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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0001" />
        <p>WEATHER</p>
        <p>Variable cloudiness with scattered showers and a little warmer through Saturday.</p>
        <p>eSth Year NO. 126</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>MEMBER OP ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AAAY 27, 1966</p>
        <p>16 Pages Today</p>
        <p>7 INSIDt READING</p>
        <p>Page f-Laser ersaef tnaort Page Aydea gaiae fiMto Page II Seawell is taspfdeas</p>
        <p>Price 5 Cents</p>
        <p>Bid Accepted</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-State Sen. Thomas H. White, chairman of the Advisory Budget Commission, announced today the contract for 75 motor graders for the * State Highway Commission will be awarded to North Carolina Equipment Co. of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>White noted the Raleigh firm submitted the lowest of four bids several weeks ago.</p>
        <p>The motor grader bid had been in controversy since rival firms complained that the Highway Commission had tailored specifications for the frad rs to meet North Caro-1 na Equipments product, Gallon.</p>
        <p>Rebellious Yiel Nam Leader And Premier Meet</p>
        <p>Practice For Coming Flight</p>
        <p>Now Fewer Voters On N.C. Books</p>
        <p>By EDWIN Q. WHITE</p>
        <p>SAIGON, South Viet Nam (AP)  The leader of rebellious Vietnamese Army forces in Hue, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Chanh Thi, was flown under a U.S. guarantee of safety today to a secret meeting with Premier Nguyen Cao Ky.</p>
        <p>Ky flew from Saigon to meet his bitter rival as U.S. planes evacuated 45 Americans and other foreign civilians from Hue and the Buddhist strongholds prOgovemment mayor moved out of the city with 1,000 loyal troops to a fortified headquarters five miles southeast of Hue.</p>
        <p>Ky and Thi, whom the premier had fired as commander of the armys 1st Corps on March 10, met at the U.S. 1st Marine Divisions headquarters at Chu Lai, about 85 miles south of Hue.</p>
        <p>Kys dismissal of Thi, who controlled South Viet Nams five no them provinces, precipitated the countrys present political crisis. Politically minded Buddhist leaders seized on the unrest the ouster generated in the north and converted it into a movement demanding the military governments replacement by a civilian regime.</p>
        <p>U.S. officials had tried before</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)Negro voter registrrtion in North Carolina Bhowed an increase of 24,644 during the past year while purging of deceased and former voters resulted in a decline of 64,-251 in white voter registration.</p>
        <p>Alex Brock, executive secrete of the State Board of  tions, said Thursday statewide registration stands at 1,915,388, down 39,610 from 1965.</p>
        <p>Brock said numerous counties havo purged their books of deceased persons, persons who have moved outsid: the state and other persons no longer eli-</p>
        <p>gible. New countywide regjs-'^ success to get Ky and frationshavebeenheldinmaiylTh'  *"  'P*</p>
        <p>counUes, he added.    L</p>
        <p>Brock gave this breakdown:    smg  of</p>
        <p>white1965 registration, 1,710,-  i</p>
        <p>314 compared with 1,646,060 in 196C; Negro1965 registration,</p>
        <p>244,684 compared with 269,318 in 1966.</p>
        <p>He said the figures point out what he termed the reckless charges made by Dr. Reginald A. Hawkins, Charlotte dentist and c! il rights leader.</p>
        <p>Hawkins earlier this month asked U.S. Atty. Gen. Nicholas Katzenbach to put North Carolinas voter registration program under federal control because he said nobody in North Carolina is willing to register the Negro voter.</p>
        <p>A U.S. plane brought Thi from Hue to Chu Lai to meet Ky, then flew him back to Hue after the meeting.</p>
        <p>There was no immediate indication of what transpired between the two generals.</p>
        <p>All we know was it was a very solid session, an authoritative source said. They met for some time.**</p>
        <p>No Americans were present at the meeting although it was held at the Marine headquarters. There were eports other members of Kys ruling junta were present.</p>
        <p>The evacuation of Americang from Hue, 400 miles north of Saigon, followed the burning of the U.S. Information Service library there Thursday by a mob of Buddhist youths. A U.S. spokesman in Saigon said the American consul in Hue, Thomas Corcoran, had apparently requested the evacuation, because there was insufficient protection for American personnel and facilities.</p>
        <p>The spokesman said half a dozen essential Americans remained in Hue.</p>
        <p>Two U.S. planes flew the evacuees to Saigon. They included American aid personnel, construction employes, relief workers, teachers, and some Filipinos, Canadians, Nationalist Chinese and West Germans.</p>
        <p>Poppy Sale To Be Held Tomorrow</p>
        <p>Between 10,000-11,000 To Polls?</p>
        <p>Primary Candidates</p>
        <p>Make</p>
        <p>Final Bids Today; Moderate Vote Predicted Over County</p>
        <p>Plan Memorial Day Services Sunday</p>
        <p>The Rev. William K. Quick,.sented by Ernest L. Avery, pastor of St. James Methodist post adjantent. Special music Church, will be the guest speak-will be presented by Eugene</p>
        <p>er Sunday, in services honoring American war dead.</p>
        <p>The services, sponsored by the American Legion Post 39,</p>
        <p>Citizens of Greenville will join some 20 million other Americans Saturday in paying tribute to Americas war dead by buy i n g t|ie American Legion Auxiliarys Memori a 1 Poppy.</p>
        <p>Volunteer Auxiliary workers will be stationed at posts in Greenville all during the day. Ail funds derived from the activity will be utilized for the aid of disabled veterans, their families and families of deceased servicemen.</p>
        <p>According to Mrs. Alf r e d Kennedy, American Le g i o n Auxiliary Poppy Chairman, approximately 500,000 Americans died and nearly 1 million were wounded in wars during the past 50 years. The memorial poppies, fashioned by disabled veterans, signify not only the dead and wounded of two world wars and the Korean Conflict, but will also include more 2,000 servicemen and 10,000 wounded in the Viet Nam war, Mrs. Kennedy said.</p>
        <p>The poppy grew on the battlefields of France and Bel-</p>
        <p>Moore, director of the Aydeni  following</p>
        <p>High School Chorus. He will be | First World War, the pop-accompanied  on the organ byi  Py became recognized as na-</p>
        <p>Mrs.  Moye Dail.  '  tures tribute to the war dead</p>
        <p>Bugler for  the  special cere-   adopted  as  the</p>
        <p>monies will  be  Rose Highs'  American Legions and  Auxil-</p>
        <p>Maurice E.  Sherman.  :  iarys official memorial flow-</p>
        <p>The public  is invited to the'  er.</p>
        <p>services and  all  veterans are! -</p>
        <p>urged to attend.</p>
        <p>GEMINI FLIGHT PRAC7TICE  Gemini 9 pUot Thomas Stafford, scheduled to make a three-day orbital flight starting Wednesday with co-pilot Eugene Ceman, works with a hatch of his practice spacecraft at Cape Kennedy. Backup pilots Edwin Aldrin and James Lovell were checking out the electrical systems of the Gemini 9 spacecraft atop the Titan 2 booster rocket. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>By G. C. CHAPMAN</p>
        <p>CancUdates vfor Democratic nomination for State Senate, House, District Solicitor, County Commissioners and Board of Education and sheriff are today putting in their last bids for support from within the nine counties involved as election time draws increasingly nearer.</p>
        <p>A moderate vote has been predicted at Pitt Countys 25 precincts in tomorrows Democratic primary.</p>
        <p>J. H. Harrel, Chairman of the Democratic Executive Committee, said this morning that the races for State Senate and House of Representatives have stirred considerable inter^est, but not enough to draw a large vote.</p>
        <p>If the weather is good, I think we well have a fair vote of between 10,000 and 11,000, Harrell said.</p>
        <p>In agreement with that opinion, Pitt Elections Board Chairman Bruce Kooce said he does not expect a big vote tomorrow.</p>
        <p>Koonce today made the rounds of the countys precincts, making last minute preparations and setting up the voting booths.</p>
        <p>The Elections Board Chair</p>
        <p>man again urged all registered voters to go to the polls tomorrow and reminded voters in Greenville Number Five of a change in location of that precinct</p>
        <p>Formerly located at Keels Warehouse, the precinct headquarters and voting booths are now situated at the new American Legion Building on St. Andrews Drive.</p>
        <p>Walter B. Jones of Farmville, recently - elected Congressman from the First District, is unopposed in his bid for nomination as Congressional candidate in November.</p>
        <p>He will, however, be challenged in November by Republican candidate Dr. John P .East of Greeville.</p>
        <p>The opposed candidates, still on the campaign trail today and expected to continue their bids for support right up to the last minute tomorrow, have issued some last-minute statements for the voting public.</p>
        <p>Probably the hottest race In Pitt County is the four -way race for nomination for Pitts two seats in the House in the 1967 General Assembly.</p>
        <p>Incumbent Pitt Representative W A.. (Red) Forbes of Win-</p>
        <p>Gemini Flight Campaigns Over On Wednesday \Sia\e Near End</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) get satellite for the astronauts The Gemini 9 rendezvous and to chase and dock with, space walk flight today was The new schedule calls for postponed one day, until next the Atlas to be launched at 11 Wednesday, to give a launch | a.m. (EDT) Wednesday, with</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Campaign- Press shows Smith Bagley of ing is about over for North Car-</p>
        <p>team more Ome to prepare an Atlas target rocket.</p>
        <p>The launching of the Atlas and the Titan 2 carrying astronauts Thomas P. Stafford and Eugne A. Cernan had been set for Tuesday morning.</p>
        <p>But the National Aeronautics and Space Administration said today that the Atlas launch crew was on a tight schedule and needed additional time to prepare the rocket. Reports were that the work on the pad was 24 hours behind schedule. The Atlas is to launch a tar-</p>
        <p>REV. WM. QUICK</p>
        <p>will be held at 4 p.m. in the Greenwood Cemetery. Special honor guesjts for the Memorial Day services will be the Gold Star mothers and fathers.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Quick will be prc-</p>
        <p>Has Feeling Of Being Followed</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) - J. Robert Jones, North Carolinas Grand Dragon of the United Klans of America, has the feeling someones interested in his whereabouts most all the time.</p>
        <p>During a news conference Thursday, Jones talked of the states watchdog committee set u. *0 watch the Klan.</p>
        <p>They follow me like little poodle dogs, Jones said. I look up every once in a while and see them tagging along. 1 dont know whether theyre following me or not, but they sure are going in my direction a lot of times.</p>
        <p>Molotov Cocktails Set 4 Fires In New Disturbance</p>
        <p>New Airports For 16 N.C. Communities</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) The State Conservation and Development Department reported today that new airports were being constructed in 16 North Carolina communities.</p>
        <p>Plans for airports or Improvement of existing facilities are being discussed in 16 other areas of the state.</p>
        <p>The report came after a state survey by Kenneth V. Brugh of Greensboro, Chairman of the governors aviation committee, and Robert N. Flournoy, aviation specialist with the C&amp;amp;D.</p>
        <p>Communities where airport construction is under way arc Ahoskie, Asheboro, Franklin, Morganton- Lenoir, Wadesboro, Goldsboro, Henderson, Mount Airy, Gastonia, Waynesville, Wallace, Edenton, Rocky Mount Wilson, Elkin, Mount Olive and Southern Pines.</p>
        <p>Plans are being drafted for projects in Elizabethtown, Rox-boro, Chapel Hill, Clinton Louis-</p>
        <p>BAKERSFIELD, Calif. (AP)lsaid several suspects were us- Molotov cocktails set fourlder investigation, fires Thursday night in Bakers- Last Sunday night, 125 law</p>
        <p>fields Negro district where ra-'officers were called to quell a  Jacksonville,  Andrews,</p>
        <p>cial trouble broke out earlier major disturbance. Small!xim this week.  ^  groups  of  youths began throw-</p>
        <p>Assistant Fire Chief Robert)ing bottles and rocks at police Paddock said one fire bomb I following an argument between caused destruction of a residen-! Negroes and officers at the tial garage with damage esti- scene of a traffic accident..</p>
        <p>One Negro youth was shot in the leg by an officer who said</p>
        <p>Warsaw, Sylva, Jefferson, Wil-lamston Rockingham, Leaks-ville - Spray, Harnett County, Tarboro and Smitbfield.</p>
        <p>mated at $3,500.</p>
        <p>Paddock said three other fires</p>
        <p>were set but were confined to the youth was about to throw a</p>
        <p>vacant lots  and  part  of  o*'  .</p>
        <p>building with minor  damage I Trouble continued  in  the</p>
        <p>reported  neighborhood  Monday  and  Tues-</p>
        <p>Police Lt.  Clyde  OKane  said | day nights,  but it was  quiet</p>
        <p>no arrests were made. Paddock [Wednesday night</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>Temperatures Saturday through Wednesday will average near normal, warm and humid most of period. Precipitation will total one-half inch or more, mostly as afternoon and evening showers</p>
        <p>AAUP Unit Condemns Eure Attack</p>
        <p>The East Carolina College chapter of the American Association of University Professors has adopted a resolution condemning recent statements attributed to Secretary of State Thad Eure, which were aimed at Dr. John P. East.</p>
        <p>Dr. East is a political science professor at East Carolina and Republican candidate to the First District seat in the U. S. Congress.</p>
        <p>Eure, in an Ahoskie speech earlier this month attacked East for running for public office and teaching in a public institution at the same time.</p>
        <p>The resolution, which was passed on May 24, reads: Be it resolved that the East Carolina College Chapter of the American Association of University Professors strongly condemns the statements of the Secretary of State of North Carolina, Thad Eure, as reported in the May 6, 1966, Ahoskie Herald, to wit, that John East, the Republican candidate for Congress from the First Congressional District of North Carolina, because he is a foreigner and a Republican, should not have been hired as a professor of political science at East Carolina College.</p>
        <p>Members of the local Association in past resolutions, have supporte(i a completely n o n -discriminatory policy in the hiring of faculty members and has encouraged political activity as an individiial American right of members of the faculty.</p>
        <p>The AAUP chapter voted to send copies of the resolution to Secretary Eure, Governor Dan K.' Moore, the. president and trustees;,, of East Carolina Col-(Continued On P^ge 16&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Gemini 9 to follow at 12:39 p.m.</p>
        <p>The flight is to last three days, during which the astronauts will practice several techniques for future moon flights and Cernan is to take a space walk of 2 hours 25 minutes.</p>
        <p>The Gemini 9 spaceship Thursday went through three practice countdowns that enabled technicians to checks its complex electronic systems and inflight procedures.</p>
        <p>A major physical examination for Stafford and Cernan is planned Saturday.</p>
        <p>The new target satellite - Saturdays primary known as an Augmented Target Docking Adapter (ATDA)  is about 11 feet long, 15 feet shorter than the Agena.</p>
        <p>Martin Looks For A Small Vote Turnout</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSTON - A fairly small turnout at Martin County polls tomorrow has been predicted by Democratic Executive Committee Chairman Nat Johnson.</p>
        <p>Johnson, noting that there pe only two races in the county in this election, said today tht the races for seats on the County Boards of Education and Commissioners might attract more people, but Im not looking for a particularly heavy vote.</p>
        <p>The races involved are between incumbent J. J. Thigpenand Frank Scott of Wil-liamston, his challenger, for Board of Commissioners; and H. N. Jackson and incumbent Robert Haislip on the Board of Education.</p>
        <p>Other candidates, all unopposed, seeking election or re-election include: J. A. Everett Jr., seeking his first term as one of Martin and Halifax C!)ountys delegates to the House of Representatives; Thorne Gregory of Halifax, seeking re-election as the second Martin-Halifax Representative: incumbent sheriff Raymond Rawls; incumbent Clerk of Court Bruce Wynne: and incumbents Jack Sharp and Exum Ward, Board of Education.</p>
        <p>olinas candidates and all they can do is await the verdict of the voters in Saturdays primary election.</p>
        <p>The outcome is not expected to significantly alter the lineup of the states delegation to Washington.</p>
        <p>Sen. B. Everett Jordan is considered a certain victor in his contest against Greensboro lawyer Hubert Seymour.</p>
        <p>The states present congressmenwith the exception of Fifth District Democrat Ralph Scott who is retiring  are expiected to advance without difficulty to the November general election.</p>
        <p>will decide Democratic nominees for all the 1967 General Assembly seats as well as for the 11 congressional seats. Republicans are selecting congressional nominees only in the 10th and 11th districts.</p>
        <p>In the Fifth District, a battle between four Democrats for the seat to be vacated by Scott has drawn wide inerest.</p>
        <p>A check of 5th District political leaders by The Associated</p>
        <p>terville, and Greenville attorneys Frank M. Wooten, David E. Reid and H. Horton Rountree are in contention for the two seats.</p>
        <p>Forbes, seeking re-election to his third full term in office, said toady: I hope the people will see fit to let me retain one of those seats.</p>
        <p>Pointing to his voting record in past sessions, Forbes sad he was partially responsible for having gotten us two seats, and expressed the hope that the voters would elect one farmer (himself) and one lawyer, which I think would be a good combination.</p>
        <p>Reid, the young attorney seeking his first elective office, said: In seeking one of Pitts two seats in the legislature, I am attempting to fulfill an ambiton which I have had since I was a boy 15 years old. For many years I have been preparing myself for this opportunity to take an active role in Government.</p>
        <p>If the good people of Pitt County approve my ambition on Saturday, I will leave no stone unturned in my effort to justify their confidence. Rountree said this morning that he has canvassed the entire county, but noted, I regret that I could not see adl the people. AH their interests are my concern.</p>
        <p>Certain things, he stated, are most important for eastern North Carolina, particularly separate university status for East Carolina College. In</p>
        <p>Winston - Salem, heir to the   legislator, I</p>
        <p>Reynolds tobacco fortune, and  * friends h i p</p>
        <p>State Rep. Nick Gahfianakis of ?, ,g*slator in easterri</p>
        <p>Durham are the favorites.  and</p>
        <p>Observers predict a runoff be-  V  ,</p>
        <p>Wooten, who previously ser-</p>
        <p>tween Bagley and Gahfianakis and possibly State Sen. William Z. Wood if he collects the rural vote.</p>
        <p>ved in the House from Pitt (kiunty and is seeking another term, also pointed out f)s con-</p>
        <p>Harold Thomerson, the fourth|,  '-</p>
        <p>candidate in the race, is expected to run last. He has</p>
        <p>served as an aide to Scott and former Fifth District congressmen.</p>
        <p>In the Fourth District, Democrat Harold Ckioley is facing a determined challenge from Raleigh lawyer William A. Creech, who has built his campaign largely on personal attacks against Cooley.</p>
        <p>Coojiys selling point has been his 32 years in the House and his influential post as chairman of the House Agriculture Committee.</p>
        <p>Rep. Basil Whitener in the 10th District has no Democratic opposition. Rep. Roy Taylor in the 11th District is expected to win easily over Bruce Burleson in the primary.</p>
        <p>Studying Fayetteville As State Port Site</p>
        <p>PINEHURST, N. C. (AP)  A The agreement will go to the three-man committee from the [Texas Gulf Sulphur Co, for its North Carolina State Ports Au- approval. Later it will be sub-</p>
        <p>thority will study the feasibility of a state port a Fayeeville.</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>A delegation headed by Fayetteville Mayor Monroe Evans appeared before the Ports Authority Thursday at Pinehurst and requested that considera-</p>
        <p>tion be given to making Fayette-    water  system  to!</p>
        <p>mitted to the governor Council of State.</p>
        <p>The authority also approved allocation of $51,000 for sewage lines at Morehead City to go with $210,000 already appropri-</p>
        <p>llege.</p>
        <p>One of the principal issues to be considered by the 1967 General Assembly will vitally affect ECC. The issue is whether or not North Carolina shall have a higher education system consisting of one large university controlled by one group of administrative officers or several universities which will compete with each other and thereby, in my opinion, provide better education for our people, Wooten stated.</p>
        <p>Another race which has stimulated considerable interest, in Pitt and three neighboring counties, is the three-way race for two Senate seats from Pitt, Warren, Halifax and Edgecombe.</p>
        <p>Julian Allsbrook of Roanoke Rapids, incumbent in the old Warren - Halifax District, is vying with Vernon E. White of Winterville and Vinson Bridgers of Tarboro for one of the two seats.</p>
        <p>Bridgers, a Tarboro attorney, is seeking his first elective office. He said this morning, I am still asking the people in this district to give me one of their two votes.</p>
        <p>I think we need strong representation from this area to protect our interests, the candidate said. Bridgers noted that he has been exremely pleased with the recption Ive had in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>White, a Pitt Countian, said today: I want to tell the peo- &amp;gt; pie of Pitt Couny that Ive oeen</p>
        <p>Twenty-Nine Refugees In 28-Foot Boat From Cuba</p>
        <p>DISPERSE MOB</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP)  Vietnamese marines broke up a howling mob of antigovernment demonstrations here tonight with tear gas and bursts of automatic weapons and small arms fired Into the air.</p>
        <p>ville a port city.</p>
        <p>On the surface it looks like they have a good case for a port in Fayetteville, said John M.</p>
        <p>Reeves, chairman of the Ports Authority.</p>
        <p>Reeves named to the study committee George Purvis of Fa-|</p>
        <p>yetteville, c h a i r m a n; E. N. MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Twenty-Richards of Raleigh and F. H. nine Cubans were jammed into Ross of Charlotte.  ;  a  24-foot  boat,  but most said</p>
        <p>they enjoyed their voyage to exile.</p>
        <p>The trip was wonderful, but hiding in swamps and jungles for three days while Waiting for the boat was not pleasant, said Rodolfo Pearanda, 84-year-old seaman, registering Thursday at the Cuban refugee center. The authority also approved The mosquitoes were big and an agreement under which a $9 hungry. million facility will be built at Penarandas daughter, grand-</p>
        <p>tie in with the Morehead City | unable to contac all the peo-water system.  '  (Continued  On Page 16)</p>
        <p>In other action, the authority adopted a master plan for future development of the Wilmington State Port Terminal. Ports Director James W. Davis said five additional 6(X)-foot berths are included in the long-range plan.</p>
        <p>Morehead City for phosphate shipments.</p>
        <p>handling</p>
        <p>son and great-grandson accompanied him.</p>
        <p>The migrants brought to 122 the total arriving by boat this month, the largest number in any month during a years period.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the organized exile airlift continued. The U.S. government-chartered airlift plane returned Thursday without landing in Cuba because of mechanical trouble.</p>
        <p>Also, the Cuban exile news service, AIP, said a man who argued with Fidel Castro while the two were cutting sugar cine was shot and killed by a Castro boydguard.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0002" />
        <p>Daily Rtf factor, Grttnvillt, N. Friday, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>ECC Computer Workshop Found In Heavy Demand</p>
        <p>There seem to be more Eastern North Carolina high school students and teachers who want to learn how to use computer^ than the East Carolina Colleg officers who want to teach them can keep up with.</p>
        <p>But ECC computer experts' are taking them as fast as they can in a series of introductory computer workshops.</p>
        <p>Currently the last in the five-workshop series is under way with just two Saturday morning sessions to go. It started last Saturday, May 21, but the enrollment was closed more than six weeks earlier. The maximum of 25 was reached on April 4.</p>
        <p>Demand for the workshops has been reflected through maximum enrollment well in advance of each. To date a total of 130 teachers and students from high schools in 56 Eastern North Carolina communities have enroled for the introductory computer course.</p>
        <p>Ahoskie has sent more enroll-ees than any other community, 12 students and one teacher. Ten studebts from Green-vill have enrolld, eight from ' Rocky Mount, seven from Goldsboro and six from Enfield. The other communities have sent from one to four enrollees each, each.</p>
        <p>Because of the great demand for the workshop, the college is planning more of them during the 1966-67 school year.</p>
        <p>Upcoming workshops will be patterned after the 1965-66 series which began last December. Enrollees come to East Carolina for three consecutive Sat-</p>
        <p>PARMVILLE HIGH SCHOOL . . . seniors who will receive their diplomas next week are: (from left) FIRST ROWMike Hardison, Ralph Mozingo, ylvia Lamm, Linda, Modlin, Mary Cobb, Sue Bagley, Joan Baker, Nancy Hobgood, Brenda Hofcood, Nancy Britt, Ben Gardner. SECOND ROWPatsy Britt, Linda Lewis, Deborah Preuler. Glenda Griffis, Evelyn Lewis, Dianne Bell, Cordelia Lewis, Shirley Gay, Mary Ethel Price. THIRD ROWSallie Oglesby, Bobby Ellis, Lorraine Lehman, Joe Webb, Susan Wireless, Janet Owens, Ann Oakley, Clecpatric Strickland, Phyllis Newsome. FOURTH ROWNiancy Joyner,  Janice Blackley, Diane Speight, Jim Darden. Charles Mayo, Eddie Jones, Betsy Flake, Prances Starling, Mary Allen, Roger Mooring. FIFTH ROWNancy Mewborn, Bill Jefferson, Clark Nolen, Henry Bateman, Stanley Carraway. Danny Bowen, David Gay, Carlos Hardison, Becky Smith. SIXTH ROWBrenda Melton, Mary Bradshaw, Nancy Harris, Ann Joyner, J. D. Andrews, Grady Mosley, Dixon Sauls, Eddie Evans. SEVENTH ROWRobert Williford, Irene Smith, Ann Pierce, Cecily Satterthwaite, Noel Darden, Raymond Boone, Jesse Young, Garland Wainwright. EIGHT ROWRay Wooten, Nancy Wilkinson, Randy NichoLs, Pat Bundy, Eddie Allen, Carlton Teel, Garland Mozingo. NINTH ROWPatricia Hobgood, Patricia Venderburg, Sherryl Oakes. Lu Dixon, Clarence Davis, Glenn Letchworth, Scott Lang. TENTH ROWRobert Rose, Claudius Corbett, James Taylor, Bill Creel, George Allen, Billy Lovic, Rusty Duke. ELEVENTH ROWShelton Ches-son, Cecil Eason. Mascots for the class are Ginger Benfield and Allen Lancaster.</p>
        <p>Dodd Reduces His Allegations</p>
        <p>Havana Feeling Power Squeeze</p>
        <p>Bible Literature Face Testing In</p>
        <p>Course</p>
        <p>Seattle</p>
        <p>To</p>
        <p>Court</p>
        <p>By DALE NELSON i determine whether a course on SEATTLE, Wash. (AP)  A court test is coming up here to</p>
        <p>VOTE</p>
        <p>SATURDAY, MAY 28th</p>
        <p>J. CURENCE GALLOWAY</p>
        <p>County Commissioner Groenville District</p>
        <p> BUSINESSMAN ie FARMER  BUILDER</p>
        <p>the Bible as literature in a state university violates a state constitutional ban against use of public funds for religious worship, exercise or instruction.</p>
        <p>On one side are two fundamentalist pastors, the Rev. Thomas W. Miller of Calvary Bible Presbyterian church here and the Rev. Harold Webb of Tacoma Bible Presbyterian church in nearby Tacoma, who say it does.</p>
        <p>On the other are the regents of the University of Washington, the American Civil Liberties Union, and the Seattle and Washington - Northern Idaho Councils of Churches.</p>
        <p>The issue is English 390, the I designation of a course the university has offered in some form or other since 1919. Similar courses are offered in many other state universities, including some whose state constitutions have the same language as Washingons concerning religious instruction.</p>
        <p>The Bible Presbyterian Church which the pastors represent, broke off from the main</p>
        <p>Presbyterian body in the 1930s.  ;</p>
        <p>Reference books give its 1965 authorship is ascribed in</p>
        <p>Last December, the Rev. Mr. Miller and the Rev. Mr. Webb wrote to Prof. David C. Fowler, who is teaching the course this year. They said they thought it should be stopped. Fowler referred them to the university provos, who referred them to the regents. The regents, on the advice of Atty. Gen. John J. OConnells office, replied:</p>
        <p>The board considers the course an imporant part of the universitys curriculum because it offers to those students who desire it an opportunity to sudy a vitally important text of the Western culture in the same manner and with the same approaches as are customary in any class devoted to the study of literary texts</p>
        <p>On April 18, the two pastors filed suit in King County Superior Court to restrain the regents from continuing to offer the course.</p>
        <p>The manner in which the authorship and writing of the Bible is presented, they said, necessarily implies that many of the books of the Bible were not written by those to whom</p>
        <p>the Bible, which presentation necessarily affects a destruction of the Bible as an infallible revelation from God to man.</p>
