P ,The ERQUIM P11/C11******CAR-RT LOT**C h , lihiiii"ii' ,l i'i l, ll"ii' l,l i'i l i l i l " PERQUIMANS COUNTY LIB, 110 WACADEMY ST HERTFORD NC 27944-1306 001 A0027 '■|||■!l|■|||•|||ll|ll , JV E E K LY To Benefit Open ood Pantry ®=ta ° ^MUL 'llQaSta 0 ^unK :eys and other food nksgiving Dinner Drop Off at 200 Dobbs Street Hertford United Methodist Church "News from Next Door" NOV 1 5 REOD WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 15, 2017 50 cents Hertford Police Chief retires BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Hertford is in the market for a new police chief Hertford Town Manager Brandon Shoaf confirmed that Chief Douglas Freeman has set a retirement date of Dec. 1. His last day in the of fice was Tuesday. “Then he’ll be out for a medical procedure,” Shoaf said in an e-mail. “Doug has done well for the town and he will be missed.” The town board will de cide this week how to go about replacing Freeman, Shoaf said. “We’ll have an interim in place until we can put together a hiring process,” Shoaf said. Freeman could not be reached for comment. He submitted his letter on Oct. 30 and it was accepted on Nov. 1, Shoaf said. Freeman was hired in 2012. Freeman replaced Inter im Chief Mike Carver who has served at the helm of the local police department following the termination of former chief Joe Amos. | Amos was fired over an is sue involving a Facebook post and the arrest of then Hertford Town Council candidate Quentin Jackson. Carver, a retired 30-year law enforcement veteran, agreed to take the job only until a replacement could be hired. At that point Freeman had more than 22 years of law enforcement experi ence and was serving as deputy chief of police for a 15-man police department in North Topsail Beach in Onslow County. At the time Shoaf said Freeman was selected through a process that start ed with over 75 applications ] from all over the United States. Shoaf hired Freeman for the position following an See CHIEF, 2 STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Dr. Mark Olesen, a retired Navy captain, speaks Saturday at the Veteran’s Day ceremony in Hertford. Crowd honors local veterans BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Temperatures in the low 40s didn’t stop several hundred people from attending a Veteran’s Day event out side the courthouse in Hertford Sat urday. The speaker, retired U.S. Navy captain Dr. Mark Olesen, still works at the V.A clinic in Elizabeth City. He stressed that he was speaking in an unofficial capacity. Olesen admitted he was a little rusty at public speaking since he re tired five years ago. “It’s a rare pleasure for this old country doctor to be speaking in front of you today.” He largely quoted a speech Presi dent Ronald Reagan made in 1985. Reagan remarked about how we may view those lost in war as old and wise, but many were just boys when they died. “They gave up two lives, the one they were living and the one they would have lived. When they died they gave up their chance to be hus bands and fathers and grandfathers. They gave up their chance to revered old men, they gave up everything for our country, for us.” Reagan went to say “the living have a responsibility to remember the conditions that led to the wars in which our heroes died. Perhaps we can start by remembering this: that all of those who died for us and our country were , in one way or anoth er, victims of a peace process that STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Richard Caporale, a retired Navy Chief Petty Officer, gestures Saturday during the Veteran’s Day ceremony in Hertford. Caporale is Commander of American Legion Post 126. failed. Victims of a decision to forget certain things, to forget, for instance that the surest way to keep a peace going to work is to stay strong. “Strength is a condition that de clares that actions have consequenc es. Strength is a prudent warning to the belligerent that aggression need not go unanswered. Peace fails when we forget that agreements, once made, cannot be broken without a price.” He also said peace fails when peo ple forget common sense. “Common sense tells us that man has magic in him, but also clay. Com mon sense can tell the difference between right and wrong. Common sense forgives errors, but always recognizes it to be error first.” Saturday’s event was special in that it reached out to all Vietnam War era veterans to make sure they knew they were appreciated. The event in Hertford was spon sored by the William Paul Stallings Post 126 of the American Legion with support from Legion Post 362. See VETERANS, 2 Jackson, Norman election winners BY PETER WILLIAMS News Editor Voters sent two new peo ple to the Hertford Town Council last week, and for the first time in more than 250 years of the town, blacks