job and coaching just makes it a much longer day if all you're concerned about is the financial part. But there are more rewards to coaching than money. You have the opportunity to not only watch a student grow physically, but also to mature. And you can take pride in the fact that you've taught them something and that they're using it." IN HOSPITAL Mrs. Lawrence Perry is a patient in the Chowan Hospital. FOR SALE Azaleas Jack Burbage US 17 NORTH HERTFORD, N.C. mii ir v'Aiiiia II vViiiii? ii Miin ap g g Ipllp Jlii .- -Tssa . - -T FROM , FROM . V toAAqe . ( 7 lfi9 7 '289s5 I '399 7. '109 V WHITE-WESTINGHOUSE il 'B A - , . 1 Wlth2-Pushbuttqn - ITy tl a Built-in Soft Food Disposer :-; Control P sw,-.i.-l'Sh;Ti ..;.,..!.'. -y :. V' ends Dre-rinsina - Y ModeSC400P. H'Wlt P,flSW - II ' D Durable Micarta' top ' I V )?tt2fK. . - Tilt-Guard Safety Door ' . I I . D 2 pushbutton controls : .... V JC9'v--'. ' ' D Concealed easy-roll ' : ' II Power-Dry' Drying :, T -'v casters- - I II J;, System VA . ' -rvS-I'er ' , . -0 Power cord and hose II , Q Multi-Level Wash Action ? J compartment ; t I Q -Rinse-Hold" cycle V - - Water release button - - - (TIUMVI WW wavigvuawiviHJfW tf . ':, ' p.. A V: f . ' , , - ' '- "C (''.' k ' NJ SUSAN COX INSTRUCTS WILLIAMSTON BASKETBALL TEAM Ull C U RUUr drill IMU Woodland Dress Shoo -v-.-,. ( .p. y,s-p 1 ' 1 1 - , 4 T .