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        <date>2012</date>
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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0001" />
        <p>o</p>
        <p>. WEATHER</p>
        <p>Variable doadiiiess with teat-lored Aowen and warm tin WedifeMbqr.</p>
        <p>86th Year- NO* 165  intebnational</p>
        <p>TO W iw  ASSOCIATED  PBES8</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N. C -27834 TUESDAY AFTERNOON, JULY 11, 1967</p>
        <p>^ INSIDi RiADINO</p>
        <p>Page SPakiftan official heie Page 7-No military aid for Nigeria</p>
        <p>Page lA-Revicwer lifcef aom-</p>
        <p>10 Pages Today</p>
        <p>Price 10 Cents</p>
        <p>Sy JOHN T..WHEELER</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP) - Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara will not recommend snidig all the additional troops the U.S. Command in Vietnam told him it needs to prosecute ttie war ftilly, a hi|^ American source said today.</p>
        <p>McNamara, on his ninth trip to Vietnam, also r^xatedly ordered Gen. William C. Westmorelands command to cutAgainst Sending 100,000 Troops</p>
        <p>^ away the fat from the 466,000-man American military fm'ce and step up the ^fectiveness of the U.S. fitting machine.</p>
        <p>With 80 American maneuver battalions, the U.S. Command . normally has only about 40.000 to 50,000 combat troops available fm* operations.</p>
        <p>It takes about ei^t men to support one front-line rifteman. The rest of the troops include engineers, clerks, cooks, administrative personnel, helicopter</p>
        <p>pilots and military police.</p>
        <p>The secretary was reliably reported to have pressed for limited integration of ^^etaam-ese troops into American units to get the Saigon army to handle a bigger share of the fighting, now d(m mostly by American battalions.</p>
        <p>However, some ^'additional troops are expected to be sent following the secretarys report to President Johnson. Westmoreland was repOTted to have</p>
        <p>asked for 100,000 to 140,000 men to prosecute the war at an optimum speed. He also submitted studies of what Washington could expect with various small-er amounts of troops.</p>
        <p>Before he left tiiis afternoon for the United States, McNamara toW newsmen of Wasl tons troop p&amp;lt;^cy since mi( 1965, It was then, it is now 1 expect it will be in the future to provide the froq)B our commanders think necessary.</p>
        <p>However, he qualified this, saying: What is necessary depends on the extent to vdiich we are using the resources we have available to us. He noted the allies rave over (me million men under arms and said: There are many ways open to increase the effectiviess of those men if w&amp;amp; N^t our minds and hearts to it. I</p>
        <p>He added that in the rapid buildup to date, U.S. conunand-ers had overlooked means of</p>
        <p>getting the most use of their</p>
        <p>forces.</p>
        <p>During his final day in Saigon, McNamara met with Vietnams top generals, Lt. Gen. Nguyen Van Thieu, the chief of state; Premier Nguyen Cao Ky and Defense Minister Cao Van Vien.</p>
        <p>The Vietnamese generals were rcp&amp;lt;Hled to have recom-men(ted boosting U.S. troop strength to 600,000 and escalating the air war against North Vietoam with the possibility of</p>
        <p>w^oa&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>)nM!it</p>
        <p>an invasion to take the pressure off the area below the demilita* rixed zone.  \</p>
        <p>McNamara told his new^ ference he could not coi for seciB*ity reasons on any po^ siUe plans to increase the aif war, but Im said it woidd not bo diminished. He said the boml^ ing campaign has been effective in making Nortii Vietnam pay dearly for its dispatch of mee and supplies to support the le-surgency in South Vietnam.Capital Improvements Work utlned</p>
        <p>Ballet Stars Arrested At Hippieland Party</p>
        <p>A new elementary, school,  Development Evaluation Tllinic building and 36.apart-)nents for married students were the addlticms made to East Carolina Universitys xapital improvements .jno-gram in Legislative committee</p>
        <p>T.:e additions, along with projects recommended by the Advisory Budget Commiadon, hrcuiht st::te appropriations to |5.5 million and were approved by the full Legislature.</p>
        <p>Coupled with federal grants and loans the Legislative ac</p>
        <p>tion win pour 113 million in new construction funds onto the univeri^ty campus during the next two years.</p>
        <p>A pOrti(m of this years appropriations .aref U{H)lemenis to previous appropriations to provide more adequate faciU-ties than originally planned. T^ is the case with'the physics and biology buflding cm which constructi(xi has just .begun. It b! also true with the home economics buUdings, construction' of which is about to get underway.</p>
        <p>Ttoe is also approximated</p>
        <p>Stress</p>
        <p>ly |3.9 million in new dormitory construction authorized by previous Lejgislatures on which construction has not yet begun.</p>
        <p>With this years authorizations and those oi previous Legislatures the university has $19 million in new construction planned or getting undej -way.</p>
        <p>The new elementary education laboratory autiumized 1^ the legislature will cost $1,135-000. Tbe state appropriation is $750,000, while $385,000 will be local funds.</p>
        <p>S 0 m e $100,000 was apprc-priated for the Development Evaluation Clinic with matching funds to come from other sources.</p>
        <p>The Legislature authorized a $3,300,OM million classroom building with a state's^rc-priation of $2,200,000 and the</p>
        <p> X</p>
        <p>remainder to come from a federal grant.</p>
        <p>An increased appropriation of $228,400 was allowed for tbc. home economics building previously authorized by the 19ffi Legislature. It will (bst a total of $1,130,000.'</p>
        <p>For the science building authorized in 1965 an increased ai^opriation of $963,400 was made. The buildings total cost will be $3,525,000. Bids have already been taken on the science building and the home economics building.</p>
        <p>Federal loans of $2,600,000 were auth(H*ized to build doi'-mitory space for 800 students. The university now has a total authorization for 2,100 more dormitory bed spaces on which construction has not begun.</p>
        <p>The 36 married students iq&amp;gt;artments, first for the uni-</p>
        <p>DBTROrr (AP) - Walter P. Reuther said today that a profit-sharing plan is an essential part 0*. equity his United Auto Workers Union is determined t.achive in 1967 m coiUract talks \^th the nations autcnnak-</p>
        <p>rS. f ,T,.  -  '</p>
        <p>Reuffaar, nedr en^iasit to profit sharing as he opafed bar-gainu^ with Ford M&amp;lt;or Co., a day after starting negotiation^ at General Motors Ckirp., where he revealed the UAW would seek profit sharing for its 655,-OOd members in Big Three plants.</p>
        <p>He will take his demands to Chrysler Corp., third member of the Big Three, Wednesday.</p>
        <p>Reuthers use of the word essential in describing profit sharii^ in this years negotiations was a surprise indication the union will fry with greater determination to win something it repeatedly has failed to attain from the Big Three since the 1950.S</p>
        <p>Profit sharing was made a</p>
        <p>of UAW contracts at Amer-Mot(srs Cap. in 1961, but the financially troubled and smallest automaker has had no profit to share snce the first t*o,-years. ,  ,  ..</p>
        <p>Mitieobp Li^Doiise, vice pres-; i&amp;lt;font-lab(H relajtjions .ahd Fords;; chief neig(^t(fr, made  luief statement in whi&amp;lt; be told newsmen that his bargaining, tesm recognizes the intorest ^of al} people who would be affecte&amp;lt;i by</p>
        <p>Remove Tumor</p>
        <p>By REX THOMAS</p>
        <p>.derson Hoqutal and 'Tumor frh Istitute said kfrs. Wallace sat on</p>
        <p>S^.the side of her'bed this mom-</p>
        <p>versitv, will cost $435,000, liso a self liqtuidating loan.</p>
        <p>Other projects authorized this session include: alterations to Whichard building, $fl,000.</p>
        <p>supplement to nursh^ building, $45,000.</p>
        <p>alterations to Flanagan building, $930,000.</p>
        <p>renovatioi  of electiicd</p>
        <p>distribution, $325,000.</p>
        <p>additions to main cafeteria $795,000.</p>
        <p>addition to Jones cafeta*i, $235,000.</p>
        <p>campus drainage end development, $37,500.</p>
        <p>-improvements of canpui streets and walks, $37,500.</p>
        <p>addition to maintenance sAup, $56,500 (includes pr^ vious ap(H:opsiati(i).</p>
        <p>auxiliary student supply .store, $163,000.</p>
        <p>equipment fa school of Music, $1004XX).</p>
        <p>Tito ligislature approved issuing tp to $500,000 in fooode for eaiefruction of 10,000 ad-ititiQBil seats in concrete on the north a Id e of Fi(^&amp;amp; stadium. The funds will also allow lor eiargii^ the press box and other improvements. Work is expected to get underway foUowii^ this years football season.</p>
        <p>REPORTED ARBSSTE3&amp;gt; IN H1PFIEI4ND-Baltal danccOT Maigst Wmtm SPd WMm Nureyev were ideoUfied by pcihce as amoog 1!7 penona amsted dailDc m pottop zfld m a nolay party M San Franciscos hlptddand early today. The oonple 3a afaiwiiii id Mea m  WtmBt BMara in 1963. They are curraxtly pofonnfog in San Frandsco. (AR Wfrtphote)</p>
        <p>Theft-Attempt Reported Here</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Police are investigating an attempted safe robbery at the Pavilfon Pharmacy at 1800 West Fifth St. reported this morning.</p>
        <p>Chi^ H. F. Lawson said pharmacy officials reported a Iveak-in there at 8:45 a.m.</p>
        <p>Entrance to the building was gained by forcing open a front door.  </p>
        <p>Both the front and'bottom of the safe had beat on, Lawson said, in an attempt tq force it open, but with negative rs-aults.</p>
        <p>Nothing way reported missing.</p>
        <p>the confract under negotiatiohs.jLurleen  'Wallace  of  Alabama</p>
        <p>Our objective will be to [.spent a,vry restful night  aft-</p>
        <p>franslate that recognition. . ..er an operation which may rid into an agreement that  to ha of a malignancy, borrow an old bargaining^  a bulletin issued by M.D. An-</p>
        <p>phrase  is fair across the  .-----------</p>
        <p>board and does not favor onci gr(H4&amp;gt; to the detriment of the others, Denise said.</p>
        <p>If the union is of a like, mind, we will succeed in this endeavor, said Denise, but he</p>
        <p>As Expected, Taylors Hat Is In The Ring</p>
        <p>made no direct reference to any of the unions confract demands.</p>
        <p>Reuther called profit sharing a *;raonal and sensible methwi;^ j  ,  j</p>
        <p>rf determining equity for work-^M^y he Jl be a candidate</p>
        <p>Asked if the UAW would strike if it did not win profitDentoeraiic fwimary. sharing and certain other of its* former speaker of the goals, Rtuther said, we dont North Carolina House made</p>
        <p>cer specialists said today Gov.</p>
        <p>Her doctors said ^y are pleased with her progress and that all of the vital ^ns such as pulse, heart beat and respiratory rate  are n(mnal. Tlie hospital said the gover-n(H* will retinm to Alabama within two or tlu-ee weeks if no compUcaticns develop during tile post-operative period.</p>
        <p>A cancerous tumor in the lower abdomoi was removed Monday during an operation that</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - As expect. *5</p>
        <p> -  -  her  doctors said afterward, gwe</p>
        <p>found nothing 5hat would prevent the govon(i complete recovery.</p>
        <p>Her husband, former Gov.</p>
        <p>Bumper Leaf Crop Slated</p>
        <p>  SAIGON    AP^    A</p>
        <p>For Georgia</p>
        <p>Reds Hurled Back In Bloody* Figbflng</p>
        <p>South Vietnamese Base</p>
        <p>Is Almost Overrun</p>
        <p>like to talk about a strike at this juncture.</p>
        <p>Reuther said he would open talks at Ford with precisely the same program he outlined Monday at General Motors.</p>
        <p>Reuther said workos should get bonuses based on profits at the end of the fiscal year just as company executives get bonuses and stodkholders get extra dividends.</p>
        <p>As they opened negotiations, both the UAW and GM attempted to cool off speculation about the possibility of a strike.</p>
        <p>clear however that he has no intention of running with, fa or against any other statewide candidates for posts such as govemcH*. He said he will not be part of a team.</p>
        <p>Taylor, 42, an attorney in Wadesba*o, saved 12 years in the Genaal Assembly, climaxed with his tarn as House speaka in the 1965 session.</p>
        <p>Tayla, who did not seek re-election to this years General Assenibly, presently is chairman of the State Board of Mental Healtii.</p>
        <p>George Wallace, whose concern fa his wifes health had become inaeasingly visible, said he was elated and very thankful for the doctors encouraging pr&amp;lt;^^iecy.</p>
        <p>He will stay at his wifes bedside as long as she is in the hcMq&amp;gt;ltaL</p>
        <p>The hos|dtal direetor a|Kl chief surgeon. Dr R. Lee Clai|[, said Mrs. Wafiaee, 40, wili return to Houston in &amp;gt;tiro mUffths or so for X-ri^ thaapy.</p>
        <p>This wtil be done Clark explained, to destroy any tiny canea cells which may have gone undetected.</p>
        <p>Sorrowful Trip For Two Soldiers</p>
        <p>SADDENED SOLDIERB ARRIVE HOMEQen. WffllMn C. Westmoreland, right, .S. commander in Vietnam, arrived in CkJum-Ma, AC., today to attend the funeral of his motha. Catching a ride on the generals C135 Jet was Spec. 5 Bobby Strickland, Irfi, M, of Mullhu, 8.C., whoee motha alaa dtod Sunday. Behind them Is N. Heyward Clarfuoil oi Cotumbia, Gen. Westmortlsnds brothei^ S-law. (AP Wlrepboto)</p>
        <p>MACON, Ga. (AP) - Georgia Agriculture Commissicma Phil C^pbell has predicted a bump-er tobacco crop for his state.</p>
        <p>Georgias tobacco aop is unusually large this year, Campbell said Monday. In fact, ft is anticipated that our crop will exceed the confoined poundage  131,754,42(i-of Geagia and C^olina tobacco sold last year in Georgia.</p>
        <p>Campbells prediction came as he announced July 26 as the date tobacco auction markets wiU open in Georgia.</p>
        <p>The date was recommended fay the Geagia T(&amp;gt;bacco Advisory Board and was determined after a survey of the crop and maiketing conditions.</p>
        <p>Earlia, the Florida Tobacco Advisoy Board had recommended July 27 as an opening date Eoweva, Florida Agriculture Commissiona Doyle Conner (iedded to comply with the opening date of Georgia.</p>
        <p>There are 23 Georgia markets and five Fl(*ida mokets in tiie Georgia - Florida Fkie - Cured Belt, wlUdi produces Type 14 tobacco used in the manufacture of cigarettes.</p>
        <p>Because of the anticipated bumpa aop, Canapbell asked tobacco warehoiusemen to sell Georgia tobacco before that pro-chiced out of the state. He also called attention to the inaease in out-of-state tobacco sold in Georgia, and said it had grown from 15.9 million pounds in 1964 to 39.6 million pounds in 1966.</p>
        <p>Should the trend of inaeased shipments continue, Campbell said, Georgia warehouses wq^d be swamped with more tobacco than they could handle.</p>
        <p>The Georgia Advisory Board passed a motion asking Campbell to ask tobacco warehousemen not to sell out-of-state tobacco on Georgia markets.</p>
        <p>Howeva, some raised the question of the legality of such a move, and Campbell suggested in letters to the warehousemen that they should sell Geor-aop befae selling that other states.</p>
        <p>The Geoigia-Florida Belt is the first to sell its crop each season.</p>
        <p>gias</p>
        <p>from</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP) - Almost 1,000 North Vietnamese regulars partly overran a South Vietnamese base camp today then wae hurled back into the jungle with losses of at least 116 killed and many more reported wounded and dragged away.</p>
        <p>Striking before dawn, two North Vietnamese battalions rushed toward the barbed wire and sanclbagged bunkas and cut throu^ one ccxrner of tiie defense periineta.</p>
        <p>For mae than an hour the fitting was savage. One South Vietnamese soldia had his wife and two children in his bunka; the wife was killed by a charging Red soldia who was then kiUed by the South Vietnamese</p>
        <p>kooper.</p>
        <p>The South Vietnamese said 15 of tfafir face wae killed, 30 wae wounded and one was missing.</p>
        <p>A few hours earlia an American parafroopa fcnrce stumbled into a fortified ambush in the central highlands and suffaed 26 dead imd 49 wounded. The Americans reported only ifac of (he aemy killed.</p>
        <p>The jfround fighthig intensified as Defense Secretary Robert S. McNamara completed his five-day inspection tour of \fiet-nam.</p>
        <p>The Nortii \fietnameae attack on the South Vietnanoese camp in Binh Long Provinoe, north of</p>
        <p>SMgon, wm lmed dhectiy ! the legging padeatioB pro gram which was one of MeNea&amp;gt;i araf main concerns.</p>
        <p>Hie cMop is manned e bati telkn ohaged with protecting padfication woricers in sor rounding villages and hantiets.</p>
        <p>U.S. faead(]ttarter8 &amp;lt;taid the American paratroopos who were hit in the coitral hi^ands Monday cvideiftly ma&amp;lt;hed hito a well fortified enemy poeitioo in the rainy jungles.</p>
        <p>Afta pasting the U.S. troope for two hours with mortars and small oms, tito North Vietnamese unit faded into the jangle toward the Laotioi frontia a few miles to the Southwest</p>
        <p>Britt Denies Unusually Fast GavelOn Tobacco Tax Death'</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL (AP) - Fa</p>
        <p>ma House ^toaka David Britt says he used no unusually fast gavel when a tobacco tax bill was killed in the waning days of the 1967 North Carolina Gen-aal AssemWy.</p>
        <p>Britt made the comment Monday night when it wai sugge^-ed that a fast gavel helpcSd defeat the tobacco tax bill.</p>
        <p>The mood of the House was not to apfwove the tobacco tax proposal, Britt said adding that as speaker he had to work hard and fast to wind up the General Assembly.</p>
        <p>Britt and Lt. Gov. Bob Scott' appeared on Nath Carolina News Confaence ova the Uni-vasity of North Carolina television system Monday night and were questioned by a panel of newsmen.</p>
        <p>In answa to a question, Scott said he is opposed to a tobacco tax in North Carolina and is opposed ot any new tax at the jfresent time.</p>
        <p>Britt agreed with Scott but added that he does not regard tobacco as holy or sanctimon-ous in regard to taxation.</p>
        <p>Both Britt and Scott said they fava an overhaul of the committee system in handling the states budget.</p>
        <p>Britt said he believes the Joint Appropriations Committee</p>
        <p>could consist 38 to 40 legis</p>
        <p>lator instead of tiie usual total of more than 80 members. Scott agreed and said be favors reduction in tito size of all Senate committees to relieve the wak-load of senators. He rejected a suggestion for committees to work the year-round on the budget, saying all mentti)ers of the Senate want to be where the action is.</p>
        <p>In answa to questions about the Joint ai^ropriations mb-</p>
        <p>comnfttoe meeting behind closed doors to consida tiie budget, Britt said, The theory of executive session is not to Ite desired but the practicatitieg somewhat demand ft.</p>
        <p>Scott agreed and predicted open meetings of the appn^irUi* tions subcommittee would lengthen the legislative sessioili Referring to the budget process, Scott said, You could nol do ft witii someone breathing down yoa neck.</p>
        <p>Beauty Contestants Are Deterred From cheating'</p>
        <p>MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -Some might call June Wil^ a statistician. Others would say shes more a detective.</p>
        <p>But at least (me Miss Univase contestant is sorry Junes backstage.</p>
        <p>June checks to make sure the girls arent giving nature a boost in the swimiit ccunpeti-tion.</p>
        <p>I fit all the girls paaonally and I can tell pr^ty quickly if one of them suddenly gets more busty, she said.</p>
        <p>Miss France, 3642-33, and Miss Scotland, 38-24-36, juresent-ed the biggest pr&amp;lt;&amp;gt;blems fa Misa Vilay u oonteat Hlaa</p>
        <p>{urohibit aftering ai^ part of the official swim suit.</p>
        <p>1 need to have my suit takes in at the waist and hips, conii plained Lena McGarvie of Glai-gow, a public relations offica.</p>
        <p>Not 10, proclaimed June, only buttons on the sfrept can ba a(|jueted.</p>
        <p>Miss WUey ateo decrees size suit the contestants ni wear as they parade before thg judges hi Saturday nigfai'f. CBS televtekm productioa. Simia* times ha Judgmant and On c(Hiteitents are at odds.</p>
        <p>Miss Italy, a 3945^ model, wanted to wea a rize 10 Mtea Witey aaid.|P9a got a</p>
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        <p>t-Photo Satellite Has 'Paid' For Space Program</p>
        <p>By HOWARD BENEDICT AP Arotpaet Writer</p>
        <p>Defense say tbe</p>
        <p>Department United States</p>
        <p>officials wUl not</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP) .be caught in another scare like</p>
        <p>phasis on a military space program. Of 435 U.S. aatellitM sent into earth orbit through June 1,</p>
        <p>such as reconnaissance, missile</p>
        <p>mapp-iig</p>
        <p>inicanoos</p>
        <p>detection, navigation, missile targets, communica an research.</p>
        <p>The Soviet Union orbited 224</p>