        <p>Textbooks for the course are the revised standard version of the Bible and outline for the study of the Bible as literature by Prof. Fowler, in which the author says:</p>
        <p>The establishment of a course in the Bible as literature does not necessarily imply that the Bible is assumed to be nothing more than another collection of literary documents. The Bible is more than just another book.</p>
        <p>On May 9, Superior Clourt Judge W. R. Cole denied a request by the plaintiffs to halt the course in midterm, and a motion by the state to dismiss the case. He set trial for June 6.</p>
        <p>The Civil Liberties Union submitted a brief as a friend of the court, contending that to halt the course would violate Prof. Fowlers academic freedom, which it said is protected by the First amendment to the U. S. Constitution. Since then, the Council of Churches groups entered the case in support of the university.</p>
        <p>membership at 11,994 in 95 churches, compared with 3,292,-204 in 9,016 churches for the United Presbyterian Church in the U.S.A.</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>VOTE</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>Vernon</p>
        <p>E.</p>
        <p>WHITE</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>STATE SENATOR</p>
        <p>DISTRICT FOUR - (PITT, EDGECOMBE HALIFAX AND WARREN COUNTIES)</p>
        <p>FARMER &amp;amp; BUSINESSMAN FORMER HIGH SCHOOL PRINCIPAL CHAIRMAN PITT CO. BOARD COMMISSIONERS VICE CHAIRMAN BOARD OF TRUSTEES Fin TECHNICAL INSTITUTE</p>
        <p>Vote - vote - vote</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>THE FARMER &amp;amp; BUSINESSMAN CANDIDATE</p>
        <p>Thia Ai Wan Payei For By PIU County Friends af VERNON E. WHITE</p>
        <p>East Favors Revision Of Supplemental Income Rule</p>
        <p>Free World Is Urged To Share</p>
        <p>GRANADA, Spain (AP)  Secretary of the Treasury Henry H. Fowler today urged other Free World nations to bear a greater share of the burden in aiding underdeveloped countries.</p>
        <p>The progress of development aid should not depend solely upon the United States for stimulation and leadership, Fo'wler said in a speech prepared for the close of the 13th annual Monetary Conference.</p>
        <p>H-' also called 1966 a year of decision for reducing world trade barriers and for agreements by the 10 leading industrial nations  the so-called group of 10  on essential points for international monetary reform.</p>
        <p>Fowler mentioned no specific countries which he felt should increase their aid programs, but he said the appropriate sharing of international aid should be high on the agendas for this falls meetings of the World Bank, the International Monetary Fund, and the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Thomas J. Dodd has revised his conspiracy and libel suit against columnists Drew Pearson and Jack Anderson, shortening the list of allegations, scaling down his damage claims to $2 million and asking for a speedy trial.</p>
        <p>Dodds original suit, filed May 6, asked for a $5 million judgment against the columnists, whose charges of improper conduct against the Connecticut Democrat are being investigated by the Senate Ethics Committee. Dodd requested the committee investigate the charges against him, saying he had nothing to conceal.</p>
        <p>The revised complaint reduces from 14 to three the specific claims of libel and also asks the case be assigned to a single federal judge to speed up pretrial proceedings.</p>
        <p>Dodd said he hoped this would permit all preliminary procedures to be completed in June so trial could begin in July.</p>
        <p>MIAMI, Fla. (AP)  Havana radio broadcast today a request by the government Electric Power Agency that householders use current sparingly in hours of greatest demand.</p>
        <p>The broadcast, monitored in Miami, said brief power interruptions in Havana and other areas result from repairs which are being made in various plants. It said the situation was temporary.</p>
        <p>urdays to learn how to use tUs computer in the ECC math departments Computing Cent::. Each sessipn opens at 9 a.m., has one-hour lunch break ?r i ends at 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Each enrollee pays a tuidc i fee of $20. That includes a t book and supplies needed in ( -veloping a computer progrrn.</p>
        <p>F. Milam Johnson, directo  &amp;lt;  the Computing Center, condue.i the workshops with assistan'^-; from Mrs. Tennala A. Gross of the math faculty.</p>
        <p>The math department cooperates with the Extension Division to offer the series.</p>
        <p>Farmville Clerk Completes Study</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Farmvilles</p>
        <p>town clerk, Carl Beaman, has completed an extensive course in Municipal Government and has been awarded his diploma by the Institute of Government at Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>Beaman, who has been attending the course since last fall, was awarded the diploma last Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Farmville clerk was one of 43 municipal officials who completed the course.</p>
        <p>ARTIFICIAL FLOWERS KEOKUK, Iowa (API-Natural flowers are reportecl scarce so artificial ones will be used to decorate graves at the National Cemetery here Memorial Day, an American Legion spokesman said.</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR</p>
        <p>J. Clarence Galloway</p>
        <p>County Commissioner</p>
        <p>Greenville District</p>
        <p>Selected For Honorary Body</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>HAMILTON - As he spoke to the Lions Club here last evening. Dr. John East, First District Congressional candidate, announced his unqualified support for a recent proposal made by Congressman Charles R. Jonas, Republican from North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Jonas spoke recently befc r e the Mecklen''urg chapter of the American Association of Retired Persons where he called fir an end or liberalization</p>
        <p>management of the Jo h n s on Administration, the consum e r price index rose four - tenths of one per cent to a record high, and the 1.4 per cent cost</p>
        <p>Alan McLeon Harris Greenville has been select e d for membership into Lampas, Transylvania Ckilleges junior and senior leadership honorary. Harris is the son of Mr. and Mrs. James L. Harris, 1611 Beaumont Dr.</p>
        <p>A junior philosophy student at the Lexington, Kentuc k y college, Harris is co-editor</p>
        <p>of living increase from January of the college newspaper, a tu April was the biggest for:member of the Transylvania that period in any year since! Student Council, and a m e m-1951.  her of Phi Kappa Tau fraterni-</p>
        <p>'lact concluded, In view ofjty.</p>
        <p>the sky rocketing cost of living, |  -</p>
        <p>thore is no justification fori  probably  originated in</p>
        <p>putting road blocks in front of Old Persia, our elder citizens who wish to</p>
        <p>Plan 'Pentecost Sunday' Services</p>
        <p>Special Pentecost Sunday services will be held at St. Paul Pentecostal Holiness Church Sunday.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Doner Lee, superintendent of the North Carolina Conference of the Pentecostal Holiness Church, will be the guest speaker. Special singing will be rendered by the Morris Sisters Trio of Vanceboro.</p>
        <p>Dinner will be spread at the fellowship building at 1 p.m. At 2:30 p.m., there will be an inspirational singing program and a sermon.</p>
        <p>GRANDMA IN NAVY</p>
        <p>INDIAN HILLS, Colo. (AP)-Kristine Jo Tays, a Wave, can say Grandma was in the Navy, too. Her grandmother, Mrs. Freda Hawkins, was a member of the Leomanettes in 1917-18.</p>
        <p>ORANGE COFFEE CAKE</p>
        <p>Diener's Bakery</p>
        <p>fff</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>^perfection protection</p>
        <p>for your PRECIOUS FURS!</p>
        <p>Wffvtake pride In the way w# pamper your furs. In our modern storage vaults they are "space hung" In order that chilled oir may flow in and oround them, constantly. This brings out the gleam of your fur, keeps it soft and supple during the summer months. Your furs are protected all ways from heat, moths and theft. Our Perfection Protection costs so little, can you afford less?</p>
        <p>of rulej governing supplenien- earn more than $1500 jf out-tal income earned by those who side income in order to supple-</p>
        <p>receive social security benefits. Presently, those receiving social security benefits may only earn up to a maximum of $1500 of outside income^ in order to qualify for full social security benefits.</p>
        <p>East stated that aojustments in :he maximum aowa b 1 e outside income had been inconsequential since the original social security law in t h e 1930s, whereas the cost of living has soared.</p>
        <p>The candidate noted, I ast m3'th, due to the fiscal mis-</p>
        <p>men their social security benefits.</p>
        <p>Our elder citizens, who have been paying social security pay-r 11 taxes for 30 years, have already earnedt heir social security benefits and it is unjust and unreaslitic to make receipt of the-e benefits dependent upon their not earning over $1500 per year.</p>
        <p>Because of its tremendous wheat production, North Dakota is considered the bread basket of the world.</p>
        <p>JACQUIN^</p>
        <p>VODKA ROYALE</p>
        <p>gZJ</p>
        <p>2K-.</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>ChariM Jac^utn at Cia., Inc.. ehila., P.^ Cit. 1884  80 PROOF</p>
        <p>MILLINERY - SECOND FLOOR</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>ntroduetory ^ ttpeeial I</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>OUR EXCLUSIVE WIGS BY</p>
        <p>100 IITMAN lI.Mil PIA S C\AIUlYIN(i C^^SK ANli WIG FOHM ONI.Y.^fl 9 a 9 5</p>
        <p>This is An Exceptional Buy For Such High Qualify Wigs, Expertly Wefted Of Lustrous 100% Human Hair ... So Light Weight You're Hardly Aware Of It! And With It You Get A Beautiful Black Plastic Patent Carrying Case And Wig Form Too, Choose From 24 Jrrestible Shades, From Raven Black To Silver Platinum,</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0003" />
        <p>Engagements Announced</p>
        <p>Th Daily RafUcter, GrMitvllla, N. C.-rPriday, May 27, 1266-9</p>
        <p>dojnsunxJksA'A diavsn</p>
        <p>By RACHEL K. KINLAW</p>
        <p>Pitt Home Agent</p>
        <p>SiLl*akJ3</p>
        <p>MISS BARBARA ANN BARROW ... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Barrow of Grimesland, who announce her engagement to James S. Buck, son of Mrs. Estor Buck of Grimesland and the late Lyman E. Buck. The wedding will take place In August.</p>
        <p>MISS EMYLA FAYE BARNHILL ... is the daughter of Mrs. R. O. Barnhill of Stokes, who announces her engagement to King David Nelson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wes Nelson of Rt. 5, Greenville. The wedding will take place June 24.</p>
        <p>Four Local Girls Are Chi Omega Members</p>
        <p>Four Greenville girls are new sisters of Chi Omega social sorority at East Carolina College.</p>
        <p>lia Brinkley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. E. Brinkley.</p>
        <p>Miss Dupree, a primary edu-</p>
        <p>They are Myra Dupree,  cation major, won the Best daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. G. Pledge award in her Chi Ome-</p>
        <p>Dupree, Linda Moore, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Moore.</p>
        <p>Joan Evans, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Evans; and Ju-</p>
        <p>ga pledge class.</p>
        <p>UNDA MOORE</p>
        <p>JOAN EVANS</p>
        <p>JULIA BRINKLEY</p>
        <p>Former Resident Is Outstanding -C-Ette Of Year</p>
        <p>Jay-</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH CITY -Mrs. Mary Hudson Kittrell, formerly of Rt. 3,Greenville, was chosen Jay-C-Ette of the Year by the Clkabeth City organization for two years.</p>
        <p>She was presented a plaque for her outstanding work as a Jay-C-Ette this year at the installation of officers.</p>
        <p>The daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hudson, Mrs. Kittrell is a graduate of Chicod High School. She attended Atlantic Christian Cnllege, Wilson, for a year, and then attended ECC.</p>
        <p>She is married to W. B. Kittrell is a graduate of Chicod High School. She attended Atlantic Christian College, Wilson, for a year, and then attended ECC.</p>
        <p>Shower Given Miss Meeks</p>
        <p>She is married to W. B. Kittrell and they reside at 1711 Wesley Dr. here. Her husband is an insurance adjustor and they have a son, Billy.</p>
        <p>In traveling over the county the past few weeks to attend club meetings. I've noticed a nUmbCr of signs advertising strawberries for sale. TJhis delicate fruit la a Wonderful source of Vitamin C and should be enjoyed during the peak of season for theli- red, sweet glory.</p>
        <p>4 One cup contains 4/5 of the daily need of Vitamin Caoout the same amount as a 6 ounce glass of orange juic. Strawberries should be cared for gently and handle them as little as possible.</p>
        <p>When you purchase the fruit, emjHy gently into tray, remove damaged or decayed berries. Cover loosely with waxed paper and store in refrigerator. Before serving, wash quickly and carefully in cold water. Remove caps after berries are clean and dry.</p>
        <p>This week I was in the St. Johns Commtmity and Mrs. Harry Register shared one of her favorite cold oven pound cake recipes with me. I made the cake the next evening and my family and friends have found it very tasty. Perhaps you too will want to try it.</p>
        <p>COLD OVEN POUND CAKE</p>
        <p>2 sticks margarine or butter</p>
        <p>2 cups silgar</p>
        <p>3 cups self-rising flour</p>
        <p>1 cup milk</p>
        <p>2 teaspobn vanilla</p>
        <p>Blend these ingredients well then add five eggs one at a time beating after each addition. Pour into a greased and floured tube pan. Place in cold oven. Bake 55 minutes at 350 P. E&amp;gt;o not open oven door while cake is baking.</p>
        <p>Summertime calls for more refreshing nutritious dairy foods hi menu plans. Keep a good supply of fresh cold milk in the refrigerator for drink time. New In the market are frozen cup custards, a milk and egg convenience food with a real fresh baked custard flavor.</p>
        <p>Call us at 758-1196 or drop by our new office on th corner of Greene and Third Streets for assistance with your homemaking problems.</p>
        <p>Calendar Evtts</p>
        <p>BETHEL NEWS</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. F. E. I*rice Jr. and children, Susan, Patrici a, and Carter, of Charlotte spent the weekend here with h i s mother, Mrs. F. E. Price Sr.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Riddick joined Miss Betty Swackhamer of Stanford, Conn. at the home of Mrs. Gara Bass at Black Creek last weekend. Monday, Miss Wackhamer came to Bethel and spend Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. Riddick. She left Tuesday on her trip for visits with other friends.</p>
        <p>MRS. MARY H. KITTRELL</p>
        <p>Before moving to Elizabeth City, she was employed as a secretary at ECC.</p>
        <p>MYRA DUPREE</p>
        <p>Bridge Club Entertained</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACTIINSES</p>
        <p>BETHEL - Mrs. Frank ' Whitehurst entertained members I of her bridge club at her home Tuesday evening. Spring flowers I were used to decorate tte house.</p>
        <p>SUNGUSSES</p>
        <p>HEARING AIDS</p>
        <p>MAGNinEI</p>
        <p>mu tuam</p>
        <p>bring ymtr prtteriptim</p>
        <p>to:</p>
        <p>Rid3y</p>
        <p>GREENVnu KaMfk Alt OuiMI* AIM ! OreeMberet</p>
        <p>High score prize was awarded to Mrs. W. H. Andrws.</p>
        <p>Miss Judith Ann Meeks, bride-elect of May, was honored at a kitchen shower last night at the home of Miss Val i n d a Whichard.</p>
        <p>Miss Whichard and Miss Kathryn Boyd welcomed the guests while Mrs. Harvejt Whichard presided at the refreshment table.</p>
        <p>Upon arrival, the honoree was presented a corsage consisting of a white carnation and blue ribbon. The hostesses also presented her a gift of crystal in her chosen pattern.  |</p>
        <p>The house was decorated inj green and white. An arrange-' ment of kitchen utensils and' greenery decorated the gift* table.  </p>
        <p>The refreshment table was covered with a white lace cloth and centered with an arrangement of white chrysanthemums, carnations and snapdragons.</p>
        <p>Coming Marriage Is Announced</p>
        <p>Mrs. David Haislip from Roanoke, Va., spent Monday night with Mr. and Mrs. R. N. Simmons.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Jim Marsal of Raleigh spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. D. 0. Speir.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Butter-worth and children, Joe and Gotten, spent the weekend at Morehead.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ward received their M. A. degrees at the graduating exercise in Greenville at East Carolina College Sunday. Tommy Whitehurst, son of Mr. and Mrs. Willard T. Whitehurst, of Bethel also received his M. A. at that time.</p>
        <p>Graham Whitehrst is confined to the Veterans Hospital in Richmond for medical attention.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. William Cadet Whitehurst and Mrs. Brooks i Mills left Sunday for Charlotte on a business trip.</p>
        <p>Newcomers Club Met On Thursday</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Robert Floyd Thompson Sr. of Greenville announce the approaching marriage of their daughter, Jenny Lynn, to Lt. jg Robert Stevens Bell of Pittsburg, Pa., son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert John Bell.</p>
        <p>The private ceremony, which will include only members of the families and close friends of the couple, will take place Saturday, June 11, in St. Peters Catholic Church.</p>
        <p>Observe Birthdays During Weekend</p>
        <p>Others playing were; Mrs. X. E. Manning; Mrs. Alton Carson; Mrs. Janie Etheridge; Mrs. Ralph Carson; Mrs. Clara Roberson; Mrs. Dennie Hardy; and Mrs. Hilton Tetterton was welcomed as a guest.</p>
        <p>^_</p>
        <p>Family Reunion Held On Sunday</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Cynthia and Chris James, children of Mr. and Mrs. C. X. James, celebrated their birthdays 3unhg the weekend.</p>
        <p>Chris was eight years old on May 20 and Cynthia was 12 on May 22. They were honored at a weiner roast at McWhorter Park here.</p>
        <p>Guests included; Jim Manning Clay Pilgreen; Joey Lassiter; Bruce Copeland; Timothy Copeland; Gray Keel; Randy Keel; Eddie James; Debra Manning; Lynn Nichols; Susan James; Gail Michaels; Christie Speir; Pat Keel; and Jenny James.</p>
        <p>Miss Thompson, an alumnae of East Carolina College, has been teaching at Shelton Park School, Virginia Beach, Va. She is a member of Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority.</p>
        <p>Lt. Bell received his engineering degree from the U. S. Naval Academy, Annapolis, Md. He is now stat i 0 n e d in Coronado, Calif., at the Naval Amphibious Base.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lindsay Savage, president, welcomed members of the Newcomers Club at the meet-i ing held Thursday morning at Plantrs Bank.  i</p>
        <p>Following several progres-| sions of cards at four tables | of bridge and two tables of can-: asta, high scores were won by Mrs. Connie Nichols and Mrs. Joan Chenier, bridge, and Mrs. L. D. Austin, canasta. Other winners wee Mrs. Clyde Hollo-well and Mrs. R. T. Rogerson.</p>
        <p>The purpose of the club is| to offer new residents.^a social outlet and an opportunity to be-| come a part of the community.!</p>
        <p>The Newcomers Club meets* the second and fourth Thursday morning at Planter Bank. New residents and interested persons are invited to participate at these meetings. For information telephone Mrs. Savage, PL 2-3966, or Mrs. C. R. Whittington, PL 8-4762.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Grover C. Whitehurst are spending some time in Elizabeth City with their daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Peel.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Whitley and grandson, Russ, were in Rocky Mount iis week to at-tend the Frances Redding School of Dance recital given in the Rocky Mount High School auditorium. Their two granddaughters, Melany and Belynda, participated in several numbers.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. C. Williamson, Mrs. Herbert Brown and daughter, Julie, attended a tea given in Ayden honoring Miss Jennie Brown Worthington, bride-elect, Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. R. L. Langley of Pine-tops ^nd some time here thii^ week with Mr. S. H. Martin and his daughter, Mrs. Simons.</p>
        <p>Dr. and Mrs. W. A. Moody and son were joined by their daughter, Sandra, at Carolina College. From there they went to Danville, Va., for a visit before returning home.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. John Nelson Jr., Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Nelson and Mr. and Mrs. J. L. Woolard won a three-day trip to Washington, D. C. They toured the Capitol, visited President Kennedys grave, the Smithsonian Institute, Museum of Natural History, the Wax Museum and other places of interest.</p>
        <p>The Rev. and Mrs. Hildred Potter are leaving for Atlanta, Ga., where they will attend the graduating exercise of Mrs. Potters sister, Annie Marie Strickland.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joseph Whitehurst went to Atlanta, Ga., to see their son graduate at Georgia Military Academy.</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.~Annual dinner meeting of the Womans Club of Greenville at Ken-land Restaurant. For reservations telej^ne 756-,0216</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Redmen meet 7:30 p.m.  Regular session of Faculty Duplicate Gub meets at Planters Bank 8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholic Anonymous meets at AA Bidg. on Farmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>SATURDAY 10:30 a.m.Informal party honoring Miss Peggy Carole Bentley at the home of Mrs. Grady Nichols. Co-hostesses are Mrs. Aubry Tay^lor and Miss Ann Nichols 12 NoonBridesmaids luncheon honoring Miss Jennie Worthingtott given by Mrs. Thomas Langston and Mrs. Blanie Moye 12:30 p.m.  Bridesmaid luncheon for Miss Judy Meeks at Silo Restaurant given by Mrs. Walter Lee 1:30 p.m.Special duplicate game at Planters Bank 3:30  p.m.Tea honoring</p>
        <p>Miss Peggy Carole Bentley and Miss Ann Elizabeth Nichols given by Mrs. Joe Exum, Mrs. Homer Compton and Miss Linda Compton 6:00 p.m.  i^rehearsal dinner honoring Faulkner-Worthington wedding party given by Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Martin in Ayden 7:30 p.m.Faulkner-Worth-ington wedding rehearsal at the Winterville Christian Church</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Wedding rehearsal for Stancill-Meeks wedding at Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church</p>
        <p>9:00 p.m.  Moose Lodge dance</p>
        <p>9:00 p.HL  After-rehearsal</p>
        <p>party for Stancill-Mceki fiedd-ing party and out-of-town guests in church social room 9:00 p.m.  After-rehearsal party honoring the Faulkncr-Worthington wedding party at the home of BIf. and Mrs. J. C. Williamson in BetbeL Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Brown arc assisting host and hostess SUNDAY 11:30 a.m.Wedding breakfast honoring the Faulkner-Worthington wedding party and out-of-town guests at the Candlewick Inn. Host and hostesses are Mr. and Mrs. John D. Btadsher and Mrs. Mildred B. Manning 11:30 a.m.Wedding breakfast at Shamrock, Farmville, honoring Stancill-Meeks wedding party and out-of-town guests</p>
        <p>3:30 p.m.The wedding of Miss Judith Ann Meeks and Rue! Seth Stancill will take place at the Meadowbrook Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>3:30 p.m.The wedding of Miss Jennie Brown Worthington and Gardner Faulkner will take place at the Winterville Christian Church. Reception following at the brides home</p>
        <p>Ayden News</p>
        <p>PERSONALS</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Jim Abernathy spent part of last week in South Carolina.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Worthington attended the Broome funeral in Aurora on Sunday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. P. R. Taylor and Mrs. Allan Johnson spent the weekend at Kures Beach.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Juanita Elks of Norfolk spent the weekend with relatives.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Brantley Speight spent Sunday in Aurora with W. A. Broome and attended the funeral of his mother, Mrs. Emma Broome.</p>
        <p>  ,  ^  ,  Mrs.  Bonne  McCormick  spent</p>
        <p>H. P. Jobnson of Greenville!,he weekend In Aurora and at-</p>
        <p>has returned home from the</p>
        <p>Veterans Hospital Durham.</p>
        <p>Mrs. J. A. Neilson, a former Greenville resident, arrived here today to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Paige. She will visit here through Sunday.</p>
        <p>BIRTHS</p>
        <p>tended the funeral of Mrs. Emma Broome.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Mae Tripp and son have arrived from California after Mr. Tripps tour of military duty.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Viola Wadkins spent Sunday in Wilson.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ray Frith and family of Charlotte art visiting Mrs. Lillian Hart Miss Cathy Respess of Roc-</p>
        <p>Evans</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. R. H. |</p>
        <p>Evans Jr., a daughter, Louise ;ky Mount, spent the weekend Herring, on May 20, 1966, in with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. North Carolina Memorial Hospi-'Joe Respess.</p>
        <p>tal, Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>RoUins</p>
        <p>Bora to Mr. and Mrs. William</p>
        <p>Z. 0. Whitford Sr. of Clay Root attended the Shrine Convention in Wilson.</p>
        <p>A D 11-  #  Jackson,  Mrs.</p>
        <p>A. Rollins of 14 E Retmann van Dudley of Vanceboro and Ave., a son, TOlliam Henry, on Mr, jobnnie Overton and Dol-</p>
        <p>May 25, 1966, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Encampments At Camp Hardee</p>
        <p>For the past six weekends. Camp Hardee has been the scene of great activity. Girl Scout encampments were held for troops in the district averaging over 150 girls for each encampment.</p>
        <p>The encampments were divided into two groups: Cadettes and Seniors, grades seven through 12; and Junior girls, grades four through six.</p>
        <p>The scouts participated in a program of games, crafts, songs, hiking and camping.</p>
        <p>A highlight of the weekend was a ceremony around the campfire on Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Warren</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Lindsay Warren of Stoke?, a ison, Lindsay Allen, on May 26, 1966, in the Bethel Clinic, Bethel.</p>
        <p>ly of Greenville spent Monday in Rocky Mount</p>
        <p>BARBECUE DINNER A barbecue dinner, sponsored by the mission department of the Ladies Auxiliary of the Pentecostal Free Will Baptist Church, Black Jack, will be held Saturday, May 28.</p>
        <p>The dinner will beg^ at 9:00 a.m. at Helen Adams Store in Black Jack.</p>
        <p>FAMILY REUNHM BETHEL  The descendants of the Tate Jim Whitdiurit will have their annual family reunion Sunday, May 29, at the</p>
        <p>home of Vance Whitehurst, son of the late Zeb B. Whitehurst.</p>
        <p>OFENINQ SOON WEE FOLKS Nursery and KinderrarlMi Mrs. Doof MorfftB Director For Further Informstloa CsU 75(Mill After i:Oe pan.</p>
        <p>BETHEL  The family of Fannie Bryant and Mike Manning held their family reunion Sunday at the Masonic Lodge here.</p>
        <p>James A. Manning welcomed the group. B. K. .Manning of Ajo-on, OUo, was guest speaker.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Kenneth Sexton gave the invocation.</p>
        <p>MEET THE NEED WITH REID</p>
        <p>CUSTOM-MADE</p>
        <p>DRAPERIES 1. Free estimate In yeiir home t. Ne larger fabric selection In</p>
        <p>N. C.</p>
        <p>s. Decorator-Consnltant</p>
        <p>4. InstallatiOB. rods, etc. by trained personnel</p>
        <p>5. Over 5.000 satlsfled customers.</p>
        <p>6. Our 20 years experience Is to yonr advantage. Take ne Chance.</p>
        <p>HOME FURNITURE STORE '</p>
        <p>(Free parking back ef Stere)</p>
        <p>Announcinq</p>
        <p>THE OPENING</p>
        <p>A-</p>
        <p>Hair Styling Academy</p>
        <p>Mitchell's Academy Is Now Open For Appointments For Their June Class. They Invite You To Come By Or Call At Your Convenience.</p>
        <p>CALL 752-g050 PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>mnmk</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0004" />
        <p>iridiy, AAy 27, 1966</p>
        <p>A Multiplying Of Special Agencies</p>
        <p>If care isnt taken to coordinate all the coor-dinatinir agencies that have been set up to help auch areas as Eastern North Carolina pull itself out of economic difficulties, the agencies are going to leave little room for any other kind of economic development.</p>
        <p>Now please dont misunderstand. We are cer tain the economic disadvantaged areas appreciate the efforts that are being made on their behalf by state anl federal programs. We are sure that the programs are making headway in helping some areas out of the economic doldrums they have experienced. Notwithstanding these factors, there is bound to be a point of diminishing returns in this pyramiding of agencies for development and coor-dnation of development.</p>
        <p>We seriously ^uestipn whether that point is not being approached.</p>
        <p>Latest venture into this field is an Applachia-style comission that will combat economic depres-aion in the Coastal Plain areas of North Carolina,</p>
        <p>N.C. Turns To Gallup Survey</p>
        <p>By WILUAM A. SHIRES GALLUP  Gallup poll survey teams and research method will be put to work shortly in a new effort to help North Carolina officials learn more about the states tourist and vacation potential.</p>
        <p>If auccessful, officials feel the reaulting infonnati o n on public attitudes and travel .promodoo. Signs presently point to reouests for big increases in the state advertising budget The idea will be to hire the Gallup organisation of Princeton, N. J., one of the nations lea^Hng public opinion aurvey firma, to collect baaic data and information heretofora unavailable.</p>
        <p>It will conduct out-of-state amplinp and attempt to measure public attitudes toward various participating atates aa travel and vacation locations.</p>
        <p>COST - SUIa officiaU feel the cost will be relatively modest.</p>
        <p>North Carolioa's participa-t i 0 s will boost only ^,900 a year and the Travel and Promotion comndttee of the State Board of Conservation and De-velopnmt has given a go-ahead lor the state to sign up by a June 0 deadline. Funds for the first year's par-tidpatioo will coma from the eurrent advertising budget.</p>
