THE PERQUIMANS WEEKLY f . Volume 60, No. 34 Hertford, Perquimans County, N.C.,~ Thursday, August 22, 1991 30 Cents • />, \ K ' ■$ /; »f*V '£;■ ^'t'K - W^&i eS«^J is Summer will be over ' ; * ;.. > , . - ' ^.:. ' • t , ; - f !■ ' Il*# when school bells • ring Monday: ‘"Pae# e Community: Friendship 4-Hers learn to speak in public: Page 3 h -’h Briefs Singspiration planned The Belvldere-Chappell Hill Volunteer Fire Department Is having their annual singspira tion on Sunday. Aug. 25 at 3 p.m. at Piney Woods Friends Meeting. The Firemen Four will be the feature of the day and special guests will be Mr. and Mrs. Billy oid. ; Open House planned - • Perquimans County Middle School will be having Open House on Sunday, Aug. 25 from 3-4 p.m. All students and par ents are invited to drop by to meet teachers, visit classrooms and get acquainted. light re freshments will be served. Auditions to be held The Bootstrap Acting Com pany will hold auditions tor their fall production “Christmas on the Radio-Christmas 1943,” an briginal musical comedy by Rob ert Fitzsimmons, to be directed by Paul Cowan. Auditions will be held on Sunday. Aug. 25 and Sunday. Sept. 1 from 7-9 p.m. at the Senior Center. If you can sing or even cany a tune. Join in on the fun of community theater. If you can not make these dates, call Mona Sadler, producer, at 426-7044. $nd a time will be arranged for you to audition. NAACP to hold mooting The Perquimans County Board of the NAACP will, hold their monthly meeting on 'Mon day, Aug. 26 at 7:30 p.m. at the Senior Center. Soccer registration Soccer registration has be gun at Perquimans Recreation Department for boys and girls ages 5-15. Registration deadline is Friday. Sept. 6 and the cost is $7. To register, come by or call 426-5695. AARP to moot Js ' Perquimans Chapter 4118 of AARP me., will meet Monday. Aug. 26 at 2 p.m. at the Senior Center. A board meeting will be held at 1 p.m. Billy White of the Hertford Drums and Fifes Corp will be the guest Chapter 4118 is open to .membership for all of the sur rounding counties. We are “Here to serve, not to be served." insurance course offered College of the Albemarle will :offer the Life and Health preli censing insurance program in September at the college’s main campus in Elizabeth City. ; Classes will meet in room ;109 of the C Building from 12 :• noon-8:30 p.m. Friday, Sept. 6; 8,a.m.-5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday. Sept. 7V3: 12 noon 8:30 p.m. Friday. Sept. 13: and S a.m-5 p.m. Saturday and Sun ■ Sept 14 and 15. < ’ The cost for the course is $30 and the textbook is avail able at the COA Bookstore for ^approximately $35. Participants are urged to purchase their text books early and to begin reading .As soon as possible. Prw-egistration by Friday. Aug. 30. is required. No refunds *iir be given. To register or for more Information, contact COA >t 335-0821. ext. 250 or 231. 1 ’*I... . i.r-. .i*: I PERQUIMANS WEEKLY \m ARE AS FOLLOWS: . Ih" --ma mm;. . mn. a p.mj .. MON. 3 P.M." SUSSES) :| LECAiS mu. 3 pm. PRIOR TO THURSDAY PUBLICATION tfERQWMANSf WEEKLY 1is w.'Orubfe St 426-1728. V> vJa . Hurricane Bob threatens Perquimans Sunday 'Storm brings Dare evacuees, no damage • s. . ... . . V. ■ \ • • (Above,I to r) Stephanie Jones, Jane Wood, Herb Wood and David Bean were four of the 43 people who waited for Bob to hit at Hert ford Grammar School Sunday night The group, from Mad ison, Va., was on vacation in Corolla when they were asked to evacuate Sunday. At right, the adults try to sleep, but the kids are too excited. Perquimans County resi dents tuned in to weather broadcasts Sunday as forecast ers updated the movement of Hurricane Bob up the Atlantic coast. As. the storm gathered strength over the open sea and set a course which cpuld have brought damage to the area, bread and milk disappeared from store shelves. Some resi dents, especially those who live on the banks of Perquimans’ three rivers and the Albemarle Sound, moved lawn furnishings and tied down boats. But Bob confined his visit to dumping more rain on an al ready-soggy county and sending whistling winds through the trees. Emergency Management Coordinator Keith Haskett was among those watching the storm’s progress. While he said he did not believe Perquimans County would be in the storm's direct path, he decided to open one of the county’s designated shelters at Hertford Grammar School where 43 people gathered to ride out Bob. Most of the guests at the make-shift Hertford Hilton were vacationers asked to evacuate the Dare and Currituck county beaches. David Bean of Madison, Va. was one traveler who sought shelter. After being told to leave Corolla, Bean said he and his traveling companions spent