        <p>~ Last March, during a visit to Tennessee, President J(^son 1950s.</p>
        <p>said he often had been criticized Then there was a grave fear for spending too much money on that the Soviet' Union had a tre^ space exploration. ,  mendous  lead  in  long-range</p>
        <p>Answering these critics, he missiles, and the United States said: *If we got nothing else poured billions into a program  satellites  in  that  period,  at leairt</p>
        <p>from the space program than to catch up. Later it was  9S  for  military  purposes,  a^</p>
        <p>the photographic satellite, it is learned that there had been no cm-ding to U.S. sources, worth 10 times over the mcmeyigap.  A  large  mimba*  of  launchings</p>
        <p>weve spent. Without the satel-j The development of recon-lites. Id be operating by guess naissance and surveillance sat-and by God. But I know exactly | ellites has been one of the most</p>
        <p>the so-called missiles gap of the 346 had military assignments security of the Navys Polaris and which are capable of de</p>
        <p>is necessary because the photographic satellites must return to</p>
        <p>earth with their film packages how many missiles the enemy! significant achievements of the'and must be replaced on patrol.</p>
        <p>has got.  ^  'space  age.  Details  about  them</p>
        <p>To date, the United States has are a tightly kept secret, but it spent nearly $40 billion on mili-,is known that several times tary and civilian space pro-  each day at least one American</p>
        <p>'tL-</p>
        <p>ALL THAT OLITTERSYoungsters swim in Lkt Cataract, Indiana, as the late temo&amp;lt;m mnmer son forms star-Uke" patterns against the water. This scene was recorded at Richard Lleber State Park. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p> 1</p>
        <p>*  k</p>
        <p>% i</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>
        </p>
        <p>Chbd Girl In Study Program</p>
        <p>* 1 It</p>
        <p>* f</p>
        <p>Miss Sarah Bailey, a rising enior at Chicod High School, is one of 40 high school stud^ts who if currently attending a dence study jnogram being held this summer at Bridgewater College, Bridgewater, Va.</p>
        <p>West's</p>
        <p>System</p>
        <p>Freeway Is Free</p>
        <p>grams. Even, Johnsons reckoning, that the photographic satellites alone have been worth nearly $400 billion, might be low. Because thanks to knowing how many missiles a potential enemy has, and where they are.</p>
        <p>spy satellite makes photographic passes over the Soviet Union, Red CJhina and other countries. Soviet observation  satellites</p>
        <p>also fly regularly over tbe United States.</p>
        <p>Both nations place strong em-</p>
        <p>Cabots Beard Is His Answer</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE-The cute child, as the late W. C. Fields often complained, is the adult actors worst on-screen enemy. Here, Sebastian Cabot of the CBS comedy series, Family Affair, reveals his secret weapon and his techniques of using it when confronted with trouble from lovaWe kids.</p>
        <p>gesture or to harrumphing like an ill-tempered judge with a</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTEThe author of the following reflections on driving in tbe East moved earlier this year from' Sacramento. Calif., to Alexandria, Va.</p>
        <p>MISS SARAH BAILEY</p>
        <p>The students were selected from approximately 200 applicants. The auccessfui applicants come from 11 different states exteiuttng from South Dakota to Mississippi to Massachusetts.</p>
        <p>Each of the students were selected to study either chemistry or physics. Mias Bailey is in the chemistry section.</p>
        <p>Miss Bailey is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John G. Bailey of Rt. 3, Greoiville.</p>
        <p>By DEREK SCHOEN WASHINGTON (AP) - Like Hollywood or the hipf^es, freeways are the butt of counftless jokes about California.</p>
        <p>So humor-connected has become the subject of the Golden States high-speed, traffic-clogged highways that even onetime Californians tend to forget at least until they come East one nice thing about freeways: Theyre free.</p>
        <p>Not so the amalgamation of turnpikes, thruways and the like that are the East Coast equivalent.</p>
        <p>You can drive at high speeds in the East. You can travel comfortably. But you cant do it for nothing.</p>
        <p>Take, for example, the unsuspecting ex-Californian who drives from Washington to Philadelphia on the newest roads avaflable.</p>
        <p>He travels Interstate 95 the 40 miles to Baltimore, Md., in less than an hour. So far he is out of pocket only the cost of the gas his car has burned.</p>
        <p>But then he begins searching his pockets for change and grappling with his wallet f(H* cash in a pantomime that seems endless.</p>
        <p>First, he arrives a. a tunnel that takes him beneath Baltimores harbor. Its a nice, clean tunnel and only a Scrooge would</p>
        <p>Fisherman Hooks A Lost Wallet</p>
        <p>yARMOUTH, Maine (AP) -East .August David Grant, 20, dropped his wallet in a small boat while on a Casco Bay picnic. Later the boat sank and when it was raised, the wallet Was gone.</p>
        <p>Saturday a man fishing frcm tbe wharf where the boat had been docked booked the wallet and tee $24 inside.</p>
        <p>French Police In Sports Cars</p>
        <p>begrudge the 50 ceirts he has to fork out to use it Then its off through northern Maryland, Delaware and New Jersey, wjiere the toU booths seem only slightly less numerous than tee trees.</p>
        <p>Consider the Maryland section of the John F. Kennedy Memorial Highway. The toll is $1, or about 2 cents a mile.</p>
        <p>And for the unwary, the cost can go up. The driver who has paid his $1 and follows a sign to one off-highway service station finds it costs him two bits to get back on.</p>
        <p>Later come the 30-cent toll for the 15-mile Delaware section of tee same highway, SO cents for crossing the Delaware Memorial Bridge at Wilmington and 40 cents for the 30 miles of the New Jersey Turnpike to the Philadelphia turnoff.</p>
        <p>The jokes about California freeways usually include a reference to the driver who missed his turnoff and had to travel many extra miles oefore be could turn around.</p>
        <p>Theres an East CJoast variation to that. Leave the toll roads in Maryland and Delaware before reaching the end and youll find an unmanned toll bocfth plus a sign reading, Exact Change Only.</p>
        <p>Presumably: No change, no exit. c.</p>
        <p>By SEBASTIAN CABOT (For Cyntela Lowry)</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (AP) - Anyone who plies his trade as an actor knows that high on the cumbersome list of worst enemies stand those twin disasters, children and animals. I am fond of children, and even of animals. Their presence in my presence on a screen, however, does not amuse me.</p>
        <p>Childrwi and animals are tee worlds greatest natural, untrained scene stealers. A cUld who has been trained to scene-steal is easily dealt witha gentle shove here, a sly cuff there. His mother-devised tactics ar more to be pitied tean censured. The stage mothiv does not live whose offspring can match infighting tactics 00 camera with your servant. </p>
        <p>But what do you do when you find yourself face to face, week after debilitating week, with the utterly guileless and charmingly freckled likes of Anissa Junes and Johnnie Whitaker, not to mention an equally fetching 15-year-old named Kathy Garver? How does one fight this kind of outrageously innocent scene-stMling talent? That is the professional cross I am asked to bear in my role in Family Affair.</p>
        <p>If one sports the kind ot magnificent beard I have carefully nurtured over the years, one has it made. In the presoice of these too-talented tykes, 1 need not stoop to the eye-catching</p>
        <p>bad cold. I need only stroke my beard as if in deep and significant thought. Attention is instantly drawn to where it ouite properly belongs, the star of the scene.</p>
        <p>An adult viewer, given the!  weateer satellites.</p>
        <p>To reduce the high launching rate, the United States is testing satellites which electronically will send clepr photo^aphs and other data to earth, enabling the payload to operate sevei^l montbl, or even years.</p>
        <p>Sources report that an operational system might be two or three years away. Its difficult, they say, to dnplicate the clear quality of pictures developed from film returned to earth.</p>
        <p>These j^tos, taken from 156 to 300 miles in a^ace, reportedly show with clarity objects on earth 4own to the size of a manhole cover.</p>
        <p>Even tee less-clear pictures relayed electronicaUy, by weate-er satellites have considerable military value.</p>
        <p>The Air Force recently reported that Its bombers were being guided to cloud-free targets In Vietnam by daily photographs received from the Ns-fional Aeronautics and Space Administrations Essa and Nim-</p>
        <p>the Air Force Minuteman ICBM slloi. Defense experts are reexamining a plan, once junked as unneeded, to mount Minute-</p>
        <p>traine that constantly move about tee counfry so th^ would not be silting ducks.</p>
        <p>A major problem to be solved Jttcfore s nuiltb^ectral satellite ^Mem can be deployed opera-uonaUy is to calbrate and coordinate (he information received by the various teStruments and to return It to earth as swiftly as it is assembled. Officials are confident this can be done-The Defense Department also has made rapid strides in developing satellites which are proving valuable navigation beacons !(* ships and planes, which are m^^ing tee earth with extreme accuracy to proviife targeting data for missiles, which are in-</p>
        <p>He's Now 17, So Purple Heart Winner Re-Enlists</p>
        <p>PARIS (AP)  Three Genl-darmes took to sp&amp;lt;M:t8 cars today to nab reckless drivers od Frances superhighways.</p>
        <p>Three Alpine-Renaults with a top speed of 120 miles an hour were turned over to the police to test their effectiveness.</p>
        <p>MORE THAN 1,060 BUFFALO, N.Y. (AP) - An</p>
        <p>Builds Each New Boat Larger</p>
        <p>insurance adjuster estimates that more than 1,000 establite-ments, most of them businesses, were damaged during racial violence in June. Much of the damage was from lootteg, burning or thrown rocks.</p>
        <p>PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - Ed Savella started building boats several years ago. Each one be built was bigger than tee last, and the latest project was a 33-foot cabin cruiser.</p>
        <p>One of his friends, who helped remove part of a wall of his workshop to get tee two-ton hull out, said that when Savella **atarts to build a 40-footer, Im loaving town.*'</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES</p>
        <p>HEARING AIDS</p>
        <p>Bring your prescslptioB tot</p>
        <p>Tbe '*Bhie** Danube River is mostly muddy brown with occasional patcbet of gray and gMO.</p>
        <p>R^3-r*</p>
        <p> ariciAMt. iw.</p>
        <p>RgMISNINO Ltomon Custard Piet</p>
        <p>ORIENVIUI</p>
        <p>Ml Kvaas SI.</p>
        <p>Phow 752-7171</p>
        <p>Dfeners Bakery</p>
        <p>Other Orricea to</p>
        <p>Raleigh. Greeaabore, Charlotte</p>
        <p>SNTIRE STOCK</p>
        <p>SPRING - SUMMER MDSE.</p>
        <p>REDUCED</p>
        <p>UP</p>
        <p>TO</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>RiO. $30 TO $40</p>
        <p>NHRI STOCK RAINCOATS</p>
        <p>REDUCED</p>
        <p>NOW 1830</p>
        <p>SKIRTS</p>
        <p>ONE TABLE SHORTS - SWIMSUITS</p>
        <p>choice, will look at a child before he will look at a fellow adults. Adults, especially American adults, tend to be somewhat sappy where children are concerned.</p>
        <p>Thus the actor unforlunate enough to find himself veritably surrounded by children, in an American television series must look to his own defenses. He cannot appear tee frrute. He cannot be obivious. '</p>
        <p>So I go back, again, to the beard. Its greatest, and most delightfully subtle, value lies in the fact that the children are quite unaware of it.</p>
        <p>They do not realize, God bless teem; teat it is the rock upon which I shatter the devastating sword of their own natural attributes. Let Buffy give that sadly solemn look of hers and I merely stroke the beard. Let Jody grin, his saber-toothed grin and the beard will waggle. Let Cissy exude that frightful teen-age charm and tee beard points like spaniel that has scented danger. As indeed it has.</p>
        <p>Ibe ctor dines only at the table of applauseand, as in any well-run household, the choice cuts do not go to the children.</p>
        <p>I love them dearly. But at my table they get tee neck of the turkey.</p>
        <p>The exp^mental technique offering tee most pronse is a so-called multispectral system.</p>
        <p>The heart of the system is multiband color photography. Three or four color photographs, each sensitive to light at a particular narrow band of visible or near-infrared frequencies, show considerable detail about land and water.</p>
        <p>Additional information comes from instruments teat scan nearlylthe entire electromagnetic spectrum, from radio waves, through radar and microwdves, the entire Infrared spectrum, up to ultraviolet and X rays.</p>
        <p>Using this collection of instruments, NASA is developing a satellite capable of measuring temperatures and density anywhere in the atmosphere and down to a depth of 200 feet in the (fceans. The satellite will report on water resources including tee location of underground rivers, tee movement of schools of fish, an inventiny of forests -including tee health of individual trees, soil fertility, and the loeatioa of minerals.</p>
        <p>Its easy to see how tee Defense Department eould use such a satellite to spot submerged submartoes, to si^tei enemy soldiers in deep foliage, or to identify a missile silo bur 4ed tinder^ound.</p>
        <p>CHARLOTT*, N.C. (AP)  Leonard Smith Jr., -who won a Purple Heart as an Arm;^,pr-afroo^ before he was 16, has re-enilsted in tbe Army and hq;)es to go back to Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Smite, now, 17, had eolistod UlogaHl when he was U.</p>
        <p>He was awarded a Purple Heart for shrapnel wounds in his right leg in Vietnam on Aug. 26, 1966, 17 days before Ms 16th birthday. He was discharged after the Army learned his true age. Monday he re-enlisted for three years.</p>
        <p>'McNamara and Westmore-</p>
        <p>and 27,000 next month, and I wanted to be part of that, the youte said.</p>
        <p>Smith, vteo would have been a senior this fall at a Charlotte high sdiool, said that he will fhiish Mgh school in the Army.</p>
        <p>It might take me some time, he said, but Ill pass the high school equivalency exam and get my diploma, because then I can put in for officer candidate school, and thats what I want, bad.</p>
        <p>Smith, 5 feet 6 and 152 pounds, said he had volunteered to go back to Vietnam and hoped to</p>
        <p>land wwe on TV from Vietnam and they said that we were losing tee war md needed 100,000 more men,, 25,006 teis month</p>
        <p>Fire Dept. Will Meet Tonight</p>
        <p>STATION HOUSE - Tbe SU-tioB House Fire Department will hold its annual membership meeting Tuesday at $ p.m.</p>
        <p>Officers will be elected gnd accomplishments of the depart-mmt during the past year will be reviewed. All members are urged to sttend.</p>
        <p>go after my 18th birthday</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>go</p>
        <p>Aug. 9. They wont let me until then.  ^</p>
        <p>Its what you am in Vietnam teat makes you want to go back, he said. 'You fight communism, and if we dont go over teere and stop ft, then it will spread over here.</p>
        <p>D. FALSE TEETH</p>
        <p>Rk Slid* or Slip?</p>
        <p>Doa* live In fwr of IUm tetii looMsiog. wobblins or &amp;lt;trosv4af j\u t the wroBg tlme.Por more eeeurlty end more eointM. juct wvinkie n</p>
        <p>ssr^^,ssfeis^.</p>
        <p>Dentiires thet fit ere eeiitliT te</p>
        <p>HGF 21x21 Oaibidp  S</p>
        <p>SWIMMING POOL</p>
        <p>SALE!</p>
        <p>/fV O:/^ v'-y I (y.  hAi.H yhL /'Gl ..</p>
        <p>E.G(LAP  -  ^:/-VF</p>
        <p>CALL Mr. Collins TODAY CALL COLLECT</p>
        <p>f19-274-46S6</p>
        <p>IMFSIIAL IWIMMIM# WOt COMVANY 11 vm Ue Itieet. eremesere, N. C. eiLL OUT CARO OMIH.STSLY ... We ere teWmted le mr fed iiee eed ieew Ifif mere eAeet rmr fpeclel eHer end tlmH Nw imffHel lerfowniiit Feel. We iwderrtted re are weder ee eSHoaHee</p>
        <p>W Neme</p>
        <p>cay</p>
        <p>Directions</p>
        <p>Cell m AM C &amp;gt; FM ( i NIffilt ( 1</p>
        <p>Thru</p>
        <p>Service</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>Wilmington</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>New fiftar idwdilet vh TraHwayi md hilanMe</p>
        <p>Why huny, loaiTy, fU m to *s slrT IMNnfs tohm iw from dovatowB to 4owitow% sad </p>
        <p>look at tee tow fMW below.</p>
        <p>Wrem GREENVILLR</p>
        <p>Oefr 1 elieage vto Ratoigb WASHINaTON, D.C.</p>
        <p>4 Thro totoi dtofr jUUPOH</p>
        <p>4 Ceaveatonl tolpe dally ATLANTA</p>
        <p>Vto Retold ead Trottwaro Bsfress CHARTSM/TOUIIi^ACIUOB IION iUf STATION</p>
        <p> W</p>
        <p>ms</p>
        <p>*8id</p>
        <p>*2.65</p>
        <p>*1530</p>
        <p>Trattwaytt</p>
        <p>aslstttrafsl</p>
        <p>oneorth</p>
        <p>Tbe possibility teat the Rus-itercepting jrateq signsif from siaas will develop such a satel- ground, air and space-based lite is causing concern about the facilities of potential e nemies,</p>
        <p>submarine program and about' tecting if any nation violates the</p>
        <p>limited nuclear test-bao treaty. ; years of problems, industry finally has produced a satelUte sensor that can detect</p>
        <p>man missiles on trucks and tbe Igtmching' pf missfies</p>
        <p>abroad. The Air fcrca recently awarded nUilHmllliofrdollar coDfracta' to bimd tela advaaced early-warning satellite.</p>
        <p>Tbe Defensa Dapartmeat has 15 teilitaiy communications sat-ellitM circling tea earth. They are, classed as teat vahicles but art being used effectively to speed nlitary massages, including trafflc'to and from Vietnam. By 1970, an advanced operational network of these satellites is expected to be flying.</p>
        <p>Shortly after that, the U.S. hopes to have in orbit a system for the field, using simple equio-ment, to communicate, with one anoteer or with rpar headquarters to better co(N*dinate tactics.</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0003" />
        <p> *&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>,..4- '</p>
        <p>Couple E</p>
        <p>L_-</p>
        <p>Greenviile SevcnMlay Ad-Church was the setting Sunday afternoon for the Un*ee&amp;gt; thirty wedding of Miss Janice DsH Waters and Hardie Winston Clark ur.</p>
        <p>'ihe bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Hart W i:rs of Greenville. Parents of the bridegroom are Mr. and M.S. Hardie Winston Clark a*, of Gainesville, Ga.</p>
        <p>lier Elbert Moye Tyson Jr. of Auro-a, III officiated at the ceremaay.</p>
        <p>Preceding the ceremony, Mrs. H?.rvey Murphy Jr. of Wilson p.essntiJ a program of o gan music. Stewart Crook of Colle-gedalc, Tenn. soloist, sang Entrant Me Not to Leave Thse and 0 Periact Love. The Weddii^ Prry:r as benediction was sung by William Waters Jr., Ixrotber of the bride. Tile background of the church was centered with a large picture of Christ Kneeling in Getb-semane. Below the picture was an open BiMe, belonging to the paternal grandmother of the bride, flawed 1^ single brass snapdragons and cath^al candles. At the altar was a prie dieu with white satin bows.</p>
        <p>Gi^ven in marriage by her father and mother, die bride wore a formal gown of peau de soie, and imported lace from Japan. The lace was a gift ctf the bridegroom. The dress was designed with a scoop neck, empire waistline and a chapel train.</p>
        <p>Her two-tiered veil of silk 3-hision fell from a matdiing lace pillbox. She carried a cascade bouquet of white bridal roses, illusioa and ivy centered with a hybrid white orchid.</p>
        <p>Miss Louise Walters of Green-viHe, cousin of the bride, was maid of himOT. She wore a street length dress of mint green lace over peau de soie, fashioned along empire lines mth an A-line skirt. Her headpiece was an open pillbox widi matching short veil. She carried a cascade bouquet of rose pink carnations, ivy and satin ribbons.</p>
        <p>Bridesmaids were Miss Ail&amp;amp;ae Langley and Miss Faye Niclmls of Greenville, cousins of the bride, d Miss Rui Clark of Gainesville, Ga., sister of the Inidegroom. They wore dresses Iddhtical to the maid oi honors and carried similiar bouquets of light pink carnations.</p>
        <p>Clifton Waters, brother of the bride, and Miss Elaine Nichols, cousin of the bride w^e can-dlelighters.</p>
        <p>Simple Solution' For Ending Wars</p>
        <p>eai-Abb</p>
        <p>By ABIGAIL VAN BUREN</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: 1 am a grown man, and Im not ashamed to</p>
        <p>admit that I read your column, and enjoy it I dont always agree with you, but T think you do a k)t of good by just letting people ten you their problems.</p>
        <p>I wish k were possible for someone to make the human female realize that she is the most powerful force in the world. She is even more powerful than the bomb.</p>
        <p>Lets be fraifr, if women wanted to, they coiild end the war in 90 days. They could simply lock their bedroom doors, and say, I win produce no more cannon fodder, and there will be no more splaying house until tee war ends!</p>
