Volume 61, No.34 i Hertford, Perqulmane County, N.C., Thursday, August 20,1992 35 Cents Feature: All Over the Map: s Prepare for school by looking ahead: pag«4 Government^*® Taxpayer group still hounding commissioners 'about budget Pages '•; ' - s V* ^ V >< <,V !£«. ,•'•^.*>1 ?p’ Lane receives prestigious veterans scholarship pages Team hunts up wins Shooters perform well at nationals By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor The Perquimans Middle School Hunter Safety Team taught folks from across the country who gathered in New Mexico for national competition how to spell "Perquimans.” A.J. Miller won first place in the hunter responsibility exami nation. The seven-member team earned third place in the shot gun category, and captured an impressive ninth place overall. Coach Roger Morgan was full of praise for the young men who made the trip when he re ported to the Board of Education Monday night. "The kids did a wonderful Job both behavior-wise and com petition-wise,” Morgan said. “It was a very successful week.” “Educational” was another adjective Morgan used to de scribe the trip. The team, Mor gan, four parent coaches and a parent spectator took up resi dence in a tent positioned on a hillside - complete with rain. The necessity to work together to dig trenches to re-route water head ing for their temporary home and co-exist in close quarters for a week was a good learning ex perience, Morgan said. “It was probably one of the most educational trips I’ve ever been on,” Morgan said. "The children we took out there learned a lot about teamwork that first day.” In addition to the life skills learned, several of the youth traveled by airplane for the first time. Summing up his report, Morgan said, “It was a very en joyable week. The whole week was just flawless.” Board chairman Wayne Howell said the board is always proud of students who represent the school well, but this trip brought special pride. “We can be extremely proud of our children when they are competing nationwide and they can do this well,” Howell said. Perhaps the local delegation performed so well in national competition because the local race for a place on the New Mex ico-bound team was so fierce. The PCMS team fielded to compete in regional and state competition was 16-strong. Team members vyed for the op portunity to participate in one or more of the four events - shot gun, rifle, archery and hunter safety. The top four local team members in each category were eligible to compete. But only seven team mem bers could make the trip to the nationals, and each qualifying member had to enter each event. Hours of practicing and scoring led to the designation of the top seven all-around athletes on the team. They were Miller, Leaiy Winslow, Curtis Whitehurst, Brad Owens, David Brickhouse and alternates Marty Winslow and Brock Nixon. J In addition to Morgan, coaches who made the trip were Bay Winslow, Archie Miller, G.C, Jennings and Billy Owens. Rich ard Winslow also made the trip. i : [f! r ■ LOOK ON V:.\ PAGE 2 FOR COMMUNITY HAPPENINGS The great flood? Residents in Perquimans County and the sur rounding area have had about all the water they can take - rainwater, that is. Recent rains have closed roads, overrun ditches and given most residents a swimming pool somewhere in their yards. At top, an uniden tified Bear Swamp resi dent erected a sign reading “CR 1102 and 1103 Your Tax Dollar At Work. Try Them.” fol lowed by an arrow point ing to the nearly impassable dirt and rock road. Below, as late as Monday evening, several inches of water contin ued to cover the Two Mile Desert Road for ap proximately one mile. The question now is, when will it end? Residents to receive federal assistance By TRACY E. GERLACH The Dally Advance A total of eight homes in Perquimans County will receive weatherizatlon repairs this summer as part of the federal Weatherizatlon Assistance Pro gram. The program, administered through the N.C. Department of Economic and Community Devel opment. will use $100,050 on energy-saving tech nology to keep elderly, handicapped and low income residents of Camden, Chowar), Currituck, Dare, Hyde, Gates, Pasquotank, Perquimans, Washington and Tyrrell counties warm this winter. State Energy Division officials are providing Economic Improvement Council Inc. the funds to weatherize the homes of elderly, disabled and needy residents. They expect to weatherize 56 homes with the money. Of the $100,050, Perquimans County families meeting the requirements will receive a total of $13,500, a spokesperson for the Energy Division said. Eligibility requirements are set according to in come. A family of two must earn no more than $13,785 a year to qualify for the weatherization program and a single occupant can make no more than $10,215 a year. improvements, which include insulating attics, floors and other sections of the home, as well as installation of weather stripping, caulking and hot water heater insulation, can reduce a family’s en ergy bill by 12 percent to 20 percent Chamber gears up for Indian Summer Festival Plans are underway for the 1992 edition of the Indian Sum mer Festival, scheduled for Sept 18 and 19 in Hertford. A vari ety of Interesting activities is jtZSSSfo* t planned for all ages, according to Perquimans C h a mb e r of Commerce orga- » , • — nlzers. U' Merchants will again participate Friday In sidewalk sales. Perquimans County merchants may come in and set i|p a booth downtown on Friday at no charge to promote their businesses. Entertainment i« being planned beginning at l2 noon. The sidewalk cafe will re turn with hamburgers and hot dogs. :f Arts, crafts, food and display booths are available for Saturday at Missing Mill Park for a foe of $25 for each 12’ X 12’ space. Each additional 12’ X 12’ space will be $15. Those having Looths for raffles must have the drawing and announce winners before the festival booths close at 6 p.m. Saturday's entertainment will Include children’s activities, i bands, doggers, a street dance, a pig picking and much more. :'v ■ ■ Mb■ . ’ New to the festival this yesl will be a talent show on Friday. The show ts set for downtown and wffl be open to all ages. En try forms may be picked up at the Chamber office. Home can ning and