        <p>The committee unanimously approvad the proposal by Travel and Promotion (hrector Bill Hensley at a budget meeting fids wetfc.</p>
        <p>SURVEY - The Gallup plan to undsrtike a new sort of surveying of public attitudes towa^ Individual states groupa of states was conttin-ed in a propossl submitted to Gov. Dan X. Moore who in turn sent it to Hensley for tody.</p>
        <p>Tba tyavil and Promotion committee wss interested im</p>
        <p>mediately. Such a plan, it said, would be in addition to the annual Copeland Travel Survey sponsored by the state and the Travel Council of North Carolina which measures total receipts of travel serving firms in the state for overall economic impact.</p>
        <p>Hensley said the Gallup program will also chart trends and report changes in public attitudes resulting from publicity, advertising, promotion andtother factors.</p>
        <p>BUDGET  The Travel and Promotion committee meanwhile received a detailed report on increased advertising costs and suggestions that the states advertising budget for 1967-69 be increased to $750,-000.</p>
        <p>The report by the J.T. Howard Advertising Co., which holds the states advertising contract, said that to duplicate in the coming year what your budge bought in 1962 requires about $119,000 more. It said the buying power* of the state advertising budget has dropped this much in four years.</p>
        <p>Media space, it said, is up 23 per cent; production costs are up 29 per cent and printing costs are up 15 per cent from 1962.</p>
        <p>It proposed a breakdown of the $750,000 overall figure as $500,000 for travel advertis-$200,000 in industrial advertising and $50,000 for Travel and Promotion division activities.</p>
        <p>SPECIFIC  Before considering new advertising budget proposals, the committee asked Hensley to include more specifics to back up requests for increases in his divisions budget.</p>
        <p>For example, Hensley asked for a $10,000 increase for postage, telphone and telegraph which he said already has been runninf over $30,000 a year. Were going to need at least $$0,000,'* he said, especially if an increased budget for advertising is approved.</p>
        <p>This would result In more inquires to the division.</p>
        <p>He requested a $5,000 increase in travel expense to cover additional personnel now employed In the division and asked for a $24,000 Increase in the budget for printing and binding.</p>
        <p>The Doily Reflector</p>
        <p>INC09P0KATID</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHA9D, Chairman Of The Board</p>
        <p>PubliiHfd Evary Afttrnoon Excapt Sunday Estibllshad 1982 JOHN 5. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Pubiishars</p>
        <p>ftitarsd at Poat Offlea, OreenviUe, N. c. aa atoond elaaa mall matter.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES By  Carrier  (In Towns)  Week  SOe</p>
        <p>By  Ctrrier  (Motor Routes)  Week  35c</p>
        <p>By MAIL Payahia In Advanca</p>
        <p>OfffnviUt Post Office, Pitt County, BobersonvUle, Vsnceboro, WsiAllaiten snd Ohoeowinity.</p>
        <p>Threa  Mentha ........................  3-7*</p>
        <p>x  MenUu ..........  7.00</p>
        <p>Ona  Yaw ......  $i8.00</p>
        <p>North CaroUne (other than listed above)</p>
        <p>Three  Monthe ...........  AOO</p>
        <p>Blx Month# ..................  7.50</p>
        <p>One Tear ...............................$t&amp;lt;  oo</p>
        <p>Phif 3% N. C, Balea Tax All Other Outside North CtroUna</p>
        <p>Three  Months  ........  4.25</p>
        <p>Six  Montlw .............................. S.OO</p>
        <p>Ope  Vasr ...................  $is.oo</p>
        <p>NIBIBBB absoctatid prbbb</p>
        <p>The AaaaelMN press is ojtclufilvely entltied to use for pubU-GStien sU aaws dispatches eredited to it or not otherwise credited to &amp;gt;hia paper snd also the local news published herein. Ah rights of publications of special dispatches here are also marrad.</p>
        <p>South Carolina and Georgria. It will be a joint state-federal undertaking to study and deal with such things as water resources, education, transportation, health and economic problems of various kinds.</p>
        <p>It seems to us there already are a number of various kinds at work on each of these areas of interest, seeking solution to all the problems that exist not only in the Coastal Plain, but elsewhere as well.</p>
        <p>The new agency may make a constructive, new contribution to what is being done by all the other agencies. It may be just what is needed to bring it all together into one neat, concise little package.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, there is alays the possibility that it will become just one more agency to deal with matters that already are being dealt with by a multiplicity of agencies.</p>
        <p>Voters Should Go To The Polls Tomorrow</p>
        <p>Inspite of the relative calm that has prevailed on the political scene in Pitt in recent weeks, tomorrow is election day and there are many offices to be filled and a number of contests to be decided.</p>
        <p>It is important to the county that each registered voter make a genuine effort to participate in the decisions which will be made at the ballot boxes.</p>
        <p>In a quiet election year such is this, there is always a question of how many voters will exercise their right to vote for the candidates of their choice to fill important state and local offices. In too many instances, otherwise conscientious citizens forfeit their right to vote and leave it to their fellow citizens to decide which candidates will become officials.</p>
        <p>We trust that will not be the case in Pitt tomorrow. Each registered voter has the responsibility as a citizen to participate in the election by casting his ballot. Each has the responsibility to help decide which of the candidates will be elected to office. And although tomorow's balloting is the Democratic primary, nomination in that primary has been tantamount to election.</p>
        <p>Officials who are named in tomorrow's voting will have the responsibility of operating your government. Be sure you exercise your right to decide which of the candidates will hold the elective offices.</p>
        <p>Guidelines Not Goina The Job</p>
        <p>By JEAN SPRAIN WILSON</p>
        <p>Make-Uo In The Office</p>
        <p>MtBbar Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>An advertising copy muat ba rtctlvad at least two days jielitt publication data.</p>
        <p>a ............    .......</p>
        <p>By STERLING F. GREEN</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)~ The administrations wag e-price guidelines may be headed for extensive alterations or the scrap heap.</p>
        <p>Thats the judgment of some labor - management relations experts who have good administration contacts.</p>
        <p>Their opinions cannot be documented officially because the Johnson administration, until it has a better stabilization device to offer as a sub-situte, is bouhd to insist 3.2 per cent is now and ever shall be a reasonable, fair and noninflationary wage increase.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless the search for a better device or a revised formula has bgun. Thats the job for which President Johnson recently revived the Labor -Management Advisory Committee. He asked its vice on how to cop with the threat of inflation in an expanding economy.</p>
        <p>Labor has repudiated the voluntary guldeposts. In effect the guidelines impose a ceiling only on workers wages, the unions say, while allowing price and corporation profits to soar. And some labor relations experts hold that a guideline policy which might work in a slack economy is unlikely to work in a full employment economy.</p>
        <p>Can a better but still voluntary way be found-one acceptable to both labor and management?</p>
        <p>Some clue may come June 3, when the 21-mcmber committeeseven members each from Industry, labor and the publicholds its second meet-</p>
        <p>This Dat0" PuIgIc</p>
        <p>ing in the offices of Secretary of Labor W. Willard Wirtz, the chairman.</p>
        <p>A six-member working subcommitteetwo leaders from each of the three sidesthen will report on progress. They could come in empty-handed. Conceivably, they might even report the present guidelines are the best approach they can think of.</p>
        <p>But there are indications hard, sincere effort is being poured into the search by the unseen but influential six. Only the labor pair has been identified. They are AFL-CIO President George Meany and United Steelworkers President I. W. Able. Presumably the management men have equal stature in Industry; if they come up with an idea, they will be listened to.</p>
        <p>Perhaps Meany and Ab e 1 will be the two men hardest to satisfy. Labor has come to feel it was sold an unintentional bill of goods when President John F. Kennedy posted the guideposts.</p>
        <p>Disillusionment came quickly. The steelworkers signed a settlement called noniiifla-tionary but the steel firms promptly raised their prices</p>
        <p>That set off the 1962 battle between Kennedy and Big Steel. The price hike was rescinded and industry leaders denounced the guidelines. Nobody loved them, but the expanding economy stayed stable for four years.</p>
        <p>Now, in the fifth year of an unprecedented five-year boom, things have heated up. The price creep has bcomc a trot and profits have set records.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-Behind the doors of their executive washrooms many big businessmen today are wagbg secret wars against jowl drag, eye-bags, worry furrows and outward ravages of hangover.</p>
        <p>In small jars, gleaming with gold ornamentation for status impact, are formulas which will at least tone down telltale age lines in time for a man of importance to make</p>
        <p>his speech, a television appearance, or an appointment with a youth-conscious client.</p>
        <p>Two kinds of facial masks are selling strongly, say department store buyers here.</p>
        <p>Eye pads, another innovation for men, are said to be helpful in draining away the strain of wee hours in time for an alert and saintly appearance at the board meeting the morning after. The</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying Should Read History</p>
        <p>(The Raleigh Timea)</p>
        <p>North Carolina Adjutant General Claude Bowers should read up a little on his history.</p>
        <p>In a recent speech to a civic club in Statesville, General Bowers said that if the military had been given a free hand in Viet Nam, the war would have been over long ago. The United Press International also quoted him as saying: At the rate were going, well be there a thousand years. The only way to win a war is to destroy the ability of the enemy to make war. . . Civilian control of the war in Viet Nam is me only reason the war is not over.</p>
        <p>General Bowers ought to know that America has always believed that the military is the servant of the people. As long as thjs is true  and it must never be otherwise  the military must be under civilian control. Civilian authorities must decide where the military will be told to fight, and the general conditions under which that fighting will be done.</p>
        <p>Civilian authority must decide how the war in Viet Nam will be waged. Civilian authority must decide whether it is best to take the risks which would bring Red China into war, not military authority. Civilian authority must be the one to decide whether the risk is worth taking from the point of view of civilization as a whole.</p>
        <p>Some military men have advocated that America bomb Red China now to destroy her nuclear capacity. This is a decision which cen never be left to a military man. It must be made by civilian authority representing all the people.</p>
        <p>There have been some military men who have whispered about the benefits of a preventive war against Russia  to blast the Russians when they werent expecting it.</p>
        <p>General Bowers should take a look at what a military dic-torship is doing right now in South Viet Nam. He couldnt find a worse mess in a long days looking.</p>
        <p>General Bowers should look back to the dark days when the military men of Japan set that country on the road to disaster by attacking America a Pearl Harbor.</p>
        <p>General Bowers should look back to the dark days just before World War I when military thinkers in Germany sent that country adventuring off into war, a war which left Germany prostrate  and much of Europe prostrate with her.</p>
        <p>As long as the civilian authority controls the military, America is in no danger of a military dictatorship. If this control were removed, America would soon be* under a military dictatorship, ruled by power. The military knows no other way to rule.</p>
        <p>maker suggests their use after exposure to smoke-filled rooms and reading too much legal fine print.</p>
        <p>Those fashion iconoclasts, todays young males who have refused to ^uate high style and scents with effeminacy, have paved the way for this boom is the pretty-up business during the past three years.</p>
        <p>Once largely limited to producing shaving soaps and astringents, 156 firms, or 30 per cent more than last eyar now turn out hundreds of virile-looking red, brown, black with gold packages containing jars, bottles, atomizers, and tubes that moisturize, liburicate, metholate and emulsify with such ingredients as lanolin, silicone, vitamins, estrogen, albumen, gelatin, seseme, and sharks, oil.</p>
        <p>Altogether there now ara more than 303 different fragrance sold either as colognes or after-shave lotions usually with lusty names inspired by the rugged outdoors or the sea.</p>
        <p>Today the super-immaculate man can begin his morning ablutions with a bath friction that has the tingling.effect of a sauna; shampoo his locks with a soap on a rope; apply bathpowder with his brass knuckles puff; shave over a translucent foam that lets him see where the most bristles are; then proceed to astringents, protective creams, deo^rants; nongreasy hair oild, hand creams, and colognes. He can hold up the bathroom even longer than a woman.</p>
        <p>My customers are smart men. They hold top jobs and plan to hang onto them, a merchandise manager said of his facial mask customers. He knows he can replace his Brooks Brothers suit any day but not his face.</p>
        <p>Quote</p>
        <p>An intangible, son, is a woman! silence.</p>
        <p>Answer</p>
        <p>By JOHN CHAMBERLAIN</p>
        <p>Copyright, 1966, King Features</p>
        <p>Syndicate, Inc.</p>
        <p>Senator Ev Dirksen considers that he was double-crossed on his proposed Constitutional amendment to reverse the Supreme Court decision requiring the states to elect both houses of their legislatures on a one-man, one -vote basis. Some of the last-minute pressure that deprived him recently of an expected seven-vote margin of vicotry in the Senate was undoubtedly exerted in deference to the left-wing Americans for Democratic Action. The ADA has all along assailed what it describes as the rotten borough impUcations of permitting small towns and agricultural regions to be over-represented in some state legislatures.</p>
        <p>It is of no little interest, then, that a confirmed supporter of ADA, Alfred M. Bingham of Connecticut, has chosen to differ with, his brother liberals on the one-man, one vote reapportionment of state legislatures that is now going on all over the country. Mr. Bingham is one of the many sons of the late Senator Hiram Bingham and a brother of Representative Jonathan Bingham of N e w York. In the Nineteen Thirties he edited (Jommon Sense, a liberal magazine that was only slightly less influential in New Deal circles than The New Republic. After a post-World War II stint in occupied Germany he turned his back on the big city to practice law in Norwich, in eastern Connecticut, and he was elected to his State Senate for a term. Though still a good card-carrying liberal, he now emerges as a champion of the right of the small towns to urit representation in at least one house of a state legisla-ure. Thus at least one ADA-er touches hands with Ev Dirksen.</p>
        <p>To Mr. Bingham, local unit representation has both its good and bad features. Mr. Bingham admits that it was a little strange that, before the Supreme Court spoke, a small Connecicut town of 400 could hove the same repre-senataion in the lower legislative chamber as a big city of 160,000. But he observes that, even with pronounced malapportionment, to coin a word, Connecticut had a less corrupt state government than neighboring Massachus e 11 s, which has had one-man, one-vote representation for years. In Mr. Binghams opinion one-man, one-vote can become rgther meaning less when a corrupt urban machine imposes its will on faceless numbers in a metropolitan wilderness.</p>
        <p>To answer the Supre m a Courts claim that unit representation is an invasion of the individuals right to equal influence in a governing body, Mr. Bingham proposes to combine the old system of geographical representation with a system of weighted voting. Under  Bingham type compromise every town would still send its representative to the lower house in a state legislature. But the small town representatives vote would count for proportionally less than the vote of a big city representative. FVact i onal representation would reconcile our old pluralistic federalism with the principle of equal protection of the law.</p>
        <p>. _    uon as a wnoie.  oiner  vrmy  w  iuj*.  ......</p>
        <p>Ago tSqv ^ Batman Has Thousands Working</p>
        <p>Ago Today</p>
        <p>By JOHN G. DUNCAN May 27, 1926 Soldiers Graves To Be Decorated Memorial Day</p>
        <p>The members of the Pitt County Poit of the American Legion will on Sunday, May 30, Memorial Day, decorate the waves of their comrades who paid the supreme sacrifice during the World War.</p>
        <p>GreeovUle Wins Fourth Match of GoU Touroamant</p>
        <p>The fourth of a series of |olf tournaments to be pUy-td by the Eastern Caro 1 i na Association was held between Tarboro and Greenville yesterday on the local course, with Greenville taking the easy end of a 22 to 10 score. Low score for the match was played by H. C. Bridgers of Tarboro, his card being 74 for 18 holes.</p>
        <p>To The Editor:</p>
        <p>I am addressing these lines to you. So use your good offices, if it is possible, to pre-. e n t peaceful pedestria n s from being attacked by dogs, especially those who arc at large and roaming over the city for food.</p>
        <p>A few years ago I was a victim of two vicious dogs.</p>
        <p>I do not want to stir up old dust, but I do not wish to have again another experience.</p>
        <p>May be the dogs are afraid of my stick and 1 was questioned why 1 am Qot making</p>
        <p>use of it.</p>
        <p>I never thought of us i n g it only to make the animal more vicious, and I might hit and hurt it and 1 do not want to be stam p e d a brute, by their owners.</p>
        <p>Sincerely yours, Alfred Mlldner, 2.3$ Orbon Drive</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER No matter what critics say about Batman, hes bi^ business. The Batman craze has created about 10,000 jobs in industries, maybe more. It is helping to sell $100 million worth of products this year. It has become a factor in the stock market.</p>
        <p>And all this is in addition to the money the series makes for the television Industry and the jobs it has creat(| in Hollywood.</p>
        <p>BatRteD has hacema such an important elemnt in the economy that if he flew out of the public eye tomorrow, while there would be no recession, thousr^ndi, would BtiT thrown out of work, sales would drop and stock prices would be affected. EVERYBODY IN THE ACT A lotal of 200 c&amp;lt;)mpanies</p>
        <p>have arranged licenses to use the names of Batman and Robin on products, ranging from toys an(i gimmicks to substantial articles of m e r-chandise.</p>
        <p>RfMER</p>
        <p>BOSBONER</p>
        <p>Thats the worlds record, said Allen Stone, president of Ltcmslng--t!!orporation of America, which dispenses the rights, usually charging 5 per cent of the wholesale price of the product. The bigfe e s t number of licenses for a pop</p>
        <p>ular subject at any one time ever before was 90. That was for Micky Mouse.</p>
        <p>Wall Struts interest in Bat^ man is also unprecedented. Here is a list of the publicly held company that, directly or through subsidiaries, (have contracted for Batman franchises:</p>
        <p>Anchor Hocking Glass, Chel-sa Industri, Aurora Plastic? Avery Proqucts, Elgin Watch, Ed  u  Cards, iruwwick Spoftp, Amsco, Cfm*o Fvk-wfy Racordf. Mattel, Palmolive, Uct%\l Industries. MGM Rtcordi, A. C. Gilbert, Milton Bradley. Kaiser-Roth Hosiery, L o r al, Miner Industries, R. C. A. Rec 0 rjd ?, Allied Chemical, Remco, Wander, Sawyeri, Bernard Ulman, 'Transogram, 20th Century Fox, Western Printing.</p>
        <p>And last but not least is National Periodical Publications, comib book publishers, headed by Jack Leibowitz, which owns the basic rights to Batman and Robin and collects from ev^body, including the television sponsors. NPP stock was hit as high of 45V4 this year, but last week was 30.</p>
        <p>The range of Batman products among the 200 licenses is wide. It includes all Batman and Robin paripbtmalia, teyi. hobbias wallpaper, mtdals, boejte, ladiats. apparel, btaeh and bath towles, rugs, bath mats ( or bat mats), pacthwork quilts, pillows, puppets and on and on.</p>
        <p>Stone said that for every license granted, two have been turned down.</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0005" />
        <p>They</p>
        <p>-I iii-iw# -</p>
        <p>Figure In Saturday's Primary</p>
        <p>Seeking Senate Seats</p>
        <p>For Solicitor</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>,  ^  a</p>
        <p>JUUAN AUSBROOK</p>
        <p>VINSON BRIDGERS  VERNON  WHITE</p>
        <p>Seeking House Seats -</p>
        <p>JAMES CHEATHAM</p>
        <p>r. A. FORBES</p>
        <p>DAVID REID</p>
        <p>HORTON ROUNTREE</p>
        <p>FRANK WOOTEN</p>
        <p>For Commissioner</p>
        <p>For Sheriffs Post</p>
        <p>ALTON GARDNER</p>
        <p>R. H. WORTHINGTON</p>
        <p>RALPH TYSON</p>
        <p>CARL WHITFIELD</p>
        <p>In Commissioner's Race</p>
        <p>Photos Not Avaiisblo</p>
        <p>LUTHER HAMILTON Candidato Solicitor Fifth District</p>
        <p>CHARLIE EDWARDS Candidate for Sheriff</p>
        <p>VANCE PERKINS</p>
        <p>D. S. SPAIN</p>
        <p>J. C. GALLOWAY</p>
        <p>School Board Race</p>
        <p>' 4</p>
        <p> .. ;aCsv.-. </p>
        <p>ROLAND BRINSON</p>
        <p>ELMER LEARY</p>
        <p>Moore Praises Pooled Effort</p>
        <p>MURPHY, N: C .(AP) - Gov. Dan Moore says a tri-county industrial education ccRter being built at Mnrphy ehowp what can be done when loc^l leadership,</p>
        <p>The governor told the audience he is optimistic about the outlook for economic, educational and cultural growth for the southwestern area of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>In No Hurry Over Service Decision</p>
        <p>YADKINVILLE, N. C. (AP) -It will be at least three or four months before the U.S. Department of Agriculture decides whether it will provide grading, inspection and price-support services at a proposed tobacco sales warehouse at Yadktnvillc.</p>
        <p>The application for USDA services at the warehouse was filed by J. A. Miller and his sons. A similar request was denied last year.</p>
        <p>At a public hearing Thursday</p>
        <p>16 of the small established markets in the Old Belt area opposed Millers application.</p>
        <p>According to an old English legend, Dick Whittington, a poor orphan, became immensely rich by selling his cat to the king of Morocco who was having trouble ridding his kingdom of mice.</p>
        <p>MEET THE NEED WITH REID</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>WILD</p>
        <p>TURKEY</p>
        <p>government, and private enter-.....effo  ^--------</p>
        <p>prise pool their efforts for prog</p>
        <p>ress.</p>
        <p>Moore participated in groundbreaking ceremonies for the center Thursday. He said the project is a symbol of the bright present and brighter future of Cherokee, Clay, and Graham counties.</p>
        <p>Wells Fargo Co. was looked upon as a weatern carrier although it was actually formed in Buffalo, N. Y.</p>
        <p>Put A New Man in Office</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR R. H. WORTHINGTON</p>
        <p>fOf</p>
        <p>PiU County CommiMioner</p>
        <p>8 YEAR OLD</p>
        <p>straight bourbon j</p>
        <p>WHISK1Y101 RROOF </p>
        <p>$015 $1:25</p>
        <p>U FIFTH ' V</p>
        <p>FIFTH ' PINT AUSTIN, NICHOLS A CO, INC. N.Y., al</p>
        <p>Th# Daily Refi#cter, GrMnvitU, N. C.Friday, May 77, IV665</p>
        <p>VOTE</p>
        <p>H. HORTON</p>
        <p>ROUNTREE</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>N. C. HOUSE OF</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVES</p>
        <p>DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY</p>
        <p>MAY 28, 1966</p>
        <p>On matters of importance, let your kind of people speak for you.</p>
        <p>Native -</p>
        <p>He was born and raised in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Forming -</p>
        <p>He manages and operates a farm, in the family for over 100 years.</p>
        <p>Education -</p>
        <p>State Employee -</p>
        <p>He has a child in college, one in high school and two in grade school. He is a member of the P.T.A. He is a College Graduate with a professional degree.</p>
        <p>Formerly a State Highway Commission Employee, Formerly an Assistant Attorney General, a Former member Loan Committee State Employees Credit Union.</p>
        <p>Veteran Affairs -</p>
        <p>He is a Veteran of World War II, South Pacific Theatre, and is a member of American Legion and V.F.W.</p>
        <p>Elected Official -</p>
        <p>He was elected Solicitor of Pitt County Recorder's Court and Commissioner of Town of Farmville.</p>
        <p>Public Affairs -</p>
        <p>He represented Attorney General's Office on State Judicial Counsel. Formerly member Governor's Committee on Industrial Development Taxation. Presently a member of City of Greenville Board of Adjustment.</p>
        <p>Rather than theory, this man believes in common sense in Government. He is your kind of people and speaks your language. Let him speak for you in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>ELECT</p>
        <p>H. HORTON</p>
        <p>ROUNTREE</p>
        <p>TO ONE OF OUR TWO SEATS IN THE HOUSE OF REPRESEN TATIVES FROM PITT COUNTY.</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0006" />
        <p>3*</p>
        <p>*6</p>
        <p>Dally Rallactor, Oramvtlla, N, C.-Prlday, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>Washington Tour Is Priced Same As 1876</p>
        <p>By L.T. EASLEY</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  The top cost of a guided tour through the United States Capitol still is what it was 90 years ago: 25 cents.</p>
        <p>Up to 12,000 men, women and children take the tour each day, the largest crowds always showing up when spring comes to Washington.</p>
        <p>So there are busy days for the 24 Capitol guides, says their captain, Calvin Kimbrough. Hes 46, a Texan who became a guide 11 years ago with the help of the late House Speaker Sam Rayburn.</p>
        <p>Up to 68 persons are in eac|i group that walks along the marble corridors, listening to a running narrative on people and events, past and present, who have made or are making American history.</p>
        <p>The limitation is set at 68 be-</p>
        <p>THESB SIXTY-NINK . . . seniors o H, B. Sugg High School in Parmville will receive their diplomas May 31 at the school's commencement exercises: FIRST ROW-Mattie Baxnes, Shirley Brown, Elouise Olds, Yvonne Bullock, Connie Tyson, Judy Refers, William Foremen, Catherine Smith, Carolyn Blount, Carolim Jc^mson. Mary Bames, Doris Tyson, Madie Sutton, SECOND ROWDavid Barrett, Joyce Gorham, Ruby Walston, Barbara Taylor, Shirley Ehron, Betty Atkinson, Irene Jemes, Margaret ciorham. Hazel Johnson, Alice Harris, Linda Horne, Emma Cooper, Shirley Joyner, Barbara House. THIRD ROW Darth Staton, Jo Ann Phillips, Roosevelt Jefferson, Clarence Smith, Gilda Wooten, Johnny Wooten, Teresa Eason, Willie Jefferson, William Gorham, Monty Speight, George Shirley, Ella Staton. FOURTH ROWPriscilla Harper, Charlotte Harris, Marilyn Moore, Dietria Cobb, Helen Edwards, Sue Harper, Sophia Hyman, Joseph Barrett, Melvin Bjmum, Jimmy Jones, Aldean Moore, Delores Eason, Joe Shirley. FIFTH ROWMarion iVson, Vivan Spell, Doris Moye, Evelyn Tyson, Mary Ward, Mitchel Newton, Frank Morgan, Cedric Frisby, Willie Adams, Larry Home. SIXTH ROWWalter Wilson, Larry Dickens, Morris Monk, William Dixon, Bennett Wooten, Albert Standi and Carlton Willoughby.</p>
        <p>cause that is the number of seats available for this type of tourist in the Senate and House galleries for spectators. A tour takes 35 minutes, and this includes five minutes in each chamber. "</p>
        <p>Black Cancer Tumors Have</p>
        <p>Been Wiped Away By A Laser</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM A. SHIRES | search team, something in the RESEARCH TRIANGLE, N. coloring matter, the melanin, in</p>
        <p>C.: The fact that a melanoma, the dread black cancer of the skin, is dark and heavily pigmented may have opened a new way for science to cure It.</p>
        <p>The black cancer tumor Is of the most preval e n t</p>
        <p>one</p>
        <p>and deadly skin cancers. Yet in recent research experiments, those tumors have been wiped away in the twinkling of an eye by use of a laser, an enormously concentrated form of coherent light.</p>
        <p>Faster than the eye can see, in a few millionths of a second, the beam of a ruby laser is focussed on a melanoma in a human patient. Instantly the tumor vaporizes and dramatically disappears.</p>
        <p>I^at happens? Apparently the molecular linkage of melanin, the pigment which imparts color to sldn and other tissues, is tom apart. Melanin is a polymer made up of molecules with tremendous capacity for joining similar molecules. But it has a unique characteristic of structure in the presence of some atomic bonds with single electrons instead of conventional pairs.</p>
        <p>Apparently, according to an American Cancer Society re*</p>
        <p>these heavily pigmented tumors responds to laser irradiation.</p>
        <p>The laser beam has no such effect unpon non-pigmented tissue.</p>
        <p>ACS says basic studies are being conducted to find out how various forms of radiation affect certain biological molecules in various tissues.</p>
        <p>Already it is known that a laser does precisely what red and infra-red rays do, but speedily and violently.</p>