        <p>Isnt teat simple?</p>
        <p>S. S. (JOPLIN) DEAR S.S.; Too sizzle. You men could do tee same thing.</p>
        <p>MRS. HARDIE WINSTON CLARK. JR.</p>
        <p>Miss Jackie Mozingo, cousin ef the bride, was flow* girl and wore a mint green dress Identical to the honor attendants and carried a white basket ^ pkdc flower petals.</p>
        <p>Ibe brides govn and her attendants dresses were designed and made by Mrs. Lteo* G. Nldnils, aunt of the bride.</p>
        <p>Jolm Clark of Gainesville, 6a.</p>
        <p>brotho of tee bridegroom, served as best man. Ushers were William Waters Jr., brother ef the brid, Floyd Kite Jr. md Steve Walters Jr., coushis of the bride, aU of Greenville.</p>
        <p>The wedding was directed*:by Mr. Herman Nobles.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Watos chose for her daughters wedding, a pink A-line dress imported em-teoidery with matdiing accet-sories. Mrs. Claik: choice a three-piece blue silk and lace dress with matching accessories. Bote mothers wore corsages of.pink roses.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Luther B. Nicbds of Kinst(i, maternal grandmother of the bride, Blrs. McCoy Tripp, paternal aunt of the bride ana Mrs. Hardy W. Clark, paternal grandmother of tee groom, wore corsages of pink carnations.</p>
        <p>For a wedding trip, tee bride changed into a beige and ^^ay sheate dress of eydet embroid-</p>
        <p>lendar</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 1:00 p.m.  Creasy K. Proctor, Order of DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall 8:00 p.m.  Naval Reserve meets in basement of Austin Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.  Witlda Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Gub 8:00 p.m.  Garris-Scott weddhig researsal will take</p>
        <p>Slace in chapel of Jarvis lemorial Methodist Church 8:00 p.m.  Pitt Co. Alcoholic Ammymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy. Telephone 75^5115 8:00 p.m.  St. James Wesleyan Guild meets at the diurch</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 11:00 a.m.  Die wedding of Mrs. Florence 0. Scott' and Dr. Alton Marcus Garris will take place at Jarvis Mem(n*ial Methodist Church Giapel 1:45 p.m.  Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Gub weekly game at Planted Bank 6:30 p.m.  Kiwanis Gub meets</p>
        <p>7 inqxirted from Japan. Ske wore beige accessories and the white hyteld orchid lifted fi^m h* bouquet</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to the North Carolina coast, bfr. and Mrs. Gark will make their home in (Jollegedale, Tenn.</p>
        <p>Die t^e is a ^edimte of Mount Pisgah Academy, Asheville, and is a jimior at Soutii-em Missionary College, C!ollege-dale, Tenn. The bridegroom is an honor graduate of Gainsville</p>
        <p>Personals</p>
        <p>-   J f</p>
        <p>Hermlm Buck iaa^surgica] piar tient in Pitt Memorial Ho^itd, room, A-205.</p>
        <p>Dr. Joyce V.'Barly&amp;gt; pastw of Jarvis Memorial Methodlst Church, addressed a group of forty young ministers hi Ridtigh last Wednesday at the QrieB^ tion Workshc^ lor minister new to 'the N.C. Aimual Gonfrrence.</p>
        <p>He spoke to them omcemmg the work of tee Beard of bOtiis-teri^ Training and Quaffilca-tions, of which be is chaim;^ After the ieting, Dr. an#Mrs. E^y visitd hr inoteer, MTs. C. M. Stansbury, at the Kc^ Rest Home in Sanford,</p>
        <p>School, Gainesville, Ga., and attended FaHs College of Drafted* Atianta, Ga.</p>
        <p>Reception Following the ceremony, Mr. and Mrs. Steve Widters, bfr. and Mrs. John D. Langley and Mr. and Mrs. McCoy Tripp, aunts and iBicles of tee bride, were hosts and hostesses at a recep-ton in the feU^mship hall of the church.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Kite 9eted guests. The receiving Una was cxmiposed of tee par-eids of tee txrlde, tee bride-^ooms parents, the bridal couple, llie maid*of honor and the bridesmiaids.</p>
        <p>Mn. Billie Mozingo presided at tee register and Mrs. Luther G. Nichols greeted guests.</p>
        <p>Punch was served by Mrs. McCoy Trbip and bridal cakes were served by bfrs. Steve Walters and Mrs. J(ten D. Langley.</p>
        <p>The refershment table was covered with a mint green taffeta cloth overlaid wite white silk organdy and lace, featiff-teg hand-sewn lace medallions. The table was centered wite an arrangment of white bridal flowers and greenery, flanked by silver cmutelabra with white tapers. '</p>
        <p>Good-byes were said to Dr. and Mm Robert Morrison.</p>
        <p>The bridal couple, parents of tiie bridal couple, wedding attendants and relatives were served wedding cake and punch following the reception.</p>
        <p>* The bridal couple cut the first slire 'of cake after which the bridis mother served tiie 'cake and the bridegromns mother servdiHinch.</p>
        <p>Master Point Game Results Announced</p>
        <p>Die Faetdty Dui^te Chib held its monthly master point game hi two sections Friday evening at the Hanters Bank. In Section A, winners Norte-South were: Steve Wright and Dr. James Stewart, first; Dr. and bfrs. Jerry KaUEman, sec-and; Mrs. J. S. Willard and bfrs. Betty league of Tarboro, third; bfr. and Mrs. Gordon Smith tied for foirth wite Mrs. Robort Barnhill of Tarboro and LevNs Newsome.</p>
        <p>Tht EastrWest winners hi Section A included: B. H. and Richard Moore of Whitakers, first; Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Mc-Caskffl of KinstonI second; Joe Perry and Ed. ammons of Kinston, tehrd; Dr. Graham Davis and Chnide Goodman, fourth.</p>
        <p>Section B winners were: Mrs. Wiley Corbett and Mrs. Irving Adler Tarboro, first; Mrs. D. J. Lewis and Martin GUI of New Bern, seicond; Mrs. Jack Cuth-berston and Mrs. I G. Miffphrey third; Mrs. L. A. Harper and Max Witherbee of^ New Bern, fOID'th.</p>
        <p>Section B East-West winnors wa*e: Dr. and Rfrs. Walter Thompson, first; hfr. mid Mrs. Allen Norris of Kinst(m, second; kfrs. L. D. Harris and bfrs. A. R. Peters of Washington, third; Mrs. Ben Mahlum and Mrs. Ralph Pate of New Bern, fourth.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY:' I have noticed teat my husband has started to get too friendly with our oldest daught^. She is 13. Does mcthsr have the right to shoot n cne (including her husbazid) he should harm her child, either physically (xc morally?</p>
        <p>My husbands famdy is very lax, morally. I knew nothing of his family until after our marriage. In his youth he was given all the freedom of a tomcat, and like a tomcat, any femate is a fair game.</p>
        <p>. TOMCATS WIFE DEAR WIFE: No healthy, normal father would entertain sudi asick notion as you suggest Tell your doctor about your suspicioia witbout delay. He will tell yoi4 what your next move should be. (P.S. Lay that iHstol down, Gal.)</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: We t^ve a s(m )fteo has just finished his junior year in college and plans to attend graduate school a year from now. He became engaged to a sophmncn^ girl last Easter. She is studying nursing. They want to get married ti^ sum-mo*.</p>
        <p>We have financed our sons educatiim oitirely. Our soa and his girl want both sets of parents to finance tiieir sdiooUqg and say if they are married it will be cheaper than living apart</p>
        <p>How much are parents suppose to he^ teeir children, ai^ for how long? Dont you think if a boy is old enough to get married he is old enough to siq&amp;gt;port himself and his wife?</p>
        <p>WONDERING DEAR WONDERING: How much be^ parents ^ve their</p>
        <p>Die Dally Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday^ My ff#</p>
        <p>Fashions For The Future</p>
        <p>LOOK AT THE FUTUREThese two ereatioos by MoUle Pamisbote abovB-tee-knee stylee-were among tee iaU faahkna ahown yesterday at the New York preview for fajtWnn </p>
        <p>Left Is a luminous gold on Uack aUk dress and lacket. Btgfat la a white silk diw, a peasant shirt, with JewM bib and cuffs. (AP Wiroteoto)</p>
        <p>childrai, mid for how loi% is a decision ttat only tee parents can make. It has been my observation, however, that when a 4diUd wants to marry while gNngto sdKxd, if tiie parents approve of the dioice, they will give till it hurts. But if they dont approve, it hurts just tiiort of the giving.</p>
        <p>Birthday Party Given Friday</p>
        <p>Miss Joan Everett of Gremi-ville and J. T. Wimaiiis of Richmond, Va., were honored at a sur{H*ise birthday party Friday night at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ledrew Coward.</p>
        <p>A colear scheme of ^een and orange was used tiffoughout the house.</p>
        <p>A centerpiece of gladioli and snapdragcms was used on the table. Mrs. Cmtis Mills poured punch.</p>
        <p>Good-byes wore said by the hostess and Mrs. Mills.</p>
        <p>Approximately 20 guests were present for the eveift.</p>
        <p>Durable press processes (there are sevoral) sbai^et entire garments so they will be wriitide-resistant mid maintain pressed-in pleats. Properly executed, these processes elmlnate any need to iron garments.</p>
        <p>CLOSEOUT</p>
        <p>WIG SALE</p>
        <p>100% HUMAN HAIR WIG. AU WIGS GOING FOR THE LOW</p>
        <p>FRIGE OF .  .</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>WIGARAMA</p>
        <p>m Atiawtte  Ptrtrtwm  Mwi  to  IwiHil</p>
        <p>IVHbace* eonpMy rewnre, N.C.</p>
        <p>Fashions unitod cm one subjectthe divided skirt is the big hit tee spring and summm. It shows in sports, daytime and eventog clotiies. Versions include the narrowed leg for an almost-pants kx^ and the wide leg giving&amp;gt;tee full skirt effect</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Diamond Setting, Remoonting AndRepairs ^ Done On The Premises Grtenvtite's-Only Raglstered JewOm</p>
        <p>Ra^stered Jiivatar  ArwImi tMefodefr</p>
        <p>BIRTHS</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Edward Earl Smith of Rt 1, Oak Gty, a son, Troy Keith, on July 9, 1967, to Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>. Brown</p>
        <p>Bmn to Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gene Brown of Carriage House Apts., a son, Harry Roderic, on July 10, 1967, in Pitt Memorial Hbejdtal.</p>
        <p>Moore</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Owen Gary Mitchell Moore of 200 W. Gum Rd., a daughter, on July 10, f 1967, to Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>A dash of nutmeg in tiiortcake dcNigh brings out the flavcnr of tie hvrtos-</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>PLAYTEXTSLYCRA</p>
        <p>DOUBLE DIAMONDS**</p>
        <p>PANTY GIRDLES</p>
        <p>NoMf-save $2.00 on Playtex Lysre Pwito Gtedlei wHh OMERi</p>
        <p>Diamonds panels of Lycra for double oONtoOl hi 9m stomach, waist, hips.. .plus double Lyera patieie hi heoh to curve you naturally for today's feehioniw Playtex makes this special offer so you can dieocwep for yourself the famous *hold-in power HiakwoWi wash out" of Playtex "Double DiaRMiKt^ Lycra PantyOhdlet Save $1.00 on the regular girdle atyfe o0 Playtex "Double Diamonds,** loa</p>
        <p>Long Ug Panty; X8, s. M, LRig. $13S5 Now |f |.9f</p>
        <p>XL$1.00inore</p>
        <p>Regular Panty:  t. M. L Rag. $11.95 Now 89.9f</p>
        <p>Girdle:  S, M. L Rag. Iiaes Now I9.9</p>
        <p>XL$lJX)inofe</p>
        <p>Nurryf. ..this sale Is tor e Unfitted ttoto en|h</p>
        <p>tO% 50% trw tpond** Crote^' tOO%.nyfe&amp;lt;i</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0004" />
        <p>July n, 1967  -</p>
        <p>Thank You Due Those Who Served</p>
        <p>LONG STRUGGLE BACK!</p>
        <p>night was th first Mondair night since  It is true that membership in the legislature Febwa^^at some 170 representatives of the people carries with it prestige and honor. There are perhaps of Carolina did net gather in Raleigh to take even a few special privileges which go along with</p>
        <p>up the legislative business of the state.</p>
        <p>The longest General Assembly session in history adjourned Thursday and for the first time ip almost she months those elected representatives were free to devote their time and attention to personal rather than state affairs.</p>
        <p>Regardless of what one might think of the accomplishments of the 1967 General Assembly, a debt of gpratitude is owed to those who have served in Raldgh these last dx months. It is not likely that any one of the 170 members of the legislature served these six months without personal sacrifice. For most of tiiem the sacrifice included financial out-of-pocket expenses over and above the pay and allow</p>
        <p>those heavy responsibilities. It is also true, however, that membership in the legislature imposes upon each of the 170 men and women who occupy state house seats special burdens far beyond that which the public generally acknowledges.</p>
        <p>To Representatives Horton Rountree and W. A, (Red) Forbes and to Sen. Julian Allsbrook and Vinson Bridgers we express our appreciation for the representation they provided Pitt County in the recent General Assembly session.</p>
        <p>Political Fever Runs</p>
        <p>anees received during the legislative session. With-  va.T.i  i</p>
        <p>But its Normal</p>
        <p>elected official in Raleigh than he would have by simply following his chosen vocation at home. In moat cases those who made up the General Assembly worked a great deal longer and a great deal harder as public servants than they would have at their regular vocation.</p>
        <p>!VIiddle-Agec. Can Only Bleec.</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Curb-stoiM comments of a P a v e-ment Plato:</p>
        <p>What this country needs is a way for the middle-aged to blow off steam.</p>
        <p>Nobody in America has more things to revolt ebout lhan the man or woman between 40 and 65, but there is Ho organized way for him or her to show his wrath except to write a letter to a Congressman. For ali the good (hat does, it mijht as well be addres^ to the man in (he moon.</p>
        <p>The middle-aged are the most overwork^ and under-appreciated class in the nation. What agency considers their  None.  And they</p>
        <p>are usually so busy taking care of others that they dont have times to take proper care ol themselves.</p>
        <p>HAL</p>
        <p>BOYLE</p>
        <p>They are fwgotten heroes of this civilization.</p>
        <p>They pay most of the taxes, are the chief support of churches and universities, do most of the worlds work and most of its wonyiiig, and suffered most of its heart and ulcer attacks. And after raising their own children they have to start in serving as unpaid baby sitters lor their granddiildren.</p>
        <p>Numbly they ask them-Bclv08*</p>
        <p>When does tba fun begbi? For them, it doesnt.</p>
        <p>The plight of the middle-aged today is pretty much the same as teat of a bUml mule in a co^ mil. They ere taken for granted-by their gover-ment, by their children, and,</p>
        <p>worst, of all, even by themselves.</p>
        <p>Welfare recipients march on City Hall, tee racially oppressed manufacture street riots, farmers destroy their crops to potest low price, and college lads are free to stage panty raids or picket their draft boards.</p>
        <p>Every class or creed in America has a way of venting its anger except the forlorn, overlooked middle-aged class. It has found no method to voice its complaints w get its grievances redressed.</p>
        <p>Not for him, the middle-aged man, comes the thrill of throwing stones at the police, besieging a foreign embassy, or even hanging someone in effigy. Nope, he jus! stands there quietly bleeding at the crossroads of time, getting more lumps every year.</p>
        <p>The government turns on fireplugs to free showers for the kids, grants scholarships for older students, subsidize housing for the poor, gives medical care to the elderly, spends billions on underprivileged at\&amp;gt;ad.</p>
        <p>But the faceless middle-aged man gets from Uncle Sam nothing but a big at round zero.</p>
        <p>If the government cair provide free milk to kindergart-ners  who, after all, have yet to do a thing for their country why cant it buy a luncheon martini once a week for a worn-out white-collar or factory workw of 50 who has been meeting his tax bills for more than a quarter century.</p>
        <p>Why not government subsidized love nests for middle-</p>
        <p>The epidemic of political fever that is following In tile wake of the General Assembly session is normal for North Carolina.</p>
        <p>It will run a peak course for a week or so longer and then settle down to a lower pitched period of maneuvering and campaigning by those with hats ready for the political ring.</p>
        <p>At least two formal announcements of candidates for high office so far have been made in the first post-legislature round. Sen. Voit Gilmore has announced he will seek the congressional seat in the eighth district and former House Speaker Pat Taylor has ended months of speculation with the formal announcement that he is a candidate for the post of Lieutenant Governor.</p>
        <p>There are other candidates, several prospective candidates and many hopefuls waiting in the wings.</p>
        <p>Lt. Gov. Robert Scott continues his campaign  Dw i a aaP^ PATPIPk</p>
        <p>for the governorship. All that is lacking is the formal  ^  MLrMiKiv-N</p>
        <p>announcement that he is a candidate, and even that will be anti-climactic when it comes.</p>
        <p>For a non-political year, 1967 is producing the expected political announcements.</p>
        <p>Pathology^ Of Madness</p>
        <p>McNamaras Big 'Decision Burden</p>
        <p>By JAMES MARLOW WASHINGTON (AP) - The University of Michigans Graduate School of Business Administration polled 432 businessmen on who is the countrys greatest living business executive. They picked Secretary of defense Robert S. McNamara.</p>
        <p>He used to be president of the Ford Motor Co. and he has a brain like a computer. Everybody says so. He can rattle off any time an astonishing list of facts and figures.</p>
        <p>He sometimes oversells himself, as on some of his trips to Vietnam when he came back saying things were looking up, and then things got worse, which could be interpreted as meaning sometimes he needs new glasses.</p>
        <p>But he has streamlined tec Defense Department. And theres no boubt its McNamara, not the generals, who runs the place, about the first time a vilian has ever been able to do that.</p>
        <p>Shortly he will retixn from his ninth trip to ^^etnemn to six years, an insp^on trip in keeping with his present line of work, which is quite different from trying to figure out the orospects for the new 1968 model hardtop.</p>
        <p>Never in his life did he lijn into the kind of competition encountered in Vietnam. Over there it is not computers but bombs and buHets vdiich tally profite and losses. Dolla* signs dont count.</p>
        <p>Now about 465,000 Americans are ei^aged in the war with the Viet Cong and the North Vietnamese, or 31, times the 15,000 U. . troops who were there three years ago. But a strange thing haiHiened.</p>
        <p>While we kept pouring in more men, so ted tee enemy. They seem to have an inexhaustible su{^ly. But it costs (Contfanied On Page 5)</p>
        <p>The Negro movement within tee United Sates, which once was headed hopefully toward the mainstream of American life, took a melancholy reversal last week. Hie drastic reorganization of the Con^ss of Racial Equality, second largest &amp;lt;rf the civil rights groups, is not a movement towani the mainstream; it is a movemit back to the bayous of bitterness and iso-latKm.</p>
        <p>At its convention in Oakland, tee CORE delegates struck from their constitution a {H*ovision teat made it a multi-racial organization. In its place, they substituted a new descritpion and a new ptffpose. Henceforth, CORE is to be a mass membership organization to implement tee establishment of a Negro political party. They ailed for black labor tinioi. They arged the takeover by Negroes of businesses in Negro neighborhoods  including, incredibly, control of the operation of vices.</p>
        <p>This backward leap toward</p>
        <p>segregation can be explained, if at all, only In terms of the pathology of madness. At Oakland, judgment fled to brutish beasts, aiul there men lost their reason. CORE has depended heavily In the past upon white sui^(^; at least one of its chapters, in Ann Arbor, is 85 per cent white, A Negro political party, field, ing Negro candidates only, could succeed (]y in a hand-full of Soutegn counties and Northern wands. Black labw uni(is are bote self-defeating and unlawful The growth of Negro business ultimately must depend iqion white capital.</p>
        <p>But tho*e it is. And not the least of the ironies is that CORES march to the rear leaves the militant white liberal with no i^ace to go. He is out of sytapaiby with the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, which he regards as too tame for the times. He tends to regard the National Urban League as too limited in its ec(Miomic aims. The Stu-</p>
        <p>Other Editors Saying Spelling Bee</p>
        <p>aged badielors, free parking places fw anywie over 45, and ^11*011.0111</p>
        <p>vara-</p>
        <p>govemment-paid annual vaca tions to all hcmsewives wholl publicly confess they are older than 89?</p>
        <p>Being middle-aged has been a crime long enough. Maybe its time these people won their rights by a mass walk on Washington, right now before they reach the wheelchair age.</p>
        <p>This Date-40 Years For Today Ago Today</p>
        <p>The Doily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATID</p>
        <p>Established 1882</p>