eight hours on the road in traf fic getting off the island and looking for a motel. But no rooms were available. Bean said he heard on the radio that Per quimans County had a shelter and he headed for Hertford. Charles and Linda Lewis of Baltimore. Md. never made it to the Outer Banks to begin their vacation Sunday. They were turned back and finally found refuge in Hertford. The Beans and the Lewises had plenty of company as they settled into the cafeteria and li brary areas at the school. Twenty-eight vacationers, in cluding some from as far away as New Jersey, bunked with 15 locals to await the arrival of Bob. Haskett said he really did not think there would be a need to open a shelter here, but de cided that it would be better to open than to realize the need too late. There was a need. “We have seen a need for it because most of these people were coming or going from the Dare County beaches.” Haskett said Sunday evening. Opening the shelter was a cooperative effort, Haskett said. Firefighters moved cots stored at the Hertford Fire Department, while the Hertford Police Depart ment and Rescue Squad made periodic checks at the site to make sure all was well. “We appreciate the help from the police department, rescue squad, the fire department for their help and the dispatching service,” Haskett said. “We got good cooperation from the peo ple. It went real well." Perquimans program'kicks off rural art project A special program at 7:30 on Saturday evening, Aug. 24. at the Perquimans Center at ’ the Newbold-White House will kick off a five-county rural arts, development project funded by fja grant to the N.C. Arts Coun cil by the National Endowment for the Arts. Chowan. Perquimans. Pas quotank; Camden and Curri tuck counties will collaborate ; in presenting the community | cultural event, consisting of an evening of musical and reading theatre, titled “Paul Green’s Carolina,” Claymon Sawyer and John Thomas Vaughan Jr. will perform the musical por , tion. and local actors will share the reading presentation. Par ticipants will also include : Roadside Theatre of Whites ville. Ky.. John O’Neal and Ju nebug Productions of New . Orleans, La. Chris Komegay of Hertford chairs the area arts project, under the overall coordination of Lottie Lassiter of Ahoskie. it Lucy F. Vaughan of Elizabeth City will direct and produce the Aug. 24 presentation. Tickets or reservations for * the Perquimans Center pro gram, priced at $4 for adults ' and $2.50 for children, may be ' purchased from the Newbold ' White House (919) 426-7567, , Chris Kornegay (919) 426 , 5663, or Lucy F. Vaughan (919) 335-5505. Space will be limited for the single perfor mance. ' '• 1* This program te one of flv$ ' rSjrSiiw'viamKi to be conducted within the 16 county region served by the Northeastern Cultural Alliance, a volunteer group seeking to improve arts awareness in this predominantly rural and ra cially-mixed corner of North Carolina. An additional tour* involving local artists as well as members of the Roadside and Junebug troupes, is scheduled for April 1992. The National Endowment for the Arts has awarded a $21,050 grant to the N.C. Arts Council for this rural arts de velopment project This funding will enable the Council to Implement a multi-cultural theater project in underserved counties. One of the project’s most outstanding features is its involvement of area artists to stimulate interest in and celebration of the loral culture on a community-wide basis. In addition to the Perqui mans event. Roadside and Ju nebug will perform Aug. 23 in Currituck and earlier on Aug. 24 in Pasquotank. Their sched ule also includes a stop on Aug. 25 at the Gallery Theatre in Ahoskie, and on Aug. 26 at the C.S. Brown Center in Win ton. On Aug. 27 they continue on to the Canal Center in Roa noke Rapids, to Tyrrell and Hyde counties on Aug. 28, and to Williamston on Aug. 29. Roadside and Junebug are particularly appropriate collab orators in these performances both companies have a multi-cultural focus. A prod; Members of Roadside Theater from Whiteburg, Kentucky, and Junebug Productions from New Orleans, share songs and stories in die co-created, original production Junebug Jack. Artists shown from left to right are: Tom Bledsoe, John O’Neal, Michael Keck, Angeiyn DeBord, Kim Cole and Ron Short. uct of Kentucky's Appalachia, Roadside performs work drawn from that culture. Junebug specializes in presentations that utilize the rich oral history tradition of American blacks. The N.C. Arts Council in the past funded a cultural spe cialist for Northeastern North Carolina Tomorrow, who worked to develop regional arts . - " ■ programming, the Northeast ern Cultural Alliance grew out of these efforts. The goal for the current outreach project is to expand upon those begin nings. strengthen community resources, build bridges be tween cultures, and act as a catalyst for future cultural pro gramming. •.