        <p>Scientists have found that intensity of melanin free radical signals was increased by the laser pulse in the same way as continuous red or infra-red light sources. But these conventional, incoherent, light sources do not have the capacity to deliver equivalent energy in such short time periods.</p>
        <p>Also, when the laser was tested against white hair and white skin, nothing happened. The response was produced only in tissues containing melanin.</p>
        <p>Receiving Degree At Bob Jones U.</p>
        <p>Weve had no inflation, Kimbrough said. Twenty-five cents was the fee set when the</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, S.C. - Miss Carolyn Jean Allen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dewey W. Allen of 110 South Sylvan Drive, Greenville, N.C., will receive a bachelor of sciehce degree in elementary education at Bob Jones University next Wednesday.</p>
        <p>Dr. Bob Jones Jr., president of the university, will confer the academic degrees on some 362 students from 39 states, the District of Columbia and several foreign countries.</p>
        <p>guide service was initiated in 1876, the help mark the nations centennial.</p>
        <p>The 25-cent fee is for adults. Children under 10 witii ^their</p>
        <p>Peace Marchers Are In Viet Nam</p>
        <p>Syria has played an important role in history because of its location as a connecting link between Africa, Asia and Europe.</p>
        <p>SANTA MONICA*, Calif. (AP)  The real peace marchers of today,* says Lt. Gen. Richard C. Mangrum, assistant commandant of the Marine Corps, are the quarter of a million Americans in Viet Nam.</p>
        <p>Gen. Mangrum told the Navy Leagues 64th annual convention:</p>
        <p>These men have been marching every day to establish and secure peace in a shattered nation.</p>
        <p>parents make the tour free. Students pay 15 cents.</p>
        <p>Ihere were six guides in 1876. By the 1920s the number had been increased to 18, and in 1932 it was fixed at the present number of 24. There now are 13 women and 11 men on the force.</p>
        <p>Guides usually get their jobs through patronage of senators or representatives but once on the job are quite secure and free of petty political influnces.</p>
        <p>The guides work a six-day week, rotating the Sunday shift.</p>
        <p>'Their pay Is based on the number of tourists they show through. From around 150,000 persons a year taking the tour in the early 1930s, the number has increased to a rate now of m million a year.</p>
        <p>So, the guides pay has increased over the years even though the tour fee has not Throughout the year the fees are pooled and put in the bank and then divided equally among the guides. Their income now runs slightly more than $12,000 a year.  _</p>
        <p>ELECT</p>
        <p>D. S. SPAIN, JR.</p>
        <p>FOB</p>
        <p>COUNTY</p>
        <p>COMMISSIONEB</p>
        <p>..Schenleq</p>
        <p>GOLDEIN</p>
        <p>AGE-GEN</p>
        <p>^4.00</p>
        <p>4/5 qx.</p>
        <p>^chenleq GOLDEN</p>
        <p>^ACE&amp;amp;S'</p>
        <p>(Political Advertisement)</p>
        <p>A Personal Message To The Voters of Warren, Halifax, Edgecombe and Pitt Counties</p>
        <p>I want to express my sincere appreciation for the outstanding support and encouragement that so many of you have given me in my race for the State Senate. I feel that the people of this District need strong, experienced representation in the State Senate, and I urge you to consider my qualifications when you cast your ballot for this important office.</p>
        <p>I have been unable to talk with many of you personally since ur District is so large. Therefore, I now ask you for your support In the election on Saturday.</p>
        <p>Your vote on Saturday will be deeply appreciated.</p>
        <p>Sincerely,</p>
        <p>JULIAN R. ALLSBROOK</p>
        <p>College Offers Special Grants</p>
        <p>ELIZABETH CITY - Educa tional Opportunity Grants have been made available to thirty or more qualified students who will be enrolled at Elizabeth City State College this fall. President Walter N. Ridley announced that several of these grants are still available.</p>
        <p>Students with satisfactory SAT scores, who represent the upper level of their high school classes, and have difficulty in financing college attendance are eligible to apply. These grants are made available through funds provided by the Higher Education Act of 1965.</p>
        <p>Many qualifying students will be awarded grants of $400 to $600 which amounts to half of their college expenses. These students may also supplement this sum with work and other forms of aid.</p>
        <p>High school graduates of good ability who wish to receive Educational Opportunity Grants to enter college this fall should contact their school principals immediately, or write directly to the Director of Admissions, Elizabeth City State College.</p>
        <p>Area Students In Recital Tonight</p>
        <p>MOUNT OLIVE-The Music Department of Mount Olive College will present a recital by voice and piano students tonight.</p>
        <p>' Among the students participating, are voice students Lore-na Moseley of Winterville, soprano, daughter of Mrs. Margaret McGlohon Moseley; and piano student Tommy Harris of Greenville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Preston Harris.</p>
        <p>Plan To Abandon</p>
        <p>Their Service</p>
        <p>AUGUSTA, Ga. (AP) - The City of Augusta fces the prospect of being without ambulance serx ce. Three funeral homes have announced they would discontinue the service as of June 30.</p>
        <p>The funeral homes cited the increa.'ijng demands for ambulances because of medicare. {</p>
        <p>ELECT</p>
        <p>Dave</p>
        <p>a capable</p>
        <p>young leader</p>
        <p>wilh a</p>
        <p>positive program</p>
        <p>for Pitt County</p>
        <p>His Qualifications</p>
        <p>His Program</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE CITY ATTORNEY</p>
        <p>PRACTICING LAWYER SEVEN YEARS; AGE 33; MARRIED</p>
        <p>CHAIRMAN STATE DEMOCRATIC JEFFERSON-JACKSON DAY DINNER, 1964</p>
        <p>PRESIDENT NORTH CAROLINA YOUNG DEMOCRATIC CLUBS, 1963</p>
        <p>ACTIVE IN CHURCH AND COMMUNITY:</p>
        <p>EPISCOPALIAN, JAYCEE, KIWANIAN,</p>
        <p>MOOSE, AND MASON</p>
        <p>CHAIRAAAN FIRST GREENVILLE CITIZENS</p>
        <p>ADVISORY COMMITTEE</p>
        <p>LAW CLERK TO CHIEF JUSTICE OF</p>
        <p>N. C. SUPREME COURT, 1959</p>
        <p>A RETURN TO THE BAUNCE OF POWER BETWEEN STATE AND FEDERAL GOVERNMENT.</p>
        <p>INDEPENDENT UNIVERSITY STATUS FOR EAST CAROLINA COLLEGE</p>
        <p>^ INCREASED EFFORTS TO SECURE A TWO-YEAR MEDICAL SCHOOL AT ECC.</p>
        <p>ir AGRICULTURAL RESEARCH TO IMPROVE PITT COUNTY'S FARM ECONOMY.</p>
        <p> ASSURANCE THAT PIH COUNTY WILL GET ITS FULL SHARE OF HIGHWAY BOND ISSUE FUNDS.</p>
        <p>ADOPTION OF UNITED FORCES FOR EDU-CATION LEGISUTIVE PROGRAM.</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR</p>
        <p>David E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>For N. C. House of Representatives</p>
        <p>Democratic Primary, May 28, 1966</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0007" />
        <p>G. R. WHTTPIELD SCHOOL . . . will graduate 53 students in ceremonies May 30. The graduates include: (from left) FIRST ROWPeggy Cannon, Vauline Carney, Wilsonia (Cherry, Margonet Moore, Carolyn Johnson, Cnuna Smith, Mary CJrandal, Geraldine Ha we, Edith Daniels, Shirley Hansley and Marshie Blake. SECOND ROWDorothy Pugh, Mae West Jones, Lillie Rountree, Eleanor Wilson, Mary Parker, Martha Little, Betty Moore, Annie Wilson, Lois Stanley, Ruby Harris, Shirley Green and Barbara Daniels. THIRD ROWLucy Battle, Shirley Chapman, Lonnie Little, Joyce Green, Patricia Thompson, Betty Daniels, Daniel Hause, Pearlie Blake, Delores Godley, Viola Carmon and Leva Hardy. FOURTH ROWHenry Thomas, Ernest Fields, Billy Thompson, James Baker, Cary Stevenson, Melvin Smith, Ira Hawkins, Curtis Small, James Ward, and James Williams. FIFTH ROWIssac Whitehurst, Veldon White, John Crandal, Jimmie Mills and Allen Daniels. NOT PICTURE!)Jessie Heming, Alexander Powell, Hem-y Gorham, Raye Daniels and Phesther Moore.</p>
        <p>Quick Action By Doctor Best (^netic Engineering</p>
        <p>Way To Handle Eye Injuries</p>
        <p>injuries</p>
        <p>When eye specially to children, seek medical help immediately, cautioned Dr. R. E. Fox of the Pitt Health Department today.</p>
        <p>Dr. Fox explained that quick action by a doctor is the best way of preventing further trouble and complications.</p>
        <p>Young children are especially likely to suffer serious or permanent damage follow i n g injury, he noted, and minor injuries can result in vis i o n impairment or blindness.</p>
        <p>Some of the common causes, made especially possib 1 e during the summer months when children play outdoo r s</p>
        <p>Mate-Matching Computer Goes</p>
        <p>MISSOULA, Mont. (AP) -Kismet, a project to match mates at the University of Montana from questionnaires put through a computer, is gone  dead from lack of interest.</p>
        <p>The programs sponsors said the demand was too small to pay for rent of the computer.</p>
        <p>occur, I much of the time, are fireworks, BB guns, toy arro w s and darts and other p 1 a y-things.</p>
        <p>Care in selection of childrens toys will help reduce the chances for eye injuries, Dr. Fox advised. However, if they do happen, call your doctor immediately.</p>
        <p>Whether the victim is an adult or a child, the same general procedures apply in handling eye accidents. Do not attempt to remove anyt h i n g from the injured eye, particularly if the skin around it has been cut or torn.</p>
        <p>In cases of burns to the eye, or areas close to it, Dr. Fox advises seeking the quick e s t medical help possible. Home treatment is not advised. Prolonged exposure to the sun during the summer months, or careless use of sun 1 a m ps dring other times, may also produce eye injuries. With i n six to 10 hours, the eyes begin to smart. Later, pain and swelling occur. A cool towel over the eyes may give rel i e f until seen by a physician.</p>
        <p>Acids and alkalies present a slightly different problem, the doctor noted. Acids do most of their damage within the first few minutes. Alkalies such as household ammonia, lye or lime, continually and rapidly eat into flesh parts, doing their damage as long as they are present.</p>
        <p>Flushing with large quantities of water by pouring or squeezing it from a cloth directly onto the eye will aid in reducing their activites, Dr. Fox explained.</p>
        <p>Remember, he added, leave mechanical inju r i e s alone, but attack chemical injuries immediately by washing.</p>
        <p>In conclusion, the Health Director said, At least half of all cases of blindness in one eye are the result of accid e n t s. The chances of serious damage or permanent blindness can be reduced by prompt medical attention. When injur i e s occur, consult your physician immediately.</p>
        <p>Said No 'Day Dream'</p>
        <p>Th# Dally Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Friday, May 27, tW6T</p>
        <p>Famwille High Will Graduate Largest Class</p>
        <p>Belinda Kilpatrick will be,itorium. chief marshal for the graduation T.-- major business of elc^&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>activities. Other marshals include Margaret Andrews, David Eason and Julia Mewbom. all Juniors; Susan Dard^, and Jimmy Wooten, SopHdrmores and Janice Calhoun, Jane Dar den, Robbie Eason, Henry D. Jefferson, Sue Joyner and Frank Lewis, FYeshman.</p>
        <p>By ALTON BLAKESLEE</p>
        <p>Associated Press Science Writer</p>
        <p>f I</p>
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        <p>SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>4 I. Sea tliuk 4 J. l unics 4). Su av</p>
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        <p>Doctoral Deg. ForR.B.Graham</p>
        <p>Luther Hamilton, Jr.</p>
        <p>LUBBOCK, Texas  Psychology major Robert Bruce Graham, of Greenville, N.C. is among twelve graduate students who are slated to receive doctoral degrees at Texas Techs 40th commencement exercises Saturday.</p>
        <p>Presentation of the top degrees will climax the 8:00 p.m. ceremony in Lubbock Municipal Coliseum honoring more than 1,500 candidates for advanced and undergraduate degrees, the largest single commencement program in the colleges history.</p>
        <p>Graham, an assistant professor of psychology at East Carolina College, elected to do his dictoral study on Satiation and Recovery of the Exploratory Drive as a Function of Environmental Complexity and Trial Length.</p>
        <p>He holds a Bachelor of Arts from University of Redlands (1956) and a Master of Arts from Tech in 1959.</p>
        <p>timetable for developments, he</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Taking a look ahead in medicine, a Nobel Prize scientist today said it isnt idle day-dreaming to expect:</p>
        <p>The conquest of most or all viral diseases, the prevention of congenital birth defects, effective prevention and cure of cancers, and effective new treatments of many bodily disorders.</p>
        <p>The key is molecular biology, particularly in the genetic code that determines all inherited characteristics and the way living molecules often behave, said Dr. Edward L. Tatum of Rockefeller University.</p>
        <p>Tatum won a Nobel Prize in 1958 for a vital discovery in molecular biology  that genes regulate certain specific chemical processes in the body.</p>
        <p>He is one of four Nobel Prize winners speaking at a symposium on the future of medicine, sponsored by Columbia University and the Merck Sharp &amp;amp; Dohme Research Laboratories. The company is dedicating new research facilities in Rahway, N.J., Friday.</p>
        <p>Tatum said the time will come when genes  the units of heredity  can be made to order. With that, and some additional knowledge, genetic engineering will then be just around the corner.</p>
        <p>Such speculations as these may be considered by some as too idle daydreaming for a serious symposium, he said. Yet the phenomena of molecular biology which now are almost taken for granted were not even dreamed of a very few years ago.</p>
        <p>Without attempting to cite any</p>
        <p>predicted most, if not all, viral diseases will be conquered, either through immunological (natural defense) means or by the design and synthesis of specific antiviral chemicals. And some viruses may be turned to mans benefit, possibly to alter faulty human genes.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - The largest graduafing class in the history of Farmville High School will receive their diplomas during commencement exercise at the Farmville High Athletic Field Tuesday at 8:15 p.m.</p>
        <p>Approximately 90 students will march through the line to receive their diplomas from R. V. Fisher, chairman of the local school committee.'</p>
        <p>Sunday the graduating leniors will hear Dr. Thomas A. Collins, president of North Carolina Wesleyan College in Rocky Mount, speak on Where the Action Is during the Baccal-aureat Services.</p>
        <p>Dr. Collins will address the graduates in the 8 p.m. services in Perkins Hall, the school auditorium.</p>
        <p>In the Commencement Exercise, four of Farmvilles outstanding seniors  Ann Pierce, Cecil Eason, Ann Joyner and George Allen  will address the audience.</p>
        <p>Senior Class President Mike Hardison will present the welcome and prior to the presentation of the diplomas. Principal Charles T. Tucker will make the presentation of senior awards.</p>
        <p>Pou Will Speak At Annual Meet</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Dr. J. W. Pou, vice president and agricultural manager of Wachovia Ba Jc and Trust Company of G ; lie, will au rcss the 29th annual meeting of the Pitt-Greene Electrid Membership Corporation here next Wednesday night.</p>
        <p>Dr': Pou will deliver the pi 1 &amp;gt; cipal address in the 8:30 p.m. meeting at the high school aud-</p>
        <p>of three of the Corpoi tons seven directors. David Corbett cf Snow Hill, Jarvis HartJson of Snow Hill and Uoyd Gay of Fountain have terms that expire this year.</p>
        <p>All three directors hava been nominated for rcelection. In ad-diton, Noah Y. Sugg of Pi*e-ville, Zeb V. Barrow of Cnow Hill and Ruel M. Dilda hava been nominated to the posts.</p>
        <p>Directors who have terms continuing this year are J. J. Grimsley of Ayden, president; Sam V. Tugwell of Farmville, secretary - treasurer; Mark W. Mozingo of Farmville and John Hinnant of Maury.</p>
        <p>Gilbert Whitley, Pitt - Greene, manager, announced the annual meeting.</p>
        <p>PLINKING BY PLUNK</p>
        <p>TUCSON, Ariz. (AP)-Work as a professional guitarist is planned by one sophomore at Catalina High School. His name is appropriate: Don Plunk.</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR</p>
        <p>R. H. WORTHINGTON</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>COUNTY COMMISSIONS</p>
        <p>Not Even Lawn Barriers Safe</p>
        <p>RESULTS</p>
        <p>Make The Difference</p>
        <p>Whatever anybody undertakes, results make the difference. The fact that he has gotten results Is what has made B. Everett Jordan one of the most highly respected men In the Congress.</p>
        <p>NORTH HAVEN, Conn. (AP)  George Tenedine purchased three telephone poles and placed them end to end on the ground to prevent cars from driving on to his la"n.</p>
        <p>He reported to police recently that the poles had been stolen.</p>
        <p>CANADA DRY</p>
        <p>earnestly requests the honor and privilege of representing you in the office of your</p>
        <p>District Solicitor</p>
        <p>for another term. I sincerely believe that the experience I have gained in the Superior Courts of our district over the past three years is advantageous to you as well as me in properly administering the Criminal Laws in these trying times. ^ for EFFICIENT, IMPARTIAL and EXPERIENC-</p>
        <p>VOTE HAMILTON</p>
        <p>in the Democratic Primary, May 28th ED administration of justice in the Fifth District. </p>
        <p>BOURBON</p>
        <p>Vs QUART 54.05</p>
        <p>tllAMNI lOillM HltUT. M PKOOf. UAfiA IY INIIIUIM CO.. NlCHOLMVHUL I</p>
        <p>He has a formula, Just plain hard work, and Ms hard work has paid off for the people of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Consider Just a few examples:</p>
        <p>He is the author of legislation which established the one-price cotton program, a program that has brought new life to the cotton industry, all the way from the farmer to the textile worker.</p>
        <p>He is the author of the acreage-poundage program for tobacco.</p>
        <p>He worked to complete the valuable W. Kerr Scott Reservoir on the Upper Yadkin River.</p>
        <p>He guided legislation through the Congress authorizing the New Hope Dam in the Cape Fear River Basin, the Falls of the Neuse Dam in the Neuse River Basin, and the deepening of the Wilmington channel to major-harbor depth.</p>
        <p>The list of accomplishments goes on and on, because Senator Jordan believes in North Carolina and what we can do if we keep on working at it. As he has done in the past, he wants to continue working for North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Vote For</p>
        <p>B. Everett Jordan</p>
        <p>United Statee Senator</p>
        <p>Democratic Primary, May 28,1966</p>
        <p>This ad sponsored by Pitt County Committee For B. Everejt Jordan</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0008" />
        <p>9k</p>
        <p>Double life. .</p>
        <p>Thats what the Pepsi generation lives today.</p>
        <p>Regular Pepsi-Cola. Diet Pepsi-Cola.</p>
        <p>Both official drinks of your generation.</p>
        <p>One for lively lift.</p>
        <p>The other for cutting calories.</p>
        <p>Why not take two aiid see?</p>
        <p>\\</p>
        <p>BOTTLM) by PEPBI-COLA BOTTLINa CO. GREENVILLE, N.C. UNDER APPOINTMENT FROM PEPSICO, INC., NEW YORK, N.Y.</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0009" />
        <p>Sports THE DAILY REFLECTORClassifiedFRIDAY AFTERNOON, AAAY 27, 1966</p>
        <p>Ayden Defeats Bunn To Gain Eastern Finals</p>
        <p>Lions Fall, 6-3 To Optimist Team</p>
        <p>The Optimists moved back into second place in the Tar Heel League with a 6-3 victory over the Lions yesterday,</p>
        <p>R. C. Cola leads the league with a 2-0 record, while the Optimists are 3-1. The Jaycees and the Lions are 1-1, while Coca-Cola and the Kiwanis are 0-2.</p>
        <p>The Lions pushed into the lead in the first inning. Steve Bostic led off with a single and Dave Prewitt slammed a homer to give the Lions a 2-0 lead.</p>
        <p>In the second inning, the lead was pushed to 3-0 as the Lions scored again. Bobby Allen was hit by a pitch, moved up on two passed balls</p>
        <p>ed to load the bases, and White and Carr came in on an error.</p>
        <p>In the third, the Optimists added another run, tieing it up. Doc Hooks singled, stole second, moved up on an out, and scored on Paul Carrs single.</p>
        <p>Then in the fourtii, the Optimists pushed into the lead, as two more runs came across. Mike Vinson walked, and Robbie Cox singled, scoring him. Rob Carraway then singled in Cox.</p>
        <p>The final run came in the fifth. Carr singled, moved up on a passed ball, and scored on an error.</p>
        <p>Lions  Optimista</p>
        <p>ab r h  ab r h</p>
        <p>and Bostic, p. If 3 12 Cox, ss  ^ I</p>
        <p>scored on a single by Carl Prewm, cl ib 311 c^away, ib 201!</p>
        <p>Bllbro, c, p Elks, 2b Allen.ss</p>
        <p>Lupton.</p>
        <p>I In the bottom of the second, the Optimists began to come to'chaidian life and pulled back to make it.</p>
        <p>3-2. Jerry White singled and Paul Carr reached on a fielders choice. Dorsett Ward walk-</p>
        <p>3  0  1  Lee, 2b</p>
        <p>3  0  0  White, c</p>
        <p>0  1  0  Carr, cf</p>
        <p>2  0  0  Ward, 3b</p>
        <p>Chandler, rf 0  0  0  Howell,  rf</p>
        <p>Totals  26  3  6  Dayson,  rf</p>
        <p>Vincent, If Knott, If Totals</p>
        <p>Lions  210  0003  6  2  |</p>
        <p>Optimists  021  21x6   1</p>
        <p>Little Fans 16 Accounts For</p>
        <p>In</p>
        <p>All</p>
        <p>Win;</p>
        <p>3 Runs</p>
        <p>LITTLE FIRES . . . Monte Little, Ayden's pitcher, fires in at the plate and a Bunn batter. Little handcuffed Bunn, striking out 16, walking three and giving up two hits in pitching a 3-0 shutout.. He drove in two runs and scored the third for Ayden in the victory. (Reflector Photo by Whitaker)</p>
        <p>The Ayden Tornadoes, behind the fine pitching of Monte Little, advanced to the Eastern finals of the State Cass A Baseball playoffs as they took Bunn, 3-0, yesterday.</p>
        <p>The Tornadoes are now tentatively scheduled to meet Ceve-land High School of Johnston County today for the right to enter the stale finals against the Western winner.</p>
        <p>The victory raised Aydens record this season to 17-0, and brought the years total to 57-0.</p>
        <p>Little started the game in fine style, striking out the first five men to face him, and ac</p>
        <p>counting for the first seven outs by strikeouts. In the second, he walked a man, and in the third, he also issued a walk, only to see that man cut down trying to steal.</p>
        <p>In the fourth, the lone clean hit was gotten by Bunn, as Little again got three strikeouts. The sixth was the worst inning for Little. Leadoff man Travis Pearce walked and Craig Mullen got a fluke single, when no one was on first to take the throw by the fielder. Jackie Frazier then hit into a fielders choice, nailing Pearce at third, and (reg Alford was out at first, with the two run-</p>
        <p>Exchange Gets Its First Win</p>
        <p>The Exchange picked up its first victory of I he year, inching past Security Life, 2-1, in a Tar Heel League battle.</p>
        <p>The victory served to increase the lead of Pepsi-Cola and the Moose, both 2-0, in the league, while third place Security drops one game back with a 2-2 mark. The Elks and Exchange are both 1-2, while Greenville Tobacco is yet to win in two contests.</p>
        <p>The Exchange moved into the lead in the first inning. Lead-off man Jeff Cargile walked,</p>
        <p>single, moved up on an error</p>
        <p>Bowens Proves Good Bait As Orioles Crush Chisox</p>
        <p>Fillies Top Aqueduct Field</p>
        <p>By ORLO ROBER'TSON | politan Mile at Aqueduct and Associated Press Sports Writer I the Jersey Derby for 3-year-olds</p>
        <p>at Garden State Park. Holly-</p>
        <p>By HAL BOCK</p>
        <p>Cargfk, ss Brlnktay, 1b Kear, 3b</p>
        <p>moved up on a stolen base and i Hudson. '2b a passed ball and then scored on Robert Brinkley's single. </p>
        <p>'Then in the third, the Exchange made it 2-0. Cargile again reached, this time on a</p>
        <p>and a stolen base and scored Associated Press Sports Writer on Duff Harris single.  j  Manager Hank Bauer, in the</p>
        <p>In the fifth. Security picked; market for another pitcher, up its only run of the game, placed his classified ad in the Robert Puryear singled, moved Baltimore Orioles dugout when up on an out and scored on | jjg posted the line-up.</p>
        <p>Shep Vincents single.  |  ^^d Sam Bowens, perhaps</p>
        <p>-7  sensing he was in the showcase,</p>
        <p>7-5,^ but couldnt put them Jo- didnt waste his chance to impress Bauers potential customers, the Chicago White Sox. He stroked four hits and drove in four runs in a one-man show in Baltimores 7-1 victory Thursday.</p>
        <p>It was hardly endearing to the 3 0 01 White Sox, but certainly impres-3Jo5jsive.</p>
        <p>0 0 01 The Orioles, hoping to entice</p>
        <p>221 7--</p>
        <p>0002 51!</p>
        <p>01017 2</p>
        <p>gether to drive in the runs. The Exchange left six men on base, while Security had 10 waiting, xchant*</p>
        <p>Alford, rf Hudson ,c Totals</p>
        <p>Exchanga Sacurity Lifa</p>
        <p>Sacurlty Lifa b r h</p>
        <p>2 2 1 Purvear, ss</p>
        <p>2 0 1 Jovnar, rf</p>
        <p>3 0 1 Riddick, p 3 0 1 Vincent, c</p>
        <p>1 0 1 Edwards, 1b</p>
        <p>2 0 0 Cade, ct</p>
        <p>3 0 0 Adams, If 3 0 0 Pinner, 3b 2 0 0 Dash, 2b</p>
        <p>21 2 5 Causey, 2b Totals 101 000</p>
        <p>br b</p>
        <p>4 1 2 2 0 0 2 0 1</p>
        <p>2 0 1 2 0 1 3 0 1</p>
        <p>an extra pitcher away from Chicago, are reportedly dangling Bowens as the bait. In two games against the White Sox he rapped six hits in nine trips.</p>
        <p>Bowens delivered a two-run single in the fourth and then drove in two more with a double in the seventh. He had two other singles and also stole a base.</p>
        <p>It could be the White Sox will make the deal for him just to keep him from hitting against them.</p>
        <p>The victory moved the Orioles into a second-place tie with Detroit which suffered through a nightmarish ninth inning and lost 8-4 to American League leading Cleveland. In the only</p>
        <p>Griffith</p>
        <p>Archer</p>
        <p>Meeting In July</p>
        <p>Wilson Rally Brings Victory</p>
        <p>I By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS,hitter and Felix Deleon drove in</p>
        <p>By MURRAY ROSE when he won the middleweight  One reason Wilson is riding</p>
        <p>Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Emile</p>
        <p>title from Nigerias Dick Tiger</p>
        <p>on April 25. Griffith has</p>
        <p>appealed the</p>
        <p>Griffith wasnt kidding when he commissions ruling to the State</p>
        <p>promised to be a fighting champion five years ago.</p>
        <p>The Virgin Islander already has had 12 title fights since he first won the welterweight crown.</p>
        <p>He has two fights in the works today, including a middleweight defense against Joey Archer at Madison Square Garden July 13, and a possible third bout in the making for September.</p>
        <p>Fight No. 2 is against the New York State Athletic Commission and the World Boxing Association for automatically stripping him of the welterweight title</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>YEU OLD</p>
        <p>Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>I dont see why I cant hold both titles, Griffith said Thursday when the Archer fight was announced. Im ready to defend both. As a matter of fact my managers are negotiating for a welterweight titlo light with Kitten Hayward at Las Vegas in 'cpteml^r.</p>
        <p>I dont duck anyone. Joey wanted to fight and now he has his chance. Fifteen rounds,</p>
        <p>Joey, is going to be a long way to go.</p>
        <p> Ive been waiting a long time</p>
        <p>Portsmouth a 4-3 vie rorken I dont totend to blow tory over Mount at Ports-</p>
        <p>atop the Carolina League is its ability to come through with late rallies.</p>
        <p>Trailing by 1-0, Wilson scored once in the seventh and again in the eighth to edge Kinston 2-1 at Wilson Thursday night. Larry Whitley held Kinston to three hits. The only run off him came in the first on a walk, a ground out and a single by Juan Guzman.</p>
        <p>Bill Haywood pitched a five-hitter and batted in two runs to lead Burlington to a 5-1 victory over Raleigh at Burlington. The game was called at th end of eight innings because of rain.</p>
        <p>A two-run homer by Jim Perkins in the ninth inning with two</p>
        <p>s:</p>
        <p>Yorker my opportunity.</p>
        <p>Griffith gave away 9% pounds when he beat Tiger. He will probably be outweighed the same amount by Archer.</p>
        <p>mouth. Bob Christian homered for Rocky Mount in the first inning.</p>
        <p>Winston-Salem scored all its runs in the fifth Inning and de-</p>
        <p>Harry Markson, director of fea^d Peninsula 3-1 at Ham^</p>
        <p>tboxing for the Garden, said the I Griffith-Archer fight figured to</p>
        <p>STRAIGHT BOURBON</p>
        <p>vilinilllll uuvnwuii -Piger bout That one lured "4,-</p>
        <p>934 fans and grossed '147,536.</p>
        <p>Griffith, getting 45 per cent of everythng, could earn about $90,000. The fight will be telecast nationally. Archer will collect a flat guarantee of $17,0^0.</p>
        <p>Archer has a 46-2 record. He has only eight knockouts to his credit.</p>
        <p>Griffiths record is 50-7, including 18 knockouts.</p>
        <p>The Dodgers hit only 78 home runs last season, their lowest total since 1946.</p>
        <p>ton, Va., behind the six-hit pitching of Ron Klimkowski. The Red Sox got only six hits off trio of pitchers.</p>
        <p>'The Greensboro Yanks and Lynchburg broke even in a doubleheader at Lynchburg. Greensboro took the opener 8-3 and lost the nightcap 2-0.</p>
        <p>Nor^t Rodgers pitched a two-</p>
        <p>COMPLETE CAB AT</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>HOLT'S</p>
        <p>1525 Evans St. PL 8-1317</p>
        <p>Ear] Ormonds or Joha Ball</p>
        <p>Men's &amp;amp; Boys'</p>
        <p>BEACH FOOTBALL JERSEYS</p>
        <p>Atsorfed Colors. Short or ^ slotvtt</p>
        <p>Boys' sizes</p>
        <p>310</p>