        <p>Published AAonday Through Friday Afternoons and Sunday AAoming</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers</p>
        <p>Eotered ai Post Office. GreenviUe. N.C. as second class mall matter</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES</p>
        <p>Home Delivery By.Carrier or Motor Route Week 40c</p>
        <p>By Mall, Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>One Year ....................  $18j9q</p>
        <p>Six Months ........................  9.50</p>
        <p>Three Months .....  5.00</p>
        <p>One Monte ...............  2.oo</p>
        <p>  (Prices  include sales tax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBER or AMOCUTED PRESS Aaaedatcd Ptbm le exchialvefr eoOtled to use for pubiL catloo aU news dkgmtebee credited to it or not otherwise ciwdtted to this paper and also the local i news published All liffhts er publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Atfmthrtnz ratee and deadlines araflaWe upon request Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLASS</p>
        <p>PRESENT-DAY MORAUTY</p>
        <p>Religion on the whole seems to be having a pretty hard time of it just at present. Some churches are crowded, but the general report tluough-out the length and breadth of the land is that church attendance has fallen ofi. Hiere is a shocking increase in crime much faster percentagewise than tee increase in our population. The term juvenile delinquency is a comparatively newcomer. Teenage shoplifting is giving merchants and police officers a severe headache. Birth control is talked about over radio and TV and discussed in newspapers and magazines as casually as is the prospective change of weather.</p>
        <p>Whats go into us? 'There are some who hold that the total of the worlds evil does not change so muchJrom generation to genCTation but is redistributed. Groups that are perfectly proper and law-abiding at one time become several generations later the center of wrongdoing and crime.</p>
        <p>Others believe that they see a periodltcy in the matter of upsurges of evil. Hiis sort of thing, they claim, comes about once every century or two centuries.</p>
        <p>There are some ways in wiiich the Church appears today even stronger than it has been in former years. Ministers are much better prepared educatkmaily for their work than they were a few decades ago. The quality of men who become clergymen today</p>
        <p>By FOY a DUNCAN Joly 11, 1927 To Hold Public Hearing For New Bridge Over Tar River A public hearing pertaining to tee construction of a new bridge across Tar River will be conducted at the courthouse in this city July 20 at 11 oclock, according to an announcement made this morning by the War Department Hie hearing will be conducted by W.A Snow, major corps of engineers, district engineer . . . All interested parties, the announcement says are invited to^be present at the above time and place . . .</p>
        <p>Electrical Concern To Open July Lite The Greenville Electrical Ckimpany, a new enterprise for Greenville, will open for business July 13th, according to information given out this morning . . . The new concern will be located at 125 W. Fourth Street, and will be operated by R.D. Whitehurst Jr., who has been connected with the Electric Service Supply Co. and P. C. Kemp, who was with the corps of electricians on the wiring of new buildings at the Teachers College.</p>
        <p>(Chicago Tribnne)</p>
        <p>The final moments of this years national spelling bee again illustrated what we users of the English language are all up against The five words that sorted out the last two contenders, Jennifer Rein-ke of Deshler, Neb., and Anne Clark of Huntington, W. Va., were lulus: fleche, spinnaker, pogrom milline, and chihuahua.</p>
        <p>The welcome our language extends to newcom^ from varied sources helps make English expressive, but all the harder to spelL Fleche is French for arrow, and appropriated for the slender structures church architects have come to prefer to steeples with belfries. Pogrom is a Russian word, meaning devastation or destruction, and related to the word in thunder. In English, it is a 20th-century word, applied to ferocious anti-semite persecutions. CJiihuahua be</p>
        <p>gan as the name of a Mexican city and province, and later was used to name a Ixeed of dog. All three have in recent times been incorporated into English just as they stood in French, Russian, or Spanish.</p>
        <p>Spinnaker is not easy, especially for girls living far from the nearest yacht harbor. It is said to be deriv from a mispronunciation of Sphnix (a Greek word), the name of the first boat to make much use of this kind of sail. Milline is made by telescoping million and line. If any English word could have three consecutive Ls teis would. Ad men know it refers to a million copies of one agate line of space. One of the girls evidently confused it with malign, which it was for her.</p>
        <p>Quote</p>
        <p>The hazards of our spelling are part of the price we pay for having a wonderfully cosmopolitan, resKNircefuI vocabulary.</p>
        <p>If we want the good things inherent in dean air and sparkling streams we must pay housekeeping coste that our careless ancestors never envteioned.  .Tidsa ((^a.) Tribune.</p>
        <p>;Rocky</p>
        <p>Minus</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>iindsay</p>
        <p>dent Non-Violent Coordinating Ckimmittee scomes him altogether. And now CORE.</p>
        <p>Your correi^xMident, by bringing, inh^tance end instinct, is a Southern white conservative; in theory, perhaps, I ought not to give a damn. Yet COREa aecision strikes me as inexpressibly pathetic. It comes at a critical time in race relations, when the excesses of a tiny N^ro miiHHlty have inflamed old hostilities. Over the country as a whole, attritudes are hardening swiftiy. Most Americans can undexstanJ tiie legitimacy of the Negro protest; -they can sympateize with it. But they cannot understand bum, baby, bum. .'hey cannot sympathize with rioting and looting. In the smoke of incendiary fires, the most valid grievance gets Jbsoioed Martin Luther King has said all this with meare auteority than any white critic could bring to tee task. In his new hook, published only last month, he stingingly lectures those white liberals who feel they can set the timetable for the Negros freedom. But he rejects CORES course ei action absolutely. In Kills view, so applied, is a nihilistic philosophy that carries the seeds of its own doom.</p>
        <p>In the final analysis, he concludes, the weakness of Black Power is its faflare to to see that tee black man needs the white man and the white man needs the black man. However much we may try to romanticize the sl(^an, there is no separate black path to power and fulfillment that does not intersect white paths, and there is no separate white path to power and fulfillment, short of social disaster, tiiat does not share that power with black aspirations for freedom and human digm-ty. We are bound together id a single garment of destiny.</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  Even before his failure to sell Michigans Governor George Bom-ney to the Republican Governors Conrfrence at Jacksoo Hole, Wyo., Governor Nelson Rockefeller of New York struck out in efforts to win over a key Republican in his own state: Mayor John V* Lindsay.</p>
        <p>After making a joint announcement about a local houting project on June 27, Rockefeller and Lindsay con-feired privately for about half an hour in the Oov^norf Manhattan office.</p>
        <p>Rockefeller argued that all moderates should unify la backing Romney to keep thi Presidential nomination out ol tee psa^a ri|^t wing. Consequently, he urged the May&amp;lt;^ to do T^at New York.'i twt senior Republicans  Senator Jacob Jarite and Rockefeller himself  have done: publicly endorsed Romney.</p>
        <p>Undsay was non-receptiva. He reiterated what he baa aaid publicly before and since. He toela teat New York Republicans should commit themselves for Romney but, for now, sUy behind tee favorite son Preridential candidacy of Jai* vRs.</p>
        <p>Actually, Javita may weD decide that he cannot be New Yorks favorite son fw President in the same year that he is seeking re-election to the Senate. Nor is Undsay considered particularly keen for anothti* RockefeH* Presidential try. Thus, many believt the May(H*s real (^ce for President ia Senator Charlea H. Percy of Illinois.</p>
        <p>^lart from Lindsays personal preferences, however, Rockefell^ migbt have troubla delivering the state delegatioi for Romney.</p>
        <p>A footnote: Although Rockefellers support of Romney is sincere, its credibility is eroded by the conduct of somfi members &amp;lt;d his official family. For instance, Lt. Gov. Malcolm Wilson, who would take over in Albany if Rockefeller goes to the White House, is actively boosting Rockefeller for President in conversations with party leaders around the state.</p>
        <p>A big hole is about to be punched in the Democratie National Committees mncte publicized rebuilding program when, in the immedtote future, former Representative Charles Wettner ol Georgia announces his resignation as a deputy national diairman to run for Congress again in lies.</p>
        <p>. Those state officials who have gotten advance word of Weltners intentions are grumbling already. Hiey contend teat the valuable missionary work done by Weltner with liberal youte disaffected with President Johnson will be washed away once he quits.</p>
        <p>Wettner has no complainis about the National Committee job, but he has tee itch to get back into elective politics again. He resigned his Atlanta Congressional seat last year, after segregationist Lester Maddox won the Democratie nomination for (jovernor, rather than back Maddox under the terms of a loyality oath prescribed by law. With Governor Maddox not on the ballot in 1968, liberal Weltner will have no such problema this time.</p>
        <p>But it may be difficult to (CoBtinned On Paga i)</p>
        <p>The Doakes Have Cut Spending</p>
        <p>Birth Announcement Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Tyndall announce the birth of a eight pound son, Sunday morning, July lOte.</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>very high, and encouragingly 80.</p>
        <p>We are passing through serious times morally and spiritually, as well as economically and politically. We need lots of faith and strong purpose to get us through.</p>
        <p>An Exposure Of Spiritism Elast Carolina Teachers College on Tuesday evening will presmt Mr. Kringsberg and Miss Esmer Alda Mortini in an ensure of the fallacies of spiritism. This is done by performing many of the thrilh ing spooky tricks employed by the leading mediums of America and Europe . . .</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>One of the troubles with business today is that Mr, and Mrs. Joe Doakes, the average Americans, arc not buying enthusiastically.</p>
        <p>The reason is that they are uncertain, a little bit scared.</p>
        <p>While retail sales have generally been higher than a year ago, higher prices account for most of the rise. Louis J. Paradise, of the Department of Commerces Office of Business Economics, told the Joint,, Congressional Economics Committee that retail sales have heen on a birtual plateau since June, 1965.</p>
        <p>Outstanding consumer credit rose $193 million in May. That was the smallest increase in five years. The increase in May, 1966, was $493 mitUon.</p>
        <p>A number of bullish statements in the appliance industry has not concealed the fact that sales are off sharply. Discounte ^ air condi</p>
        <p>tioners have beoi offered at the start of what should be the peak season. Auto industry spokesman have amiouiiced that prodiKttfon is being tapered oif so teat it can start early production the great, new 1968 cars, but the fact is that sales of 1967 models are behind expectations.</p>
        <p>OMKR</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>Why He Rdactauce To Spend The Doakes, who have spent the nattooi way out of re-cesstous and threats of recession many times since World War II are uneasy and tiiis is why:</p>
        <p>Threats of higher taxes</p>
        <p>emanate from Washington almost every day.</p>
        <p>Predictions that the Vietnam war will be furtiicr escalated threatens their peace of mind.</p>
        <p>Although things have now quieted down, the flare-up of fitting in the Middle East has reminded the Doakes that a global war is possible.</p>
        <p>Rising prices, and the pro-bablity of higher prices ahead, have them womed.</p>
        <p>Labor ProUems Ahead</p>
        <p>Strikes and threats of strikes worry them too. The long strike of rubber workers, wtth some companies apparently willing to sit it out aiMl thereby reduce inventories, is making almost every uniixi man uneasy. The demands of the United Auto Wix-kers at negotiations starting next monite may lead to another bothersome situation, if not a strike. NEW LOOK COMING FOR Chrtetmas, 1967</p>
        <p>Pink roses and tiny whits turtle doves for Christmas trees attracted attention at the gift and housewares show a tee Dallas Market Center.</p>
        <p>Amcig Oiristmas gifts offered were psychedelic bird cages, paper tables and fiber glass mailboxes imbedded with real butterflies.</p>
        <p>Total employment declined in the feit five months of the year, and tee addition of tbottsaods to the labor force this summer can increase un-mploymeot sharply.</p>
        <p>Thrsats of racial rials this sununer, already signADsd hf disturbances in half a dozen cities, is ODsetttlng even to those Doakes who m white suburbs.</p>
        <p>Those are the things that are vnxrytog the Doakes, the things that are causing them by tee millions to cut down oe spen^g and put what money they can into savings. Hi the Doakes, it looks lilM ratau</p>
        <p>in Ml-</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0005" />
        <p>y^THER VORGC^Sbowers and thunderabowfra are forecaat Tuesday night from the Plains eastward to the Appalachians and the Ouli Coast states. Showers are also ezpeoted in the Rockies and northeni portions of the middle Atlantic states. It will be cooler In the north eentral region of the country. (AP Wlrepboto)</p>
        <p>Today In Washington</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  The vanee warning of turbulencs as D ;nse Department Is buying much as 10 miles ahead, and $. .59 million worth of cbemi- with more development ti ad-cals to defoliate junglea and vanee distance may 30 miles, crops in Vietnam which hide the Federal Aviation Adminis-and feed the Viet Cmig.. i tration reports.</p>
        <p>The Pentagon says the chenu-  The device is an infrared cals dont harm human or ani- spectromet^ manufactured by m:tl life and dont make crop the Barnes Engineering Co. of land sterile.  Stamford, Conn., and its use in</p>
        <p>But there has been some pro* detecting turbulences Involves test that the Johnson adminis- h e a t-measuring techniques, trr.tion, in authorizing the use of .More testing will be d&amp;lt;me, 1^ relatively mild chemicals.'FAA said. m'ht consider more lethal I Air turbulence can injure pas-chcmical warfare. A group of sengers and damage planes.</p>
        <p>-&amp;gt;t'"ts, i icluding seven No- This disturbance usually occurs b-1 Prize winners, {urotested last at altitudes above 20,000 feet, y ' to Presirent Johnson!  CAPITAL FOOTNOTES</p>
        <p>a  nst the u-e of chenucals i;By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>th2 v:et '?m war.  i Spokesmen for Miami And</p>
        <p>U.S. forces used about $10 Chicago meet in Washington miTon worth of defoliants and Friday with Republican party hebicides last year on officials to make specific money h  rds of thousands of acres offers Ui hopes of lurbig the 1960 of Vietnam jungle and Cummu-'Republican National Convention nl.':'-held rice paddies.  to tiicir cities. A GOP spokes-</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  A new man sdd both are very much in device can give jet pilots ad- the naming.</p>
        <p>The Inter-Amnican Commis-</p>
        <p>Marriage</p>
        <p>Licenses</p>
        <p>sion on Human Rights says evidence points to abuses in (}uba prisons, including firing squad executions and poor facilities Marriage licenses have been  women. Prime Minister Pi-</p>
        <p>issued to the following white  Casl^ has deied flie gn^</p>
        <p>couples from the office of Mrs.  to  niake an on-the</p>
        <p>Elvira Allred, Pitt County regis- examination of the prisons ter of deeds, since July 3:  I  commission  annoonCement</p>
        <p>Ervin James Buck, RL 3, 'aaid.</p>
        <p>Greenville, and Patricia Annt The Federal Communicatiims Fdrnes, Rt 2, Vanceboro; Don- Commission reports political ny Eugene Hemby, Greenville, (candidates paid $32 miUton tor and Barbara Ami Wilkerson,radio-televi8i(m advertising in</p>
        <p>FarmvUle;</p>
        <p>Joseph Frederick Fuller n, Rocky Mount, and Evelyn Jean Ferguson, Greenville; Jessie</p>
        <p>the 1966 campaign, a new high for a non-presidential election year. Democrats spent $18.S million, Republicans, $12.2 mil-</p>
        <p>Ray Miller, Rt 1, Farmville, lion. Third party and nonparti-</p>
        <p>and Jacqueline Allen, Farmville; Frank Crandall Cloyes Jr., Stockbridge, Mass., and Jane McGlohon, GreenviUe; Wilmer Edward G&amp;gt;tingbam</p>
        <p>san candidates spent the rest The United States has lifted restrictions &amp;lt;m travel to Lebanon. The restrictions, imposed during the recent Mideast war.</p>
        <p>J.*'., Tampa, Fla.,  jmain for Algeria, Iraq, Jor-</p>
        <p>Lee Baker, Rt. 1,  Wil-  Libya,  Sudan, Syria, Egypt</p>
        <p>liam Carlton McUwhom. Ay-1</p>
        <p>den, and Brenda Lee Buck,  _</p>
        <p>Greenville;</p>
        <p>Marcus Alton Garrtt, Roanoke I iirOS 19F rlO0l$ R?nids, and Florence Overton  A-*:-.-.</p>
        <p>Scott, GreenviUe; George Ave- IVlliea 111 ACTIOII</p>
        <p>rette Jr. and Hester Elizabetii Butler, both of Greenville.</p>
        <p>Marriage licenses were issued to the foUowing Negro couples: James Lee Davis and Irene Jacobs, both of Greenville; Willie Lee Langley, Washington, D.C., and Ernestine Carr, Bethel; Arthur Dixon and Hattie Brice, be Ml of Kinston;</p>
        <p>Vc. ner Jackson Williams, Wilson, and Clara BeU Lee, Kinston; Ben Smith and Carrie BeU Br rey, both of GreoivUle; Eld-gar Burstion and YvcHine Watson, both of GreenviUe.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The defense Department has released the names of three N(th CaroUnians kiUed in action in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>They were identified as: Army 1st U. Floyd H(9ifield Jr., husband of Bffn. Judy L. HoUfield of Asheville.</p>
        <p>Army Spec. 4 Lee R. Taylor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry L. Taylor of Route 8, Sanford.</p>
        <p>Marine Cpl. Vinson Byrd, ward of Mrs. Edna HiU, Route 1, Orrum.</p>
        <p>mimm puzzle</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1. l^brkshop 7. Spinet 12 Hand cren 13. Canadiaa porcupine 11. Signe</p>
        <p>15. Jeacent </p>
        <p>16. i^nall tumor</p>
        <p>17. CoRua avene</p>
        <p>18. Oioler</p>
        <p>19. Discevered 23. Ohenr-e 25. R''</p>
        <p>29.1 31. 1</p>
        <p>pOf</p>
        <p>82.</p>
        <p>SI, Position 87. Kimono</p>
        <p>sa'</p>
        <p>38. S:</p>
        <p>41. IM^iossee-aes</p>
        <p>43. CottoaiAm}d</p>
        <p>45. GiaiUanin-(BUo</p>
        <p>46. Emerged 47*Goastera 48. Perceived</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>1. IXlatocy</p>
        <p>2. Large volune</p>
        <p>3. Tool</p>
        <p>4. Noise</p>
        <p>5. Poci; . butterflies</p>
        <p>QGIQ aQQO QGIiaBQ [! mad</p>
        <p>adti Bua [! QQ] anQaiiii na ana aaaa  caaaQQiaaa qo</p>
        <p> [DEIOI DBB B QllQaOB</p>
        <p>aa  aa aaaaa</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OP YKTItOAY'S PUZZLI</p>
        <p>6. Fcrward</p>
        <p>7. Meddler</p>
        <p>8. Name meaning tchful</p>
        <p>9. Ital, wine center</p>
        <p>10. Roulette</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>r"</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>T"</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>T"</p>
        <p>ar</p>
        <p>r"</p>
        <p>li</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>(4</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>wy</p>
        <p>li</p>
        <p>ik</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>tk</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4r^</p>
        <p>4k</p>
        <p>bet 11. Fonnerly 15. Cloy ir.EKdmi-oa</p>
        <p>20. Willow</p>
        <p>21. Electric eel</p>
        <p>22. Pedestal part</p>
        <p>23.Yoad me</p>
        <p>24.Neiiv</p>
        <p>26. IfflMocable</p>
        <p>27.HdfDn</p>
        <p>28. Sim god aaAcwLs SS.PeimHly H,Fmt</p>
        <p>planas</p>
        <p>3S.EDiptQal</p>
        <p>8&amp;amp;.aikck</p>
        <p>MlToMiAi</p>
        <p>Pressure Israel On Annexation</p>
        <p>UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)Mounting pressure on Israel to undo its annexation of the OW City of Jerusalem was expected today as U.N. Sed*e-tary-General U Thant prepared to issue a report on the situation there.</p>
        <p>Under t resolution the General Assembly adopted last Tuesday night, Thant bad until tonight to report to the assembly and the Security CouncU whether Israel had heeded the assemblys caU to rescind its merger of New and Old Jerusalem.</p>
        <p>Israels five-page reply to the resolution was deUvered to Thant Monday n|^t The re|Uy was kept secret, bid the IsraeU government has said repeate(Uy it would preserve the unity of the Israeli sector of Jerusalem and the occupied Jordanian sector, the site of most of the holy places.</p>
