I The Perquimans Weekly 350 Vol. 64. No. 22 The only newspaper for and about Perquimans County people Hertford, North Carolina 27944 ■i-' I Hoola hoop/Field Day fun PHOTO BY SUSAN HARRIS Perquimans County students are busy with end-of-courses tests, final projects and exam preparation, but there’s still time for a break to have fun. Field Days at Hertford Grammar, Perquimans Central and Perquimans Middle schools offer students the opportunity to show their athletic ability and have a great time. Here, eighth grade boys swing their hips in the hoola hoop contest Friday at the middle school. Miss Dobie’s class took first place for the day. PCHS to offer new breakfast program Perquimans High School students will fuel up for suc cess next fall with the expan sion of the school’s breakfast program. Through the First Class Breakfast in a Bag Program, breakfast will be delivered to each classroom at the end of the first period class. Breakfast will be available to each student at the school at no charge. The program is made possi ble through an $8,000 grant from Share Our Strength and American Express. It is a part of the Charge Against Hunger campaign with American Express. Studies have shown that children who eat breakfast receive nourishment required for proper growth, attend school more regularly, behave better in the classroom, have greater attention spans and improve academic perfor mance. Breakfast has been avail able at school for several years, however students had to arrive early to participate. Child nutrition personnel rec ognized a need to increase par ticipation in the program for the benefit of all students. County economic and social factors helped to influence the grant approval. According to the grant application, Perquimans has a population of 10,701, with 1940 students enrolled in its school system. Of those students, 71 percent receive AFDC. The county’s average per capita income of $10,241 make it 89th in the state. About 25 percent of county tfamilies earn incomes below the poverty level. Almost 40 percent of students in the local schools live in sin gle-parent households. Another 5 percent live with a guardian. “Traditionally, both of these groups earn low wages,” the application states. “These fac tors have a direct impact on children.” Many local students are from families dealing with unemployment, poverty, sub standard housing, transporta tion problems, drug abuse, domestic violence and health crisis. As a result, numerous students are involved in the complex issue of hunger. Statistics indicate that stu dents from low-income fami lies depend on the schools’ meal program for as much as one half of their daily nutri tional intake. SUBMITTED PHOTO Shirley McClain (center), executive director of North Carolina Hunger Network, visited Perquimans County Schools recently to present an $8,000 anti-hunger grant. Through the grant, high school students will receive a free bagged breakfast next school year. With McClain are Student Alternative Services Coordinator Jeanie Umphlett (left) and Child Nutrition Director Donna Harris. Records will be kept of the breakfast program to docu ment its effectiveness. The project will be a collab orative effort of the school sys tem, the State Department of Pqblic Instruction and the Perquimans County Health Department. The health department will help make the community aware of the importance of eating a proper diet to preserve good health. Funds will be sought from private, public and local fund ing sources to continue the program after the grant period ends in April 1997. Inmate labor saves town on maintenance By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor John know PHOTO BY SUSAN HARRIS Hertford officials say inmates from the Gates County Correctional Facility have saved the tpwn thousands of dollars on maintenance projects like this one on Church Street. Town Manager Christensen doesn’t exactly how much money Hertford has saved over the past few months thanks to inmate labor from the Gates County Correctional Facility, but he’s sure it’s a significant amount for a small town. The most recent project for which the town was able to secure inmate labor was clean ing out the drainage lines that link Church and Front streets through the Holy Trinity Episcopal Church property. Heavy rains in late winter and early spring brought major flooding at the intersec tion of Church and Dobbs streets, and complaints from motorists. The town deter mined that tree roots had grown into the drainage lines, and said fixing the problem would be labor-intensive. With inmate assistance, the town maintenance crew fin ished the project last week. Gates County inmates have also done work at the sewer plant, helped with the massive tire cleanup on town property adjacent to the sewer plant, and performed roadside cleanup in several areas. Bus, car hit head-on south of Hertford No students injured in wreck on Highway 17 By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor and GINGER LIVINGSTON The Daily Advance Ann Lightfoot is being hailed as a hero for preventing a head-on collision between the school bus she was driving and a car from becoming a tragedy. Lightfoot managed to keep Perquimans County Schools bus No. 59 upright and out of a ditch when a car traveling north on U.S. Highway 17 bypass about one mile south of Hertford pulled directly into the path of the southbound bus. “The bus driver did a tremendous piece of driving,” Perquimans Superintendent Randall Henion said. “I think my first reaction would liave been to swerve which could have caused the bus to roll over. When I asked her about it she said she wasn’t driving the bus at the time, it was a higher authority.” Transportation ______ and maintenance secretary June Ritter said she was told by school transporta tion officials that when Lightfoot saw the car pull into her path, she locked the brakes, holding the bus at the right edge of the road. To her right was a dragline ditch. Hertford Police Department Sgt. Dale Vanscoy was a mem ber of the Hertford Fire Department response team that responded to the accident. “I don’t know who that dri ver was, but she did an excel lent job,“ Vanscoy said. “She turned the bus just enough to keep it from taking the full impact of the hit.” Lightfoot suffered a cracked wrist during thii%f@feident, Ritter said. She will probably be unable to resume her dri ving duties for a week. “For precaution and grati tude, we decided to give her a week off,“ Ritter said. The driver of the car, whose name is unavailable, was not so fortunate. Her car was jammed under the front wheel well of the bus on the driver’s “The bus driver did a tremen dous piece of driving.... When I asked her about it she said she wasn’t driving the bus at the time, it was a higher authority.” Randall L. Henion Superintendent Perquimans County Schools side. The response team used the jaws of life to remove her from the car, Vanscoy said. Emergency personnel on the scene suspect she suffered sev eral broken bones. She was taken to Chowan Hospital for treatment. No word on her injuries or condition is avail able. None of the seven high school and middle school stu dents on the bus at the time of the accident were injured, school officials said. However, some parents indicated to school officials that they would take children in for examination as a precaution. “I was really proud of their (the students’) demeanor in pulling together," Henion said.He also praised the driver of a second bus caught in the traffic backlog caused by the accident. He said the driver kept the students calm and occupied during the delay. Traffic was rerouted down several secondary roads while the accident was cleared. Vanscoy said emergency per sonnel were anx ious as they trav eled to the scene, because the inci dent was reported as an accident involving a car, a school bus and a tractor trailer. Upon their arrival, the response team found that the log truck driver following the bus had managed to avoid hit ting the bus.Ritter said offi cials told her that the truck driver realized there was trou ble ahead before impact and slowed down. Traffic is normally heavy o'n U.S. 17, especially on the two- lane corridor connecting Hertford and Edenton. With road construction underway to widen the highway to four lanes, travel along the eight- mile stretch is often slow. Area residents regularly note prob lems with speeding, dangerous passing and construction vehi cles pulling out in traffic. The possible danger of trav el down U.S. 17 is of special concern to Henion due to school buses transporting stu dents on the route. While N.C. Highway Patrol officers don’t think the con struction on U.S. 17 has made travel more dangerous, several local officials, including law enforcement officers, disagree. Outside High: Low: High: Low: High: Low: 70s 50s 70s 50s 70S 50s CHANCE OF RAIN CHANCE OF RAIN CHANCE OF RAIN