        <p>Men's Sizes</p>
        <p>*3.75</p>
        <p>H. L. Hodges &amp;amp; Co.</p>
        <p>210 East 5th Street</p>
        <p>the two runs with a single to give Lynchburg its victory. A1 Closter pitched Greensboro to victory in the opener, allowing only five hits. Jim Covington and Clarence Warmsley hit home runs to lead the attack.</p>
        <p>Tonights games: Winston-Salem at Peninsula; Rocky Mount at Portsmouth; Wilson at Kinston; Raleigh at Burlington; and Greensboro at Lynchburg.</p>
        <p>Minor League Baseball By -raE ASSTQATED PRESS International League</p>
        <p>Buffalo 6, Rochester 1 Richmond 8, Columbus 2 Syracuse 10, Toronto 4 Toledo at Jacksonville, poned, rain</p>
        <p>Pacific Coast League Portland at Seattle, poned, rain Spokane 2, Vancouver 0 Tulsa 4, San Diego 3</p>
        <p>post-</p>
        <p>post-</p>
        <p>sa</p>
        <p>Carl L. Kinlaw Says:</p>
        <p>. . . Did you over hoar anyone worrying about tho safaty of his lift inturanco invastmont.</p>
        <p>CARL, KINLAW</p>
        <p>Home Savlnfs A Loa4 Bldf*, 543 S. Evan* St</p>
        <p>752-4825</p>
        <p>NEW ENGLAND LIFE</p>
        <p>  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>other AL game, Boston downed</p>
        <p>Minnesota 7-:</p>
        <p>In the National League, Pittsburgh shaded Houston 3-2, St. Louis edged Chicago 3-2 and San Francisco blanked Philadelphia 1-0 in 14 innings.</p>
        <p>The Tigers were tied at 3-3 going into the ninth inning against Cleveland. But a walk, a fielders choice, a wild pitch and another walk loaded the bases with none out.</p>
        <p>Chuck Hinton singled for two runs. Then with two out. and the bases still loaded after Vic Da-valillos single, Hank Aguirre uncorked a wild throw on Fred Whitfields dribbler and three more Cleveland runs crossed the plate. That gave the Indians five runs on just two hits.</p>
        <p>Jim Northrups two-run homer had tied the game for the Tigers in the eighth.</p>
        <p>Earl Wilson won his fifth game in the last decisions, striking out nine Twins.</p>
        <p>Rico Petrocellis eighth home run gave Wilson a quick lead in the first inning and the Red Sox routed Jim (Mudcat) Grant with four runs in the second.</p>
        <p>Jimmie Halls home run and three singles deprived Wilson of his shutout in the ninth.</p>
        <p>The 3-year-old filly stars headline a rich weekend of horse racing in the Acorn at Aquedrct Saturday.</p>
        <p>Other top events on Saturdays card are the Hollywood Express Handicap, the Cherry Hill Handicap at Garden State Park ane the Sheridan at lington Park.</p>
        <p>Two $100,000-plus stakes are scheduled Mondaythe Metro-</p>
        <p>wood Park will offer the Will Rogers, Arlington Park the Round Table Cap on the grass and Delaware Park the Polly Drummond for 2-yar-old fillies.</p>
        <p>ners advancing to second ani third. But Little calmly struck out the last batter to end the only threat Bunn made.</p>
        <p>Altogether, he struck out 16, walked three and allowed two hits.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, his teammates were finding some trouble in getting on base themselves, after putting two on in the first, on a hit and a walk, Ayden again got a man on base in the second, but neither time could they score.</p>
        <p>Then in the third, Buster Miller led off with a walk and Tony Dail got a single. Little then unloaded with a triple to deep center field, scoring both runners for a 2-0 lead. Little then came across on a balk, making it 3-0.</p>
        <p>Ayden got three more men on base, one in each Inning, and left two of them in scoring position, one on second and one on third. The other was erased in a double play.</p>
        <p>Ayden is now three victories away from their third championship of the season, after having captured the regional football and state basketball Gass A titles.</p>
        <p>UNN</p>
        <p>Welborn Speaks To Raleigh Club</p>
        <p>Odell Welborn, assistant football coach at East Carolina College, spoke last night to a meeting of the Raleigh Chapter of the Pirates Gub. The club is a financial organization for the athletic program.</p>
        <p>Welborn pointed out to the members of the club that the school hopes to be improving its program by playing better football teams in the future, and is hoping to be able to play ACC teams. He noted, however, that the scholarship program of the college must be upgraded still further if East Carolina is to be successful against such teams.</p>
        <p>He pointed out that East Carolina has done well in some sports in the Southern Conference, but poorly in others and this is where more scholarship help must be given, so that the college will be a firm contender in all sports.</p>
        <p>The Acorn is expected to attract the top fillies in the land. Ar- Heading the probable field for the mile race is Moccasin, who easily won her last race after two setbacks. She was Horse of the Year last year after going undefeated in eight starts.</p>
        <p>Moccasin will go against Og-dn Phipps three-horse entry of Destro, My Boss Lady and Marking Time; Kentucky Oaks winner Native Street; Black Eyed Susan winner Holly-0, and Swift Lady.</p>
        <p>B'or, 2b Mullen, 2b Frazier, 3b Alford, If, p H'wood,is S'land, rf Mullen, cf Lewis, lb R'ards, c Poe, c Pearce, p. If 10 0 0 Totals 22 0 2 0 Bunn AydM</p>
        <p>AYDIN</p>
        <p>brhM</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 Miller, lb Call, 3b Little, p B'fleld, rf</p>
        <p>3 0 10 C'brook, 1b 3 0 0 0 W'ton, If</p>
        <p>Polosky, cf Booth, e</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 Merritt, m</p>
        <p>1 0 0 0  Totels</p>
        <p>10 10 3 0 0 0 3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>brhbl</p>
        <p>2 10 0 3 12 0 11 2 2 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 10 0 0 12 3 5 2</p>
        <p>00 MO B-0 2 1</p>
        <p>M3 OM -4 I 0</p>
        <p>The Hollywood Express at Hollywood Park, at 5*^ furlongs is expected to attract seven, with Azure Te the highweight under 122 pounds.</p>
        <p>Garden State looks for eight starters in the six-furlong Cherry Hill, with Chicot packing top-weight of 119 pounds. The Sheridan is a six-furlong dash for 3-year-old colts and geldings, with Flaps Downs, Gypsy Ben and Caligerro each carrying 122 pounds.</p>
        <p>Ayden Meets Cleveland</p>
        <p>Ayden High School will meet Geveland High tomorrow at 2 p.m. in Goldsboro.</p>
        <p>The game will decide th* Eastern representative in the state Gass A baseball finals, scheduled for next week.</p>
        <p>Saad's Shoe Shop</p>
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        <p>Wing Tip Styla $23.00 Saddle Shoe Stylo $2100</p>
        <p>AfefroolDCVWOM</p>
        <p>H.L. Hodges &amp;amp; Co.</p>
        <p>210 East 5lh SttMt</p>
        <p>you see the mark of authenticity!</p>
        <p>University Row* shirts</p>
        <p>KfMwnastho</p>
        <p>"exampiar of ttw traditiofuir, our MANHATTAN* UnhfersHy Row shirts conform handsomaiy to every detail yott demand: the authentic rolled collar; correct short aieeve; box-pieet and ioo^ proparfy tapered body. Choose from sli the approved ontafi and stripeia</p>
        <p>$5.00</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0010" />
        <p>I</p>
        <p>10Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Friday, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>Woodys</p>
        <p>Ramblin's</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE</p>
        <p>Track is rapidly becoming one of the favorite spring sports for the youth of Eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>This was shown during the sectional track meet held here a short time ago. High School boys irom all over the northeastern part of the state, in greater numbers than ever before, gathered at tiUst Carolina College to take part in the meet, and several went on to set new state records.</p>
        <p>Earlier, at a special meet for the freshmen at Rose High School, a lot of interest was shown by the students, enough interest to probably bring a number of these boys out for track next year. Some of their times and distances were outstanding for boys with their experience and age.</p>
        <p>During the past few years, Ray Martinez has done a lot to bring swimming into the spotlight in Eastern North Carolina, and now the East Carolina Swimming Association is moving into a position where it can compete in meets with other, more established, teams in the state. This has been done through an intensive summer program, and a Saturday program during the rest of the year.</p>
        <p>At East Carolina, one of the finest track facilities in the south is available. But for nine months of the year it sits idle.  r-  v</p>
        <p>The youth of the area could put it to good use. Such a program as is conducted in swimming could be put into action for track. The aspiring tracksters could hold weekly meets, with different areas competing against each other. Then during th week, practice sessions could be held, with specialized training in certain phases, so that the youth could correct their mistakes before they make them. Proper supervision would of course be mandatory.</p>
        <p>The program also need not be for boys alone, and girls should be encouraged to participate.</p>
        <p>Such a program could also be continued throughout the year, with a Saturday program.</p>
        <p>The interest of the youth is apparently there. It is up to the adults who are in a position to do something about it to pick up the challenge.</p>
        <p>Marichal Goes 14 Frames</p>
        <p>ALUAMERICAN . . . Two Pitt County basketball players were honored by the Royal Crown Bottling Company last night at a banquet, abng with their team members. Ricky Webb, left, of Greenville, and Billy Stokes of Ayden, right, were honorable mention on the annual Coach and Athlete-R.C. Cola All-American Prep Basketball team. At center is Frank Hill, manager of the local R. C. Company</p>
        <p>(Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Gabriel</p>
        <p>Contract</p>
        <p>Denies</p>
        <p>With</p>
        <p>Signing</p>
        <p>Raiders</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCUTED PRESS. National League</p>
        <p>W. L. Pet. G.B. !</p>
        <p>San Fran. ...</p>
        <p>27 14 .659</p>
        <p>_ 1</p>
        <p>Houston .....</p>
        <p>23 17 .575</p>
        <p>3Vi</p>
        <p>Los Angeles .</p>
        <p>23 17 .575</p>
        <p>3V</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh ..</p>
        <p>20 17 .541</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Cincinnati ...</p>
        <p>18 17 .514</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>Philadel.....</p>
        <p>18 18 .500</p>
        <p>6Vi</p>
        <p>Atlanta .....</p>
        <p>19 23 .452</p>
        <p>St. Louis </p>
        <p>16 20 .444</p>
        <p>ZVz</p>
        <p>New York ...</p>
        <p>13 18 .419</p>
        <p>^ 1</p>
        <p>Chicago .....</p>
        <p>10 26 .278</p>
        <p>14141</p>
        <p>Thursdays Results</p>
        <p>!</p>
        <p>San Francisco 1, Philadelphia.</p>
        <p>0, 14 innings</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>St. Louis 33, Chicago 2</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh 3, Houston 2</p>
        <p>Only games scheduled</p>
        <p>Todays Games</p>
        <p>Cleveland 8, Detroit 4 Todays Games Minnesota at Cleveland, N California at Detroit, N Chicago at New York, N Baltimore at Kansas City, N Boston at Washington, N Saturdays Games Baltimore at Kansas City, N California at Detroit, N Minnesota at Cleveland Boston at Washington Chicago at New York, N</p>
        <p>Carolina League</p>
        <p>Philadelphia at San Francis CO, N</p>
        <p>New York at Los Angeles, N Pittsburgh at Houston, N Cincinsati at St. Louis, N Atlanta at Chicago Saturdays Games Atlanta at Chicago Cincinnati at St. Louis, N Pittsburgh at Houston 2, day-night</p>
        <p>New York at Los Angeles, N Philadelphia at San Francisco American League</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Pet. G.B.</p>
        <p>Wilson</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>.683</p>
        <p>Winston-Salem 23</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>.639</p>
        <p>Rocky Moimt</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>.572</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Burlington ..</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>.513</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Lynchburg ...</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>7^</p>
        <p>Kinston .....</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>.486</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Raleigh ......</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>.474</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>iPortsihouth ..</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.450</p>
        <p>9Vz</p>
        <p>Peninsula ....</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>.419</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Greensboro ..</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>.410</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Durham ...</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.389</p>
        <p>Yesterdays Results</p>
        <p>Wilson 2, Kinston 1</p>
        <p>1 Burlington 5, Raleigh 1</p>
        <p>W.</p>
        <p>L.</p>
        <p>Pet. G.B.</p>
        <p>Cleveland ...</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>.714</p>
        <p>Detroit ......</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>.583</p>
        <p>4^1</p>
        <p>Baltimor ..</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>.583</p>
        <p>California ...</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>.514</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Minnesota ...</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>7Vis!</p>
        <p>Chicago .....</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>.457</p>
        <p>9 I</p>
        <p>New York ...</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>.444</p>
        <p>9^</p>
        <p>Washington .</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>.432</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Boston ......</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.405</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Kansas City .</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>.371</p>
        <p>12 </p>
        <p>(called end of 8th, rain&amp;gt; Portsmouth 4, Rocky Mount 3 Winston-Salem 3, Peninsula 1 Greensboro 8-0, Lynchburg 3-2 Todays Games Winston-Salem at Peninsula Rocky Mount at Portsmouth Wilson at Kinston Raleigh at Burlington Greensboro at Lynchburg</p>
        <p>Even Today, $15 Suits For Men</p>
        <p>Tliursdays Results Boston 7, Minnesota 2 Baltimore 7, Chicago 1</p>
        <p>FRANK WOOTEN FOR</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVE Six Team Lfiltlve Experlenee</p>
        <p>SANTA FE, N.M. (AP) -Contrary to popular belief, the days of $15 mens suits are not gone.</p>
        <p>Henry Hillson k Co. of Albuquerque was the apparent low bidder recently to supply the New Mexico 2tate Penitentiary with 215 mens suits at $14.38 each.</p>
        <p>The suits are given to men released from prison.</p>
        <p>OAKLAND, Calif. (AP) ~ Quarterback Roman Gabriel states he belongs to the Los Angeles Rams of the National Football League for many years to come. But the Oakland itaiders of the American Football League contend he belongs to them starting in 1967.</p>
        <p>The Rams announced Thursday they had signed their four-year veteran to a contract through 1967, with an option for 1968.</p>
        <p>Hours later, Raiders General Manager Scotty Stirling announced hed signed Gabriel Monday in Oakland to a three-year contract, starting in 1967, with an additional one-year option.</p>
        <p>Gabriel was not in his Southern California home. But he left a statement with his wife, Suz-zane, which said:</p>
        <p>I have signed a contract with the Los Angeles Rams. But I turned down a far more lucrative financial offer from the AFL. The Rams are my team and Im looking forward to a winning season, and I plan to be with the Rams for many years to come.</p>
        <p>The twin announcements further stoked the hot war between the two leagues. There have been recent reports that AFL teams were trying to raid NFL clubs in retaliation for the signing of kicker Pete Gogolak by the NFL New York Giants after he played out his option with the AFL Buffalo Bills.</p>
        <p>If the Raiders get Gabriel and they hint theyll go to court to do sohe will be the first NFL star to be wooed away in the current dispute by the younger league. The battle for college stars already has cost both leagues millions.</p>
        <p>We negotiated the agreement in good faith and consider it binding, said Stirling, who did not comment on why the Raiders waited three days to announce the signing.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles owner Dan Reeves disclosed the terms of his contract with Gabriel and said he talked to the star Thursday night. He wouldnt say what was said but commented that he didnt believe the incident would</p>
        <p>cause the inter-league rivalry to apparently died down.</p>
        <p>get hotter.</p>
        <p>I think this is a club problem for the individual' clubs concerned, said Reeves.</p>
        <p>Last week, AFL clubs reportedly contacted members of the New York Giants and Detroit Lions. But after the Lions signed tackle Alex Karras to a seven-year contract, the furor</p>
        <p>He's Got A Good Teacher</p>
        <p>TV</p>
        <p>Win an All-American Fling Complete with Credit Cards!</p>
        <p>G-E TV See America Sweepstakes</p>
        <p>30-days on the countryon the house. Anywhere, everywhere in the Corilinentel U. S.for the entire family. Plus a 19^ Dodge Charger and $5.000 cash for the grand prizewinner.</p>
        <p>Thousands of winners nationwide,</p>
        <p>thousands of prizes-G.E. Porta Color TVs, big scraan mmtt parsonai portables, FM/AM portables. R&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>K wara going to hava a winnarl</p>
        <p>LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -James Ellis probably has the best job around to help him achieve his ambition.</p>
        <p>His ambition; To be heavyweight boxing champion of the world.</p>
        <p>His job: Sparring partner of heavyweight champion Cassius Clay.</p>
        <p>If I move VP to challenger, Clay will fight me, said Ellis Thursday. Hell fight anybody. If we fight; I'll just be doing a job.</p>
        <p>Ellis has returned to Louisville from London, where he helped Clay get ready for his successful title defense against Henry Cooper.</p>
        <p>Ellis has a record of 19 victories against five losses as a professional, some of his victories coming against name boxers. He gained a victory on the Clay-Cooper card last Saturday.</p>
        <p>At 188 pounds Ellis has been campaigning recently as a heavyweight after starting in the pro as a middleweight.</p>
        <p>One source at the time said the AFL strategy was to sign players with one year to run on their contracts, then question whether the NFL would want them to play in 1966 knowing that they would defect the next year.</p>
        <p>Gabriel fell into this category. Professional football contracts generally are for one year with a one-year option.</p>
        <p>After an outstanding career at North Carolina State, Gabriel was first draft choice of the Raiders in 1961, but signed with the Rams. This was before A1 Davis became the Oakland head coach and general manager. Davis became AFL commissioner after the 1965 season.</p>
        <p>Gabriel lost his starting job two years ago to rookie Bill Munson but regained it last year when Munson was injured.</p>
        <p>In Getting Ninth Win</p>
        <p>By MIK" RATHET Associated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>About the only thing Juan Marichal hasnt done yet this season is pitch two shutouts in one day.</p>
        <p>But hes working up to it.</p>
        <p>The unbeaten San Francisco right-hander was on his way there Thursday, pitching 14 innings before recording his ninth victory and fourth shutout in the Giants 1-0 triumph ever the Philadelphia Phillies.</p>
        <p>This was my tJghest game of the year, Marichal admit-td. I was tired.</p>
        <p>But he added:</p>
        <p>I thir I coild * '*ve gonw a few more innings.</p>
        <p>It probably wouldnt have</p>
        <p>made much difference to the Phillies. Mrrichal has been Jr-tually un' uchable this sex on and sur*id "I onl. six Uts againr' the lies while striking out 10 a'd w'lking y one.</p>
        <p>Only two other games were played in the National League, Pit' burgh edgi^.g Houston 3-2 and "t. Louis defeating C.e Clii-cago Cubs 3-2.</p>
        <p>In the American League, Baltimore wallop^' the Chicago White Sox 7-1, Cleveland belted Detroit 8-4 and Boston downed Minnesota 7-2.</p>
        <p>'larichal was loc^ed in a brilliant duel with Jirr Bunning until the nth innin^ when the Phillies starter left for a pinch hitter after allowing only four hits. Then, in the 14th, Jim Daven-</p>
        <p>Pott Leading Oklahomo Open</p>
        <p>By BILL LITTLE  ing  pro  Dick  Metz,  is  a  two-time</p>
        <p>Associated Pr. Sport. Writer</p>
        <p>OKLAHOMA CITY, Okla. (AP)  Johnny Pott sees nothing wrong with being on top.</p>
        <p>The pro from Gulf Hills, Miss., fired an eight-under-par 64 to grab a four-stroke lead in the Oglahoma City Open at Quail Creek Golf and Country Club Thursday</p>
        <p>champion. At 24, he is fresh out of East Texas State College, but has no plans about turning pro.</p>
        <p>Joining Metz at 68 were Bruce Devlin and Tom Weiskopf.</p>
        <p>Ted at 69 were Tony Lema, Harold Henning, Johnny Allen and Lou Graham.</p>
        <p>In all, 41 golfers tied or cracked the par-72 of the 7,173-</p>
        <p>Only once hefore this year has j yard Quail Creek course, golfer led a tour tourney</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>throughout.</p>
        <p>It never hurts to be ahead, Pott said. Theres no psychological disadvantage or anything like that. Most of us have been playing for a long time, and I dont get too excited anymore. There is nothing wrong with leading a tournament as far as I can see.</p>
        <p>Pott hasnt won a tour tournament since he captured the American Golf CJassic in 1963, but he collected $50,896 on the tour circuit last year with high finishes.</p>
        <p>His 64 tied the course record.</p>
        <p>Potts blazing ound  he took only 26 putts and hit 16 greens in regulation  overshadowed a superb performance by amateur Craig Metz, who shot a 68.</p>
        <p>Metz, the son of former tour-</p>
        <p>TERRIER-HAIRED DENVER (AP)Mrs. Dorothy Pubols owns six white terriers. Not only have they won ribbons at dog shows, but theyve shed enough hair for Mrs. Pubols to make several sweaters on an old-fashioned spinning wheel.</p>
        <p>port lined one to right center off reliever Darold Knowls. Johnny Callison tried for a backhand, shoestring catch but the ball got by him for a trple.</p>
        <p>Hal Laner drew a walk  and it was Marichals turn to bat.</p>
        <p>I didnt want Herman (Man-ager Herman Franks) to let me hit and then be sorry for it, said Marichal, "^'so I went to him and told him. Ive been hitting well but Im not a good hitter.</p>
        <p>Franks tapped Jesus Alou to pinch hit and Knowles walked him intentionally. Pinch hitter Bob Barton then lifted a fly to cente' field, Davenport raced home with the games only run and Marichal hcsd a 9-0 recc</p>
        <p>Manny Motas third inning homer proved decisive for the Pirates. The victory went to Steve Blass but he needed Pete Mikkelsens relief help in the eighth inning after Jim Gentile tripled.</p>
        <p>Mikkelsen was tagged for a run-scoring double by Lee Maye but eventually got out of a basts-loaded jam by getting Felix Mantilla to hit into a double play.</p>
        <p>Cubs starter Dick Ellsworth took a six-hitter and a 2-0 lead provided  rcn  Browi.e's</p>
        <p>homer into the ninth inning but the Cardinals came out on top.</p>
        <p>Orlando 'Zepeda singled In the tying run, after an error by Ron Canto had let in the first, and Tim McCarver capped the uprising v/ith a bases-loaded single.</p>
        <p>Put A New Man In Office VOTE FOR R. H. WORTHINGTON</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>Pitt County ComnMioner</p>
        <p>DOG HAVEN KENNEL</p>
        <p>NOW OPEN</p>
        <p>BOARDING FOR DOGS &amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>PUBLIC INVITED</p>
        <p>OPERATED BY MRS. ELSIE DUNN PHONE 752-3377</p>
        <p>Automatic Fire Alarm Sounded</p>
        <p>Greenville firemen were called to General Sales in the 200 block of East 14th Street when an alarm from Box 16 was received at 2:25 p.m. yesterday.</p>
        <p>Fire officers, who reported no fire was found, said water pressure in the firms sprinkler system had leaked down causing the fire alarm to be automatically turned in.</p>
        <p>Evan</p>
        <p>Vl^liams</p>
        <p>BL/iCK UBEL</p>
        <p>C(t/ml Jilm</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY STRAIGHT ttOURBON WHISKE</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>YEARS OLD</p>
        <p>90 PROOF</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR FREE RADIO TO Bi GIVEN AWAY MAY 28</p>
        <p>V. A. MERRITT &amp;amp; SONS</p>
        <p>207 EVANS ST.  PL  2-3736</p>
        <p>4 Rfth</p>
        <p>*2 Pint</p>
        <p>lohi'td by la EVAN WILLIAMS DISTILLMY tine* 1783 fMtUwN. lltlMii C*unty. KvnluelV</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR</p>
        <p>AN EXPERIENCED^ LEGISLATOR INTERESTED IN MEETING YOUR NEEDS</p>
        <p>FRANK</p>
        <p>WOOTEN</p>
        <p>CANDIDATE FOR NORTH CAROLINA HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES GREENVILLE AND PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>FRANK M. WOOTEN, JR. can giva Pitt County and Eastern North Carolina the responsible leadership this area demands and deserves in order to insure that Eastern North Carolina moves toward ^e fullest development of its potentialcultural, Industrial, and agricultural.</p>
        <p>FRANK WOOTEN can provide effective leadership because he hat beam -An actively practicing lawyer in Greenville for twenty-five years.</p>
        <p>A member of the House of Representatives for six years.</p>
        <p>-A recently appointed member of the Governor's Commission on the Establishment and Improvement of Alcoholic Rehabilitation Cantors</p>
        <p>-An active participant in church, professional, civic, and fraternal erganiiations</p>
        <p>FRANK WOOTEN will unfailingly work for the needs of Eastern North Carolina because he supports what this area wants:</p>
        <p>-The establishment of a medical school and university status for East Carolina College.</p>
        <p>-Adequate school facilities</p>
        <p>-Reasonable salaries for all state employees</p>
        <p>-Local and new industry</p>
        <p>-Increased sources of income for farmers</p>
        <p>-Development of a mental health program</p>
        <p>-Continued support of the technical school system</p>
        <p>-An arterial highway systam for the State providing adequate access for eastern North Carolina (Paid for by Friends of Frank M. Wooten, Jr.Qualified by experienck and Interest)</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0011" />
        <p>fh DaHy Raflactor, GraanvHIa, N. C.Friday, May 27, 196611</p>
        <p>' 'rs _  }</p>
        <p>'  r:-</p>
        <p>  -  '  s  &amp;gt;x.y vviXvSv'l., ^R| V</p>
        <p>CHICOD HIGH SCHOOL . . . will graduate a Senior Class of 39 members in ceremonies on May 31. Those graduating Include: (from left) FIRST ROWYvonne Spain, Rena Wilson Ann Daughton, Sarah Wiggins, Gloria Vandiford, Patsy McLaw. horn and Carolyn Perkins. SECOND ROWJean Mills, Prances Pomes, Barney Mills, Jackie Rouse, Albert Buck, Mike Clark, Sylva Dennis and Carolyn McLawhorn. THIRD ROWLou Eaien Cannon, Linda Halstead, Avis Stanley .Jimmy Eks, Lou Tina Forrest, Brenda Sutton and Norman Cashion. FOURTH ROWNancy Hardy, Janice Campbell, Tommy Bess, Brenda Haddock, Nancy Wetherington, Jimmy Smith, Ralph Haddock and Lyman Haddock. PIFTH ROWRuth Warren, Jimmy Williams, David Cannon, James Gurkins, Ronnie Mills, Rodney Williams, Teb Stocks, Elaine Mills and Jarvis Pollard.The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>A Belated Salute Due Our Business Schools</p>
        <p>President Fenton and ^t h e 1,200 other heads to topnotch Business Schools, deserve a belated salute! They are the greatest hope for staving off Socialism and Communism. For their students dont espouse Socialism or Communism but are staunch supporters of A m e r i c as free enterprise system!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph. D., M. D.</p>
        <p>CASE Z-429; President S. D.</p>
        <p>Carroll Voices His Dismay</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Dr. Charles (trary, illegal and unfair.</p>
        <p>ished most of the money by which our Liberal Arts and other colleges have been financed! (The Rockefellers have giv e n over $76,000,000 just the University of Chicago alone!)</p>
        <p>It is business which also makes possible the generous American contributions to churches, United Funds, hospitals, etc.</p>
        <p>And American business under the free enterprise system, has undergirded the United Nations as well as the lush for-eigh aid that runs into many Fenton invited me to deliver,billions, the Commencement Address forj prom the most remote days 250 graduates of his American of antiquity, business has fur-</p>
        <p>Institute of Commerce.</p>
        <p>Prior to my speech, Hazel Muligan. house mother, showed me around the girls dormitories.</p>
        <p>These coeds are placed in separate apartments with beds for from 6 to 9 girls.</p>
        <p>Each group has its own kitchen, dining room, and spacious study area.</p>
        <p>If there are 6 girls to an apartment, then 2 of them do the grocery buying.</p>
        <p>Another pair will do the cook-</p>
        <p>nished most of the employment and the taxes by which to operate governments.</p>
        <p>But Business College have been treated much like a stepchild or the ugly duckling, possibly because they operate frugally and dont yell to the state legislatures for million - dollar football stadiums.</p>
        <p>Remember Business Colleges dont panhandle at the state legislatures for millions of tax dollars to operate their schools! Instead, BUSINESS C 0 L-</p>
        <p>Carroll, North Carolinas superintendent of public instruction, is disappointed with a reply from the U.S. Office of Education to questions about 1966 school desegregation guidelines.</p>
        <p>As far as I can see, nothing has changed, Carroll said Thursday. We have presented our position and they have presented theirs.</p>