        <p>child's Body In Irrigation Ditch</p>
        <p>GOLDEN, Colo. (AP)The body of Lee Peterson, 3, M Golden, has been found in an irrigBtion ditch at t point thoi^t to be about seven ^es from where he fell in June 2S.</p>
        <p>A party of surveyors diacov-ered the body M6n(^.</p>
        <p>Sheriff Har&amp;lt;dd.Bray said Saturdays heavy rains in the area apparently washed the body aground.</p>
        <p>The childs grandmother, Mrs. EdHh Fleming, lives in Rocky Mount, N.C.</p>
        <p>Power Of Prayer Started A Car</p>
        <p>BRISTOL, England (UPl) Everything else failed so an unidentified parisMoner of St. PhOh;&amp;gt;s Church asked the Rev. Malcolm Widdicombe for religious help to start his jalopy.</p>
        <p>The Rev. Widdicombe said he blessed the car keys and the motor later kicked over. *Just one way in which the Lord blesses us, he said.</p>
        <p>Evans &amp;amp; Novak ..</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4)</p>
        <p>explain this distinction to his constituents. Republican representative Fletcher Thompson, who won the Atlanta seat after Weltner quit, will be considered a alight favorite over Weltner.</p>
        <p>Formo' Governor Edmund G. (Pat) ^wQ, who is eyeing the California Senate seat now held by Republican Thomas Kucbel, got bad news from powerful labor leaders m a confidential chat ttie otiitf day.</p>
        <p>Both the Teamsters* Union and the AFL-CIO construction trades unions flatly informed him that if Kuchel is the Republican nominee (now all but certain) they wouM back him against any Democrat  including even that old friend of labor, Pat Brown.</p>
        <p>Although Brown says priva-]y he would not like to run Kuchel has represented California well in the Senate, he is neverthelesa itchy.</p>
        <p>Sue Spouse For Bignv. ButShe Stilt Loves Him</p>
        <p>HANBTEE mch. (AP) * Jms Martona aaya  aun lovat iMT camtval worker boa*</p>
        <p>band, John C. Bence Jr., though she has been told he haa six aliases and possibly as many wives.</p>
        <p>fiflrs. Martone filed a bigamy charge against the husky Bence, explaining that while *T still love him, you know the saying hell hath no frnry like a woman scorned.</p>
        <p>Bence pleaded guilty to the bigamy diarge when arraigned Monday in Manistee Circuit Court in northwestern Lower Michigan.</p>
        <p>I State police said Bence nas six wivM. The Manistee County prosecutor said he has three. Mrs. Martone, who said she married Bence under 1^ alias of John Martone July S, 1963, said she believed he has four wives. The bigamy charge in^ volved one other marriage.</p>
        <p>Bence, vlio will be sentenced July 24, faces a maximum penalty of five years in jalL</p>
        <p>Mrs. Martone, 26, said she and Bence traveled the carnival circuit for a wliile, then she heard rumors.</p>
        <p>Someone gave her a name, she said, and she wrote to a Peggy J. Reed in Gaithersburg, Md.</p>
        <p>We exchanged pictures, and found we were married to the same man, said Mrs. Martone.</p>
        <p>It turned out that my husband had married Mrs. Reed &amp;lt;m Aug. 30, 1962, in Fredericksburg, Va.,* she said.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Martone said she also believes that under tiie name of John Potter he married a girl called Beverly in Massacfau setts, and a woman named lUiode to Bay City, Mich., about four montiis ago, using the name John Bence.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.-Tueiday, July II, 1W-</p>
        <p>Pakistan Agriculture Official In Price Grain Support Studies Here</p>
        <p>Marlow...</p>
        <p>(ontimied from page 4) Nortii Vietnam a M less to fight a war.</p>
        <p>And the Soviets have supplied North Vietnam witti weapons, some of them very good, whicfa, frmn a bosiiiess view, makes North ^^etnam look like a Soviet distributor.</p>
        <p>McNamara has conferred at length in Saigon with the American commamier, Gen. WiDiam C. Westmoreland, who wants stiH more men, possibly 100,000 to 140,000 men.</p>
        <p>As any good businessman would, McNamara has probed and pressed to know if the best possibie use is being made of the men afready there. When he returns be will report his recommendations, for or against, to President Johnson.</p>
        <p>Westmoreland said last week;</p>
        <p>We are slowly but steadily w inning. This indicated some progress, tor when McNamara returned from ^etnam in 19-65 he said the Communists were tripliiig their rate infiltration but we have stopped losing.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, over the weekend Hanoi radio disputed Westmoreland about slowly winning. It said the war is a stalemate right now. So this is all a pretty gloomy business for McNamara.</p>
        <p>Suppose he decides Westmoreland needs 100,000 men or more and Johnson sends them and then the N&amp;lt;ntii Vietnamese pump in more men to make up the difference.</p>
        <p>Then what happens? Docs McNamara make anothe. trip in a year or so and does Wt-moreland say things are looking a little better but he ne^ more men? And if that happens, how long will it keep on happening?</p>
        <p>ATTEMPT TO UNIFY</p>
        <p>MIAMI, Fla. (AP) - Cuban exiles are attempting to form a unified anti-Castro organization. 'The decision was made at a recent meeting of delegates representing factions of the divided exile coUmy. The delegates represented 37 differ^ exile groups.</p>
        <p>4aiMnA</p>
        <p>4KI 43.</p>
        <p>44r4Mk</p>
        <p>4&amp;lt;blUfo</p>
        <p>LOWEST PRICES ON</p>
        <p>DRUGS</p>
        <p>mrpuzA fHOMNo asKtm</p>
        <p>tqm Rahman, assistant di-fuetor of agrieolttiral marketing for the fovsmment of East Pakistan, visited Pitt (bounty recently seeking information about the US price support program for grain.</p>
        <p>Rahman has been in the United States for about ten nranths, has studied Agricultural Economics at the University of Maryland, and has spent some time in Warington discussing price support programs with Agricultural and Soil Conservation Service officials. He says he came to Pitt County to observe price support oj^ations at the grass root level.</p>
        <p>Rahmans home country is a semi-tropical area of 54,000 square miles situated at the head of the Bay of Bengal. nual rainfall averages 106 inches and is unevenly distributed throughout the year. Heavy rainfall occurs during ttie period fnnn May to September and winter rains, which are usually tight showers, occur during December and January, averaging ten inches.</p>
        <p>About 20.5 million aereas are under cultivation in East Pakistan mid about two million acres are recoverable waste. Principal cn^ are jute, rice, tea, tobacco, and cotton.</p>
        <p>According to Ridiman, the government of East Pakistan has determined that a price support program must be developed to speed the changeover</p>
        <p>It's Criminal,</p>
        <p>But No Penalty</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tom. (AP) -Public druid[emie88 remains a criminal offense in Nashville, but there no longer will be a penalty. Metropolitan Court Judge Andrew Doyle said pifolic drunks would be jailed only loiig enou^ to s(to up.</p>
        <p>The ruling, Doyle said, will save the city more than $1,000 a month in bond bills. To dramatize his new policy, Doyle freed 51 workhouse inmates who were serving sentences on drunkenness d^ges.</p>
        <p>TEAM MEMBER</p>
        <p>TAHLEQUAH, Okla. (AP) -The right membo* United States parachuting team for intemai-tional competition will indtKte Gene Thacker of Ft. Bragg, N.C.</p>
        <p>from subsistmce farming to a mnketioriented farm acooomy. He believes that, with no price policy of support, the producer is at the mercy of the buyer that crops are really arid or bartered at a small percentage of ttieir actual value.</p>
        <p>In East Pakistan, he said, Tittle public storage, meager market news dissentination, and poor transportation factiities place the producer in the position of having to dispose of his produce at ^latever jarice the buyer is willing to pay.</p>
        <p>If Pakistan is to develop a comnmrcial market oriented to agriculture, farmers must be provided the incentive of stable prices in line with the actual market value of his product It must be linked with the profit motive; otherwise, farmers will continue to produce only enough to provide for their own livelihood and wiH never generate enough capital to exjMnd the use of agzicoltural iiq)at8 such as fertilizer, pesticides, and Irrigation equipment, all of which are vital for increasing the ag</p>
        <p>ricultural production if tha country.</p>
        <p>Price aupport must be used to I stabilize seasonal price fluctua-timu and assure the producer a fair return if be invests in new inputs, Rahman said</p>
        <p>He also said that plans are underway to develop licensed warehouses where, produce s can store tiirir surplus pro^'ue-tion and use it for loan collateral. He believes a price support program is essential if this program if to develop successfttlly and rapidly.</p>
        <p>ATIQUR ... nf last ASCS offlca cencaming tha</p>
        <p>Pakistan aanfara wHk US Prka Sugisait</p>
        <p>WTifipMOTI KMMflV Wt</p>
        <p>far grain.</p>
        <p>The average procupine has about 30,000 quills.</p>
        <p>New Assignment For Strickland</p>
        <p>Bmce Stri(^and. a Bell Arthur native, has assumed his new duties as financial consultant with the (fommerce and fo-dustry divisimi of the North (Carolina Department of Conservation and oevelopn^t.</p>
        <p>A division staff member since Janua^, 1965, he previously was Ralei^ regional representr ative. He is a graduate of Greenville High School and Didce University.</p>
        <p>Lake Granite Shoals in j Central Texas has been re- j named for President Lyndon JrimstXL</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>SUMMER TIME IS TEA TIME. TRY VESPER TEA AND TEA BAGS FOR A CHANGE.</p>
        <p>NOW AVAIUBU AT YOUR</p>
        <p>Bilbro Serviced Stores</p>
        <p>When someone dents yonr fender and yon need yonr Insurance diedi Bffiw instead of weeks from now.</p>
        <p>...the man from Nationwide is on yonr ride.</p>
        <p>Wt W4m*t let cobwebs gather. We pay two out of three dainiswittita 72 horn.</p>
        <p>lt*g bad noni^ having an accBent On top of that, why should you have to wait weeka for irour insorenoe heck?</p>
        <p>You shouldnt have to, says the man from Nationwide-and points to the Natcm wide record.</p>
        <p>Fifty percent of all Nationwide auto claims are paid foithin 2A hours after they are received. More tl^ two-thirds are paid within 72 hours.</p>
        <p>Nationwide may even hold a world speed record in paying an auto claim: 15 minutes.</p>
        <p>(Our customer drove up to'a Nationvride drive-in claims station, nudged the gate,and scraped his fender before the very eyes of the man from Nationwide.)</p>
        <p>Remember these fast facts when yonre renewing your auto insurance.</p>
        <p>And when you talk to Nationwide about lower premiums and special discounts for careful drivers, youll find the man from Nationwide is on your aide there, too.</p>
        <p>Nationwide</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>llw RH iMi ltatio9iii 1 GB year Mfi.</p>
        <p>LiFG- HEALTH* HOME *CAR  BUSINESS. Nationwide Mutual Insurance C(K Nationwide Mutual Fire Tntu ranee Ca.</p>
        <p>Nationwide Life Insurance Co. Home office: Columbus, Ohio</p>
        <p>For all your insuranco needs,</p>
        <p>W. H. CLIFTON  F.  P.  CADE</p>
        <p>your Nationwid. agwiH</p>
        <p>L HENRY HUDSON</p>
        <p>217 Waet Ave.</p>
        <p>Ardan Naws Lender BMc.</p>
        <p>Ardra. N.. 74648N</p>
        <p>P. 0. Bex 2065 Grenvilte, N.C. Phone; WWIf</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>Rente S. Bex SO</p>
        <p>Gieenrille, N.C. Phone: 7S24674</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0006" />
        <p>#TIhi Daily Raflactor, Graanvllla, fi, C.TiMsday, July 11, ivasT</p>
        <p>Colson Receives Swindell. Grant</p>
        <p>Butch Colson, a 197-poundiNortheastern 3A Conference; sophomore fuUbadc from Eliza-!thus qualifying Colson who play-beth City has been awarded theled four years as a star at Eli-</p>
        <p>1967 Norman Swindell Memorial Scholarship, according to the East Carolina Head Football Coach and Atdetic Director Qarence Stasavich.</p>
        <p>The Swindell Grant, which was named today by a special committee, was set up as a memorial to Norman Swindell, a former captain and grid star of the Pirates who lost his life during a hunting trip in Decem-b3T, 1965. The fimd for the schol-^hip was set up through donations to the East Carolina Century Club by residents of New Beni, North Carolina, Swindells hometown.</p>
        <p>It is stipulated by the Selection Committee that the Swindell redbient should have play-d his high school football in</p>
        <p>zabeth City.</p>
        <p>During his freshman year, Butch was a Mr. Everything* in the Baby Buc backfield. In 68 plajrs, he rushed for 195 yards, passed for 48 for a total of 243. He scored five touchdown during the five game season. He also scored a TD durii^ the spring game for the Purple team.</p>
        <p>Stasavich said today, I am ideased that the committee has selected Butch for the 1967 Swindell Scholarship. He is an outstanding young man with good habits. He is a good student and a fine football player. He Is active in the Fellowship of Christian Athletes. We are anxious to have his leadership on our football squad.</p>
        <p>Optimists And Kiwanis Win</p>
        <p>Hie Kiwanis and Optimists advanced into the semi-finals d! the Nmth State little Leagw toumamoit yesterday, eliminating the Limis and Jaycees.</p>
        <p>Hie Kiwanis downed the Jaycees, 5-1, while the Optimists defeated the Ii&amp;lt;s, 18^.</p>
        <p>Today at 4 p.m. at Elm Street Park, the Optimists will meet R. C Cola; then at 6 p.m., the Kiwanis will meet regular sea-on champ Coca-Cola.</p>
        <p>In yesterdays first game, tiie Li(Hi8 took the lead in the first inning, pushing fom* rtn across. Wayne Elks walked and Danny Allen got a hit. David Prewett walked to load the bases. Ed Johnson was hit by a</p>
        <p>pitdi, forcing in Elks. Walks to</p>
        <p>T( </p>
        <p>Tony Phelps and Charles Chand-lo* forced in Allen and Prewett and Johnson scored when Mike Lewis was hit by a pitch.</p>
        <p>In the second, the Lions boosted their lead to 5-0. Johnson reached &amp;lt;m a fielders choice, advanced on a walk and scored on a passed ball.</p>
        <p>In the bottom of the second, file Optimists began to rally. Ben Knott reached on an error, moved up on a fly-out, and scored on a passed ball.</p>
        <p>The Optimists cut the U&amp;lt;m lead to 5-2 in the third with another run, this one on a homer by Robert Carraway.</p>
        <p>The fourth inning saw the lead</p>
        <p>Allen.</p>
        <p>In the sixth, the Optimists made their final charge, pushing across six runs to take the 10-5 win. .Jerry White started things off with a single, then Jeff Steig got a hit Knott, Allen and Skinner all walked, forcing in White and Steig. Lee doubled in Knott and Allen, and Days&amp;lt;m sacrificed Skinner across*. Lee later scored with the final run.</p>
        <p>In the second game, the Kiwanis took the lead in the second inning with a lone run. Grif Gamer singled and advanced on a single by A1 Heath. He then scOTed &amp;lt;m a sacrifice fly by Howard Leggett In the fourtih; the Kiwanis</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>Of</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>Moose,</p>
        <p>In</p>
        <p>dreehville Tobceo Company land WhHford scored on a pass-pulled a smashiOK iipset of the;ed ball. Hodges also came Mdose, 10-2, io: the firid round across on a passed ball and of the Tar HCel Little League Reilly stole home with the sixth toimament yesterdiw- la the run.</p>
        <p>other game, tbd Exchange doWned Security Life,* 7-1,/* , This afternoon, at Guy Smith</p>
        <p>Field, the Elks will meet the Tobs at 4 p.m., with the Exchange taking on pennant-win-ner Pepsi-Cola at 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>In the first game, the Tobs</p>
        <p>In the third, three more Tpb runs came in. Hodges walked and stole both second and third,</p>
        <p>SWINDELL SCHOLARSHIP WINNERButch Colson, centor, Is congradulated</p>
        <p>by Dr. John Reynolds, left, end Clarence Stasavich, right, aftar ha is named the winner of the 1967 Normen Swindell Scholarship. Colson Is a rising sophomore fullback for the Pirates. Reynolds is faculty chairman of athletics, while Stasavich is head football coach and athletic director.</p>
        <p>wasted little time in asserting their strength as they pushed across six runs in the first inning. Jeff Beaman started tiungs off with a walk and stole ond. Charles Moye singled and Rusty Purser doubled in both runners, Iwt he was out trying to stretch it Macon Moye , reached on an error and Gil iWhitford singled. Both stole up</p>
        <p>scoring when Beaman was safe on an error. Beaman advanced on a passed ball and scored on Bobby Smiths single. Smith came around on a couple</p>
        <p>errors.</p>
        <p>Carolina</p>
        <p>Builders</p>
        <p>Dairy, Home Capture Wins</p>
        <p>The fourth inning saw another Tob run score. Reilly was Mt a pitch and advanced on Wesley Deals walk. Beaman then doubled him in.</p>
        <p>The fifth saw five more runs score for a 15-0 lead. Smith walked and Charles Moye singled. Both advanced on a pass-</p>
        <p>a base and Ronald Hodges walk- ed ball and Purser doubled in</p>
        <p>ed, loading the bases. Mike Reilly walked to force in Moye</p>
        <p>Smith. Moye stole home and Purser scored on n fielders</p>
        <p>added three more runs for a 4-0 advantage. Robert Boles led off with a single and Heath got a hit Ed Holland doubled to score both runners and he scored &amp;lt;H) David Browns single.</p>
        <p>In the fifth, the final Kiwanis run came across. Linwood</p>
        <p>Carolina Dairy edged past Planters Bank, 5-4, while Home Builders slammed Pepsi-Cola, 10-2, in Teener League action last night State Bank continues to lead the league with an 8-2 record. Carolina Dairy is second, a game and a half back at 74. Home Builders is now third at 6-5, followed by College View, 5-5, Pepsi-Cola, 4-7 and Planters Bank, 2-9.</p>
        <p>In the first game, Planters Bank broke into the lead first, scoring twice in the second innings Tommy Vicars walked and advanced on a passed ball. George Ruller walked. Steve</p>
        <p>Williams reached on an error,</p>
        <p>scoring both runners.</p>
        <p>In the top of the fourth, Carolina Dairy scored its first run. Byron Dickens walked and stole second. Billy Sutton singled and Trent Whitehurst got a hit to score Dickens.</p>
        <p>In the fifth, Planters took the run back with a 3-1 lead. Jimr my Bond singled and moved up on an error on Lewis Gidleys grounder. Bond came across mi a passed ball.</p>
        <p>In the top of tiie seventh, Carolina Dairy finally struck for the lead, scoring three runs for a 4-3 lead. Whitehurst reach-ed on an error and moved up</p>
        <p>on two wild pitches. Jimmy</p>
        <p>Church League Race Narrows</p>
        <p>drop to 54 as two more scored, struck out four.</p>
        <p>Brown singled, moved up on a hit by Boles and scored on Garners single.</p>
        <p>The Jaycees avoided a shutout in the bottom of the fifth as they scored one run. Bill Ellington walked and Mike Stevenson doubled him across.</p>
        <p>Kiwanis pitcher Leggett allowed just two hits by the JJay-cees as he walked four and</p>
        <p>First Game</p>
        <p>Knott was hit by a pitch and</p>
        <p>moved up on wild pitches.  Cliff | Lions ........... 410  000 5</p>
        <p>Allen and Tony Skinner  both C^timists ..... Oil  26x10</p>
        <p>walked to load the bases. Then I  Second  Game</p>
        <p>Bill Lee and Pat Dayson  both | Kiwanis ......... 010  3105</p>
        <p>walked, forcing in Knott  and Jaycees ......... 000  0101</p>
        <p>Chance Is Hopeful Hero For American</p>
        <p>By MURRAY CHASS ANAHEIM (AP) - Dean Chance returns to the land of Donald Duck and Mickey Mouse today as the American League tries to transform itself from one of Snow Whites seven dwarfs back into Jack the Giant Killer.</p>
        <p>Chance, the controversial</p>
        <p>year-old Chance, 11-7, has received the starting honor for the second time in as many All-Star appearances.</p>
        <p>In his All-Star debut in 1964, the Ohio farmboy blanked the Nationals on two hits in the first three innings. The NL eventually erupted for a 74 triumph. The loss for the Americans</p>
        <p>right - hander who was a Cab- part of a skid that has seen fomia Angel when the Angels'them plummet from a 124 All-became neighbors of Disneyland j Star lead to a 19-17 deficit. The last year, was named by AL| National League has won 15 of Managm* Hank Bauer to start the last 21 games, eight of the todays All-Star game against last 10 and the last four.</p>
        <p>Big Fights Are Back On Tube</p>
        <p>By MURRAY ROSE</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Fight fans throughout the nation will get a break out of the eight-man heav)nveight elimination tournament and other fights coming up among the big boys. The price is right. It will be free for most everyone.</p>
        <p>By signing Floyd Patterson, the former two-time heavyweight king for the World Boxing Association-approved tourney Monday, Sports Action, Inc., lined up eight of the 10 top men in the WBAs rankings.</p>