hold the majority on the five-member board. Also for the first time since 2002, there are no women on the board. Quentin Jackson and Frank Norman finished first and second in the four way race for two seats on JACKSON the town council. Losing out were Ed Lane and Lillian Holman. Each served the — past eight KIMML years. Jackson garnered * 213 votes L - while Nor- L man col- lected 198. Lane fin- NORMAN ished with 177 votes and Holman had 162 votes. Hertford today is made up of roughly 50 percent black residents and 50 per cent white but until Horace Reid was elected to the council in 1997, the board was all white. At best since then whites held a three-to- two majority on the board. Now blacks how a four-one majority. Does Reid think it will make a difference? “Hopefully it won’t,” Reid said of having the majority. “We as council members need to come together. I don’t want to get into situa tions like in Elizabeth City.” See ELECTION, 2 High school students to present play Friday, Saturday From Staff Reports Students in the Perqui mans County High School theater program will pres ent the play “The Impor tance of Being Earnest” on Friday and Saturday in the high school auditorium. Drama teacher Rachel Sanders said she picked the play because it’s a classic. “It is hysterical and fits our students to a tee. These roles show off their gifts beautifully.” The play will be per ¬ formed Friday at 7 p.m. and Saturday at 2 p.m. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for students. The Importance of Being Earnest is a comedy about Jack Worthing and Alger non Moncrieff who both ironically pretend to have the name Ernest. When Jack proposes to his love, the sophisticated Gwendo len Fairfax, Lady Bracknell refuses to let her daughter accept the proposal. The men’s lack of earnestness soon causes mayhem, when Algernon falls in love with Jack’s ward, the beautiful and young Cecily Cardew. Matters come to a head when Cecily meets Gwen dolen, who happens to be Algernon’s cousin. Ten sions rise as both women believe they are engaged to “Ernest.” The sequence of events only get more cha otic from there and end up revealing long lost secrets that even the characters themselves do not know See PLAY, 2 STAFF PHOTO BY PETER WILLIAMS Perquimans County High School theater students will perform “The Importance of Being Earnest” on Friday and Saturday. Church collecting holiday food From Staff Reports The fourth annual “Tur key Drop” — a countywide collection of turkeys — will be held on Friday and Satur day to assist those in need this Thanksgiving season. The collection is sponsored by The Open Door Food Pantry of Perquimans Coun ¬ ty and the Hertford United Methodist Church. This year’s goal is 200 turkeys and trimmings. Last year the people of Perqui mans County donated 183 turkeys, 736 pounds of food and over $1,400. “We try and raise the goal each year because the need grows each year,” said Vera Harrell, one of the organiz ers of the event. Open Door is planning to help 325 families this sea son, and if donations aren’t made, then the pantry must buy the food and that limits what it can do during other times of the year. Turkeys, canned vegeta bles, sweet potatoes, rice, cranberry sauce and stuff ing mix will be collected curbside at the Hertford United Methodist Church, 200 Dobbs St., between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. on Friday and from 9 am. until 2 p.m. on Saturday. Monetary dona tions will also be accepted. The Open Door Food Pan try will distribute Thanks giving meals on Nov. 20. Ruritans looking for holiday help From Staff Reports The Parksville Ruritan Club is once again reaching out to the community to help children who might not otherwise get anything for Christmas. “Santa Trees” are located at both Wo odard’s Pharmacy and Family Care Phar macy. Hanging on the branches are the names of local children. The families have been screened through the Perquimans County Depart ment of Social Services and the cards have been created for each child that has a genuine need. The cards list the gender, age, wishes and particular needs of each child. The deadline to help is Dec. 6. According to Action for Children in North Carolina, more than 30. percent of the children in Perquimans County live in poverty, said Michael Hurdle, a member of the club. For those children and their families, the holidays are a difficult time, where children face the likelihood of few to no gifts Christmas morning. People are asked to pick a child or group of children and pick up a few gifts then return them wrapped, with the tag attached, to the pharmacy where they got the card. The Ruritans will take it from there and complete this mission of giving by picking up the wrapped toys and dis tributing the gifts to the families.