        <p>Carroll had asked that enforcement of the guidelines be delayed until the entire matter could be studied. But U. S. Commissioner of Education Harold Howe refused Carrolls request.</p>
        <p>Howes 18-page reply was termed by Carroll to be a re-stateni^t of policies handed down earlier. Carroll warned against it being misinterpreted.</p>
        <p>The letter said in part: Free choice plans are acceptable only if they achieve a significant measure of desegregation.</p>
        <p>Local resentment against the guidelines are no reason to delay their enforcement, inevitable result of school de-Faculty integration is an segregation plans.</p>
        <p>One responsibility of local school systems is to adopt and implement an effective plan of school desegregation.Beer Fall' Was Also Measured</p>
        <p>Ing for a week, while the final LEGES actually PAY TAX-2 girls wash and dry the dishes. eS!</p>
        <p>and friends, that Dr. Glenn I They are thus a self - reliant Frank, former president at the type of education that pays its</p>
        <p>GRAND FORKS, N.D. (AP) Several inches of beer falls To lift out of context only | occasionally on the Red River fragments of what either of us Valley, according to the old rain has stated would result in an in- gauge at the University of North complete comprehension of the Dakota, questions raised and replies Officials said student prank-given, Carroll said.  jers  had been pouring beer into</p>
        <p>Howes letter was a point-by- the gauge.</p>
        <p>point reply to charges by Car-j -</p>
        <p>roll in Washington April 14 that* Lima, Ohio makes railroad the new guidelines are arbi- equipment.</p>
        <p>Univerisity of Wisconsin, said the business man (salesman and advertiser) is:</p>
        <p>. . . not the high priest of a sordid commercialism but is</p>
        <p>own way.</p>
        <p>So it is high time we Americans began to salute the Business Colleges and made our Liberal Arts schools follow^ their</p>
        <p>really the sparkplug of civiliza-;efficient plan of operation, tion.  i  Lets put first things first!</p>
        <p>Then I mentioned that honor i most important colleges and glory have brightened the &amp;gt;" America are the Business</p>
        <p>image of Liberal Arts colleges, as well as dental, medical and law schools.</p>
        <p>But Business Colleges have been overlooked far too long.</p>
        <p>Yet business men have fur-</p>
        <p>a flavor to suit every taste</p>
        <p>easy to use... ask your dealer</p>
        <p>Schools!</p>
        <p>We could even get along without medicine and other wonderful colleges but not without business people.</p>
        <p>Business is the foundation for our lush American standard of living and our charitable offshoots, such as the Boy Scouts, YMCA, United Fund, hospitals, etc.</p>
        <p>Would that every potential housewife and every Congressman had received a diploma from a Business School!</p>
        <p>Then our taxes wouldnt be wasted so profligately at Washington and by our state legislatures.</p>
        <p>And divorces would diminish!</p>
        <p>For the average American has no concept of gross vs. net profit!</p>
        <p>He doesnt even dream that an average dictated one-page business letter costs $2.32, as per Dartnell Corporations recent analysis!</p>
        <p>NINE-YEAR COMMUTER TO GET DEGREE  For nine years Shirley C. Keller has been commuting first from Middletown and then from Ashland, Ky to attend the Uni-versity of Cincinnatis evening classes. The travelestimated at 40,000 milesand the long hours will pay off June 10 when he is graduated from UC.  ((AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>(Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)</p>
        <p>Bagdad, Calif., in 191M4 had no rainfall for 767 days.</p>
        <p>SAVE ONDRUGS</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>pm PIAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>RE - ELECTFor Ability and Experience .</p>
        <p>A Pitt County NativeJAMES CHEATHAMSolicitor</p>
        <p> EXPERIENCED COUNTY SOLICITOR</p>
        <p> PRACTICING AHORNEY</p>
        <p> NAVY VETERANLt. Cdr. USNR  CIVIC and CHURCH LEADER</p>
        <p> MARRIEDFather of two</p>
        <p>If elected, I pledge to work diligently in the pur* suit of the proper administration of justice, to bring the court dockets up to date and to avoid delays in the operation of the courts. I feel that I am well qualified through my experience as county solicitor and I pledge to work hard in the interest of the entire district.</p>
        <p>thSolicitorial District</p>
        <p>ALTON GARDNERCOUNTY COMMISSIONER</p>
        <p>FIFTH DISTRICT</p>
        <p>Democratic Primary  May 28, 1966 Your Vota and Support Appreciated</p>
        <p>DEMOCRATIC PRIAAARY SATURDAY, AAAY 28thYour Vote Will Be Appreciated</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0012" />
        <p>12Th* Daily Raflactwr, Graanvilla, N. C.Friday, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>T"'     -.......--  -------Seawell Suspects Illegal Activity By Kluxers</p>
        <p>By SAM MORTON CHAPEL HILL, N. C. (AP)-Malcolm B. Seawell said today he believes the Ku Klux Klan has engaged in illegal political activity by campaigning for Klansmen seeking public offce in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Seawell, a Raleigh attorney who heads a state connnittee investigating the Klan, laid North Carolinas 1953 Moore Act out-</p>
        <p>ilaws secret political societies.</p>
        <p>The Klan is a secret organi-jzatlon and for them to engage in any type of political activity makes them  secret political society under the law in my view, said Seawell, who also is chairman of the State Board of Elections.</p>
        <p>Seawell, who resides in Chapel Hill, was asked to comment on a news conference held in Char</p>
        <p>lotte Thursday by J. Robert Jones, North Carolina head of the United Klans of America.</p>
        <p>Tsam R. f^isenheimer, a Mecklenburg County Klansman running for the State House of Representatives, and Jones wife Sybil, a candidate for clerk of Rowan County Superior Court, were introduced at the confer</p>
        <p>ence.</p>
        <p>Misenheimer wore the Klans</p>
        <p>0 </p>
        <p>FOR FC.AST</p>
        <p>FigwM lliaw Uw l0mp0rmtw tmp0f UnM fHwday Memiwf</p>
        <p>WEATHER FORECAST  Scattered showers are forecast for most of eastern third of nation Ukd Rocklea Friday night with rain over Washington coast. It will be cooler in north Pacific eoast, northern Plateau, Great Lakes and portions of upper Mississippi Valley, with warmer temperatures teen for mid*Mississippi Valley and north Atlantic coast states. (AP Wirephoto Map)</p>
        <p>white satin robe and conical hood. Both he and Mrs. Jones are candidates in Saturdays pri mary election.</p>
        <p>I would say, said Seawell, theyve violated the Moore Act And theyve violated it before.</p>
        <p>No matter what they say, he added, its political activity for any member of it (the Klan) to espouse the cause of another member.</p>
        <p>The Klan is chartered in North Carolina as a fraternal organization, and any political activity might endanger the charter.</p>
        <p>Seawell has said that any kind of illegal activity is just what his committee is looking for, particularly in connection with Saturdays primary election.</p>
        <p>Jones 4 emphasized several times during the news conference the Klan is a fraternal organization, not a political party.</p>
        <p>But survival is the first sign of life, Jones said at one point, and in order to be a fraternal organization, there must be some political activity ... to some extent.</p>
        <p>Jones said several times he was backing Misenheimer personally, not as a Klan official.</p>
        <p>But he was asked how the Klan supported candidates and replied:</p>
        <p>Last evening Klansmen hit every house in Salisbury, Spen</p>
        <p>cer and East Spencer with one of Sybils cards, Jones replied.</p>
        <p>Seawell refuted a statement by Jones that Klansmen are running for public office in at least 75 of the states 100 counties this year.</p>
        <p>They arent even organized in 75 counties, said Seawell.</p>
        <p>Jones refused to give numbers or names but said there are some Klansmen now holding seats in the state legislature.</p>
        <p>In an interview earlier in the day, Jones had said he did not know exactly how many Klansmen were seeking office, "but I do know there are as many as 18 to 20 running in some counties.</p>
        <p>Misenheimer, a 53-year-old construction worker, who has lost three times as a candidate for the Mecklenburg County</p>
        <p>Commission, said the Klan had not yet contributed any money to his campaign.</p>
        <p>Im leaving that up to them, he said. *Tt will be up to the members in Charlotte. I havent asked them myself.</p>
        <p>Jones said many Klansmen who are candidates in Saturdays primaries" will not admit their membership, fearing discrimination and harassment. But besides Mrs. Jones and Misenheimer, at least four other candidates have admitted their Klan affiliation.</p>
        <p>Seawell said his committee was gathering more information, especially with the primaries coming up. Weve gotten a good bit of information recently. We should have something to say (about the Klan) in the near future.</p>
        <p>Re-ElectROLAND G.BRINSONPitt County Boardof Education</p>
        <p>The Klan announced Thursday it would hold a rally at 8 p.m. tonight on a farm about three</p>
        <p>miles north of Mount Airy off U.S. 52 near Fancy Gap. Jones is expected to attend. ___RE-EUCTJ. Vance Perkins</p>
        <p>County Commissioner</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE DISTRICT DEMOCRATIC PRIMARY MAY 28, 1966EXPERIENCED THROUGH MANY YEARS OF SERVICEAS . . .it COUNTY COMMISSIONER it COUNTY TREASURER</p>
        <p>Your Vote and Support Appreciated</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)-Twen-ty-three Republican congressmen called today for a thorough</p>
        <p>investigation of the Selective Service system.</p>
        <p>They said the entire draft law</p>
        <p>SEAGRAMS</p>
        <p>V.O.</p>
        <p>IMPORTED</p>
        <p>CANADIAN</p>
        <p>WHISKY</p>
        <p>$q65 O Pint</p>
        <p>eainui^</p>
        <p>- A BLBNO</p>
        <p>Miictio</p>
        <p>I THf canaiaM I</p>
        <p>'VMlSHy IS sn VIA*5 9''</p>
        <p> StAOKAM e</p>
        <p>M woor</p>
        <p>SttlXAM-DlSTILURS COMPANY.R.Y.C.86.8 PIOOF. A ILENO...SIX YEANS OLD.</p>
        <p>needs re-examination because the manpower needs of the services and the manpower available to the services both are dramatically different than they were when the current draft law was enacted...</p>
        <p>The group, headed by Rep. Robert F. Ellsworth of Kansas, said it would submit five more statements on the draft in the next two weeks.</p>
        <p>It noted Gen. Lewis B. Her-shey. Selective Service director, is expected to be called before the House Armed Services Committee soon to determine whether a full scale congressional investigation is needed.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Sen. Edward M. Kennedy wants a federal relocation agency established to help persons whose homes or businesses are taken by government programs.</p>
        <p>The Massachusetts Democrat told the Senate Public Roads subcommittee over 80,000 families and individuals are displaced each year by highway and urban renewal programs.</p>
        <p>Now is the time, although it is late, he said, to begin giving greater attention to the fact that most of those displaced have not been made whole economically.</p>
        <p>CAPITAL FOOTNOTES</p>
        <p>President Johnson has ordered federal agencies to take the lead in efforts toward improving control of air pollution.</p>
        <p>Secretary of Agriculture Orville L. Freeman says India has received an additional $313,480,-000 worth of foods under the U.S. Foreign Assistance Program, making that country the largest recipient of Food-for-Peaoe funds from the United States.</p>
        <p>Secretary of Commerce John T. Connor says golden passports costing $7 each and permitting entry to all federal recreation areas charging admission fees go on sale today.</p>
        <p>THE AFTERMATH CHANDIGARH, India (AP)-At least 44 Indian civilians have been killed and 54 injured by land mines left behind by Indian and Pakistani forcea that fought across the Northwest plains in September 1965.</p>
        <p>Mobile homes set on permanent foundations are now subject to ad valorem taxes in Florida.</p>
        <p>PITT MEMORIAL HOSPITALNwRt Scale Effective May 23,1966Ward Bads (par day)  $12.00Somi'Privite Rooms (per day) Without Toilet$14.00With Connecting Toilet $15.00</p>
        <p>$16.00</p>
        <p>$18.00With Full Bath Private Rooms (Per Day)</p>
        <p>Without Toilet With Connecting Toilet $19.00 With Full Bath  $21.00.Discharge Hour11:00 a.m.</p>
        <p>PiHant rMYialniiie after 11 am will be ahtrfed addltienal day</p>
        <p>Admitting Hour - 2:00 p.m. Board of Trustees-Pitt Memorial Hospital</p>
        <p>C. D. WARD, ADMINIfTRATOR</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>'... is black and white and read all over. Every day, in 85% of the homes in the United States. And when you advertise in the daily newspaper; there are two things you can be sure of. (1) Just about everybody in your trading area will see your ad. (2) They wont be knitting or driving to, work or holding a conversation or sleeping when your ad comes on^</p>
        <p>People have to concentrate in order to read. And your ad in the newspaper gets the undivided attention of ^ your best prospects. So if you have something to sell, \ think of newspaper readers. Silence is golden.  ^</p>
        <p>LThe Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>Pitt County"s Home Newspaper^'</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0013" />
        <p>Far-Ridden Women Learn Judo Defense</p>
        <p>By BARBARA LEWIS</p>
        <p>NEW YRK (AP) - Four years ago a, middle-aged typist was attacked by three young thugs after she got off her bus on her way home from work. She was knocked to the ground, slapped, punched, kicked, rob-bc^d, and remained in shock for weeks.</p>
        <p>Today, after four years of weekly judo lessons, gentle, graying Mrs. Eleanor de Milt says: I would welcome an attack now. I feel I can take on anybody.</p>
        <p>During the recent New York City transit strike, a pretty, 18-year-old coed was walking home through a deserted Bronx factory district at dusk when she noticed two men trailing behind her. One lurched ahead and grabbed her by the arm.</p>
        <p>The 5-foot-1, 105 - pound student caught his wrist, twisted his fingers upwards, and pressed counter-clockwise until he</p>
        <p>screamed in surprise and pain. Both men took to their heels.</p>
        <p>The girl had had the preence to execute one of the most elementary judo holdsthe wrist lock. It may have saved her life.</p>
        <p>These two women learned the hard way that police protection in crime-infested New York isnt always at ones fingertipsbut that judo, the concealed weapon, can be.</p>
        <p>Along with a small army of some 300 other fearful city women, they decided to steer a do-it-yourself self-defense course and enrolled in weekly judo classes at the YWCAs Central Manhattan Branch. This huge female enrollment was spurred by a recent wave of Queens rape and daily reports of muggings and robberies.</p>
        <p>In the ys vast, mat-strewn gym, the maidenly art is taught to women from all walks of life by tall, trim Ruth Horan, national vice-chairman of the U.S.</p>
        <p>Womens Judo Committee, and a judo student for 12 years.</p>
        <p>Under her deft supervision, housewives and nurses, bookkeepers and professional women from all over the metropolitan area learn how to man-handle men should the situation ever arise.</p>
        <p>They come here because city streets scare them now,* says Mrs. Horan.</p>
        <p>Forty-year-old Ruth Horan, who looks 10 years younger, says that 65 of her students had been robbed or attacked before coming to her for help. She adds none of them need have suffered this experience.</p>
        <p>After only eight lessons of basic judo, she says, a woman can protect herself.</p>
        <p>She points out that a 98 -pound woman can pin down a 200-pound brute using judo since an attacker makes himself automatically vulnerable in the art. Judo, she says, teaches you to</p>
        <p>AN Ci.0Of^AtfA WAS jeotOMf</p>
        <p>r^ANic ^howpy/i t.iKe</p>
        <p>A HANPUBP-THAT , -Mm  Hpw'p</p>
        <p>1 TMfc</p>
        <p>turn your adversarys strength against himself.</p>
        <p>A gun or knife at close range can be easily handled,** she declares. Not a single criminal assault could take place if won-en knew judo.</p>
        <p>Ruth Horan would like to see the art incorporated into the New York City public school systems physical education curriculum. It makes so much more sense than all that running and broad jumping. We teach our students to run, but to run with confidence.*</p>
        <p>The we she refers to includes her fellow jud-expert and husband of 20 years, Nick Horan. A bandleader on weekends, and just about the only male in the womens Y during the week, Nick pays for the privilege by acting as class *vil-lain and assailant* in demonstration attacks, and prize foil in holds, locks, and escapes.</p>
        <p>The leonine-headed judo expert is pictured in every conceivable upside-down attitude and position in his wifes recent book: ' Judo for Women, a Manual of Self-Defense.</p>
        <p>The manual is the only requisite for the course as i d e from the kimono-like judo-GI outfits the ladies wear once</p>
        <p>theyve fintshrd eight weeks of basic judo. The classic judo-GI ensemble consists of white jacket, trousers, and grade -depicting belt (white for beginners black for the experts) Horan also recommends padded iH'as, even for amply-endowed ladies, since theres a lot of rubbing and bumping.</p>
        <p>The Horans say that judo which, in Japanese, means^ the gentle waytempers the personality, quickens the senses, and lifts the spirits. They stress that it is purely defensive and must never be used to harm anyone.</p>
        <p>They also say it can change a fear-ridden woman into an hi-trepid one.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.RrWay, May 27r  IS</p>
        <p>Check These Bargain Buys</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>wNa</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>:0O Nws ;10 Sports 6:75 Weather 6:30 News 7:00 Dennis 7:X Wild West 8:30 Hogan 9:00 Corner Pyla 9:30 Smothers 10:00 O'Brien 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie SATURDAY 8:00 Kangaroo 9:00 Heck.-Jeck. 9:30 Tenn. Tux 10:00 M. Mosua 10:30 Lassie 11:00 Tom &amp;amp; Jerry 11:30 Quick Draw 12:00 Sky King 12:30 Linus 1:00 Fllcka 1:30 Lona Ranger 2:00 Movie 4:00 Belmont 4:30 Honeymooner* 5:00 L. Thaxton 6:00 Grtyhounds 6:30 Wilburns</p>
        <p>7:00 P. Wagoner 7:30 J. Gleason 8:30 Sec. Agent 9:30 Faco Fam. 10:00 Gunsmoka 11:00 Naws 11:15 AAovio SUNDAY 8:00 Lessons 8:30 Gospel Singing 9:30 Light 10:00 Whitsunday 11:00 Camera 3 11:30 Big Picture 12:00 Concepts 12:30 Face Nation 1:00 Hennessey 1:30 Star Per.</p>
        <p>2:00 Honeymooners 2:30 Sports 4:00 Showcast.</p>
        <p>6:00 Century 6:30 A. Hour 7:00 Lassie 7:30 Martian 8:00 Ed Sullivan 9:00 Perry Mason 10:00 C. Camera 10:30 My L'ne?</p>
        <p>11:00 News 11:15 Movla</p>
        <p>WITN</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>6:00 News 6:15 Sports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Hunt. Brink. 7:00 Wyatt Earp 7:30 Runamuck 8:00 Hank 8:30 Sing Along 9:30 Mr. Roberts 10:00 U.N.C.L.E. 11:00 Weather 11:05 News 11:10 Sports 11:15 Tonight</p>
        <p>SATURDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Clutch Cargo 7:30 Space Angel 8:00 Hospitality 9:00 Jetions 9:30 Atom Ant 10:00 Sec. SquirrtI 10:30 Underdog 11:00 Top Cat 11:30 Fury 12:00 Laramla 1:00 Baseball 4:00 Highlights 4:30 The Lt.</p>
        <p>5:30 Sam Snead 6:00 Newscopa</p>
        <p>6:15 ports 6:25 Weather 6:30 Scherer 7:00 To the Races 7:30 Flipper 8:00 Jeannie 8:30 Get mart 9:00 Movie 11:00 Weather 11:15 Theatre SUNDAY 7:30 Astro Boy 8:00 Ingin'</p>
        <p>9:00 Revival Hour 9:30 Compass 10:00 Fron. Circus 11:00 The Life 11:30 The Answer 12:00 Don Powell 12:30 Oral Roberts 1:00 Matlnaa 3:00 Aquanauts 4:00 ports 5:00 Viet Nam 5:30 College Bowl 6:00 Wells Fargo 6:30 Age of JFK 7:30 Disney's 8:30 Branded 9:00 Bonanza 10:00 Wacky Ship 11:00 Theatre</p>
        <p>WNBE</p>
        <p>obtained from office of the Superintendent of the Pitt County Schools. No proposals will be considerad or acceptad unless, at the tinta of its filing, the snrHi shall be accompanied by cash deposit, bid bond, or certified check in the amount equal to five percent (5 percent) of the proposal.</p>
        <p>The FItt Caunty Board of Education reservas tha right to reiact any and all bids, to award tha bid in tha best public interest and to waive informalities. For the Pitt County Board of' Education, Pitt County, North Carolina Arthur S. Alford, Svparintandent May 27</p>
        <p>OLD8MOB1LE  3-19M  '</p>
        <p>iDBded. IMl 88* 4 door hardtop</p>
        <p>call Vic Pezzulla, PL 8-1123.</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Administratrix, c.t.a., of the estate of Georgianna Whltthurst Whltfletd, de-caasad, laa of, Pitt County. North Car. ollna, this Is toYiotlty all ptraens having claims against said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of October. 1966, or this notice will ba pitaded In bar of thair recovery. All persons Indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the 13th day of April, 1966.</p>
        <p>Llltia W. Little,</p>
        <p>Administratrix, c. t. a., of The estate of</p>
        <p>Georgianna Whitehurst Whitfield 531 North Main Street Farmville, North Carolina H. Horton Rountree, Attorney May 27, June 3, 10, 17, 1966.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>North Carolina Pitt County Notice Is hereby given that L. J. Whitehurst 8i Sons, Inc., has filed with the office of tha Secretary of State of North Carolina Articles of  Voluntary</p>
        <p>Dissolution pursuant  to  G. S.  55-117  and</p>
        <p>that said corporation Is now In the process of winding up and closing out its affairs as provided  In  G. S.  55-119.</p>
        <p>This tha 25th day  of  May,  1966.</p>
        <p>L. J. Whitehurst  A  Sons.  Inc.</p>
        <p>C. W. Everett, Attorney Bethel, N. C.</p>
        <p>May 27 and June X 10, 17, 1966</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVi</p>
        <p>Autos Ror ^lo</p>
        <p>METROPOLITAN  1958. fOOd</p>
        <p>condition. 30  $150.00.</p>
        <p>Call 756-0300.</p>
        <p>OPEL  2. 1958 2 dr. and 1960</p>
        <p>stationwagoQ, one owner, csdl Vic Pezzulla 758-1123</p>
        <p>PUEGEOT  1963, by owner. Perfect cond. May be aetn at 752-2775.</p>
        <p>SEE T. O. CAYTON. SALES manager, EAM Motor Co., 4th ii Cotanche St., PL 94616. nne$ Used Cars.</p>
        <p>TODAY! PICK THE OAR TO fit your purse, new or used. Blf seiectiMi. Wagner-Waldrop Motors, West End. PL 2-1525.</p>
        <p>WOMAN I&amp;gt;SSIRES WORKING lady as companion. Room rent kitchen privilege free in exchange for companionship. Call 752-6383.</p>
        <p>EXECUTOR'S NOTICE Having qualified as Executrix of tha estate of Kyrus M. Crawford, deceased, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said dacaasad to exhibit them to the undersigned on or before the 15th day of October, 19&amp;lt;6. or this notice will ba pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This tha 15th day of April, 1966.</p>
        <p>Mattie L. Crawford, Executrix af tha estate of Kyrus M. Crawford Harrell &amp;amp; Mattox, Attorneys.</p>
        <p>May 27, and June 3, 10, 17, 1966</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SERVICE OF FROCESS BY PUBLICATION</p>
        <p>Louise Simmons Sutton V.</p>
        <p>Jessie Lea Sutton To Jessie Lee Sutton:</p>
        <p>Take notice that a pleading seeking relief against you has been filed in tha above entitled action. The nature of the relief being sought Is as follows: An action for absolute divorce on the grounds of one year's separation.</p>
        <p>You are required to make defense to such pleading not later than the 4th day of August, 1966, and upon failure to do to, the party seeking relief against you will apply to the Court for the relief sought.</p>
        <p>This the 25th day of May, 1966.</p>
        <p>D. T. House, Jr.</p>
        <p>Clerk of Superior Court Roberts &amp;amp; Wooten, Attorneys May 27, June 3, 10, 17, 1966</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>6:00 E. Report 6:10 Weather 6:15 Newt 6:30 Indiana. 500 7:00 E. Tubb 7:30 A. Family 8:00 Honey West 8:30 Farmers 9:00 Court Martial 10:00 Tammy 10:45 Theatre 10:40 Weather 10:30 Late Report SATURDAY 7:00 Hopa long 8:00 Talestory 8:15 Cartoon 9:00 Porky 9:30 Beatles 10:00 Casper 10:30 Magilla 11:00 Bugs Bunny 11:30 Milton 12:00 Hopplty 12:30 Bandstand 1:30 Robin Hood 1:00 Matinee 3:30 Big Pictura 4:00 World Sports 5:30 Review 5:45 News 1:55 Weather</p>
        <p>6:00 Town A C. 6:30 Ozzie 7:00 D. Reed 7:30 L. Welk 8:30 Palace 9:30 Scope 10:00 News 10:15 Round Up 11:15 Wrestling SUNDAY 7:00 Truth 7:30 Insight 8:00 Faith 8:30 Gospel 9:00 Beany 9:30 Potamus 10:00 Bullwlnkla 10:30 Discovery 11:00 Boots A Sad. 11:30 Californlant 12:00 Direction 12:30 Issues Ans. 1:00 E. G, A.</p>
        <p>1:30 Matlnaa 3:30 Flying Scots 4:00 Bowling 5:00 Mr. Lucky 5:30 Death Val. 6:00 Voyage 7:00 F. B. I.</p>
        <p>8:00 Movie 10:00 News 10:15 Movie</p>
        <p>Descendants At Dedication Event</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP) - Descend-</p>
        <p>ants of thrfie American presidents and a cousin of a fpilpth attended the dedication of a 22-story state office building recently.</p>
        <p>Taking part in the planning of four presidential trees honoring four men from Massachusetts who served as president were:</p>
        <p>John Coolidge, son of Calvin Coolidge; John Quincy Adams and Charles Francis Adams, descendants of John Adams and John Quincy Adams; and Robert Fitzgerald, a first cousin of John F. Kennedy.</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>INVITATION TO BID</p>
        <p>Pitt County Board of Education has authorized the advertisement for bids on the following project:</p>
        <p>Sealed proposals will be received by the Pitt County Board of Education and the office of said board at the courthouse, Greenville, North Carolina until 2:00 p.m. (EST), Friday, June 6, 1966 and Immadiately thereafter publicly open and ra8d for furnishing a mobil film materlala center for the Pitt County Schools.</p>
        <p>Bid forms and specifications may ba</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>Needed</p>
        <p>Male with meehanical back, ground. Experienced, working on lewing machines preferred. Must be sober, reliable, dependable, draft exempt. Apply hi person at Prepshirt Manufacturing Corp.</p>
        <p>ARE YOU DRIVING A 10W4RICED CAR?</p>
        <p>. . . that laaks and tato Hka a law prtc84 car?</p>
        <p>Then yea havaiiT driven a 1986 Fanttsc. Fentiac offers luxwriM sat afferad an ttia se-cailad law-priced can. Ya awn It te yourself to find eut why Fentiac hat baen Amarica'8 3rd Mrieel aaUnr far 6 etraifht years.</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD PONTIAC</p>
        <p>1381 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>PLPni</p>
        <p>WE BUY-WE SELL-WR TRADE New A Used Can or TYudu Harrington A White Motors, 364 BywPnss. Phone 756-8133.</p>
        <p>Cyclos For Slo</p>
        <p>OSSASHES A BEAR 11 HOT New 175CC from Spain, excluslvt in North Carolina! Stans Cydi Center.</p>
        <p>Tmckt For Stio</p>
        <p>DODGE  1960, extremely nioe, fully equipped, original white paint, only $495. F&amp;amp;D/ Motor Co. Bethel. PL84408.</p>
        <p>BOAT FOR SALI</p>
        <p>19 FT. GBADY-WHITE, 100 HP Mercury, Cox Tandem trailer, S to S radio, convertible top, full cover plus other equip. All 1963 model. 756-8705.</p>
        <p>iMnOVMSNt</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;MMla ftae WaWMl</p>
        <p>PART TIME  I NEBD 3 LAD-iea I daya a wodk to interview and recruit people for 60 year &amp;lt;rtd oompaoy. IlexIWd hours, excellent overwrite oommlasions, must be neat, have car. Call Mrs. Hughe, 78-34Gtt Tuesday only between 13 Noon and 8:30 pm.</p>
        <p>SBORBTARY. PROFICIENT typist required, general oiike, permanent opportunity. Salary opn. CaU PL 8-201 tor appointment.</p>
        <p>LADIES</p>
        <p>Need one middle-age lady between 35 and 85 years of age to do survey work in Greenville Burrounding area. No over-night travel, starting salary $1.80 per hr. Must be naat in appearance, good character, have auto. Apply</p>
        <p>414 Waahli^fUm St. Romn 13 bo* tween 9 h 10 a.m. tMa week.</p>
        <p>Mala-Foinal Halp Wantod</p>
        <p>FARM WORKERS INTEREST*</p>
        <p>ed in priming tobacco and picking cucumbera, pteasa contact Kendrick Taylor at tba Employment Security office on 1003 Evans St., QrocovUla.</p>
        <p>MALE AND FEMALE CENSUS Takers for new Oity Directory (Greenville &amp;amp; Waynesvtlle). Good handwriting and spelling essmtial. At least tem months work at good pay assured. Write, Cenius, Box 408, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Malo Help Wanfod</p>
        <p>ACCOUNTANT. OOLLBGE DE-gree in accounting with a minimum of two years axparlanct in auditing and accounting work Responsible pcolUon with pro-moUfmal opportunittes for ona of the leading universities in the Southeast. Salary negotiable. Excellent fringe beneflts. Replies oonfidentiaL Apply to Personnel Office, Univarei^ of North Carolina, Box 730, Chapel KUL North Carolina.</p>
        <p>17 FOOT GLASSPAR BOAT, trailer and new top. $488. Call</p>
        <p>753-7274 after 6 pm.</p>
        <p>EMPLCYMENT</p>
        <p>ENEROirnC  YOUNG  MAN</p>
        <p>mechanically inclined for da-livery in stock room work. Contact Boiee WUllams,  Parte</p>
        <p>Manager. Jtokina Motor Co.</p>
        <p>Female Help Wantad</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS Having this  day  qualified  as  admin</p>
        <p>istratrix of tha estafa of Royce Jones, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of the said deceased to exhibit the same, duly Itemized and verifletf, to the undersigned administratrix at 511 S. Elm Street, Greenville, North  Carolina,  or  P. O.</p>
        <p>Box 696 Greenville, North Carolina, on or before  the  15th day  of  October,</p>
        <p>1966, or this notice will ba pleaded In bar of their  recovery. All  persons In</p>
        <p>debted to said estate will please make payment to the administratrix.</p>
        <p>This the 19th day of May, 1966.</p>
        <p>Olive J. Jones</p>
        <p>Administratrix of the estate af</p>