        <p>The only exceptions are unbeaten Joe Frazier of Philadelphia and lOth-ranked George Chuvalo, the Canadian champion from Toronto, who will battle in a 12-rounder at Madison Square Garden July 19. That fight is not part of the tooma-ment, since Frazier preferes to</p>
        <p>make one match at a time.</p>
        <p>But it will be telecast into homes by MSG-RKO General Presentations.</p>
        <p>The four quarter-finals, the semifinals and the final of the elimination tourney to determine a successor to defrocked</p>
        <p>Cassius Clay, will be telecast natonally into your home 1^ ABC-TV.</p>
        <p>New York will be blacked out of the Frazier-Chuvalo telecast and sites of the tournament bouts also wont get tie live telecasts.</p>
        <p>ABC-TV will show the quarter-finals and semifinals on the Wide World of Sp&amp;lt;ts program on Saturdays, startii^ about 5 p.m., Eastern time. The final, at the Houston Astrodome, in January or February of 1968, will be shown on prime evening time over ABC.</p>
        <p>Durham</p>
        <p>To Stay</p>
        <p>Rallies</p>
        <p>Close</p>
        <p>Sugg walked as did Kim Harbin, loading the bases. Mike Cox reached on an error, scoring Whitehurst. Sugg scored with the tieing run on a passed ball Harbin was out trjdng to score, and Paul Carr singled in Cox with the go-ahead run.</p>
        <p>But Planters rallied to tie it up in the bottom of the seveoth Gidley singled and came armmd to score on a hit by Wayne Owens.</p>
        <p>That sent the game into extra innings, and it was finally decided in the 10th. Carr singled, moved up on a hit by Chuck Odum and an error on Randy Phillips. He scored &amp;lt;hi a ground out by Dickens, giving Carolina Dairy a 54 win.</p>
        <p>In the second contest, it was not nearly as close.</p>
        <p>Home buildens bounded into the lead in the first inning, getting five of their eventual 10 runs. David Weaver was hit by a pitch and Joe West singed. Tony Whitehurst homered for a 3-0 edge, Bryant Kittrell reached on an error and Trent Hill homered to make it 5-0.</p>
        <p>In the second, two more scored. West homered for one. Hien Durward Crews singled and</p>
        <p>St James Methodist Church defeated Immanuel Baptist, 10-2, to make it a two-way race in the Church League. In the other game last night Meadow-brook won by forfeit over Gum Swamp.</p>
        <p>St James and Presbyterian</p>
        <p>are the only two teams with a chance at the title now. St James leads the league with an 11-1 record, a game ahead of Presbyterian, at 9-1. Presbyterian has four games left, while St James has but two. They are scheduled to play each ofher again. In the rest of the league Mt Pleasant and Immanuel are tied for third with 6-5 record, followed by Meadowbrook at 6-6. Next comes Oakmont at 8-7, followed by Gum Swamp, 2-10, and Pente^tal, 0-10.</p>
        <p>St. James took the lead in last nights game in the first inning, scoring one run.</p>
        <p>Then in the second, the Methodists exploded for eight more runs and a 9-0 lead.  '</p>
        <p>Immanuel tried to rally in the</p>
        <p>third, picking up its only mns as two came across.</p>
        <p>St James added its 10th run in the fourth inning, to claim the easy victory.</p>
        <p>St James ........ 180 100 0-10</p>
        <p>Immanud ....... 002  000  0 2</p>
        <p>dioice by Whitford. Hodges walked and bpfh he and Whit ford stole up ,a l^e. Reilly singled in both runners. / '</p>
        <p>The final Tob run scored in the sixth. Purser singled, moved up mi a passed ball and scor-#d on Macon Moyes double.</p>
        <p>The two Moose runs both came in tiie Rftfa. Herb Paspbal doubled and advanced on Eugene Andrews fiddert ehoice. Paschal scored on a patoed ball, and Andrew^ icmred m a hit by Mike l^altii.</p>
        <p>In the seeond Seefrity took tile early leM in the |oin*th inning. Danny Harztogton xialk-</p>
        <p>ed, moved up on a walk to Tony Nichols and scoeed :oB M^is Vicars double.</p>
        <p>But the lead didnt kt long as the Exchange came back with four runs in tiie. fiftii. Robert Brinkley singed and moved up on Roy Hudsons single. Hudson then stole second and John Stauffer douMed in both runp ners. Lyim Hudsmi tripled toi score Staufer, and then be scorw ed on an error on Randy Alfords grouider.</p>
        <p>The sixth saw the, other three runs score. Brinkley stoglednnd Hudsmi drove him in wHh a double. He scored on Stauffers sh^pe and Stainer scored on a hit by Alford.</p>
        <p>First* Game Greenville Tob. 603 151-18 It</p>
        <p>Moose ......... 000  020-2  8</p>
        <p>' Second Game</p>
        <p>Exchai^e ____  000  0487 9</p>
        <p>Security Life ....'000 1001 S</p>
        <p>Food Mart Ices Tie For Title</p>
        <p>stole bis way around, coming across on a double steal as Whitehurst stole second after walking.</p>
        <p>Home Builders pidced up its eighth run in the third. Hill doubled, moved to third when Robbie Cox attempted to sacrifice, and scored on an error on the play.</p>
        <p>Pepsi-Cola scored its first run in the fourth. Greg Williams singled and moved to third when Tommy Diggs was safe on an error. A1 Nichols hit into a fielders choice, scoring Williams.</p>
        <p>In the fifth, Home Builders picked up its final two runs. One came on a homer by Kittrell. Then the next scored after Robbie Cox reached on an error, took second on a passed ball and scored on another er-</p>
        <p>Putter Is Key To Brttish Open</p>
        <p>HOYLAKE, Etogland (AP) -Hie best golfms in (he wm*Id tock another look today at only one club in their bag  the putter.</p>
        <p>Steaming sun and only gentle breeze off the Dee Estuary and the Irish Sea scorched out the 6, 995-yar J, par 72 Hoylake cmnse.</p>
        <p>ror.</p>
        <p>the National League.</p>
        <p>Before denting the Nationals superiority, however, the Anieri-</p>
        <p>Currently making a glittering comeback after being traded to can League must get past Juan Minnesota last winter, the 26-iMarichal, San Franciscos bril--------iliant right - hander who was</p>
        <p>Giants, Red Sox Are Winners</p>
        <p>Pepsi picked up its other run ;in the sixth. Bob Forbes reach-By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS big gun  with three singles which led  on  an error and  advanced</p>
        <p>The Durham Bulls managed drove in three runs.  |on  an  out. He then scored  on</p>
        <p>to shove across a run in the!  Tprrv  TpwpIT  Steve Caytons single,</p>
        <p>last of tte nth toing Monday,,dS ^  n..  ,    </p>
        <p>mght to stay wito two per- , ^th to break a M Ue and  ^  in  S</p>
        <p>centage points of Greensboro m j^e Greensboro its win. i'</p>
        <p>the battle for the lead in the,  Second  Game</p>
        <p>Western Division of the Caroli-' Peninsulas Bill McNulty, Pepsi-Cola  000 101  0 2  7</p>
        <p>na League  starred in a nine-run rally in Home Builders 521 02x10 7</p>
        <p>Durham 'defeated Winston-Sa- '&amp;gt;th inning with a home tom 7-6.  ^un and a double as the grays</p>
        <p>An error, a stolen base, an- downed  Kinston,</p>
        <p>other error and a wild pitch</p>
        <p>and the field of 130 stmtod to realize that the 1967 British Open Championship would be won on the greens.</p>
        <p>Jack Nicklaus, the 27-year-old Columbus, CHiio, holder of both the British and American Open titles, carried five putters with him Monday in practice sessions.</p>
        <p>Tliat put his bag at about 18 clubs, four over the limit, but he contended he knew what he was doing. He tinkered around on greens, no lightning fast in spots, dangerous in others because good turf caii oftimes turn out to be heavy in stretches.</p>
        <p>Roberto De Vicenzo, M tt-year-old Argentiniaii whose record for consistency in the British Open can hardly be challenged over the past decide, spent eight solid hours doing only one thing  putting.</p>
        <p>The Food Mart dinched at least a tie for first place in the Ladies Softball League with a 64 victory over second place Little Mint last night In other action, Pollards beat Wachovia, 11-6, and Coca-Cola downed Big Value Discount. 12-5.</p>
        <p>Food Mart now Itolds a 10-3 record with just two games left to play. The little Bflint is 8-5, and can only tie for the top. EUminated from the title lecture are Wachovia and Coke, both 7-6, Pollards, 6-7, and Big Value, 1-12.</p>
        <p>A single victory by Food Mart will give them the title.</p>
        <p>In the first game, Pollards took the lead in the seccmd inning with a lone run, only to fall biehind as Wachovia pushed across three in its half of the frame, lii the third, Wachovia padded its lead to 5-1 with two more, on a homer by Pam Biggs. In the fiftii, Wadiovia scored again for a 6-1 lead. That run scored mi a homer by B. Baker.</p>
        <p>But in the sixth, Pollards rallied to score four runs and cut the lead to 6-5. Then in the second, six more runs scored, i including homers by J. Hathaway and K. Anthony to give Pollards the win.</p>
        <p>In the second game. Food Mart moved out in the first inning, 1-0, and added anotiier run in the third. The Little Mint then rallied in the bottom</p>
        <p>of the third to take a 8-2 lend, on a homer by Darlene Briley.</p>
        <p>In the fourth. Food Mart came back with two for a 4-3 edge, but the Little Bfint picked up another in the bottom of the frame to tie it at 44.</p>
        <p>A homer by S. Davis ii the fifth and another run in the seventh gave Food Mart the win, however, 64.</p>
        <p>Coca-Cola took the lead in the final game in the first inning, getting three runs. Big VMue came back to tie it up in the top of the second, but Coke pushed in four nunre in the bottom of the inning for a 7-8 lead. Coke added two mcnre in the third. Two more scored in the fourth on a homo* by G. Clark, and the 12th run scored in the fifth.</p>
        <p>Big Value picked up its final two runs in the fourth on a homer by Gay Neal. *</p>
        <p>First Game</p>
        <p>Pollards ........ 010  004  8-11</p>
        <p>Wachovia ......... 032  010  0 6</p>
        <p>Second Gne Food Mart ........ 101210 16</p>
        <p>Uttie Bfint ....... 003 100 0-4</p>
        <p>Third Game '</p>
        <p>Big Value  0302000-5</p>
        <p>Coca-Cola  342 210 x12</p>
        <p>Pfonuri Expert Sorvleo AH Work Guaruteod Servloe Whilo Toa Wall</p>
        <p>Sai^s Shoe Shop</p>
        <p>Located'Ai Ooiloao&amp;lt; View CleaMn Mato Plato</p>
        <p>Sieer Clear of Accidents!</p>
        <p>named to st^ for the NL by gave the Bulls their winning run I Jorge Velasquez of Panama</p>
        <p>The Giants and the Red Sox picked up victories in last nights</p>
        <p>kees, 9-0, while the Red Sox also bested the Yanks, 10-3.</p>
        <p>Coastal League action at South '  Priniarily  to</p>
        <p>Greenville Park.  Detroit s A1 Kallne and Balti-</p>
        <p>^ - X  I mores Prank Robinson, the two</p>
        <p>The Giants downed the Yan- highest vote getters on the 25-</p>
        <p>man squad.</p>
        <p>Kaline fractured his right In the first game, the Giants hand June 27 by slamming his broke the ice in the third when bat into the bat rack after strik-Roy Savage scored on asingle big out, and Robinson has dou-by Lonnie Barnhill.  hie vision as the result of a mild</p>
        <p>The big inning came in the concussion he suffered the .same fourth when Alphonza Hunter day sliding into Chicagos A1 hit ti first ball out of the Weis at second base, park in seven years fw a horn- Tony Oliva of Minnesota re-</p>
        <p>placed Kaline in the line-up The Yanks managed only while Tony Coniglitoo of Boston hits off winner Leroy PerkiM. took Robinsons place. Oliva will Henry Hardy was charged with piay center field, Conigliaro in the loss.  right with Bostons Carl</p>
        <p>Manager Walter Alston.</p>
        <p>The winningest pitcher in the majors with a 12-7 record, Mari-chal is making his second ^itart in six appearances and seeking</p>
        <p>Ws rd victory against no e- iaged to stay out in front with a</p>
        <p>  16-5 win over Lynchburg. In oth-</p>
        <p>Bauer s forces have been dec-ier league action, Raleighs</p>
        <p>after two were out. The Bulls pulled a double steal for their tying run in the ninth to run the game into extra innings.</p>
        <p>Greensboro, meanwhile, man-</p>
        <p>led the Gulfstream Park jockeys with 52 victories at the 1967 meeting.</p>
        <p>XS OOOODOfiOOOOOOODOOOOCOODOO</p>
        <p>lo the second game, the Red Sox wasted little time in taking the lead, scoring six runs to the first totoiig.</p>
        <p>Harold Stevenson was t win-fum and Raymond Smith, the losar.</p>
        <p>Yastrzemki in left.</p>
        <p>Shortsti^ Rico Petrocelli of Boston has a braised wrist, and first baseman Harmon Kllh-brew of Minnesota reinjured his groin during the weekend, but both wers expected to play.</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Eastern Division leaders thumped Wilson 11-1, Portsmouth nipped Rocky Mount 3-1, Asheville edged Burlington 3-2 and Peninsula thumped Kinston 11-5.</p>
        <p>Raleigh exploded for seven runs in the seventh inning in its win over Wilson. Raleigh collected 15 singles off four Wilson pitchers. Ed Niq&amp;gt;oleon was the</p>
        <p> PLAY IT SAFE...BE SURE THAT</p>
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        <p>If Fire Should Sfrike Be Sure You're Protected</p>
        <p>Your home is probabfr your largest sfaigle investment. Make sure ^ you are fully protected. Consult us today.</p>
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        <p>im vtaamm kim:</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0007" />
        <p>-i?</p>
        <p>s"</p>
        <p>By JACK BELL</p>
        <p>WASHINGTW (AP) - The Johnson administration rejected rebellion-twn Nigerias request fiH* military aid just as edgy congressonal leaders began lunng tiwt stx!fa he^, coupled with earlier dispaidi of U.S. planes to the Congo, could invite Oommonist medcUiitg in Africa.</p>
        <p>A congressional uproar Monday greeted Sundays announcement that three transport planes and 150 men had been sent to the Congo, tom by a</p>
        <p>5,.  '-^1</p>
        <p>PIRB SUPPORTTubes are pointed nearly straight up f as a J. hifantry artillery battery lays down support for Infan-trymm novtog through juni^ of Vietnams central highlands near ti Tantiwi bonier. The area is 100 miles southwest of Dak To and some 300 miles ntnth of Saigon. The batterys 105  mm guns lvt attachmots on the barrel muzzles to hide the flash of firing. (AP Wlrephoto)____</p>
        <p>Late Registrants Will Be Accepted For 3 Courses</p>
        <p>Late registrants will be accepted at the next two class meetings of three adult courses which began at Pitt Technical Institute last' week.</p>
        <p>Stenoscript ABC Shorthand, a 60-hour class, which met for the first time last Thursday will meet on Tuesday and Thursday evenings from 7:30 to 10 p.m. Tuition for this course is $6 and  the textbook is $9.27.</p>
        <p>Beginning art, sketching, and painting classes, which began Thursday, will meet each Tues-. day and Thursday evening from 7:30 to 10 p.m. There is a $3 tu^km. fee and each person j .must furnish his owp supplies. Those planning to enter the c ass-should call Pitt Tech and ask what supplira are neces</p>
        <p>sary. All students should have supplies by the second meeting next Thursday.</p>
        <p>Adult driver training classes, which met for the first time Wednesday evening, will not meet Monday, but will meet for the next time Wednesday and each Monday and Wednesday thereafter from 7:30 to 10 p.m. This course is composed of 36 hours of classroom work, a minimum of six hours behind-the-wheel training, and 12 hours observation in a dual-controlled car. There is a $16 fee for the course. In addition to classroom instruction, each students driving time wiU be scheduled during the afternoons and Saturdays. Each person can be picked up at his residence and returned after the driving period.</p>
        <p>Til# Dally R#fl#cfor, 6r##nvHI#, N. C.Tuesday, July 11, 1967-1^</p>
        <p>No. Military Aid For Nigeria</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT - Ch. 9</p>
        <p>TUIfDAY 4:00 S*crtt Storm 4:30 Cartoon*</p>
        <p>5:00 Sugarfoot 4:00 News 4:10 Sports 4:25 Waathar 4:30 News 7:00 Peter Guim 7:30 Daktarl 0:30 Spotltgfit 9:30 Pattlcoaft 10:00 News 10:30 T. S. A.</p>
        <p>11:00 Final Raport 11:30 Movla WIDNISDAY 4:30 Carolina 0:35 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Can. Cam. 10:30 Hlllbllllas 11:00 Andy 11:30 Van Dyka 12:00 Naws n</p>
        <p>12:10 Farm Nowo 12:25 Waattwr 12:30 Saarch 12:44 Guiding Light 1:00 Love Life 1:25 Timely Tip* 1:30 World Turn* 2:00 Password '2:30 Nowoporty 3:00 Tell Truth 3:25 News 3:30 Edge of Night 4:00 Socret Storm 4:30 Sronco 5:00 Rawhldo 4:00 Nows 4:10 Sports 4:25 Weathor 4:30 News 7:00 Art. Smith 7:30 Lost In Spaea 8:30 HIIIMIQoa 9:00 Gratn Acras 10:00 Steve AHon 11:00 Movla</p>
        <p>mercenary-led rebellion.</p>
        <p>Hows later, just as Capitol Hin began sounding off against a hint toat such aid might go to Nigeria, too, the State Department turned down Nigerias request, saying its rebellion was purely internal.</p>
        <p>Iir almost the same breath that some congressmen cx-pessed fears of a Vietnam-type involveaneirt in Africa, they discounted the optimistic repmT from Secretary of Defense Rob-ert S. McNamara that the military ww is going well in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Some said tiiey expect McNamaras visit to result in dls-patch of mert troops to Asia and a tax ii^r^ue to pay for them.</p>
        <p>With both Vietaam dovi and hawks criticizing tiie Coiko ac-</p>
        <p>*4.-   *___j  .</p>
        <p>tion, the and Foreign tees sumu State Dean explanation</p>
        <p>Armed Services commit-Secretary of for a iM'ivate  (rf the administrations position.</p>
        <p>Chairman J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., :f the Foreign Relations Committee challenged a State</p>
        <p>Department spokesmans contention that the United States is obligated to uphold the *terri-torial integrity and unity of Nigeria and the Congo.</p>
        <p>This busintess oi guaranteeing the territorial integrity of nations all around the world is being carried too far, Pul-br^M said. What treaties (to we have that caU for our intervention in the domestic affairs of other countries? So far as I know, there are none that apply in Africa.</p>
        <p>A portion of Nigeria has proclaimed itself the independent nation of Biafra.</p>
        <p>Fulbright, a vigorous critic of Johnsons Vietnam policies, said he regards even the Congo aid as a wide open invitation to the Russians and the Red Chinese to stir up trouble in Africa.</p>
        <p>Smate Democratic Leader Mike Mansfield and Chairman Richard B. Russell, D-Ga., of the Armed Services Committee agreed.</p>
        <p>Mansfield said in a separate interview any . S. aid to Nigeria would only compound tiie mistake he said had been com</p>
        <p>mitted in making aircraft available to Ckmgo President Josep D. Mobutu.</p>
        <p>I hope the State Department finally comes to reauze that Congress and the Anricar. people do not believe that we can intervene in every kind of conflict in the world because iriien we do we are always left holding the defense umbrella, he said.</p>
        <p>He said he hoped Johnson would notice tiie criticism o the Congo actitui.</p>
        <p>But White House press secretary Gecnge Christian said Johnson had asked Rusk to talk with apfNropriate chairmen of Senate committees, induding Fulbright and Russell, before action was taken because he was aware how deeply they felt on matters affecting the Cong.</p>
        <p>Mansfdd, Russell, Chairman John Stennis, D-Miss., of the Preparedness subconunittee and others said there was no evidence that rebels hi tfaa Con-</p>
        <p>disturbances.  {amara  is  c^mistic.</p>
        <p>Russell, a backer of Johnson Every time be comes iMdt</p>
        <p>on Vietnam, and others voiced tears that the United States might be drawn deeper and deeper into African turm&amp;lt;^ as it was in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>McNamaras report from Sd Rap River that air and ground opwaticHis in Vietnam had been going very well for the past four nMinths was greeted with Scepticism.</p>
        <p>Sen. George D. Aiken, R-Vt., a Foreigr. Relations committeeman, sdd in an interview he is always apprriiensive wln Me-</p>
        <p>wNBE - Ch. 12</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>5:00 Beze 5:30 Rebti 4:00 Early Raport 4:15 Waathar 4:10 Sports 4:30 Naws 7:00 Hwy. Fatliol 7:30 Combat 0;X InvaSars 9:30 Fcyten FL 10:00 Fugitivo 11:00 Naws 11:10 Weathar 11:15 Sports 11:30 Joay SIshoF</p>
        <p>11:30</p>
        <p>12:00</p>
        <p>12:30</p>
        <p>1:00</p>
        <p>2:00</p>
        <p>2:30</p>
        <p>2:5S</p>
        <p>3:00</p>
        <p>3:30</p>
        <p>4:00</p>
        <p>4:30</p>
        <p>5:00</p>
        <p>5:30</p>
        <p>4:00</p>
        <p>4:15</p>
        <p>4:20</p>
        <p>4:30</p>
        <p>7:00</p>
        <p>7:X</p>
        <p>Family Gama Talking D. Rtad Fugitiva *</p>
        <p>^a a------a </p>
        <p>nVWIrWM Draam Girl</p>
        <p>O. Haapltal Ok. Shadows an</p>
        <p>Dating</p>
        <p>Fopava</p>
        <p>'General Bars Unformed Marines From 'Events'</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 7:00 Ban AAoora 8:00 Romper Room 8:00 8:45 King A Odio  9:00</p>
        <p>9:00 Early Show  11:00</p>
        <p>10:30 Oatallna  11:10</p>
        <p>10:55 Doctor  11:15</p>
        <p>11:00 Suparmarkat  11:30</p>
        <p>Bozo Rabal</p>
        <p>Early Raport Weather Sports Naws</p>
        <p>Hwy. Patrol</p>
        <p>Batman</p>
        <p>Monroas</p>
