November 14, The Perquimans Weekly 350 Vol. 64, No. 44 The only newspaper for and about Perquimans County people Hertford, North Carolina 27944 State asks for education input The North Carolina School Improvement Panel wants your two-cents worth on edu cation. The panel has scheduled a public forum for Nov. 21 in Edenton to listen to the pub lic’s ideas on school improve ment. Chaired by State Board of Education member Lowell Thomas, the panel has spent the last year focusing the state’s educational reform ini tiatives into a single, long- range, multi-year plan for con tinuous school improvement. The panel has examined reform programs already in place and how these programs align with one another, and has recommended additional efforts needed to fill in any gaps. Key to the School Improvement Panel’s plan is engaging the public in sus tained dialogue to open com munication about education reform. To accomplish this, the panel plans a series of issues communications semi nars, public education forums and community feedback meetings across the state. Since August, the panel has hosted six education seminars with business leaders and edu cators to highlight the key issues surrounding education reform in the state. Next, the education forums seek input and feedback from a variety of people, including parents, teachers and civic leaders to help spread the mes sage even closer to the grass roots of North Carolinians. Among the tops the forums will address are the role of the school, the quality and profes sionalism of the teaching force, questions of time and money, and the need for com munity partnerships to com- ipit themselves to improving their local schools. These are crucial issues as public educa tion moves forward into the 21st century, according to panel members. The final step in the engage ment campaign will be a series of community meetings to start in early 1997. These com munity meetings will provide the training and tools needed to establish a way to gain pub lic input about education reform in every school district in the state. For addition information, contact Brenda Lassister, Public Information Officer for Perquimans County Schools, at 426-5741. Schools to close early Monday Perquimans County Schools students will have a short day next Monday, according to school officials. Students in all four schools will be released early to allow time for planning of the School Improvement Plans under the New ABCs and other staff development activities. Scheduled release times are; Hertford Grammar School, 12:45 p.m.; Perquimans Central School, 1:10 p.m.; Perquimans Middle School, 12:50 p.m.; and Perquimans High School, 12:30 p.m. Claude Brinn recognized for service .W -n- \% ^ ' '' ■> ,'.v* '■ -i- / ‘if* DAILY ADVANCE PHOTO Claude Brinn was honored Friday night during the Perquimans-Camden football game for his 33 years of volun teer service to the Perquimans High School athletic pro grams. Brinn was accompanied to midfield by his daughters Beth Whitehurst and Claudia Bunch, his sons-in-law, Gary Whitehurst and Buck Bunch, and grandson. Drew Winslow. Brinn starts clock for last time PCHS press box veteran retires after 33 years By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor Claude Brinn was chilled to the bone by the cold, wet rain that poured onto Memorial Field at halftime Friday night. But his heart was warmed by the awards and kind words he received from those who braved the weather to thank him for his many years of service to Perquimans High School ath letics. Brinn received an Unsung Hero Award from the North Carolina High School Athletic Association, pre sented by Perquimans High School Athletic Director Harrell Thach. Thach also gave a plaque of appreciation to Brinn on behalf of the high school. Brinn’s hat, which Thach said was famotfs among Perquimans football fans, was retired. It will be housed in the athletic trophy case at the school. The Perquimans County Athletic Boosters presented Brinn with an athletic afghan in recognition for his years of service. In addition, the club announced the initiation of a Claude Brinn Athletic Scholarship. Co-presidents Edgar Roberson and Susan Harris represented the Boosters. On hand for the occasion were four members of the 1963 Perquimans High School football team — Mack Nixon, Archie Miller, Paul Gregory and Sid Eley. The quartet represented the first football team for which Brinn kept the clock. Members of Brinn’s fami ly, daughters Beth Whitehurst and Claudia Bunch, sons-in-law Gary Whitehurst and Buck Bunch, and grandson Drew Winslow accompanied Brinn on the field. Brinn was escorted on the field in a classic Chevrolet convertible by its owner, Douglas Layden. The Marching