        <p>Royce Jones, deceased.</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee, Attorney May 13, 20, 27 June 3</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>North Carolina County ot Pitt The undersigned, having qualified as administratrix of the estate of ZEB V. HARRIS, deceased, late of Pitt County, this is tn notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned on or before the fourteenth day of November, 1966, or this notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate will please make Immediate payment to the undersigned. This the tenth day of May, 1966.</p>
        <p>Jessie S. Harris, Administratrix Charles H. Whedbee Attorney for Administratrix P. O. Box 479 Greenville, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>May 13, 20 and 27, June 3, 1966.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For SaTo</p>
        <p>BUICK  1962 Special convert-ble, R/H, WW, 4 spd. trans. extra clean, See Walter Curry or Till Chauncey. S&amp;amp;E Motor Service, Ayden, 748-3111.</p>
        <p>CADILLAC  1962 Coupe De-ville, black, red leather Interior, full power, factory air. Just like new $2395 Stafford Olda.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET  1962 Impala 4-dr.  V-8, automatic, power</p>
        <p>brakes &amp;amp; steering, r/h, excellent condition. W. D. Tucker 763-3989 or 752-2186.</p>
        <p>CORVAIR  1968 Monza, R/H, 4-speed. $1796, PhelpsOhevrolct. 756-2150.</p>
        <p>MERCEDES BENZ  1962  160 series 4 dr. sedan. Radio, heater, 4 forward gears on column. Extra clean. Phelps Chevrolet.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>PAINTERS</p>
        <p>WANTED_^</p>
        <p>TOP WAGES PAID BRUSHMEN CaU After 6:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>752-5654 J. C. LYNN CO.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>1957 CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>BELAIR 4 DOOR V8 ENGINE, AUTOMATIC TRANS MISSION LOW MILEAGE. A REAL CREAM PUFF, JUST LIKE NEW.</p>
        <p>*25</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>*35</p>
        <p>Par Manth With Approvad Cradit</p>
        <p>THIS ONE WONT STAY ON THE LOT LONG SO HURRY!</p>
        <p>E &amp;amp; M MOTOR CO.</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>CORNER 4th &amp;amp; COTANCHE</p>
        <p>752-4616</p>
        <p>TRAINEES</p>
        <p>Young ladies 18 and over to train as representativas for nations leading Trade Journals. Must be free to travel East coast resorts. $60,00 per week guaranteed to start. Special consideration given to the physl&amp;gt; cally handicapped. See Mrs. Bal' dree. Holiday Inn 1 to 3 p.m. Sat.</p>
        <p>WANTED: WHITE LADY TO care for 2 children. Light housework. May live in or commute. Must be dependable, have health certificate and references. Write Baby Sitter, 1707 Engle-w'ood, Oreenrillc, N.C.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED NURSE FOR doctors office in Greenville. Salary open. Write giving age and qualification* to: Nurae, P.O. Box 408, Greenville, N. O.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY WANTED</p>
        <p>Secretary needed. 'Typing required; no bookkeeping. Salary commensurate with ability. Must be between 21 &amp;amp; 30, Neat In appearance; have good character, Apply room No. 10, Tetter-ton Building between 9 || 10 a.m. all this week. Ask for Mr. Smith.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>WEEK</p>
        <p>MAY es - SB</p>
        <p>Movmci OP?</p>
        <p>SEnUBB DOWM? see A neALTxmi</p>
        <p>KALTOt^t A prtiessieiMl Ii real estate wht sabacrfetf ta.a strict Ca4a af Ethiea at a Mt&amp;gt; her af the lacal baartf m af</p>
        <p>ttia Natiaaal kntMn af RtK Eitita Barfs.</p>
        <p>WANTED: A GOOD BACKHOB and crawler operator. Call PL 8-1821.</p>
        <p>WANTED: MEN INTERB8TKD in learning furniture business. In reply furnish quaUflcatlooa and references. Write Pumiture, Box 4M, Greenville.</p>
        <p>WANTED  TO UN* UP TWO dependable tobacco primers. Will pay top wages plus big bonus. Rent free house ainailable if wanted. Also can use wife ae shtiter hand. Contact Charlie Harris; Rt. 6, Greenville, Phone 7534404.</p>
        <p>PART TIME  I NEED 8 MEN 8 evenings a week and all day Saturday to help me interview and recruit people for 80 year old AAA-1 company, excellent overwrite oommlssions. Must be neat, have car. CaU Mrs. Hughes, 758-3401 Tuesday between I p.m. and 8:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>HOI</p>
        <p>GIVES YOU AN OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>GO INTO BUSINESS</p>
        <p>We are Interested in your service station experience not yeur finances</p>
        <p>SUN OIL CO. WILL</p>
        <p>1. Pay yon during training</p>
        <p>2. Annual TJI.A. Refund</p>
        <p>3. Give free eoanseiing, merchandising aid te help year sneeese.</p>
        <p>4. Asdst yen in Hnandng</p>
        <p>GCT THE FACTS BEFORE YOU DECIDI CAU TODAYI</p>
        <p>MR. PEARCE 783-058 Wriiet m-C S. Elm Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Real Estate Broker</p>
        <p>A professional in REAL ESTATE who MbeertbMi te n strict code of Ethics m a licensed Broker ef the STATE OF N.C. REAL ESTATE LICENSE BOARD, pelloed and enforced by the BOARD . . . HIOHLY trained prefeeeioiiel dedicated to servlnr the Comnuinlty in which he eperates</p>
        <p>his basinets, and the STATE of N.C.......When yea</p>
        <p>need Real Estate advice, service, or appraisals ... CaU a PROFESSIONAL . .  One that malntaitMi an eCfloe Fall time, not as a Hobby ... or side line . . , Call Ed Upton Agency 288 Boyd Ave. 758-8603 for Licensed prsfMatenal service.</p>
        <p>LOCAL - STATE - NATIONAL LISTING SERVICI Let us sell your home for you. Or find yon the Heme yen have been leeking for,</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency</p>
        <p>203 BOYD AVE.  758-2401</p>
        <p>it Oreenvitle*8 Full Time Agenqf 'Ar</p>
        <p>Onr Congratnlations to all Realtors ThrenglMNil Tim Nation, during this National Realtors Week.</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0014" />
        <p>Daily Raflactor, GraanvHIa, N. .Friday, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>/-</p>
        <p>SELL RENT* SWAP  HIRE  BUY  SELL* RENT  SWAP  HIRE  BUY  SELL*RENT* SWAP* HIRE *CUSanBI IDS BH RESUnSHIRE * BUY * SELL* RENT  SWAP  HIRE * BUY* SELL* RENT* SWAP* HIRE * BUY * SELL* RENT *</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Mala Halp Wantad</p>
        <p>OPENING FOR STOCK ROOM manager. Service exempt man. Apply in person A. B. Whitley, Inc., Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Mala Hejp Wantad</p>
        <p>JUST THINKI</p>
        <p>YOUR FUTURB CAN IB</p>
        <p>BoanJlcs5, dependent only upon the effort you are ailHnx; to put forth to be a top mam.</p>
        <p>YOU RECEIVB THIS</p>
        <p>CONCENTRATED trainlnc by men using the Show-How" method and by Company School. COMPANY background  mil-Ifbns of dollars plus nearly 30 yaars of experience.</p>
        <p>SALE appointments  quallfed appointments secured by can. leasers who are maintained on a salary basis.</p>
        <p>PLUS LEADS SECURED throngh REFERRALS - SATISFIED CUSTOMERS</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>. YOU CAN EARN THIS TODAY</p>
        <p>FIRST CLASS WELDER  Should be experienced in electric, acetylene, and heliarc weld-ng. Must be capable of fabricating from blueprints or be will-Ing to Immediately take a course in blueprint reading. Win-terville Machine Works, Inc., Wlnterville, N.C. Phone: 766-2130.</p>
        <p>fjDO Per Mo. Commission By Average Men.</p>
        <p>$1000 Per Mo. By Above Average Men.</p>
        <p>WORK PILING UP? HIRE DE-pcndable workers with "Help Wanted Ada. Dial PL 2-6166 today.</p>
        <p>TOMORROW</p>
        <p>Advancement opportonitp to Jl^tions of management paying salary, overwrite, and espies in offices where vaceles already exist dne to cur-' t promotions; Income virtaaUy mUmited.</p>
        <p>Come to the Town House Motor Lodge Friday, May 27, between 67and 8 P.M. Ask for Mr. Edwards.</p>
        <p> SAVINGS</p>
        <p>JUST A FINGERTIP mWAY</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>ITo Placa Your Dally Ro* 'flactor Classifiad Ad. Inaart for 7 Days, Tha Coat Is -'Lats.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>1 LINE MINIMOH 1 Day30c Per Line Per Day 1^4 Days27c Per Line Per Day y Days25c Per Lliie Per Day  Contract Rates Avallabla</p>
        <p>:  CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$1.50 Per Cehunn loch - Contract Rates AvallaUa</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>No new sds, kills or carree, ikms accepted after 3 pja. ,lhe day before publicatioB.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors must be reported tm-^'lately. The Daily Ra flector can not make aUaw-' anees for errors after 1st oay.</p>
        <p>MAN OVER 21 TO SERVICE established customers with Nationally Advertised Products. Can expect earnings in excess of $100 weekly. No Investment. Write Box 1092, Goldsboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>WANTED:  SHORT  ORDER</p>
        <p>cook from approximately 5 p.m. to 12 midnight, 2 curb boys, 16 or over and also parttimc help. Call PL 3-4229 ask for Dave Roberson.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT OPPORTUNITY in the sales field selling floor surfacing maintenance equip, to the rental and contractor trade, eastern N.C, area. Contact Howard C. Miller, Division Sales Mgr. Clark Floor Machine Co., P.O. Box 15201, Charlotte, N.C. Tele. 523-7386.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVeCfe</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITION NOW. HOT weather only a few weeks away We offer quality materials, workmanship, and dependable service. Call for free Eurvey. Financing available. Oenerat Heating. Inc. Tel 752-4187. 1100 Evans Street.</p>
        <p>COLOR OR BLACK-AND-white, our technicians are fully trained to repair your set quickly, economically. PL 8-2436. H$M Radio &amp;amp; TV Shop</p>
        <p>UWN MOWER REPAIR</p>
        <p>Jacobsen Sales &amp;amp; Service</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL DRIVE 756-2557</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE</p>
        <p>CALL US NOW&amp;gt; FOR YOUR long grain bins being erected before the rush. Ayden Mobile Milling, 756-2016.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscallanaoua For Salt.</p>
        <p>LE US FIGURE WITH YOU on your storm windows and doors. Bank rate financing. Thompsons Discount Furniture, 802-804 Clark St., PL 8-3187.</p>
        <p>FLORISTS</p>
        <p>WHEN WORDS PAIL, SAY IT with Greenville Floral flowers! For happy occasions or sad ones, call Bettie or Mai, PL 2-2827.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Fumituru  Appliancu</p>
        <p>PINEVIEW MOBILE HOMES baa a wide aelection of used fum&amp;gt; Iture and appliances. Come see at our E. 10th Ext. locatton.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Mitcellaneout For Salo</p>
        <p>JUST ARRIVED A FRESH shipmMit of Russell Stover candies, all assortment, cigarettes special $1.99 carton. Get your beauty aids also. Georgetown Sundries, 4 doors below Coed, Cotanche St.</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS Storm windows and djors. AwO-ings, Venetian blinds, porch enclosures, paint and hardware. No down paymeut. Three yoars to pay.</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON COMPANY *Toiir Comfort Is Our Basinese* PL 2-223K</p>
        <p>BUG LIGHTS</p>
        <p>NOW IS THE TIME TO IN-STALL THEM.</p>
        <p>Call HENDRIX-BARNHILL NOW PL 2-4122</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>AGE 65 AND OVER</p>
        <p>YOULL RATE WITH YOUR date when you take her to the Coed for dinner. Cozy atmosphere; delicious food. George-towne Shoppees.</p>
        <p>HOME FURNITURES GIFT Shop has Just the ideal gift for that special Graduate. F&amp;gt;or quality, shop with us.</p>
        <p>LAWNMOWERS</p>
        <p>Parts For Lauson, Briggs-Strat-ton, Clinton, Lawn Boy, Wisconsin &amp;amp; Bridgestone Cycles.</p>
        <p>R.F. McLawhon &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>" We Service What We Sell" N. Greene St.  PL  2-3286</p>
        <p>PAINT SALE:  VINYL  PLAT</p>
        <p>wall paint. Dries in 30 minutes. Reg. 3.99 - Now 2.88. 3 Guys From Dixie, 629 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>BOYS BASEBALL UNIFORMS Includes pants and shirts, sizes age 4 to 11, only $4.50. H. L. Hodges Co.</p>
        <p>4 USED 60" X 34" WALNUT desks, $69.50; 4 new floor sample executive swivel chairs, upholstered, rpg. $78, now $49.50. (10) 1 drawer, letter size, steel filing cabinets, $5.50 each. Taif office Equip.. 214 E. 5th, PL 2-2175.</p>
        <p>DELUXE GE RANGE. IVa years old. Excellent condition. Call 758-2610.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE broken? Let H, C. Haddock repair it. Get first quality workmanship at low cost, PL 2-2619,</p>
        <p>PROTECT YOUR AUTO CAR-pets with Mats, Choice of individual or over-the-hump styles. All colors transparent or opaque. 98 cent &amp;amp; up Western Auto.</p>
        <p>PLANNING A TRIP? BE SURE your car is in safe driving condition. Carr Allen Texaco, PL 2-4838.</p>
        <p>HEALIHEUL LUXURY WITH in reach! 'Thats what (Coastal Refrigeration York Air Conditioning gives you. Make summer comfortable by calling PL 2-2294. Easy terms.</p>
        <p>FOR THOSE WHO WANT LOTS of refrigeration space. See the Westinghouse Space King at Smith Electric, 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>USED CHESTS, DRESSERS, wardrobes, $9.95 up; Refrigerators ii ranges, $19.95 up; office desks, $14.95 up. Thompsons Discount Furniture, 802-804 Clark St.. PL 8-3187.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM BUILT AND IN-stalled porch railings, columna, interior rails, screens &amp;amp; dividers. Metal Specialties. 758-4591.</p>
        <p>COMBINAnON HOTPOINT Dishwasher, sink, and disposal. Also wall kitchen cabinets. Bw-sle Hayden, Phone_752r3578.</p>
        <p>THE AMAZING BLUE LUSTRE will leave your upholstery beautifully soft and clean. Rent electric shampooer $1. Gliddens,</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>SASSERS CAMPING CENTER all types Safari-Lite campers for sale. 2021 N. Williams St..-Goldsboro. N. C. 734-4616.</p>
        <p>ALL LITTLE LEAGUE EQUIP-ment including gloves, bats, balls and shoes. Additional 10% off regular price until June 4. H. L. Hodges Co.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOOD-*'</p>
        <p>OERTS A GAY GIRLREADY for a ivhirl after cleaning carpets with Blue Lustre. Rent electric shampooer $1. Mary Carters.</p>
        <p>SITREO AMPLIFIER, STEREO AM-PM tuner, turn table or changer, and speaker system. Call 752-2775.</p>
        <p>BRIDE-TO-BE .  .  .  BRING</p>
        <p>your veil to the Beauty Nook. We thoughtfully study your profile to create your lovely, Individual coiffure. Dial PL 2-4161.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOF PROBLEMS? EXPERTS in all types of roofing. Call for an estimate today, PL 2-4322, Ooodson Roofing. We Top Them All."</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>NEW MODEL 9364</p>
        <p>PTO DRIVEN</p>
        <p>TILROVATOR</p>
        <p>SURE WAY TO PREVENT headaches is to let Second &amp;amp; Cotanche "66 give your car a complete check-up. Mgr. Benny Smith.</p>
        <p>Eastern Tractor A Equip. Co.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Tractors</p>
        <p>Implemento</p>
        <p>\m St. Ext. a U4 By-Pau PL S-1474</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPIAY</p>
        <p>For a limited time only, regardless of your age, we can offer you a guaranteed renewable hospitalization policy, the same benefits that are now available to younger people. This policy will pay in addition to and supplement medicare. Write P.O. Box 736 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobilo Homos For Ronf</p>
        <p>LIVESTOCK</p>
        <p>VERY BEST PUREBRED MEAT type Duroc Boars for Sale. Joe Moye, Jr., Rt. 2 Box 32 Farm-ville, N.C.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>STOP PAYING RENT! GO TO B&amp;amp;W Bobile Homes and give your budget a break. Many models, easy financing. Memo-rial Dr.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT See our new 10 wide, k bedroom mobile homes for $3,295. $2M down and $54 per month. AZALEA MOBILE HOMES Phones: PL 2-.3109. PL 2-5822 3012 East 10th Street</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobilo Homos For Solo</p>
        <p>1957 2 BR 8* X 38-$1.200. Mrs. White, Hillcrest Court, E. Tenth St., 7-9 p.m,  ^</p>
        <p>1957, 8 WIDE, 1 BR, AIR cond. mobile home. Inquire Brad Sears on the hill, Hillcrest Trailer Court.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobilo Homos For Silo</p>
        <p>TRAVEL TRAILER, SELF CON-tained, shower, refrigerator, hot water, heat and qir cond. Can bo seen at Pine View Trailer Saleo, Washington Hwy.</p>
        <p>LAP EUO OR  poo  </p>
        <p>Claaolfled Ada sell onythtogl</p>
        <p>Mobilo Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE AIR-CONDmONED 2 BR house trailer. Meadowbrook Trailer Park. Call PL 8-1108.</p>
        <p>2 BR MOBILE HOME FOR rent. Phone 758-2769.</p>
        <p>GIVE A GIFT SHE CAN USE at College. London Fog RaincoatsMonogrammed Free. All sizes and colors in London Fog at Brodys.</p>
        <p>USEFUL GIFTS SUCH AS hairdryers, clock radios, small televisions and personal portable radios will delight any grad. V. A. Merritt &amp;amp; Sons, 207 Evans.</p>
        <p>UVE AT PINEVIEW COURT Just five minutes from downtown, Port Terminal Rd., turn leit Cliffs Oyster Bar. 264 Bast of Greenville, Large shaded lota, patio, play area, picnic tablea. 10 and 12 wide homes for rent &amp;lt;58-3644.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES 2 BEDROOM good location. Also lot spaces for rent. PL 2-3286.</p>
        <p>10 WIDE, 2 BR, UVINO ROOM, kitchen, in Wlnterville. Phone 756-1433 after 4:30</p>
        <p>NEW 12 X 45 MOBILE HOME for rent. Call 756-1653.</p>
        <p>LARGE, 2 BR MOBILE HOME on 264 By-Pass. Air Cond., Swimming pool, laundrette. Call 756-3515</p>
        <p>2 BR TRAILER FOR RFaTT Privately parked, 3 mo only.* Call PL 2-3056 before 6.</p>
        <p>SPEEDY....THRIPTY! 'THAT'S the action you get from Classified Ads. Dial PL 2-6166 now!</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>BUY FOR BOTH PROM THE Fashion Shop in Ayden. For Him:  Swank  Jewelry,  Arrow</p>
        <p>shirts, Jade East Toiletries. For Her: Sportswear or Pajamas.</p>
        <p>NEWEST SPORTSWEAR BY donnkenny has arrived at Helens Dres5 Shop, 516 Dickinson Ave. Skirts, blouses, bermudas, jacketsmix and match.</p>
        <p>SHOP CAMPUS CORNER FOR that unforgetable gifta Sero shirt featuring the Purist Collar and Single Needle construction dress or sport.</p>
        <p>GIVE HER WHAT EVERY Woman Wantscosmetics by Merle Norman. See our array of Summer Jewelry which gives any outfit the finished touch.</p>
        <p>REMEMBER;  NOTHING</p>
        <p>makes her feel all female like beautiful lingerie with an extravagance of lace trim like ours! C. Heber F\)rbes, 419 Evans.</p>
        <p>THE ONE AND ONLY 1966 Fiat 600D for $1295 plus 1^1% N.C. Sales Tax delivered in Greenville. Brown-V/bod, Inc your authorized Fiat Dealer.</p>
        <p>PERFECT FOR GRADS! Clock radios, AM and PM transistors, portable, all kinds, quality models. Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance, Dickinson Ave., PL 2-2616.</p>
        <p>WOULDNT A CORVAIR MAKB a wonderful gift? 4 SP6 w Automatic, we also have th# cleanest used can to Phelps Chevrolet, West Ena Circle, PL 6-2510.</p>
        <p>LTITLE GliTS . . . PlERcMJ earrings from $3, Daisy riivs with matching bracelet and earrings from $2. Ths OoUego Shop, 222 E. 6th St.</p>
        <p>VARIETY HEADQUARTERS for Graduation Gifts is bigger and better Belk-Tylers. Make Gift Buying Easy by shopping with us, free gift wrapping.</p>
        <p>TUFIDE A-TTACHE and BKUSi-Cases, Sheaffer pen sets. Tensor miniature lamps, RemingU Portable typewritera. Taif Office Equip. Co.</p>
        <p>MUSICAL ENTERTAINMENT ^we have a large selection of portable radios, record players, tape recorders, stereos, small</p>
        <p>TV. Music Arts, 758-2530.</p>
        <p>TIMEX WATCHES. ..6.96 UP. Radios, $7.95 up. Complete lino of Sporting Goods. A world o gifts for the graduate at Western Auto.</p>
        <p>ACXJUTRON WATCHES Exclusive dealer for Greenville, Lautares Jewelers, to please and enlighten, a gift long remembered. 414 Evans, PL 2-3831.</p>
        <p>SET.FiCT HER OlFl PROM A large selection of sportswear! Villager, Boe Jests, Pamela Martin. Snooty Pox. Gift Wrapped Free.</p>
        <p>HAMILTON &amp;amp; BULOVA  watches of quality. Jewelry of distinction. A fine selection moderately priced at Tetterton Jewelers, Fifth St. Stop in now.</p>
        <p>CHARCOAL PORlltArrS AB-solutely guaranteed satisfaction-only $5 Si $8. Will not smear 1 Call Jack Brendle, PL 8-4646.</p>
        <p>HEADQUAR'TERS FOR SMALL Gifts , . . wallets, electric toothbrushes, cameras, shaving kits, men and womens toiletries. Biggs Drug Store, 300 Evans.</p>
        <p>OLIVETTI underwood Portable 'Typewriters. A favorite on 5 continents wth high school and college students. C^ olin Office Equip. Co., 30w Evans, PL 2-3570.</p>
        <p>GIVE YOUR FAVORITE GRAD a watch, 12 personal portable clock-radio or stereo from Gammon Supply, 821 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>REACH MORE CUSTOMERS for your home improvement product or service with M ^ In Classified. Dial PL 2-618 now!</p>
        <p>GIVE A COLLEGE GIRL PAV-oriteMcMullen Blouses, choose from Brodys large selection of McMullen Blouses.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>Pin CAMPING,JCENTER SALES &amp;amp; RENTALS LEES TEXACO</p>
        <p>14th. ft Charles St Greenville, N. C,</p>
        <p>PHONE rSMSS, 7n-4347 WEEKLY RENTAL I3S.M A UP</p>
        <p>^  CASHI  ^</p>
        <p>For Spring Exponsot</p>
        <p>Home repaiiv car repaln, new clothes, yard and gmr-den needs or taxesreally add up. Get the cash yon need. ONE loanONE ^ Payment Takes care of R even^hinf and pays old 9 bills too. Come In or phone f today!</p>
        <p>^ GREAT SOUTHERN FINANCE</p>
        <p>^ 105 8. Evan* St. 712-7117 ^</p>
        <p>'N8WGar?-'iiope-lutthad IPPUMNCE PROTECTION SERVICES It</p>
        <p>FHtLPS CHEVkulET</p>
        <p>OHIMIOIflr UAMMAN AINTaNAPfOft</p>
        <p>qiMtfivsMwei</p>
        <p>%Mom J 3^</p>
        <p>ILL RIGGANS SERVICE MANAGER</p>
        <p>mAMNCE PMTECTION SDNIGES</p>
        <p>PHELPS CHEVROLET, INC.</p>
        <p>WIST INO CIRCll  4-2150</p>
        <p>ONI STOP PIATURBD SERVICI</p>
        <p>, .   -</p>
        <p>TRY ONt OF OUR AIR CONDITIONiD</p>
        <p>USED CARS</p>
        <p>65 FORD GALAXIE</p>
        <p>*'500 2 door hardtop, factory air condition, power steering ft brakes, radio, heater, white-walli, tinted glass.</p>
        <p>62 CHEVY IMPALA</p>
        <p>4 door hardtop, factory air condition, power stecrinf ft brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, tinted f lass.</p>
        <p>65 CHEVROLET IMPALA</p>
        <p>station Wagon, white, blue interior factory air condition, power steering, brakes windows ft seats, radio, heater, whitewalls, luggage carikr, tinted glaao 13,000 actual miles factory warranty still good.</p>
        <p>65 CHEVROLET IMPALA</p>
        <p>station Wagon, dark blue, factory Rir ctmdltion, power steering &amp;amp; brakes, radio, heater, whitewalls, luggage carrier tinted glass, 14,000 aetnal miles factory warranty still good.</p>
        <p>65 CHEVROLET IMPALA</p>
        <p>I door hardtop white, bine interior, factory air condition, power steering, brakes, windows, ft seats, radio, heater, tinted glass, whitewalls, 16,000 actual miles factory warranty still ^ood.</p>
        <p>64 OLDS "98"</p>
        <p>Custom Sport Coupe, factory air condition, power steering, brakes, windows &amp;amp; seats, tilt steering wheel, radio, heater, tinted glass, white, with green Interior, whitewalls.</p>
        <p>60 OLDS "88"</p>
        <p>4 door hardtoi factory air condition, power steering, brakes, windows ft seats, tinted glass, radio, heater, whitewalls.</p>
        <p>61 OLDS "88" Super</p>
        <p>4 door isedaii factory air condition, power steering, brakes, ft windows, tinted glass, radio, heater, white walls.</p>
        <p>SEE THESE AND MANY OTHER HANDPICKED USED CARS AT BARGAIN PRICES</p>
        <p>See Walter Harrington, Julian White, Joe Pinner, W. C. (Billie) Jenkins, Bobby Smith, Henry Bonner, Jimmy Keziah.</p>
        <p>Harrington &amp;amp; White Used Cars</p>
        <p>264 BY-PASS  PL  6-2123</p>
        <p>WE DEAL IN ALL MAKES AND MODELS . . . NEW AND USED</p>
        <p>T1</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>SAVE HUNDREDS WITH THE NO. 1 BUYS ON THE NATION'S NO. 1 AUTOMOBILE</p>
        <p>BECAUSE WE SELL CARS AND TRUCKS BY THE HUNDREDS</p>
        <p>Greenville's Largest Cor Dealer Dollar for Dollar You Can't Beat a Chevy</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET,</p>
        <p>where You're Not Forgotten After You Buy Eaetern North Carolina's Volume Chevrolet Dealer</p>
        <p>(Mm</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0015" />
        <p>fh Daily Reflactor, Graanvilla, N. C.~Frdy, May 27r lf66 IS**'</p>
        <p>Low Cost  Terrific Results, Cafl PL2-6166 For REFLECTOR WANT ADSMONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>LET ~WACHOVIA FINANCE YOUR HOME</p>
        <p>FHA, VA and ConTCntionaJ Mort;a|re Loan Dept758-2151</p>
        <p>REAl estateREAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Call ED TIPTON AGENCY 758-2602TO SELL OR BUY HOMES203 BOYD AVE.</p>
        <p>REAl gTATR</p>
        <p>WATCH THIS SPACE ON VfONDA YSTURNAGE</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE A INSURANCE AGCY. Real Estate-lnsurance-AppralaalaPhone PL 2-2715</p>
        <p>(</p>
        <p>Housas For SalaQUOTE FROM</p>
        <p>TURCOTTE</p>
        <p>REALTY COMPANY</p>
        <p>Realtors-Insurors 204 E. 8th St Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>752-3881</p>
        <p>POR BETTER BUYS IN REAL Estate see or call E. H. Williford Realtor 105 E. 2nd St. PL 8-3911 List your property with us.</p>
        <p>CLASSIHED DISPIAY</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONNOW</p>
        <p>Add coollnff to yonr existinf warm air system. Be comfortable this summer. Prompt service, terms available.POLLARD'S</p>
        <p>Plumbinc, Htf. &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Air Conditioninf Co.</p>
        <p>209 E. Third St. Phone PL 2-7232 or PL 2-4833Code of EthicsNATIONAL ASSOCIATION OF REAL ESTATE BOARDS ARTICLE 25</p>
        <p>The Realtor &amp;lt;3hould not voluntarily disparage the business practice of a competitor, nor volunteer an opinion of a competitors transaction. If his opinion is sought it should be rend-dered with strict professional integrity and courtesy.CONCLUSION</p>
        <p>The term Realtor has come to connote competence, fair dealing and high integrity resulting from adherence to a lofty ideal of moral conduct in business relations. No inducement of profit and no Instructions from clients ever can Justify departure from this Ideal, or from the injunctions of this Code.Greenville  Pitt County Boerd of Realtors</p>
        <p>1811 SULGRAVE ROAD3 BED-rooms, tile baths, carpeted living room with fireplace, kitchen with built ins and dining area, paneled den and carport. Immaculate throughout. $17,500 with 97% PIA financing approved. Shown by appointment. Cali Moye A Overton Realty Co., 768-4685.Farms For SaleFARMS FOR SALE</p>
        <p>A 20 acre tract of andwith 2 dwelling&amp;amp; fish pond located 5 mile northeast of Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>A 4 acre tract of landHills &amp;amp; treeslocated 2 miles W of Greenville.</p>
        <p>For Farms. Homes, Loit &amp;amp; Business property</p>
        <p>Contact D. G. NICHOLS. Realtor Tel. PL 2 4012PL 2-3612CLASSIHED DISPUYHomes For Sale</p>
        <p>2 of Greenville's finest. Located in one of Greenville's most exclusive neighborhoods  Forest Hills  And EnglewoodSHOWN BY APPOINTMENT ONLY</p>
        <p>One 4 bedroom brick veener. 2 Beautiful Baths, Enclosed back porch* Cook-out arrangement in back yard, with beautiful brook. On Overlook Drive. Must be seen to appreciateOnly $22,500. Can assume present loan by paying equity to present owner.</p>
        <p>One 3 Bedroom Brick Veneer, Double Carport Outside storage Large wooded lot. Marble ft tile Bathrooms (2), 3 Blocks from Elmhurst SchooL Built in appli-Ianees,. Completely- air. conditioned (Central System) Beautiful ! landscaping ft shrubs. This is a home for the most particular people. Located in One of Greenvilles most exclusive neighborhoods. Forest Hills. Only $38,riOO.</p>
        <p>CallED TIPTONAGENCY</p>
        <p>for appointment 758-2602</p>
        <p>REAl ESTATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>IKM E. ROCKSPRINQ RD.  beautiful home near college, high school and Elmhurst elementary school, 5 bedrooms, 3(-i baths, living, dining and family hooms, study, large kitchen, breakfast and utility room. New wall to wall carpeting. Owner being transferred. Bill WiUiams Real Estate, 752-2615.</p>
        <p>203 NICHOLS DR.EASTWOOD 3 BRs, living room, kitchen-dining combination, 2 full baths, utility, storage, central air conditioning, carport, 2 yrs. old. 115,500. Call 758-4200.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER, 2608 S. WRIGHT Rd., 3 BR, IVi baths, kitchen-family room comb, LR, foyer, carport ft storage, practically new. Buyer can make down payment &amp;amp; assume FHA loan based on old interest rate. 758-3577 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>DUPLEX HOUSE - 1012 W. Fourth St., 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, $11,500. Call PL 2-2983.RENTALS</p>
        <p>4 REASONS WHY ITS SMART to have Grier Rental manage your income property; Trained staff, personal attention, efficient, you net more. 752-5700.</p>
        <p>AVAILABLE JUNE 1OFFICESStarting $30 Per Mo. Heat, Air Cond., Toilets In Beautiful</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: BRICK 8 LARGE rooms, 2 full tile baths, flagstone terrace, 3 years old, facing McWhorter Park, Bethel. Priced below appraisal, 825-7921.</p>
        <p>1740 BEAUMONT DR.3 BED-rooms, 2 baths, large kitchen, large den, separate living and dining rooms, central air conditioning, new carpeting, drapes shutters and new dishwashers included. PL 2-2631.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Call 752-3300</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APT. FOR RENT. 1208 Chestnut St. PL2-5733.</p>
        <p>ONE UNFURNISHED 4 ROOM</p>
        <p>garage apt. Piped for automatic washer. Call 752-4804.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Apartmnts For Rent</p>
        <p>3 ROOM DUPLEX APT. 1304 Cotanche St. Rents for $32 monthly. Call PL2-2875.</p>
        <p>UNFURNISHED I BR APT. 1310 A Myrtle St. $35. Phone 752-6175. Globe Hardware Co.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL DELUXE ONE-bedroom completely furnished apt. with wall-to-wall carpeting, water heat ft air conditioning, also furnished. Near college. A-vallable Immediately. PL 2-3376,^rni5apartments</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATEOCCUPANCY</p>
        <p>VISIT OUR BEAUTIFUL MODEL APARTMENT OPEN It AM-7 PM DAILY</p>
        <p>1 ft 2 Bedroomg With Wall-Ta-Wall Carpeting* Swimming Pool, Landscaped Grounds. Sound Conditioned For Quiet RelaxeR Liv-Inr.1900 CHARLES ST.</p>