        <p>Movla</p>
        <p>Naws</p>
        <p>Waathar</p>
        <p>Sports</p>
        <p>Jpy Bishop</p>
        <p>WITN - CK. 7</p>
        <p>Bass.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (P) - The Marine Corps commandant, apparently prompted by Sundays battle in Houston, Tex., between uniformed Marines and peace demonstrators has issued a pointed notice to Marine reserves;</p>
        <p>Marine Corps reserve personnel may participate in public soqnd may participate in public status or otherwise authorized l?y proper authority.</p>
        <p>"Gen. Wallace M. Greene Jr. lent that mess^e Monday to Marina Corps district directors.</p>
        <p>Ha said respes may take part in public events only when</p>
        <p>theyre out of uniform and not on duty, and only as private citizens.</p>
        <p>Although the message did not mention the Houston incident it followed by just a day the five-minute slugfest between about 30 peace pickets and some 190 Leathernecks in fatigue uniforms.</p>
        <p>The fight occurred after tiie Marines, headed home after a weekend drill, fell hrto step behind 5,000 war backers and just ahead of the peace cemonstra-tors dining an American Legion parade designed to show support for U.S. efforts in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 7:00 All Stir 10:00 TBA 11:00 Nsws 11:15 Sport* 11:25 Woathw</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 4:00 Aspict 4:30 Country Music 7:00 Todiy Show 9:00 Mr. Ed 9:30 GJrl Talk 10:00 Judgment 10:2SNBC News 10:30 Concentration 11:00 Personeltty 11:30 Hollywood 11:30 Tonight 12:00 Debnem 12:25 WeehMH</p>
        <p>12:30 Eye Guess 1:55 NBC News</p>
        <p>1:00 JsBpsray 1:30 hUks A Dial l:S5 Naws 2:00 Our Ltvas 2:30 Doctsri 3:00 Ahbthar World 3:30 Don't Say 4:00 Match Game 4:25 NBC News 4:30 Funny Page 5:30 Lassie 4:00 News</p>
        <p>4:30 Hunt. Brlfdc. 7:00 Fishing Report 7:30 Virginian 9:00 Bob Hope 10:00 I Spy 11:00 News 11:15 Sports 11:25 Weather 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>Theater Reports $1.2 Million Gross</p>
        <p>BALTMOBE, Md. (AP) -The Morris A. Mechanic ITiea-ter has ^ossed more tiian $1.2 million since it o^ed in January. The $4.2-mion modernistic playhouse in tiie Charles Center, a downtown redevebpment area, has entertained more than 230,000 patrons, averaging 1,200 a show for the past 24 weeks. Fox said business was so brisk the l,804nseat theater was booking ^ows for next spring and beyond.</p>
        <p>The largest American city on the U.S.-M^dco border is El Paso, lex., with more than KK000 population.</p>
        <p>MODEL LANDINO ON *MOON-An engin eeiiog model of the Surveyor 4 spaoecrBft which wIB attompt a gentle touchdown at the center of the moon, goes thitmgh tests by englneers at Hug^ Aircraft Company in Loa Angetes. The latest Surveyor win carty a new tool&amp;lt;-a tiny noag-deteraiine whether the lunar aoil contains magnetic parttoles. The Hughes firm builds Sur-ter NASA. (AP Whrepbato</p>
        <p>go and Nigoia had been incited by the Conununists. They agreed the United States had no buiiness interfering itf domestic</p>
        <p>with a report that progreis if being made, I look for tbe.wont to happen, Aikm ^d.</p>
        <p>Mansfield said of McNamaras statement; I wirii it were true. But the Democratie leader added that ht expects there will be an increase in U. S. troop strength after Johnson ccmfers with McNamara and Gen. William C. Westmoreland. Westmoreland is retomir^ to attend his mothers funo-al and subaequently will sea tiie Presl-clent</p>
        <p>Now Possible To Shrink Painil Hemoniioids</p>
        <p>And FraopBjr Step The ReliewPShiin</p>
        <p>.f tte fa&amp;lt;tan.d kMoSot*</p>
        <p>once has foond a xnedkatitai todkplaeab</p>
        <p>with the ahOitgr, in moot caaea TlwaBrint toTfMiMnllMLlIf.</p>
        <p>-- to proBapOsr atop ttehittSs  ---^  - fnrnmli</p>
        <p>KhwpaniidirfiilUit  M PnpaiMlaB H .kw</p>
        <p>'501 SAID,miDRro, n*SNOMOPNWMRMn^ BUT sptinding to much of Harry's karchoamod moM-ay radacorafing your living room k going to aanan troublo ... It's just gorgaous, but going Into dabt for luxurias it no way to kaap paaaa tn ftm tanto tty</p>
        <p>1 t</p>
        <p>WELL, DID SHE TEU MR .. 0iho Mm row ona rad cant..  sha leamad a trick about malto ing monoy with classified ads. Saams sho chacfcaci through tho house and found a lot of things fh# kids had outgrown, soma fumitura fhay no longer needed, some of Harry's old sporting ocpripmont and other perfectly good itams fust gather^ dost. So she made a list and dialed PL 2-6166 for oni of those friendly Reflocior Ad Wrttars  ,  iho girh who help you word your ad lor quidfott reauIlK (Did you know a i2 word/3 Rno ad It only 66c  day on tho special 7 day fttanD</p>
        <p>YOU WOULDNT BELIEVE how ftst each buyori started clamoring for those things  . . that's hew sho got tho money to redo the living room. Well, I figure if it worked for Mildred, why not for mat*</p>
        <p>And, why not for YOU?</p>
        <p>Here are three Reflector Classified Ads that brought quick results:</p>
        <p>Mr. Bobby Hardee of Rt. 2 Greenville sold hit camper after the second inserttoa of this ad:</p>
        <p>FOLD OUT camper ~ 1966 model. $350. CaU 756-XXXX.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Joha Coay of IflS Sherwood Dr. had a buyer for her advertised sofa with-la hour* foUowing press time!</p>
        <p>EARLY AMERICAN SOFA  In good condition. $25. CaU 756-XXXX.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Tyaon BIRirt of 1004 X. Third St. sold aU the Hems she advertised with om classified ad:</p>
        <p>15* BARROUR BOAT. 3S HP Evlnrude electric motor and traUer. Completely new finish, excellent cow* ditioB, 60 day guaraalea. CaU PL 2-XXXX.</p>
        <p>Daily Reflector Classified Ads</p>
        <p>Bring Happy Results</p>
        <p>Telephone 752-6166</p>
        <p>8:30 A.M.-5:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0008" />
        <p>A</p>
        <p>'^Th'Dally Rafkctor, Oraanvllla,'N. C.Ttday, July 11, 1947</p>
        <p>THERE OUGHTA</p>
        <p>LAW!</p>
        <p>Bi POPULAR REQUesr Aform^ ROlM&amp;gt; OFT^e -QUeSS WHO-OAMB</p>
        <p>6uee5'^</p>
        <p>tuxsie-f</p>
        <p>'ssf&amp;amp;y^iSsS".</p>
        <p>ArtW</p>
        <p>V(0B</p>
        <p>zS^</p>
        <p>^gGO^,</p>
        <p>^PRWFTE^</p>
        <p>OUT!</p>
        <p>GuESG M0 iS GONMA SUGGE^ DVVWlKlG THECHCCU 50-50^</p>
        <p>JUSTA HAMBURGER JORMCf</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>MARE MBJE A &amp;gt; DOUSIC'SIUSIRLOM</p>
        <p>STEAK wiTMAtL IHETRIMMlftsr</p>
        <p>Qkankd. ter ^R&amp;amp;A luqws.</p>
        <p>ViiALLA walla, WASH.</p>
        <p>O/tL^</p>
        <p>MAy ^FfiRAlki ' CHICAGO,/LL.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;#f</p>
        <p>The Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Spoken Word Is Big Factor In Marriage</p>
        <p>Acc^ Post In Revenue Office</p>
        <p>Anna finally developed a paramour but tiiough he irill ed her far more than her husband, it was chiefly &amp;lt;hie to his verbal prelude and posUude! Note the actual words of Anne wben she compares her husbands lack of sexual technique! Eroticism to a woman needs to be largely verbal!</p>
        <p>By EORGE W. CRANE, Ph.D., M.D.</p>
        <p>CASE C-592: Anne Q., aged 28, is the wife who is suing &amp;lt; for divorce because her husband doesnt talk to her at night Anne, I began, a divorce li like elective surgery, which you can undergo now or defer till a few months later.</p>
        <p>So dont rush into this divorce! Postpone it for at least 3 months in order to give yourself a final senous attempt to salvage your marriage.</p>
        <p>Otherwise, your conscience may trouble you all the rest of your life.</p>
        <p>For Im sure if I have an interview with your husband, you will be able to avoid divorce.  ^  '</p>
        <p>Marriage is like a game of tennis where two iHayws bat the ball back and forL ^ But Annes husband refuses to bat the ball!</p>
        <p>She tosses out many conversational cues but he ignores them or merely grunts. * But theres no sign of low inr telligence, for Thomas Carlyle, a. brilliant author and theologian, broke the heart and spirit ^ his devoted wife by. also clamming up.</p>
        <p>One day Jane Caiiyle couldnt stand it any longer so she exclaimed:</p>
        <p>Why dont you tell me if you Hke my cooking? I try to please you and do many kindnesses to make you happier, but you never say a word.</p>
        <p>To which Carlyle haughtily relied:</p>
        <p>Woman, must you be paid for evoTthing you do?</p>
        <p>Then he abruptly left the table and climbed to his attic desk to continue with his writing.</p>
        <p>But when Jane died unexpectedly, and he returned from the funeral, he thumbed through her diary.</p>
        <p>On many tear-stained pages, he read her recurring cry: Oh, why dont you tell me you like any of the foods I cook or the little kindnesses I try to render you?</p>
        <p>Too late, Carlyle rushed out to the rainly cemetery and knelt</p>
        <p>too her wet grave.</p>
        <p>Oh, Jane, be cried, if only I had known!</p>
        <p>Well, he was a smart man but so wrapped op in his own ideas that he was a poor social detective.</p>
        <p>Even after she asked him for a compliment, he was such an introvert fliat he refused to give her one.</p>
        <p>One reason I launched this educational column was to open the eyes of'married folks toa little common sense in human relations.</p>
        <p>Most divorces are unnecessary. .</p>
        <p>They are due to psychological myopia (nearsightedness).</p>
        <p>So this colunm should help widen your vision and act as corrective psydbological glasses, so you can see bey(id tiie end of your nose.</p>
        <p>Tomorrow ID give you my interview with Annes husband.</p>
        <p>Anne had finally been dating an office co-worker on the sly, mainly to gain ttie pleasure of</p>
        <p>Thcnnas N. White of M7 Berkshire Rd., Greenville, has accepted  a position as Revenue Officer witii the Internal Revenue Service. The announcement</p>
        <p>Named Director Answering Service Is</p>
        <p>Into Bigtime</p>
        <p>WHIPPANY, N.Y. ~ John S. Mayo, of Holmdel, N.J.  has been promoted to Director of the Underwaters Systems Laboratory at Bell Telephone Laboratories here.</p>
        <p>He is the son of Mr. and Mrs.</p>
        <p>JOHN S. MAY(M</p>
        <p>By JOHNCUNIFF NEW YORK (AP)  Witii Inllions and billions oi telejhone calls handled for, millions of clients during the/past 40 years, the telephone answering industry is now feeling some of the problems of bigne. v We have moved out of the bedroom, said, one pr&amp;lt;q&amp;gt;rietor referring to the spare nxmi origins of most of file companies. Most agencies, in fact, have moved ri^ out of the house to downtown offices.</p>
        <p>To document its growth, the industry offers these statistics:</p>
        <p>Charge Driver In Farmville Wrck</p>
        <p>W. L. Mayo of Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Dr. Mayos new responsibilities will include a broad area of work ranging from basic research to development of electronic equipment.</p>
        <p>He joined Bell Laboratories in 1955 and initially engaged in research &amp;lt;si military weapons control systems.</p>
        <p>Dr. Mayo received B.S., M.S. and Ph. D. &amp;lt;tegrees in electrical engineering from North Carolina State University in 1952, 1953, and 1955, respectively.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE  A two^ar collision &amp;lt;m South Main Street Saturday resulted in $300 damage.</p>
        <p>Investigating officer Allen Do-land identified the' drivers as Jolmny Streeter of Snow Hill and Rhocerick^ Artis of 402 Walnut Street, Farmville.</p>
        <p>Artis was charged with failing to see his way dear before moving.</p>
        <p>$150 million of business a year by 54,000 agendas owned by 3,-600 individuals who fH*ocess a billion calls fa* 500,000 custom-ei^.</p>
        <p>And the problems: A slKntage of labor, rising wages, increasingly complex assignments that require technical knowledge.</p>
        <p>And the result: Many of &amp;amp;e tiny aimpanies founded during the past 20 or 30 years are now selling out to bi^er businesi^ which can betta* handle file problems.</p>
        <p>Five years ago, said a spokesman for the industrys national association, there werent more than six or seven owners of more than 50 switchboards with an average of 80 customers on each board.</p>
        <p>Just five years ago, tiie spokesman continued, a large business consisted of about 4,000 or 5,000 clients. A larije busirtss today might have 10,-000 customra's.</p>
        <p>When the industry began expanding about 40 years ago ckictors were its biggest customers. But most Americans have phones now and doctors supply</p>
        <p>only SO per cent of the answering business today.</p>
        <p>One-man television repair shops are heavy daytime users because the proprietors often are out on house calb. When the phone rings at the shop it rings at the answering service too. Heavy night-time users are banks which advertise 24-hour loan smrice.</p>
        <p>Private homes ^also have become big users.</p>
        <p>If the society matrons phone is not picked up after fomr rings, as per her aeement with the answering service, it is assumed she is out attending to her charities and ckos. The service takes the message and relaj it to her.</p>
        <p>And the late-sleeping bachelor with nKiney to spare subscribes to an answering service so 2 to be'awakened in the morning.</p>
        <p>Two usOTs have given considerable frouble: tiie bookie and the call girL</p>
        <p>, Gradually the work of the services is becoming complex. Jammed elevatws now signal answering service vdiich then contact the repair man. Devim in greenhouses ring the service when temperatures get too low</p>
        <p>The major part of file work, howeva*, continues to be the receiving and relaying of messages for which the service usually collects between $15 and $30 a month, the l^er figure being for 24-hour vigilance.</p>
        <p>Denionstratiim By Cuban Exiles</p>
        <p>MUMI, Fla. (AP)  Cubans carrying suitcases insTibed, *^Let us fight Reds or we go away/* demonstrated Monday night for fellow* exile Felipo Rivero, who faces ouster from the United States because of anti-Castro violence.</p>
        <p>On the eve of a scheduled U.S. ruling on whether Rivero stays or remains, about 100 followers carrying valises and torchlitts marched ^before tho JdinF. Kennedy "Torch of Friendship.</p>
        <p>Rivero has been in jail rinco May 12, when the Immigration Service arrested him for beking-ing to an organization advocating violence.</p>
        <p>Americans ransomed Rlvert from Cuba for $100,000 after h was captured ^in the unsuccessful 1961 Bay of Pigs invasion.</p>
        <p>Riveros Cuban - Nationalist Association has been linked with an-Communist sabotage including firing a bazooka at the U.N. building in New York white F^el Castros now missing aide, Che Guevara, spokt ttere.</p>
        <p>Immigration authorities said Riv^ would &amp;gt;Bot be sent in Cuba in any case.</p>
        <p>conversation.</p>
        <p>Her clandestine dates led to an. affair, which was more plesfiant than enerital relations with her husband, chiefly because her, paramour verbalized his love and petted her afterwards.</p>
        <p>My husband, she said tartly, just jumps out of bed aft*-wards and rmbes &amp;lt;nit to the kitchen for a .bottle-of pop!</p>
        <p>He doesnt say a ^word to me and doesnt even  offer' to bring me a drink! ,</p>
        <p>So send for the booklet Sex Problems in Marriage, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents and learn the art of dove. . '  &amp;lt;</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 s^ for one of his bodc-lets.)</p>
        <p>THOMAS N. WHITE</p>
        <p>was made by J. E. Wall, District Director in Greensboro.</p>
        <p>White, a native of Norfolk, Va., attended Old Dominion College in Norfolk.</p>
        <p>He wfll attend a special school for revenue officers conducted the IRS before being assigned for duty at the local office of Internal Revenue.</p>
        <p>Mention 'Big G' In BBC Film</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI)..The British Broadcasting Cap. (BBC) says a play, To Lucifer, A S&amp;lt;m, will be screened despite a reference to God in the script as Big G.</p>
        <p>In the play, Satan wants to explain that hell is really everyones idea of heaven and sends fais son to earth with the message. Hell is shown as a mixture of bingo parlor and discotheques with mini-skirted</p>
        <p>Surveyor 4 To Have Insurance</p>
        <p>girls. Heaven is porljayed as a</p>
        <p>place where Beethoven is played.</p>
        <p>It is not sacrilegious, said playwright Johnny Speicht. Its a little controversial.</p>
        <p>CAPE KENNEDY, Fla. (AP)  A beehive-shap^ spacecraft built to help scientists send biological creatures into orbit is safely in a Cape Kennedy hangar today after being listed as missing all day Monday.</p>
        <p>While Florida highway patrolmen combed state roads, a truck carrying the missing crjdt arrived at Cape Keimedy Monday evenir^ about 18 hours late.</p>
        <p>The driver didnt know there was any pamc about the thing, said Robert H. Gray, director of unmanned launch operations for the National A^onautics and Space Administratms Kennedy ^ace Caiter.</p>
        <p>The spacecraft is worth several mli&amp;lt;Hi dollars, tt is due to be launched ^ut Aug. 23 to test the effects of weightlessness and radiation ob living cells.</p>
        <p>General Electric Co., pffime Biosatellite contractor, said it requested a search for the craft after it failed to appear at Cape Kennedy by 4 p.m. Monday.</p>
        <p>Gray said a driver of the Allstates Van Lines Truck apparently became ill while en route from GEs plant nesu* Philadelphia, leaving his partner to drive alone. The lone driver made an unscheduled overnight stop to rest, officials explained.</p>
        <p>ON HONOR ROLL Wilsonia Emma D e 11 e n a Cherry was placed on the honxn: roll of the University of N.C. at Greensboro for the second semester. She is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W.A. (2ierry of Robers(Hiville.</p>
        <p>1,460 Planes Lost In Vietnam</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP) - The United</p>
        <p>Id .</p>
        <p>States has lost 1,460 planes over North and South Vietnam so far during the war. U.S. Command Z 1 reported today.</p>
        <p>\  ' Of these, 602 were bombers</p>
        <p> 'V. and other combat planes lost to I!  enemey action while flying mis-</p>
        <p>^ sions over Nortti Vietnam, and</p>
        <p>*  .  191 went down in combat over</p>
        <p>*    South Vietnam.</p>
        <p>*  The remaining 667 planes</p>
        <p>*  were combat planes which went</p>
        <p>*  down because of mechanical</p>
        <p>*  troubles and accidents, and sup-</p>
        <p>*  porting noncombat planes such as transports and cargo planes which went down from either enemy action or nonhostile causM.</p>
        <p>Aimounced helicopter losses in combat totals 3^.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>UOth ANNIVERSARY</p>
        <p>CABIBRIDGE, Blass. (AP) -Harvard Lew School edebrates Ms 150th anniversary next Sep-tembtt*. Ohief Jusce Earl Warren and Associate Justice William Breiman of the U.S. Supreme Court are among those expected to attend the celebra-ttons. )</p>
        <p>PASADENA, Calif. (AP)  Sdentiati'say the' Surveyor-4 spacecraft scheduled to take off 4ar the moon Thursday will carry electronic insurance against the double boimoe that nearly ruined Surveyor Ss landing April 19.</p>
        <p>Surveyor 3s radar system, designed to cut off its descent-braking rockets 14 feet above the lunar surfikie, became confused tty some mysteriously reflective rocks as the craft neared touchdown.</p>
        <p>The engines kept burning and rocketed file three-legged vehicle 35 feet high on the first bound, 20 feet on the second. They were shut off by command from eartii and the craft settled down in a crater some 30 feet away.</p>
        <p>Luckily it remained uprigM and was able to meet its main goals of digging small trenches in the lunar soil and televising pictures of them to earth.</p>
        <p>Jet Propulsion Laboratory, released the first official explanation of the mishap, Sunday. It said the unusually reflective rocks have not been identified and there is no way of telling whether the same hazard exists in Surveyca* landing area. To prevent recurrence, however, the part of its electronic brain which could be confused by unexpected radar reflections wiU be by-passed during Sir-veyor 4s desdent.</p>
        <p>Plans call for Surveyor 4 to land Saturday night in Sinus Medii, the central bay, near the center of the moon about 400 miles northeast of now inactive Surveyor 1.</p>
        <p>Goren on BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>[e 1M7 IV Tkt CMcm TrllvM]</p>
        <p>Both vulnerable. East deals. * NORTH AAQ</p>
        <p>O A854 4bQ8432</p>
        <p>EAST A J43 ty75432 OK1098 4k 10</p>
        <p>North  NT</p>
        <p>WEST 4107SS2 tyiets 03</p>
        <p> JffS_</p>
        <p>SOUTH 4kK88</p>
        <p>-OQJ72 4kAK7 The bkl^g:</p>
        <p>East  Sooth  West</p>
        <p>Pus  1 NT  Pau</p>
        <p>Pus  Pau  Paw</p>
        <p>Opening tead: Ten of &amp;lt;7 North and South reached a sound six no trump contract by merely adding up hi^ card points. Noi^ hu 17 and inasnnich u Souths opening no trump promises a minimum of 16, the partnership is usured of ^ 33 required to undertake a small slam. Since a grand slam^ .wu not under con-aideratk, North proceeded</p>
