Winslow awarded honors by NC Travel Industry RALEIGH ? Mrs. Emmett Win ? clow (Lucille) and Discovery Place I have been awarded North Carolina's highest honors by the travel industry. Winslow is the 1963 recipient of the ^ Charles J. Parker Travel Award for >;?ervlce to the state's travel and ;? 'tourism industry. Discovery Place t-was awarded the G. Lynn Nisbet ^-Award for outstanding contributions nby an organization. Hugh Morton, owner of Grand * father Mountain and past president J -of the Travel Council of North 'Carolina, and William Friday, president of the Greater University | i]of North Carolina, presented the t -Parker Award to Winslow at the > ^Travel Council's annual convention ! rlat the Hotel Europa in Chapel Hill. | i* "Lucille Winslow was the first ; ; j>erson who saw the big picture," said Morton, calling her the "absolute i " From 1979 to 1982 she was chair Locals attend Conference Marian Frierson of Belvidere, and Dianne M. Layden of Elizabeth City, formerly of Pequimans County, recently attended the Governor's Conference on Women and the Economy, held October 31 through November 2 at the Raleigh Civic Center. '/? Both Frierson and Layden found v the conference to be exciting and ?; thought-provoking. Both stated that they were proud to have been a part of a process that will ultimately affect all North Carolinians The new Office for Women's Economic Development, which Governor Hunt announced during the conference, will help implement ? those recommendations. i Service news t STALLINGS J Spec. 4 Williams Stallings, son of Mr. and Mrs. William M. Stallings of t Route 1, Belvidere, has been ? decorated with the Army Achiev : ? ment Medal at Fort Riley, Kansas. ; Stallings is a 1979 graduate of Perquimans County High School. PERRY Army Pfc. Craig J. Perry, son of Allen and Jessie Perry of Route 2, Hertford, has participated in Bold Eagle 84, a joint service readiness exercise held at Eglin Air Force Base, Florida. The exercise involved more than 19,000 service members from all elements of the Department of Defense assisting in repelling from a friendly nation an invading force, thus testing the combat readiness of the U.S. -based forces. Perry is a cannon crewman with the 7th Infantry Division at Fort Ord, ; Calif. ; He is a 1981 graduate of ' Perquimans High School. 1 - NOW OPEN . . . The Waterfront Shops 400 S. Water Street Elizabeth City, N.C. 338-6119 10 Unique Shops and a ML f ^ I Two mad to live m cheaply at > ?m, bat now om can Inn I aa expensively as two. Becky HmjjroE CAMPER pohmon White Insurance Agency | 109 Market St. Hertford. N.C. 42*7705 Insurance it thm o nty thing you con I buy w hon you n?tf It. " man of the Roanoke Island Historical Association. Winslow is a member of America's Four Hundredth Aniversary Committee, appointed by Governor Hunt. Working for the Four Hundredth, she has endeavored to make it truly a statewide activity through her efforts to create in every county an active committee and to encourage groups all over North Carolina to participate in the celebration. Winslow has served as president of the North Carolina Hotel Association, director of the N.C. Restaurant Association, vice president of the Travel Council of N.C., and director of the N.C. Arts Council. She is also an advisor to the Nor theastern Historic Places Office in Edenton, a member of the board of the Historic Albemarle Tour, and a trustee of the Northeastern Branch of the N.C. Museum of History at Elizabeth City. Bill Hensley, president of Hensley Associates and Travel Counicl vice president, presented the 1983 G. Lynn Nisbet Award to Freda Nicholson, executive director of Charlotte's Discovery Place. Since opening on October 31, 1981, Discovery Place has brought national recognition to North Carolina through its very fine quality of scientific exhibits and program ming. It is a showpiece for the new type of "hands-on museum," following the lead of places like the Boston Children's Museum. Since the museum's opening, hundreds of thousands of people of all ages have spent hours inside its walls. This was the 19th year of presen tation by the Travel Council of the two travel awards. Each of the two annual awards is an Atmos Per petual Motion Clock. The Travel Council of North Carolina is a private nonprofit association representing the several facets of the travel and tourism in dustry. The ten Perquimans County residents who attended the Gover nor's Statewide Volunteer Awards Ceremony in Williamston Tuesday, Novermber 1, posed for a picture with Governor and Mrs. James B. Hunt Jr. They are: (left to right, back row) Miriam Perry Haskett of Hertford, Individual Human Service Volunteer: Anne White of Hertford, Individual Community Volunteer Leader; Rev. John P. London of Hertford, A d ministrator/Coordinator of Volun teers; Andy White of Hertford, Youth Volunteer; and Alvis R. Jordan of Hertford, Senior Citizen Volunteer. (Left to right, front row) Rev. Joe Louis Godfrey of Hertford, Disabled Person Volunteer; Leslie J. Abbott of Hertford, School Volunteer; Sarah Eason of Belvidere, One-On-One Volunteer; Mary C. Harrell of Hertford, accepting for the Perquimans County Chamber of Commerce, in the Community Volunteer Organixaiton category; and Annette Teague of Hertford, accepting for The Open Door, in the Church/Religious Volunteer Group Introducing A complete entertainment guide. 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