From the old school
A vine winds its way around a window frame reaching out for an old desk in an abandoned house near Winfall.
Photo by Noel Todd- McLaughlin.
Library news
Enjoy a relaxed evening at
the movies right here in
Hertford! DAVID AND LISA,
a tale of two emotionally
disturbed teenagers falling in
love, will be shown Friday,
June 6, at the library.
The movie will be preceded
by a film short, DREAM OF
THE WILD HORSES, which
will start at 9 p.m. Both films
are for general audiences and
admission is free. For more
information, call 426-5319.
THE HOBBIT is the feature
cartoon of a SCHOOL'S
(ALMOST) OUT! film
program for kids on Saturda,
June 7, at 10:30 a.m. Other
films will include THE CASE
OF THE COSMIC COMIC,
THE SECRET LIFE OF T. K.
DEARING, and THE CASE
OF THE ELEVATOR DUCK.
Gather up a group of friends
and make a day of it!
The Summer Reading
Program will be starting June
16 with a PIRATE'S DAY.
Watch this column next week
for further details.
SELECTED NEW BOOKS
WORKS AND DAYS. The
people of a farming and resort
community talk about
wetlands, dunes, birds,
weather, gardening, and other
country tasks and pleasures.
IF LOVE IS THE ANSWER,
WHAT IS THE QUESTION? A
warm, witty, frank treatment
of human relationships.
THE JESUS OF
PSYCHOANLYSIS: a
Freudian interpretation of the
gospel.
SERPENTINE by Thomas
Thompson. The author of
BLOOD AND MONEY now
tells the story of a sinister
young man who swept back
and forth across half the
r
world, leaving in his wake a
trail of blood, horror, and
baffling mystery.
IT'S GOING TO STING ME!
A coward's guide to the great
outdoors.
THE AMERICAN
FAMILY: a history in
photographs.
TRICKS AND STUNTS
WITH PLAYING CARDS.
BORN TO WIN. Increase
List your property with
William F. Ainsley
Realtor
Hertford, N.C.
Diol 426 -7659
your awareness of the real
power you have to direct your
own life, to make decisions,
and to understand that you
were born to win.
During tp-ri 1 ' coliform bacteria was found in drinking
(month)
water samples from the ttinfall Water System above the limit
(name of water system)
as it appears in the "Rules Governing Public Water Supplies."
Coliform bacteria is normally found in the intestinal tract of man or other
warm blooded animals and can be easily found in drinking water samples. The
presence of coliform bacteria indicates that some contamination has occurred.
In ah attempt to correct the cause of the contamination we have done the
following:
(Check the appropriate examples)
X We have disinfected the water system.
? f
X We have flushed the water line*.
We have Installed continuous disinfection equipment.
X Check samples submitted on April, 24 show the water
(dates)
to be free of coliform bacteria.
Student honors, graduations
N.C. State dean's list
The students earned their
places on the Dean's List by
mastering studies in the
sciences, technologies,
humanities and arts taught at
NCSU.
Those on the Dean's List
who achieved a "B+" or
better from Perquimans
County were: William B.
Jennings, a student of
agriculture, son of Mr. and
Mrs. S. E. Jennings of Route
4; Wayne T. Nixon, a student
of agronomy, son of Mr. and
lira. T. D. Nixon of Route 2;
Brenda C. Sawyer, a student
of computer science, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Sawyer,
Jr. of Gaither Street; Wayne
D. Tarkenton, a student of
business management, son of
Mr. and Mrs. W. F. Tarkenton
of Covent Gardens; and
Timothy H. Wilson, a student
of mathematics, son of Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Wilson of Route
4, Hertford.
Salem graduate
Miss Mary Heath Bryant,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Richard H. Bryant of Hert
ford, was recently a par
ticipant in the graduating
White
awarded
James G. White, Jr. of
Hertford has been awarded a
four-year scholarship to
Campbell University in Buies
Creek, N.C.
White, who will be a 1980
graduate of Perquimans High |
School, is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. James G. White, Sr.
exercises of 1980 at Salem
College. Miss Bryant received
a Bachelors of Arts degree in
Psychology.
White
Student pages
Robin Bullard, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Bullard,
125 N. Grubb Street, Hertford,
and Dianne Jordan, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Arnold E.
Winslow, Route 1, Belvidere,
served as a pages in Governor
Jim Hunt's offices in Raleigh
during the week of May 27-30.
Misses Bullard and Jordan
are sophomores at
Perquimans County High
School.
Bowser honored
Rene Bowser, a rising
Perquimans County High
School senior, was one of ten
students selected to par
ticipate in the Research Ap
prenticeship Program for
minority high school students
at North Carolina A&T State
University.
Academy graduation
The twelfth graduating
class of Albemarle Academy
will receive their diplomas on
Friday, June 6, at 8 p.m., in
the school auditorium.
r
Baccalaureate services will
be held Thursday, June 5, at
the academy's gymtorium,
with Dr. B.E. White, Jr.,
pastor of Elizabeth City's
First Baptist Church, as
speaker.
The commencement
speaker on Friday evening
will be the Reverend Robert
F. Bundy, presently serving
as pastor of the United
Methodist Church in
Lillington, N.C.
Valedicotrian for the class
of 1900 is Kathy Lynn Glover,
daughter of Mrt. Rohfcrt C.
Glover, of Hertford.' Mi.
Glover will make the
traditional valedictory ad
drew at the commenecnAt
exercises Friday evening. ?
4 I J
The clasa aalutatorian, (Sail
Denis Boothe, is the daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Van
Boothe of Elizabeth City.
Job tips offered ;
Two popular summer jobs,
lawn mowing and baby sitting,
will cost more than they are
worth to some teenagers this
year.
The novice lawn ower
operator is likely to join the
ranks of 60,000 Americans
seriously injured each year
while cutting the grass.
Mower accidents tend to peak
early in the season and are
more apt to occur when using
an unfamiliar machine.
The baby sitter faces the
unpredictable behavior of a
child. Children have an in
creased number of accidents
when guests are in the home,
in unfamiliar surrouodinfP
and during any othfcr in
terruption of their normal
routine.
Both jobs are serious un
dertakings, requiring
knowledge, skill and t^e
ability to accept respop
sibility.
The Atlanta Regional Offifce
of the U.S. Consumer Product
Safety Commission offers t?
safety information kits-Co aid
teenagers pursuing ' these
summer jobs.
Write or call CPSC at 1330
West Peachtree Street,- NW
Atlanta, Georgia 30309, (404)
881-2231.
Camp slated
A one week camp for
youngsters eight to fourteen
years of age will be held June
23-27 at Wingate College,
Wingate, N.C.
This camp will be operated
by Diabetes Services of
Meclkenburg and Union
Counties, a Division of the
Community Health
Association.
The camp will offer
recreation and sports as well
as instruction in diabetes care
by a staff of nurses and
physicians. The cost for the
five day camp is |45.
For information on fees and
scholarships, call Judy
Outlaw, R. N. at 3754)172 In
Charlotte or Malinda Peeples,
R. N. at 283-1539 in Monroe. #