baked goods judging has also been added. Entry is open for youth and adults. En try forms and listing of entry di visions may be picked up at the Chamber office or from Juanita Bailey, Home Economics Exten sion Agent, at the Perquimans Cooperative Extension Center, no later than Sept 15. r j ■ t '. • / For more festival *02 infor mation, contact the Chamber of Commerce at 426-5657.. Barricade bill frees up law officers By TRACY E. GERLACH The Dally Advance A new bill making it a felony for drug dealers to construct bar riers around a structure where a controlled substance is being manufactured, sold, delivered or possessed will strengthen local law enforcement efforts. Sheriff Joe Lothian said. “It will give us one more tool to use to help fight this problem that we have," Lothian said. The bill, passed by the Gen eral Assembly recently, toughens criminal penalties for drug deal ers who fortify a home in order to keep law enforcement officials out. Officers throughout the state have run into anything from six-foot chain-link fences with barbed wire to double steel doors, barricaded windows and attack dogs. “The main problem for police was it took too long to gain entry into a fortified home, giving drug dealers inside plenty of time to destroy any evidence of drugs and making arrests almost im possible,” said Lieutenant Gover nor Jim Gardner, who chairs the North Carolina Drug Cabinet. “Law officers told me they needed this type of bill in order to strengthen the laws against fortified homes.” Lothian agreed, citing a “It will give us one more tool to use to help fight this problem that we have.” Joe Lothian Sheriff, Perquimans County two-inch bar with electronic sen sors which was confiscated and Is being held In the department. Behind such barriers, sheriffs deputies often find five-gallon buckets of acid, ledgers, par aphernalia. large quantities of baking soda, and pipes, he said. The bill was recommended by the North Carolina Drug Cabinet and sponsored by state Rep resentative Doris Huffman. School starts Monday By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor Students enrolled in the Per quimans County School System will find a few changes when school starts Monday. Those who ride buses to school will see a difference first. Director/Administration Indus trial Technology Tom Monti told school board members Monday night that students will be as signed to buses differently for the 1992-93 school year. Students from the middle school and high school will ride together, while those from Central and Hertford Grammar schools will share transportation. Monti said the change will eliminate some of the stops and scheduling conflicts of past years. Before, high school stu dents rode one set of buses. The other three schools shared trans portation, resulting in drop-off and pick-up at three locations each day. Each bus will now have only two schools to which to deliver students in the morn ing and pick them up in the af ternoon. Another plus for the new alignment, Monti said, is elimi nating overcrowding. Middle /high school buses will transport a maximum of 36 students, the elementary buses a maximum of 54. While the system has not vio lated state regulations regarding the number of students assigned to buses in the past, the three school buses have seemed more crowded due to the size of the students. Monti said. The altered transportation schedule should not increase ex penses, Monti stated. “It looks like we will be able to run with the same number of buses we had last year.” he told the board. Monti said bus drivers have been instructed to contact stu dents assigned to their buses to introduce themselves and give approximate pick-up and drop off times. Another change students can expect is a system-wide discipline policy. Traditionally, each school has implemented its own policy. But this year, the principals are working to gether to compose a uniform code for all students, according to superintendent Randall L. Henion. Students will receive a copy of the policy Monday when school opens. It was not avail able at press time. Some new faces will be in place in classrooms, thanks to resignations, reassignments and appointments. As of Mon day, Personnel Director Paul Ward said the system had three teaching positions left to fill. Maintenance personnel have been kept busy all sum mer refurbishing and renovat ing at all four schools. At the high school, the department has been working to complete renovations to allow for moving all classes formerly housed at the King Street Annex into the main building. Henion told the board that as faculty and staff began re turning from the summer break on Monday, he sensed an excit ement among them, and high expectations for a productive school year. Sizzling heat sparks blazes By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor _ The summer’s sizzling heat and blanketing humidity have translated into calls - lots of calls - for local volunteer firefighters. According to Hertford Fire Department Captain Larry Chap pell, overloading circuits with air conditioners has been the source of trouble for several residents. He warned that care should be used when operating window air conditioning units. Licensed electrician Phil Har ris advises consumers who own 110-volt units to make sure the branch circuit feeding the outlet into which the unit is plugged has the capacity to handle the unit Plugging an air conditioner Into a circuit already being -.y* < ' • * tapped for several other electrical devices could result in overload. Harris said that a 220-volt unit should generally be wired di rectly into the electrical panel on a separate circuit with the capac ity to handle the load. Under no circumstances should a fuse or circuit breaker larger than the rating of the wire in the circuit be installed. He said fuses and circuit breakers are there to protect the wire. Inserting a fuse or breaker larger than the wire can cause the wire to bum before burning out a fuse or trip ping the breaker, possibly result ing in fire. When in doubt about whether a circuit or electrical service can handle a load, Harris recom mends contacting a license elec trician. i/ v v . , - . . h-v, »••!. ■'■■*>/■■■*, *r .%*.<-‘.v. v *■.*&-'.v-trvJ? • e