This is in violation of my own rules but every rule has an exception. I did eliminate the paragraph on the survivors. We have permission from the Daily Reflector to use anything genealogical in nature and I consider this genealogical in nature. The obit did not appear in the online Free Press today. Daily Reflector Ima Mewborn FARMVILLE - Ima Eula Mewborn, 89, passed away on the 5th day of February, 2002, after a period of declining health. A memorial service will be held Friday at 11 a.m. from the Farmville Presbyterian Church. The family will receive friends at the church after The memorial service. A private interment will be held prior to the memorial service at Forest Hills Cemetery in Farmville. She was born May 30, 1912, at Nehucky Farm, Bullhead Township, in Greene County, the second child of George Lemuel Mewborn and Eula Virginia Mewborn. She was preceded in death by her brother, Dr. John Moses Mewborn and wife Margaret McNeill Mewborn; brother-in-law, Varner Rayford Garner; brothers, Henry Drew Mewborn, Quentin Alexander Mewborn and Marvin Bruce Mewborn; and sister, Manora Mewborn Nunn and husband Malcolm Dee Nunn. After graduation from Snow Hill High School in 1929, Miss Mewborn attended East Carolina Teachers College, today East Carolina University, and graduated in 1933. She enjoyed a long career as a nurse associated with the family practice of her brother, Dr. John Mewborn, taking particular pride in helping Dr. Mewborn to deliver many healthy babies in the Farmville community and surrounding area. Miss Mewborn was also a talented needle artist, sharing examples of her beautiful needlepoint and crochet work with her relatives and friends. Miss Mewborn enjoyed a lifetime interest in genealogy and local history. In her retirement, she and her sister, Ailine Mewborn, traveled widely researching family lines, relished a lively correspondence with genealogists throughout the nation, and often welcomed friends to their Farmville home to share the fruits of their research. Miss Mewborn was an active member of a number of genealogical and historical societies, including Daughters of the American Revolution, Daughters of American Colonists, Colonial Dames of Seventeenth Century, Jamestown Society, Magna Carta Dames, Eastern North Carolina Genealogical Society, Old Dobbs Society and many others. She served many years as registrar for her chapters of DAR and DAC. Ima and Ailine Mewborn were also early benefactors of Heritage Place at the Learning Resources Center of Lenoir Community College, contributing time, print resources and funds to the establishment of the premier genealogical collection in eastern North Carolina. In 1999, she donated her collection of personal papers and research, "These Are My People," to Heritage Place. In lieu of flowers, contributions may be made to Heritage Place, Learning Resources Center, Lenoir Community College, Kinston, N.C. 28501 or to Farmville Presbyterian Church, 310 Grimmersburg St., Farmville, N.C. 27828.