Pirates had practiced for weeks on a musical tribute to Bfinn, “In The Mood,” but did not per form due to the pouring rain. Overcrowded Two double-wide mobile units were deiivered to Perquimans Central School recently to help ease the load of over crowded classrooms. Capital needs in Perquimans County include the replacement of Perquimans Central School. The school sys tem is projected to receive in excess of $4 million to help meet capi tal needs with the pas sage of the Nov. 5 school bond referendum. Winfall fire department receives state grant funds Accident victim in guarded condition The 9-year-old boy hit by a truck in Hertford on Halloween night remaips in guarded condition at Pitt Memorial Hospital. The child, whose name has not been released, is breathing without the aid of a respirator, according to Hertford Police Chief Bennie Murphy, He underwent surgery last week on his two broken legs. He ^aid doctors still do not know ifvthe child has any neurological damage. .. The bdy allegedly ran ip,to the path of a truck operated by Christopher Lee Dail of Tyner. No charges have been filed.; County voter turnout heavy By SUSAN R. HARRIS Editor Perquimans County voters raised their voices loudly last Tuesday, as 59 percent of those registered cast ballots in the general election. Of the county’s 6,971 regis tered voters, 4,088 showed up to vote. Even with the high number of voters. Elections Supervisor Eula Forbes said there were few problems during the day. “It was great,” Forbes said. “Everything has just gone wonderfully well.” Other counties in the state reported long lines and hours spent waiting to vote, but wait ing time in Perquimans rarely exceeded 15 minutes, Forbes said. Poll woekrs reported heavy voting when the polls opened at 6:30 a.m., again at lunch time and then after peo ple got off work. Polls in all seven precincts closed on time. There was also little prob lem with DMV registrations, a concern in other counties, according hastate election offi cials. Forbes credited provisional ballots with helping to keep voting lines moving and prob lems at the polls to a mini mum. When poll workers could not find a voter’s name on the records in the precinct where the voter showed up to vote and other precincts where the voter might have been regis tered could not be reached, voters were given provisional ballots. Each voters’ ballots were sealed in an envelope, marked with the voters’ names, and turned in with bal lots and abstracts to the elec tions board Tuesday night. Election officials checked reg istration records for the names, verified registration, and counted all verified provi sional ballots. Forbes attributed Tuesday’s high voter turn-out to public interest in the presidential and gubernatorial races, and the fact that county commissioner candidate Bert Hayes can vassed door-to-door in his suc cessful election bid. The outcome of the vote in Perquimans did not change Friday when the county can vas was held by election offi cials. Forbes said the verifica tion and canvas process was made easier and more efficient thanks to the computer pro gramming work of John Jennings, a former elections board member and present chief judge for the Bethel precinct. Jennings has been instrumental in setting up county files, Forbes said. The Winfall Fire Department received a grant check for $5,129.87 from the N.C. Department of Insurance this month. The money is from the Volunteer Fire Department Fund set up by Insurance Commissioner Jim Long to assist fire department all over the state. “One of the reasons that we feel so strongly that this fund is needed is that it frees up the time of these fire fighters for further training,” Long said. “Without this grant, fire fight ers would be forced into spend ing too much of their time fund raising just to keep departments afloat.” The fund was established in 1988 and has granted nearly $22 million through 1996. To qualify for a grant, the fire department must be a volun teer organization, must be able to match the grant for up to $20,000 and must show need based on a set of objective cri teria. “North Carolina is extreme ly fortunate to have an out standing network of highly trained fire fighters protecting life and property, “ Long said. “Providing these fire fighters with better equipment will fur ther help public safety and keep fire insurance rates as low as possible.” The new WinfaU equipment was inspected by Kay Bennett, Deputy Director with the Eastern Regional Office of the Department of Insurance. Bennett presented the check to Kelvin Roberson, a Winfall fire fighter. Outside w-wra k 1 * 1 r ] 1 ] High: Low: High: Low: 50s 30s 50s 30s PARTLY CLOUDY PARTLY CLOUDY High: Low: 50s 30s FAIR