        <p>PL 8-3572</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONED APART-ment at 551 Evans St. 2 large bedrooms, living room, dining room, kitchen, and garage. Appliances, heat and water furnished. Available June 1st. Call J. M. Moye at 758-4585 or 752-5942.</p>
        <p>ROITAU</p>
        <p>Apartmftnt* Fgv Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APT. 2 BR. $90 Married couple. AvaUable-*me 1. 704 A East Third St, PL 2-4717.Business Property for RentCOMMERCIAL PROPERTY FOR LEASE</p>
        <p>Large Warehouse on main highway available for rea.sonable lease. Suitable for sub-leasing if entire area not needed by leasor. (yontact FV)ley Realty Co. at 752-3608 Day or night.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>MNTAIfResorts For Rent</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH OOTTAOl oear-Pavilioa. Van D. Hatch. 746-6891</p>
        <p>RESTHAVEN;' WATERFRONT cottages for rent on Pamlico River. Sleeps 8 people; S-W wcek-lyfor 5. $35: 2. $25. Boat and Fishing. Phone Sidney Crosa-road.s, 964-8257, Poye Mason, Bath. N.C., Rt. 1.</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>6 ROOM HOUSE. CENTRAL heat, excellent cond. 2707 S. Dickinson Ave. $75 per mouth. Call PL 2-3727.</p>
        <p>3 BR BRICK HOME, FURNISH-ed, 2 baths, closed-in garage, available immediately Call 756-3903.</p>
        <p>ROTARY AVK  ONE 2 BR frame house. $70 per month. Available now. Call PL2-2754 from 8 to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>IN WINTERVILLE  1 HEAT-ed furni.shed bedroom, private bath, private entrance, TV, and air cond. Reasonable. Call 756-1620 nights.</p>
        <p>NICELY FURNISHED BED-room to girls for summer. Call 756-1821.</p>
        <p>TWO ROOMS FOR RENT. College boys preferred. 112 E. Ninth St.CLASSIHED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Rooms Hk Ronf</p>
        <p>MEN STUDENTS, IF YOU need an air cond. room or apt. for summer school or fall quarter call 756-3616.</p>
        <p>Wanfod To Rout</p>
        <p>THREE BEDR&amp;lt;X&amp;gt;M DUPLEX or three bedroom houee preferred East Greenville aection* CaU PL8-4603,inCiAi NOTICES</p>
        <p>BRACE YOURSELF FOR ,A thrill the first time you usa Blue Lustre to clean rugs. Rent electric shampoocr $1. Belk-Tylera.</p>
        <p>TUTORING</p>
        <p>English grammar and literature. Junior high through high achooL Call 768-4946 after 6 p.m.WANTED</p>
        <p>WANTED: GOOD. CLEAN, COT*, ton rags. The Daily Beflect&amp;lt;^^</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ELEVEN-ROOM HOUSE. Excellent heat and cooling system. Suitable lor fraternity or tourist house. 1499 Dickin.son Ave.</p>
        <p>ONE 2 BEDROOM FRAME house on North Summit St. Double garage, shaded lot. convenient to college. CaU 752-5765 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>'THREE BEDROOM HOUSE with central heat. Located 8 miles out on New Bern Hwy, Available June 1. Call PL3-5366 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APARTMENT,</p>
        <p>private. Also bedroom for working or business men. PL 2-4358.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APTS. TO CO-ples or groups. Air cond., lau-drette ft swimming pool. Call PL 6-3516</p>
        <p>CUSSIREO DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Holiday HOUSE PAINT</p>
        <p>FESTIVAL!</p>
        <p>SAVE kaK die time... add years of beaiJty!</p>
        <p>@SPREDHOUSE PAINT</p>
        <p>Homogenized  Acrylic latex</p>
        <p>Outlasts ofxiinary cmT base paints by 50%! Dries in just 30 minutes!</p>
        <p>For WOOC, masonry or metal!</p>
        <p> Cleans brushes, rollers in soap and water!</p>
        <p>5.95</p>
        <p>SP///S/J</p>
        <p>GALLON</p>
        <p>Jtotnogeniiod</p>
        <p>Premium oil base home protection...</p>
        <p>ENDURANCE HOUSE PAINT</p>
        <p>^MOtJNAMCa</p>
        <p>I008EPMIIT</p>
        <p>Tough, self-cleaning high gloss finish  resists cracking, fading!</p>
        <p>Years of beauty and protection.</p>
        <p>Goes on smooth arxl easy.</p>
        <p>.95</p>
        <p>6ALL0N</p>
        <p>Available in 2149 colors</p>
        <p>$5</p>
        <p>SAVE on quality</p>
        <p>4"BRUSH</p>
        <p>$1.99</p>
        <p>Non-shedding nylon bristles. Made for finest painting results!</p>
        <p>Lasts Longer... goes on easier</p>
        <p>SPRED GLIDE-ON</p>
        <p> Covers masonry, stucco, brick, asbestos shingle.</p>
        <p> Resists chipping, flakiog.</p>
        <p> Dries in 30 minutes.</p>
        <p>Available in pastel colors and white.</p>
        <p>$6-35</p>
        <p>GAL</p>
        <p>GLID-TONE REDWOOD STAIN 5.04</p>
        <p>Briiigs the beauty of natural Redwood to weethof*  GAL</p>
        <p>bieeched woods!</p>
        <p>GLID-TONE REDWOOD FINISH 52</p>
        <p>Tough, brittiant gloss, weather-resistant finish for redwood.  GAL</p>
        <p>JAPAUC ENAMEL An-purpose high gloss 2*50</p>
        <p>enamel for wood or metal  for interiora end eKtwrioral</p>
        <p>CHARGE IT!</p>
        <p>Get all your paint and decorating needs now and charge it Ask about our Budget F^an  no Interest or carrying charges. Or our Installment Plan.</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Gliddei^ I Paint &amp;amp; Decorating Center</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTEB</p>
        <p>PL 6-1833</p>
        <p>CLASSIHED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FOR SALE'</p>
        <p>Beautiful 100 acre farm near Brook Valley. 10 acres tobacco, 4 acres peanuts, 50 acres grain. 9 buildings in good condition.</p>
        <p>_imDIAL 752-3300</p>
        <p>THE CLEANEST</p>
        <p>USED CARS</p>
        <p>IN THIS AREA</p>
        <p>... And We Mean It! We're Going to Se!l 25 Cars Before May 31. Here Are On!y A Few of the Many Used Cars on Our Lot. Come On Out, Look Them Over, and Compare Our Hard-to-Beat Prices.</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>IMPALA</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>FORD Galaxia</p>
        <p>4-door, radio, heater, automa- 2-&amp;lt;ioor, radie, hi tic, power steering, V-8.  malle,  V-8.</p>
        <p>XI CHEVROLET OI BELAIR</p>
        <p>4-door, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, air condition, V-8.</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>FALCON Deluxe</p>
        <p>Z-door, radio, heater, automatic.</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>IMPALA</p>
        <p>4-door hardtop, V'-6, radio.</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET BELAIR</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>PONTIAC Catalina</p>
        <p>heater, automatic. power steering, power brakes, air</p>
        <p>Z-door hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, low mileage.</p>
        <p>condition.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET OD BELAIR</p>
        <p>4-door, 6 cylinder, radio, heater, like new, 16,000 miles.</p>
        <p>M CHEVROLET IMPALA</p>
        <p>Z-door hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, power steering.</p>
        <p>X Q CHEVROLET OaJ BELAIR</p>
        <p>Wagon, 4-door, radio, heater, automatic, power steering.</p>
        <p>jrpy CHEVROLET OZ IMPALA</p>
        <p>Z-door hardtop, radio, heater, straight drive, V-8 327 engine.</p>
        <p>jrey CHEVROLET OZ BELAIR</p>
        <p>4-dbor, radio, heater, aulo-malic, V-8 327 engine.</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>IMPAU</p>
        <p>Z-door, hardtop, radio, heater, automatic, V-8,</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>v-8.</p>
        <p>OLDSMOBILI F-BS</p>
        <p>4-door, radio, heater,</p>
        <p>jTsy BUICK</p>
        <p>OZ invicta</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>Pickup, radio, heater.</p>
        <p>Convertible, radio, heater, automatic power steering, power brakes.</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER Newport</p>
        <p>2-'oor hardtop, radio,</p>
        <p>healer.</p>
        <p>MUSTANG</p>
        <p>Radio, healer, low</p>
        <p>mileage.</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>60</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>PICK-UP</p>
        <p>FORD</p>
        <p>PICK-UP</p>
        <p>CHEVROLH</p>
        <p>PICK-UP</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>PICK-UP</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>COMET</p>
        <p>4-door, radio, healer, aulomalic, V-8.</p>
        <p>62</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>BELAIR</p>
        <p>Wagon 4-door, radio, heater, aulomalic, power steerinf, V.8.</p>
        <p>63</p>
        <p>FORD Fsstback</p>
        <p>Radia, healer, auloma^ tic, power steering, V-8.</p>
        <p>BEFORE YOU TRADE ANYWHERE ELSE BE SURE TO CHECK OUR TREMENDOUSLY HIGH TRADE-IN VALUES.</p>
        <p>SEE ONE OF OUR SALES REPRESENTATIVES TODAY  CLYNN lARBER, REX WAIN-WRIGHT, JAY MILLS, DAN QUICK, REGAN JONES, H. J. EVANS; BILL HADDOCK -N*w Cr M*n*g,r; JAMBS PHELPS - UMd C*r M*n*g*r; WAViRLY PHELPS - Owimt</p>
        <p>Phelps Chevrolet</p>
        <p>EASTERN NORTH CAROLINA'S VOLUMN CHEVROLET DEALER</p>
        <p>WEST ND CIRCLE  H.  -2150</p>
        <pb facs="00088121_0016" />
        <p>Dally Raflactor, Graanvilia, N. C.frWay, May 27, 1966</p>
        <p>Stock And Mdrket Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)~ (NCDA)  North Carolina hog prices steady to 75 hiher. Tops of 24.00-25.00 Wilson; 24.25 - 24.75 Miufreesboro, R o bersonville, Statesville; 24.00-24.50 Salisbury 23.50-24.50 Rocky Mount; 24.25 Selma, Goldsboro; 24.00 Tar-boro, Bethel.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)- (NCDA) -North Carolina poultry markets: Fryers and broilers one-half cent lower. Live at farm prices 151^ cents per pound.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-The stock market was irregularly lower early this afternoon in the lightest trading of the week.</p>
        <p>Caution prevailed prior to a three-day weekend. Stock exchanges will be closed Monday, Memorial Day.</p>
        <p>The news background was more encouraging, brokers said, but the momentum of the recovery from the years lows seemed exhausted for the time being.</p>
        <p>The rise in world (t per prices still spurred some Oi the copper stocks. Selected blue chips gave the list some support but the popular averages were trending mildly lower.</p>
        <p>at 323.1 with industrials off 1.6, rails off 1.3 and utilities up .1.</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones industrial average at noon was off .83 at 890.92.</p>
        <p>Declines of more than a point</p>
        <p>Political Newcomers In Greene County Vote</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL  A number of</p>
        <p>political newcomers will test the strength of incumbents as Greene County voters go to the polls tomorrow.</p>
        <p>In the race for Greenes two seats in the State House of Representatives, I. Joseph</p>
        <p>automobile dealer; Wayne Lane former night policeman in Snow</p>
        <p>of Carr, a merchant; Millard B. Letchworth of Snow Hill, a</p>
        <p>by Du Pont, General Electric and United Aircraft dampened the industrial average.</p>
        <p>These were countered to some extent by Anacondas rise of about 2 points.</p>
        <p>With trading volume light, said Thomson &amp;amp; McKinnon, the market may in for a period of consolidation.</p>
        <p>Among larger blocks: Burlington eased % to 41V4 on 14,-000 shares; Santa Fe was off ^ at 34^ on 12,900; and Duquesne Lighting was off % at 29% on 11,800.</p>
        <p>Prices were mixed in moderate trading on the American Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>U.S. Treasury and corporate bonds were mostly unchanged.</p>
        <p>Horton, Snow Hill lawyer who</p>
        <p>House Okays Minimum Pay Changes</p>
        <p> -----  V'ASHINGTON  (AP) The</p>
        <p>The Associated Press average  overwhelming</p>
        <p>of 60 stocks at noon was off 1.2    hill  that  would</p>
        <p>Will Speak At Church Sunday</p>
        <p>approval to a bill that would increase the minimum wage to $1.60 an hour by 1969 and cover another 7.2 million workers. Thq measure goes now to the Sente where supporters predict it may</p>
        <p>served two terms as Greenes representative before reapportionment, faces challenges from Guy Elliot of Kinston, a lawyer and former legis 1 a t o r. (fiarles Francis Sugg of Snow Hill, a newcomer to G r e ene County politics is the third man in the race.</p>
        <p>Sheriff P. L. Barrow, filling the unexpired term of Clifton Barfield, who resigned, fac e s four opponents. Barrow, of the Arba Corfimunity, has serv e d about two years of the unexpired term.</p>
        <p>His opposition includes A. T. Bowen of Ormondsville, an</p>
        <p>Primary ...</p>
        <p>Community</p>
        <p>Announcements</p>
        <p>The house to house prayer service of Friendship Holiness church will meet Saturday at 8 p.m. at the home of Deacon James Foreman, Falkland.</p>
        <p>GRIMESLAND - Revival services will be held at New Birth Holiness Church beginning Monday night and continuing through June 3.</p>
        <p>Differnet speakers will participate.</p>
        <p>BETHELDr. A. E. Carpen- be expanded further, ter will be the guest speaker at The 303-93 House vote Thurs-the Bethel Baptist Church Sun- day sending the bill to the Sen-day morning.  ate  marked  a substantial victo-</p>
        <p>Pastor of a church in Tempe, Ariz., Dr. Ca^nter will speak on his experience oina recent ]|Hreaching mission to New Zealand.</p>
        <p>He is the father of Mrs. M. r. EUand of Bethel.</p>
        <p>Obituary</p>
        <p>Perkins</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mrs. Lou Ethel Perkins of Rt. 6, Greenville, who died Monday, May 23 in Bethel Oinic, will be held at the St Marys Church Sunday, 2 p.m. with the Rev. Leroy Perkins officiating. Burial will follow in the Brownhill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, John Perkins of the home; one son, Robert Walker of Philadelphia, Pa.; three grandchildren; one sister, Mrs. J^llie Peterson of Greenville; one brother, Richard Walker of Greenville.</p>
        <p>The body may be viewed at Phillips Brothers Mortuary from 6 p.m. Saturday until one hour prior to the services.</p>
        <p>ry for President Johnson and the AFL-CIO, which hasnt Lred too well this year with its other legislative proposals.</p>
        <p>In the Senate, the bills supporters said today they hope to get Labor Committee approval next month. The coinmittee completed its public hearings on the legislation last year.</p>
        <p>Supporters said they were confident the Senate would pass a bill fully as broad as the House version and perhaps even extend the coverage to a few more groups of employes.</p>
        <p>Senate action is complicated by a vacancy in the chairmanship of the Labor subcommittee wl 'h r.iust handle the bill. The post was held by the late Sen. Patiick V. McNamara, ch. Sen. Ralph W. Yarborough, D-Tex., is expected to be named soon to fill the vacancy.</p>
        <p>The bills managers lost one round the House Thurscay but there were indications this helped cons lidat support for the measure.</p>
        <p>The measure would bring to</p>
        <p>Rev. W. L. Jones announces the following union meeting services for Mt. Calvary FWB Church:</p>
        <p>Tonight, 7:30, Womens Department in charge of service Saturday, 7:30 p.m.. Holy Communion; Sunday, 11 a.m.. Rev. C. E. Moore will preach; 3 p.m.. Rev. Stephen Jones will render services.</p>
        <p>CHOCOWINITY - Annual union will begin at Cedar Grove Holiness Church tonight at 8 oclock.</p>
        <p>A business meeting will be held at 2 p.m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>The Star of Zion Usher Board of York Memorial AME Zion Church will meet Sunday immediately after morning worship services.</p>
        <p>The following services have been announced for St. Matthews Church; Rev. Jasper Perkins will preach Monday night; Missionary Christine Foreman will speak Tuesday night; Wednesday, choir rehearsal; Thursday; Rev. 0. T. Gorham will preach.</p>
        <p>IN COLOR</p>
        <p>*'THOSE MAGNIFICENT</p>
        <p>MEN IN THEIR</p>
        <p>FLYING MACHINES"</p>
        <p>The IneUnt Fun Show Thai* A BIf Hit From CoMt to CoMtt</p>
        <p>Features At</p>
        <p>1:25 - 3:55 - 6:30 - 9:00 Adults l.M - ChUdren 50c</p>
        <p>_________    , The Senior choir of Com-</p>
        <p>36.8 million the number of work-| erstone Baptist Church will meet ers covered by the Fair Labor at Holy Trinity Church Monday</p>
        <p>Standards Act.</p>
        <p>Powell, Kistlor A Co.</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF THE NEW TOKK STOCK</p>
        <p>EXCHANGE</p>
        <p>POWELL T. SPEIGHT</p>
        <p>REGISTERED</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVB</p>
        <p>Can PL 8.3468 of PL 8-2439</p>
        <p>at 7:30 p.m. to participate in revival services.</p>
        <p>District Three Union meeting of B Division will convene at 2on Chapel FWB Church, Ay-den, tonight and will continue through Sunday.</p>
        <p>Ask about banking's</p>
        <p>finest bargain</p>
        <p>planters</p>
        <p>nMational</p>
        <p>I U Bank and T</p>
        <p>Bank and Trust Company __</p>
        <p>unique 'Personalized"</p>
        <p>K0N-044ATK</p>
        <p>Checking Plan</p>
        <p>NO</p>
        <p>MONTHLY SERVICE CHARGI MONTHLY ACTIVITY CHARGE MINIMUM BAUNCi REQUIRED</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>Union meeting of District Two, A Division, will meet at Arthurs Chapel Church May 27-29.</p>
        <p>The following events have been announced: Tonight, Womens department in charge; Saturday, 11:30 a.m., mtroductory sermon and business meeting; Sunday, 11 a.m., Rev. 0. T. Gorham will preach</p>
        <p>(Ointinued From Page 1) pie due to the size of the district. Im depending on my. friends in Pitt to help me in the county.</p>
        <p>I would urge my Pitt County people to go to the polls and vote for two men of their choice for senate  and I stress the word two, he concluded.</p>
        <p>Allsbrook yesterday pledged himself to work hard to obtain the objectives of East Carolina College. Pointing to his experience in the General Assembly, ' the veteran legislator said: T dont mean to reflect on the other candidates but experience is necessary. I want you to help me use my ex-p&amp;gt;erience by returning me to the state senate.</p>
        <p>Another race, this one involving Pitt, Greene, Jones, Pamlico, Carteret and Craven Counties, is between incumbent District Solicitor Luther Hamilton Jr. and James T. Cheatham, his younger challenger from Green-vile.</p>
        <p>Hamilton, who has had the dual responsibility of runni n g a campaign and continuing his duties as Solicitor, was unavailable for comment this morning.</p>
        <p>Cheatham, who has conducted the most intense campaign over a larger area than any other candidate, issued a final appeal for support from his home county:</p>
        <p>I would appreciate the people in Pitt County voting for a Pitt native. With a good turnout from Pitt, he noted, T feel confident that the solicitors job will return to Pitt County after four years.</p>
        <p>Other offices at stake in tomorrows election are seats on the County Commissioners, and Board of Education, and for Sheriff.</p>
        <p>Incumbent sheriff Ralph Tyson has been challenged by Carl Whitfield of Greenville and echarles Edwards of Grimes-land.</p>
        <p>Vance Perkins, County Commissioner from Greenville, has been challenged for his seat by D. S. Spain, former Elections Board Chairman, and J. C. Galloway.</p>
        <p>Roland Brinson of S i m pson, incumbent, is opposed by Elmer Lee Leary of Chicod, the only Negro candidate in tomorrows primary, for a seat on the Board of Education.</p>
        <p>B. Alton Gardner, another incumbent on the Board of Commissioners, is seeking to retain his seat in the face of opposition from R. H. Worthington of Ayden.</p>
        <p>Running unopposed for the seat to be vacated by White, who is presently chairman of the Board of Commissioners, is Vernon Cox of Winterville.</p>
        <p>Dr. William A. Moody of Bethel and Richard Worsley of Greenville are unopposed in their bids for re-election to the Board of Education.</p>
        <p>Other unopposed candidates include: Judge Dink James, seek ing re-election as Recorders Court Judge; Willis A. Talton of Greenville, County Solicitor; and D. T. House, Clerk of Court;</p>
        <p>The polls will open at 6:30 a. m. and will remain open until 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>I urge everyone, every reg-</p>
        <p>Hill; and S. William Sugg of Snow Hill, a former Greene County Deputy Sheriff.</p>
        <p>In the county commissioners* race, E. E. Butts of Hooker-ton, J. J. Grimsley of Ormondsville and J. Roy Vandif o r d of Lizzie, all incumbents, are opposed for three available seats by Willie C. Gray of Rt. 2, Snow Hill, a merchant; and Claude Wade of Jason, a farmer and fertilizer salesman.</p>
        <p>J. W. Edwards of Snow Hill is the sole challenger in the race for a seat in the Greene County Board of Education. The other five candidates, W. D. Cobb Jr. of Jason, Waitman Dixon of Snow Hill, R. S. Holloman of Walstonburg, J. Denver Hughes of Lizzie and Mrs. Sara M. Stocks of Hookerton are all incumbents on the board.</p>
        <p>Judge Walter G. Sheppard of Snow Hill is being challenged by Herbert W. Hardy of Maury in the race for Judge of the Greene County Court. Sheppard, a Snow Hill attorn e y, has held the post since 1944.</p>
        <p>Greene County voters will also have a choice in deciding who occupies the position of Solicitor for the 5th Solicitorial District, which includes Carteret, Craven, Jones, Pitt, Pamlico and Greene Ck)unties. Luther Hamilton Jr. of M o r e-head City, the incumbent, faces opposition from James T. Cheatham III of Greenville.</p>
        <p>One Injured In Two Accidents</p>
        <p>Police said one person was injured and an established $1,275 property damage resulted from two traffic mishaps investigated in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Heaviest damage resulted</p>
        <p>toche Stre^ invoMng vehicles</p>
        <p>*iven by -niomas Wayne Bess candidates for office. 18, of Route 2, Greenville and Joseph Smith Stoneham, 34, of 1013 Ward St.</p>
        <p>Jones To UAv\e!speakers Heard By Aydai Athletes Davidson Alumni</p>
        <p>AYDEN First District Congressman Walter B. Jones will pay special tribute to the Ayden High School athletic teams during the schools commencement exercises on Monday.</p>
        <p>Jones will be on hand for the 8 p.m. exercises to present the school with a special award hpnoring the athletic teams for outstanding achievement.</p>
        <p>He will share the platform with Dr. Douglas R. Jones, Dean of the ECC School of Education, who is the regular commencement speaker.</p>
        <p>The Ayden athletic department recorded its 59th victory of the season yesterday against no defects with a play-off baseball victory over Bunn High School in Franklin CJounty.</p>
        <p>Ayden High is undefeated in major sports this year. Its football team was named Eastern District Class A champion and its basketball squad was named Class A State champions. 'The baseball team is now seeking to win a third championship for the school this year.</p>
        <p>AAUP Unit..</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 1) lege.</p>
        <p>Dr. Frank Adams, president of the local AAUP chapter, this morning received a letter from Eure acknowledging the receipt of the resolution concerning statements alledged to have been made by me in my home county.</p>
        <p>Eure charged that he had been misquoted but offered no clarification of his statements.</p>
        <p>He said, You did not accord me the courtesy of checking on the accuracy of the reporting of what I actually said and of course, you are not interested in that now since the wide distribution of your resolution.</p>
        <p>This is notice to you and the members of your group that I shall use this Resolution and the names listed as I participate in the political campaign this</p>
        <p> ~ ;   .  r  ***^  poiiiicai  uua</p>
        <p>from a 2:18 p.m. mishap at the p^n jjj matter that may intersection of 10th and Ck&amp;gt;-  .......</p>
        <p>appear to me to be helpful to my party (Democratic) and its</p>
        <p>Copies of Eures letter were sent to Governor Moore, Dr.</p>
        <p>Officers, who charged both Jenkins Md ECC Trustee Chair- grandparents, Mrs. Harvey</p>
        <p> uu  -  man  Robert  Morgan.   1</p>
        <p>The AAUP resolution</p>
        <p>drivers with failing to obey a stop signal, set damage to the Bess vehicle at $600 and estimated damage to the Stonehom car at $500.</p>
        <p>Police reported that Stoneham suffered injuries in the mishap.</p>
        <p>Katie Buck Clark, 27, of Route 1, Greenville was charged with ailing to keep a proper lokout while backing in a 12:55 p. m. mishap of Fifth Street west of the Vance Street intersection.</p>
        <p>Investigators said the Clark auto collided with a vehicle driven by Willie Cutchin, 32-year-old Negro of 204B Cadillac St.</p>
        <p>Damage to the Cutchin auto was set at $75 while damage to the Clark vehicle was placed at $100.</p>
        <p>   J  Sunday 3  ^</p>
        <p>p.m.. Rev. S. Jones will render istered voter, to go to the polls,</p>
        <p>was</p>
        <p>adopted by the eight-member Chapter Council, which is made up of seven Democrats and one Republican.</p>
        <p>Members of the Council, in addition to Dr. Adams, are Dr. Ralph Brimley, Dr. Patricia Daugherty, Dr. Ralph N a p p. Dr. Herbert Paschal, Dr. Mary Poindexter, Dr. Charles Price, and Dr. Bart Reilly.</p>
        <p>The Greenville-Washing t o n-Rocky Mount District of the Davidson (Allege Alumni Association, meeting here last night, heard reports on the colleges 'academic development and the progress of a multimillion dollar development fund.</p>
        <p>Meet at the Greenville Country Club, the Davidsofl alunuii first heard an address from Dr. Louise Nelson, Davidson professor of Economics and the only woman on the coll eges faculty.</p>
        <p>Dr. Nelson discussed with the alumni the developm e n t of the college and its students for a higher quality of academic work there.</p>
        <p>The group also heard fr o m Osborne Bethea, a ret i r e d</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Warren</p>
        <p>J. E. Warren Jr., 16, died at 5:30 Thursday morning at Wake Memorial Hospital in Raleigh, as a result of injuries received in a Honda-truck collision Friday night at 5th Street and Memorial Drive. Funeral services will be conducted Sunday afternoon at three o^clock at Gum Swamp Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. W. L. Poy-thress, pastor, and assisted by the Rev. R. B. Crawford, pastor of the Trinity Free Will Baptist Church. Burial will be in the Gum Swamp Free Will Baptist Church Cemetery. 'The body will be taken from the Wilker-son Funeral Home to the church one hour prior to the time of service.</p>
        <p>He had spent most of his life in the Belvoir community and was a member of the Gum Swamp Free Will Baptist Church Sunday School. He had attended Belvoir-Falkland High School and was in the Junior class, and he was a member of the Future Farmers of America. He was employed part time at Kentucky Fried Chicken in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Warren Sr. of Belvoir; one sister, Deborah Jean Warren of the home; three half-brothers, Steve Carroll Little of Belvoir, Floyd Earl Little and Jimmy Howard Little, Greenville; and his</p>
        <p>Moore of Greenville, Mrs. Nannie Dunn of Belvoir, and Alex Dunn of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, D.C.-Robert Smith, brother of Mrs. Lindsay Fomes of Greenville, died here Wednesday at Walter Reed Army Hospital. He was 51.</p>
        <p>BURNING POUNDS MELBOURNE (AP)-Austra-lias old one-pound notes, now replaced by Australian dollars, are being burned in five-million bundles at the note issue branch of the Reserve Bank here.</p>
        <p>OUTLIVED VIOLENCE GLENWOOD SPRINGS, Colo. (AP)The epitaph on a large stone of Doc Holliday, frontier gunman and gambler, reads. He died in bed.</p>
        <p>businessman working wit the development program, and Joel Bird, a recent Davidson graduate who is working with th alumni asociation. Included in their presentation were shdes of the college.</p>
        <p>Davidsons development program will bring a grant of $2,-200,000 from the Ford Foundation, contingent on the alumni and friends of the Presbyterian college raising $5,500,000.</p>
        <p>These funds will enable tha college to increase faculty salaries and enlarge its endowment in addition to providing additional scholarships for students.</p>
        <p>In the business session last night. Dr. Ernest L. Larkins Jr. of Washington was elected chapter president and William E. Glidewell of Greenville was feleo ted secretary-treasurer.</p>
        <p>Kim Novak Wins Divorce Action</p>
        <p>SALINAS, Calif. (AP) - Ae-tress Kim Novak has won a divorce after testifying her 38-year-old husband caused her mci.tal anguish by insisting she live in Britain.</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>ends TONIGHT</p>
        <p>uta AiiimMmi wWBtnf mH T nm ttwvm w</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>TONIGHT AND SATURDAY</p>
        <p>BAfV-At-Vov.</p>
        <p>Toaiihiiui</p>
        <p>01944MiemCM MTESNATIOIMinCTUaU</p>
        <p>ALSO</p>
        <p>IR"</p>
        <p>fjrp</p>
        <p>FAMOUS FOR GOOD FOOD</p>
        <p>CAROLINA</p>
        <p>GRILL</p>
        <p>services.</p>
        <p>'The Meadowbrook Day Care Center will present its rhythm band concert Tuesday night at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>Parents are asked to have their children at the center at 7:15 p.m.</p>
        <p>Koonce said this morning.</p>
        <p>FRANK WOOTEN</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>REPRESENTATIVE Six Fears Lefflslativ Experience</p>
        <p>VOTE TO CONTINUE HONEST &amp;amp; IMPARTIAL LAW ENFORCEMENT IN PITT COUNTY</p>
        <p>Y</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>F</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>RALPH TYSON</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>SHERIFF OF PIH COUNTY</p>
        <p>HE IS ABLE, EXPERIENCED, HONEST</p>
        <p>FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT AT ITS BESTI</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>T-O-DA-Y</p>
        <p>3Z30</p>
        <p>SATURDAY MORNING ONLY!!! GOLDWYN TIKOS TO EARLY BIRDS! A .300 IB. SHARK IS HARD TO KEEP BUT THE THEATRE IS GIVING AWAY TEN INDOOR SIZE PET FISH TO THE FIRST TEN CUSTOMERS COMPLIMENTS OF THE PET SHOP!!</p>
        <p>VOTE FOR</p>
        <p>R.H. Worthington</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>Pitt County Commissioner</p>
        <p>Economy - Progress - Service</p>
        <p> Farmer</p>
        <p> Retired Businessman</p>
        <p> Moosa</p>
        <p>'  Red Men</p>
        <p> Shrindr</p>
        <p> Former Town Commissioner Aydefi</p>
        <p>Paid For By Friendt of R. H. Worthington</p>
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