-.—. Residents seek ways to,send drug dealers packing By NANCY ROYDEN-CLARK The Dally Advance Members of the Hertford Housing Authority Resident As sociation, the Resident Advisory' Committee and public officials met last night at the Wynne Fork Community Building to seek ways to rid the area of , drug dealers. Elaine Stepney, chairman of the resident association's board, said she and other people were tired of drug dealers working around the entrance of the com munity. •> The resident association was formed last fall under the guidance of Harold Lucas Jr., a former attorney with Legal Serv ices of the Coastal Plains in Ahoskie. Stepney said Lucas has since moved to Philadelphia. Pa., ■/ •_;_ where he Is practicing law. Stepney said the drug deal ers do not live In Wynne Fork, but some are from Dogwood Trailer Park, located across the \ street from the entrance to the development » Upon moving into public housing last winter, new resi dents signed a membership agreement to loin the residents association, fne agreement re quires that residents "refrain from using or possessing or al lowing the use or possession of any illegal substance or drug iq their apartment.” The agreement also states that the resident will report the observation of any crime or crime conduct to the board of HARA, or to local law enforce ment officials.. • ■ f *| i doe Lothian. Perquimans County sheriff, attended the meeting. He said much of the county’s drug problems stem from people wno are from other counties. Imposing a curfew in the Community was discussed last night, however, Hertford Police Chief Aubrey F. Sample Jr. and county sheriff Joe Lothian said the community would have to make sure a curfew was en forceable before the idea could be pursued further. Sample said the community would have to give the state strong reasons why a curfew is needed. John Beers, the only candi date for mayor of Hertford, said residents should ban together in groups, to let the dealers know they’re not welcome at Wynne Font. i ? | "Somebody has to bear the I ilK . - V- ‘ ' ..’,1 brunt,” Beers said. He told the group about a article that re ported a community’s efforts to get rid of drug dealers. "These people were scared but they were willing. They worked together as groups. It’s going to take time. It’s a hard wing to push,” Beers said. The group discussed Issuing photo Identification cards to res idents. That would make It eas ier for law enforcement officials to determine who actually lives in the housing developments, and who does not. they said. Lothian warned that resi dents should take precautions about weapons In the area. He said the weapons some people own are extremely dangerous. ' Sample said the community needs to further pursue a Com munity Watch program. M'r, ::r t D.A.R.E program discontinued The Drug Abuse Resistance Education program, known as DAR.E has been disconti nued for the 1991-92 school year. Sheriff Joe Lothian an nounced last week. “I don’t like it, but I don’t have any choice in the matter,” Lothian commented Monday night. “Having to discontinue the D.A.R.E. program in the schools is probably the most dlsppointing decision I've had to make." Lothian drastically reduced the number of hours his dep uties are on duty beginning July 1. While the deputies have his torically received pay for 174 hours per month, Lothian said they often put in over 300 hours until he put a halt to the prac tice last month. “They’re (the deputies) being taken advantage of,” Lothian said. “It’s just not fair.” The cut-back has not only affected the D.A.R.E program, but has meant that Lothian has been forced to hire off-duty Hertford Police officers to assist his deputies on court days. The DARE program dis penses accurate information about alcohol and other drugs, teaches decision-making skills, builds self-esteem, suggests ways to resist negative peer pressure and offers alternatives to drug use. Locally, D.A.R.E has served almost 600 middle school students since it was ini tiated here in 1988. In the be ginning. an officer from the sheriffs department and one from the Hertford Police Depart ment worked with the program. In 1990 and 1991, the sheriffs department provided the DARE, officer, Deputy Ralph Robinson. Robinson was at the middle school two days each week working with the program. He said other deputies handled part of his work load to help keep the program going. In', But it will go no longer. **1 hate to see it go.” Lothian said. ...... • ' - :