        <p>wttboat further ado to six no trump.</p>
        <p>West opened the ten of hearts and Norths queen held the trick. Declarer observed that he could count 12 tricks provided clubs divided three-two. Off the top, there would be three S|Mktes, three hearts, one</p>
        <p>diamond, and five clubs. Whan he cashed the aoe</p>
        <p>and king of clubs and East showed, out. on the second round, discarding aheart, the situation altered. The sure trick total had been reduced to 10. A diamond finesse would develop nnmbor U and If that suit responded f avorabty, South could count back to 12.</p>
        <p>Declarer observed, however, that it diamonds were stacked as unfavorably as tbe dubs, that he must proceed with caution to avoid a disaster. At tridc four, a diamond was ted to the aoe as both oi^xments followed suit. A small diamond was continued from tiie dummy; East played the nine and South covered with the jade. If West had tbe king, he was welcome to it, for now the suit must divide and declarer has his fulfilling tridcs in diamonds.</p>
        <p>When West, showed out on tbe second diamond. South abandoned tbe suithaving scored a vital trick thnein ,and went beck to clubs. The queen and another chd&amp;gt; cleared the suit, and established Ncnrtha toag. card lor the 12th trkk. Wests jack clubs was the sole defen-rive tally &amp;lt; the deal.</p>
        <p>Souths careful play paid off. Obeerve that East would not have benefitted by putting up the king of diamonds, for by so doing be estabUdies two diamond tricks for declarer and thereby ehnrlnates the need to deveteo clubs.</p>
        <p>lost Spacecraft Safe In Hangar</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0009" />
        <p>Th Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Tuesday, July 11, 1967</p>
        <p>S-iK HOW EASY It Is to reach hot prospji^ctt for Mobile Homes wRh Classified Ac</p>
        <p>Dial PL 2-6166SEE HOW EASY it is to reach hot prospects for something new... something old with Clossified Ads.</p>
        <p>Miss Universe Feces Year Of ' BeingChaperoned</p>
        <p>MIAMI BEACH, FU. (AP) -Miss Universa 1967, who will be chosen next Saturday night in a eontest based on beauty of body .find personality, must face a of no dting without a chaperone.</p>
        <p>Most of the girls dont seem to realize they wont be alone with men for a year.</p>
        <p>Is it worth It? commented Miss England, Jennifer Lewis, when she found out Sunday.</p>
        <p>Yiok, for a whole year? taid Ivonne Coll, Miss Puerto Rico.</p>
        <p>Miss USA, Sylvia Louise Hitchcock, a Miami girl who was also Miss Alabama, was aware of the rule because she cannot date without a chaperone while she ia Miss USA.</p>
        <p>For some the girls from Latin American countries, it is what they are used to. For me it is differMt, she said.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVI</p>
        <p>Autemeffive Uene</p>
        <p>DOLLARS IN M1NUTE8 18 What you get at Atlantic Discount when you make a loan on your new car. 75J-41ia.</p>
        <p>Autes Rer Sale</p>
        <p>BUICK - 1963 Eleotra 225 4 - dr. hdtp. Fully, loaded with air ooo-dltlcm. Silver grey with grey in-terior. vie PezaoUa, 7Se-ai28.</p>
        <p>CREVBLLB  1968 Mallbu S8.</p>
        <p>Daytona blue. Bucket seats. 4  speed. 300 H. P. 24,000 miles. Excellent shape. Call PL ^4686.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1966 BiscayM statioDwason, autmnatie. power steering, factory air. 1 loisal owner, ^295. Phelps Chevrolet, 756-2150.</p>
        <p>MHOYMINf</p>
        <p>Nmele Help Wented</p>
        <p>HOUSEMOTHER NEEDED TO live in East Carolina fraternity house. Will work in a chaperone capacity. Furnished spacious room on ground level plus nurnth-ly salary. Kitchen privileges included. AppUcants ahould be between ages of 45 and 55 and exhibit pleasing personality. Apply to P. O. Box 2093. EC StaUon. City.</p>
        <p>TO LIVE IN. Age, race, religiwi of no cwicem. Capable of complete management of home. Cimtact Mrs. Humphrey, Bell Arthur or Farmvllle 753-4339.</p>
        <p>IXFfllT IBtVICI</p>
        <p>GROUND SNAP CORN. MIXED, to your specificatiOQs. 347.00 a top Ayden Mobile MUUng. 756 2016</p>
        <p>TYPING</p>
        <p>An work profesilonally done. Addressing, business letters, term papers. Dictation by phone, pick op and delivery*</p>
        <p>756-3768</p>
        <p>Mrs. Antlumsen</p>
        <p>l&amp;gt;OR SALI</p>
        <p>Miscollsfieous Per fele</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>CARPETS AND UPE TOO CAN be beautiful if you use Blue Lustre. Rent elect]^ diampooer $1. OUddens.</p>
        <p>V(H*UMES OF PUNS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) The Stgtg Health Dr^iartment has completgd plans to clean up interstate and coastal waters to btn.H(v tijf extra federal aid; Gov. Nelson A. Rockefeller says the plans are in fight huge volumes.</p>
        <p>FUMJC NOTICE</p>
        <p>NOTICS OP SALS OF SSAI. ESTATK</p>
        <p>UnStr sMl py virtut sf ttre powsr *f Ml* oontclnsd In Wist csrtsin d*d of trust tx*cut*d by Ssv. Hanry c. Hagsns anS wifa, Laurs J. Hagan*, to I. T. Valentina, Jr., Trust**, dated th* iTtti 9* Pabruary, 1*64. and recordad in Soak 1-34, page 484, Ftft County Rapistry, default having been mtd* In th* pay-mant af th* indabtadnaaa tharatoy *9-cured and demand having been made upon the underjigned by the halders of said Indabtadngaa to foracloM, and st4 deed of truat being by the terms thereof subject to foreclosur*, the undersigned Trustee will,</p>
        <p>on SATURDAY, the 13 dSV af JULY, 1N7,</p>
        <p>t ar abavt tbs Hour af isilf noon, in frant af lb* CwirfhatM* doar In Oraanvilia, North Carolina, offer for sale at public auction tg the highest bidder, for cash, the property conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and  being in  or  near  the</p>
        <p>City of Greenvtfia; PIN County, Marth Carolina, and mdra particularly described * faUowa:</p>
        <p>numbirtd and daHbnntad ps II of Lot No.  y. Blocit  of  that</p>
        <p>cartoW svbdly|afon -in or. near  tb*  city</p>
        <p>of Greanvltia, Pitt County, North Carolina. knawn M  Calanlai  Itaights,  ae-</p>
        <p>carding to a map of the tarn* mad# by Roger L. Mann, Jr., C.E., recorded In Map Book 5, at page 119, In the office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, to which map reference Is hereby made for an achrate and more detailed descripttan of the sama, and more particularly deacHbed as follows; BEGINNING at a sfika in.tho ^Mtern property line gfs Franklin StfMt; said point being a oamnaan point for |.ots 4 and 7 in Slock "E" in th# gastarn properly Bnt Of Franklin ttfeoti running ihenoB. Soutbcastwardly along Die dividing linn betwnan Lsfs  nnd 7, a</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1966 Impala 88 convertible. R/H, 4-ipeed trsns-mission. 396 engine. $2895. Fhelpe Chevrolet, 756-2150.</p>
        <p>CHEVY n  1962 oonvertlUe. red finish, automatic trao".. $895. B T. Rowe Chevrolet. Ayden. 746-3141.</p>
        <p>CORVAIR - 1965 Corsa 2 dr hdtp. Red with white interior. 4. speed tranamiuion. good condition. Going in service. $1100. Call 752-6529.</p>
        <p>FORD - 1964 Fairlane 500. 9 passenger sta. wag. V-8. auto., power steering, factory air. 1 local owner. Like new. Stafford Olda. 756-3115.</p>
        <p>FORD - 1959 for sale. 4 dr.. straight drive. Price $135. Call 752-5911.</p>
        <p>MUSTANG  1966 two dr. hdtp. 289 engine, straight ahift. $1795. $195 down with MHHxived credit or wUl take older car for equMy. CaU 747-5141. Snow Hill, after $ p.m.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 1968 Le Mane convertible. Extra clean. By owner. Call 752-6775.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN Only 2 eold In 1049 - 428,000 in 1966. Aie you one of these? If not. see Joe Pe-cheles Motors, dial 756-1135.</p>
        <p>STOP STALLING! DRIVE A FL-ly recwditiwed and guaranteed \ised ear from Wagner-Waldrop</p>
        <p>Motors. Inc., 752-4525.</p>
        <p>DODOE ^</p>
        <p>CARS A TRUCKS Sales A Service We Have A Good SelectlaB</p>
        <p>ROUSE DODOE, INC</p>
        <p>Dealer No. 4981 Qoldsbece Hwy. Kinston, N. C Tel* B7-4121</p>
        <p>PONTIAC</p>
        <p>distane of IJS feet, more or lets, to o stake In th* Nn* of &amp;gt; Lef 9| running thence Saothwaatwardty m a atralght line along the dividing line between Lots 7 and 9 to a stake, a common corner of Lots 7,  and 9 In Block-'E running thence Northwestwardly along the dividing line between Lots 7 and 8, a distance of 117.7 feet to a stake In the Eastern property line of Franklin Street; running thence Northeastwardly along the Eastern property line of Franklin Street, a distance of 90 feet to a stake, the point of BEGINNING. This being the Identical property described In deed from James T. Keel et al to Henry C. Hagans and wife, Laura J. Hagans, dated February 2, 1954, and recorded in Book P-27, page 417, Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>Sublect to Restrictive Covenants appearing of record in Book E-27, page 179, Pitt County Registry; however, the amount of $5,500.00 appearing in the Restrictive Covenants herein referred to is amended to read $7,000.00 The successful bidder will be required to deposit with the undersigned Trustee Ten (10) percent of his bid on the date f sale.</p>
        <p>This 15th day of June, 1967.</p>
        <p>I. T. Valentine, Jr., Trustee 0. Box MM Nashville, North Carolina Telephone - 459-2181 June 27, July 5, 11, 18, 1967</p>
        <p>DIAL PL 2-6166</p>
        <p>To Plago Yeiir Dtily Ro-tMctor CloMifM A4. Insort for 7 Doyi* TRo Cabi</p>
        <p>Is Uu.</p>
        <p>, RATES</p>
        <p>I Uoe Minimpm f Diiy&amp;lt;&amp;gt;-S6e Per LOm Fsr Day 4 Dayi-^s Psr 14m Psr Day 7 Day--25c Per Un Per Day Castraet Ratss AvtUaUi CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>$1.50 Per Colttmn Incb Contract Rates Avallablt</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>\o new ads, kills or comcttons accepted after 12:00 p.ns. Um before pubUcatton, except %RSay and Monday edltkma ; oadar deadline Is 12 aaoa I'rkbiy and Monday deadltoc is Friday 4 p. m.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors must be reported tab-mediately, fha Dally Rofloctar can bet make aHowaaees far errors after let aa|</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Third In New Car Salea, New la Seventh Straight Year! Dbeever The Many Reaseas Why. CaU BiUy Browa, Didk Grtena* JhoMg Pace, Rabtrt TagweO, Or Jlmiay RebaMa.</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD INC.</p>
        <p>1205 DICKINSON ^ PL A7U1</p>
        <p>Cyclof For Solo</p>
        <p>BRIDGESTCmE IIS - 1966 model. SAW mllM, A real datll B. T, Rowo CbevTolat, 74$-tl41.</p>
        <p>3W SUPER HAWK ~ 1966. TOr sol# by owner. Very good eondi-Uon, low mlHoge. If hiteiMtid, eall 7S$-3M7 after  pm.</p>
        <p>MAIDS, NY TO $75 WK TOP JOBS, BEST HOMK</p>
        <p>la N.Y. City, New Jersey. Bring your friends. Fare sent, mah refs. Free gift. Miss Dixie Agency. 300 W. 40 St., N.Y.C. Dept. 10,</p>
        <p>MAIDS NEEDED NOW! LIVE-in Jobs In New York, New Jersey Masa.. Norfolk. One u $6.&amp;gt; wk., if you tre ready to leave now, call collect to Mrs. Anderson. Portemoutb. Va.. 399-4031 or write DOW to me at Anderson Employment Agency, 469 Oretm 8t Portamouth, Va. 1 wUl come for you.</p>
        <p>Mak-Famala Halp Wantad</p>
        <p>ESTABLISHED RAWLEIGH business Just beooms available. Dependable man wanted. No capital nooesaaiy. Write Rawle^b Dept. NCG-740-882, Richmond, Va.</p>
        <p>MAN OVER 21 YRS. OF AOE</p>
        <p>for counter sales In general etfgw. Also mlddleaged woman foi* gilll woric, experirace preferred. Meadows A Eaaon Grill A Gro-,cery. Cannons Cross Roads. ^mlles from Ayden. 746-9727.</p>
        <p>SHEETROCK HANGER AND finisher wanted. Prefer experience but not necessary if wfillng to learn. CaU 7564)063 after 6 vm</p>
        <p>SHOPPmO? LET US SERVICE your oar. SAH Green Stamps. Carr AUen Texaco, Evans St., 752-4838.</p>
        <p>Penn. Ave.</p>
        <p>RHODES</p>
        <p>Biaetrlui Cantraciar</p>
        <p>7S2-4S6S</p>
        <p>USED CRIB AND MATTRESS basinet, carriage, stroller and playpen. Call 756-1660.</p>
        <p>HOUSEHOLD GOODS</p>
        <p>BRACE YOURSELF POR A thrill the first time you use Blue Lustre to clean rugs. Renf electric shampooer $1. Mary Carters.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>Pin CAMPING CENTER, INC</p>
        <p>423 GREENVHXE BLVD. (UNITED RENT-ALL)</p>
        <p>REM^ODELlNOf CHECK Home Tmprovements in Cas tfied when you need expert help</p>
        <p>FHA A VA MORE AVAILABLE NOW</p>
        <p>HOME LOANS Mortgego Loen Dopartment</p>
        <p>WACHOVIA BANK</p>
        <p>AND TRUST CO, PLAZA g*tUl</p>
        <p>RENTAU</p>
        <p>SHORT OF VACATION CASH? See Oreat Southern Finance for easy-to-reimy vacation loan. Low monthly payments. 405 Evans.</p>
        <p>RIAL ISTATI</p>
        <p>RID YOURSELF OP RAGGED receptlfm! HAM Radlo-TV repairs your set to perform like new. For fast, low oo.t service, oaU 758-2436.</p>
        <p>SIDING</p>
        <p>Vhupl</p>
        <p>Aluminum  Asbesto#</p>
        <p>GOODSON</p>
        <p>ROOFING SERVICE</p>
        <p>75^2142</p>
        <p>IT COSTS YOU NOTHING FOR detaUs, estimates on air conditioning your home, business or one room. General Heating. Ino. shows you how to live In comfo.1 eoonomlcaUy. Dial 752-4787 today. Lumox A Chrysler Alrtemp dealer*-</p>
        <p>CAN YOU SESLL7 DO YOU NEED money? Are you wUUngf If so. we are In need of 3 people who can earn $40 per sale and if they want to assume the responrtbillty for hiring, they can earn $55. CaU 752-5211 after 6 pjn. or write P.O. Box 334.</p>
        <p>Male Halp WanfMl</p>
        <p>MONEY PROBLEMS AND CAPI-tal are easy to solve. Ill show you bow. Write to Personnel Manager. P. O. Box 738, GreenvUle, N.C.</p>
        <p>PORTER AND MECHANIC. Must have s&amp;lt;ne meehanlcal ability. WIU train. A$ply HlUcreat Lanea between  a.m. and 5 pjn.</p>
        <p>YAMAHA - YL-l, I9M. 100 ee. 2 cyl.. 2 cycle. 1,000 miles, auto-lube. $250. Call 7664610.</p>
        <p>Tfifffcf Nr SslA</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET - 1967, long wheel baae, 6 mlinder. Extra eleao, Only $im FAD Motora, m, PL 64409.</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL - 1966 plek</p>
        <p>up, 26.000 actual mUae, extra clean, |U3S. CaU FL 1-1179.</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL SCOUT - 1966, 21,000 miles. 4 wheel drive, top ooQditlon. 11666. CaU 781-1170.</p>
        <p>BOATS A IQUIPMINT</p>
        <p>IS* BOAT AND TRAILER FOR sala. Reduoad price $U0. OaU 756-2778 or</p>
        <p>IS lANDUIXY BOAT. 70 RF Mereury motor. Cm tltt traUer. Rumttag lights, oonv. top, eom-pletely emdi^. MOO. CaU MU-vin Fussell. 746-S9M.</p>
        <p>FINANCE ADJUSTER</p>
        <p>:</p>
        <p>If yea. ure m maMtam yeoug person wUBng te work hard fer an excepitoaal future wtth a growing company, it would be wise te investgate this optnfaig,</p>
        <p>QUALIFICATIONS: Axe tl-26, preferably stagle. Seme eoUege dMfrable. Must he bitelBgeat. personable and aggressive. AblUty to meet public required. Prior ex. perieace nnneeessary.</p>
        <p>CQMPENSAnONS: Good sUr-IMg eahury, inowased periodically. Maay fitege benefits. Ex-ceptloaal IXtnre with expanding eempaay,</p>
        <p>THE JOB; Varied and inter-eetiag. Frimarily outside contac-(iag fabUe. Fer am&amp;gt;ointment caU:</p>
        <p>M. D. MIXON Reeky Meaat. N.C.</p>
        <p>44$Hfrtf</p>
        <p>M. G. FIHMAN Goldebera. N.C. 716-1104</p>
        <p>INSTANT COPY SERVICE</p>
        <p>Copying Whllt You WaR</p>
        <p>STEVE VAN EVERY A ASSO.</p>
        <p>115 West Fourth Street 75^5135  7524U0</p>
        <p>POR lALI</p>
        <p>Hoveahoid Fumlahlnit</p>
        <p>ITS INEXPENSIVE TO CLEAN rugs and upholstery with Blue Lustre. Rent electric ehampooer $1. Waters Carpet Center.</p>
        <p>FOR THE FINEST IN CARPET . . . Watera Carpet Center, your only exclusive McAawk Carpet center In Pitt County. Wlntervina N.C.</p>
        <p>EXFEKXENdS) TRACTOR ME-ebanic. Must be sober and depend</p>
        <p>able. Apply b) person at M.O. Blount A Sons. Bethel or phone for volntment 625-4351.</p>
        <p>Work Winfad</p>
        <p>LADY and OENTUEman de-fire positions olfioe cleaning and floor waxing. Phone 752-6780.</p>
        <p>iXPERT IMVICF</p>
        <p>DOGS B fITi</p>
        <p>BEAGLE PUFPlEf. REOXITER-ed and dewoimed. ExeaUent lor hunting or pets. CaU 786-87M or</p>
        <p>756-2524.</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD. SILVER</p>
        <p>and black. Female. Phone 753 6789.</p>
        <p>COLLIE PUPPIES, PUREBRED and dewormed. Telephone 752-9216.</p>
        <p>FVLlrBLOODBD GERMAN Shepherd puppies, 9 weeks old, dewormed. CaU 7534242. Farm. viUe.</p>
        <p>wmmm cuaners</p>
        <p>Wait Eml Shepphig Center **auBly FlrsP*</p>
        <p>^ Free MoMipreoflng</p>
        <p>it Free sterage Mfmrn Oeaatiig it 6&amp;gt;Heir Bhirl Service</p>
        <p>YOU BOSS THE WEATHER with York air oondlti&amp;lt;ming. Ask about eur budget plan by dlaUng Coastal Rafiigeratkm. 756-2104.</p>
        <p>PUBLIC SICRITARIAL</p>
        <p>services</p>
        <p>205 BOYD AVE. 752-2019</p>
        <p>OEAUNO IN 8ERV1CE89 ClaiBlfled Ads get you new biif-</p>
        <p>WANTED:  2 MINUTURE</p>
        <p>French  pcKxile males tod 2 Pekingnese miles for breeding purposes. Also have fmr sale pp. kingneae ind Freneh Feediif.</p>
        <p>:all 746^7l.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>40 DELUXE DETROIT JEWEL porelaln gas range with electric timer, clock, etc. Mahogany spinet desk, gossip bench, steel shelving, large flush door work table 6 8 by 30.'ExceUent condition. Come see and make offer. 108 N. Holly St. 752-5091.</p>
        <p>MIscwllaneous For Salo</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS IN</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>CALL OX SIX</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>Lbf Yavr Preparty Wlfti U</p>
        <p>PL 1^1. Nigtit XL 34481</p>
        <p>CAMPING TRAILERS SAIL BOATS SALES A RENTALS</p>
        <p>WEEKLY RENTAIJ $38 UP</p>
        <p>Phone 75^^862</p>
        <p>LOST A FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST: MALE BEAGLE. BLACK and white. 8 mos. old. No collar. Phone 752-5996.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HGMIS</p>
        <p>Mobil# Homes For Ron!</p>
        <p>2 BE. AIR. COND. MOBILE home. $65 mo. Meadowbrook TraUer Pk. PL 8-1108.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM TRAILER FOR rent. CaU 752-5896 or 752-5362.</p>
        <p>10 AND 12 WIDE TWO BED? room, air oooditloned trailers on 264 By-pas. Phone PL6-3515.</p>
        <p>2*3 BEDROOM MOBILE homes. Good location. Also lot spaces for rent. FL ^3286.</p>
        <p>UVE AT PINEVIEW COURT Just five minutes from downtown, Port Terminal Rd turn lefl Cliffs Oyster bar. 264 East  OreenvlUe. Large shaded lots patio, pity arsa,  tables.</p>
        <p>10 and 12* wldes for root, T86-3644.</p>
        <p>Housos For Solo</p>
        <p>FOR SALE IN ELMHURST ON Longwood Dr. Attractive S BR white frame house with garage on nice comer lot with big shade trees. Distance from schools: elementary, 3!4 blocks:  high</p>
        <p>school, 4 blocks; proposed Junior high, 4H blocks. House ooets $17,500 with good financing available. See Smith Ins. * Realty Co. 752-2754.</p>
        <p>3 BR TRAILER ON PAMLICO River. Waterfront lot. Phone PL</p>
        <p>fi-1901.</p>
        <p>SEE GRIER RENTALAGCY. for rental units, commercial and residential plus real estate Ust-Ings. Dial 752-5700 today!</p>
        <p>WE RENT MOST EVERHTING FOR YOUR DAn.Y NEEDS</p>
        <p>HOUSBHOLD</p>
        <p>EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p> TV Sets</p>
        <p> Rug Shampooert</p>
        <p> Rollaway Bedi</p>
        <p> Adding Macbiaeg</p>
        <p> Baby Cribs</p>
        <p>UNITED RENT All OPEN 8 AM  rPM 423 GreenvUle Blvd. ^  7i$-38lt</p>
        <p>RINTAIS</p>
        <p>Heuaaa For R#nt ;</p>
        <p>7 BDE'3 BATHS I%RN. rooming house to coUege-approvcd housemother. 7 blocks fnn campus. CaU 756-3515.</p>
        <p>j5l</p>
        <p>Retort For Ront</p>
        <p>8 BR APTS., ATLANTIC BEACH. Ocean iron'age. near Sportsmans Pier. Call 746-6442.</p>
        <p>1 BLOCK ,mOM OCEAN. AT-</p>
        <p>lantic Beach. $75 weekly. Sam Pollard Ph mbing Co.. 752-3661, nights 758-3S41.</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACK C0TTAGT3 near PavUUon. Call Van D. Ratcn collect 527-3110, Kinston, N.C.</p>
        <p>CAMPING TRAILER. SELF CON-tained. Sleeps 6. By week or weekends. Parked at Triple 8, AUantie Beach. CaU 768-4554 af.</p>
        <p>ter 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Apertmoiita For Rout</p>
        <p>NICE COLORED DUPLEX, cloee In downtown. FuU bath, hot water, etc. Cidl 763-5771.</p>
        <p>ATTRACmVE BRICK VENEER</p>
        <p>home in College Court. 7 room hwne with 3 bdrms., double lot. $24,000. Contact Jimmy Lee, H. A. White St Sons, PL 8-2149. nights PL 6-1374.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER: NEW 4 bdrm. air condtltloned house oo woodeu lot In Stratford. Phone 756-0741 or 788-2458.</p>
        <p>1701 B 3RD ST 4 BR, LR. DR. 2 baths, screened porches, garage. FHA financing available. 752-3760,</p>
        <p>BY BUILDER; 1809 6ULGRAVE Road. 3 bedrofnns, living room, kitchen, family room with fire-plfu:e. 2 baths, carport and storage. $600 down and assume FHA commitment. CaU 752-3182 day. 752-3240 nighta.</p>
        <p>2 RM. DOWNSTAIRS FRN. apt. Private bath and. troat and back entrances. Convenient to business section. Prefer married couple without children. 413 West 4th St.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED APT. FOB RENT. See at 1306 Dickinson Ave. or can PL 8-1598.</p>
        <p>THE CARRIAGE HOUSE</p>
        <p>t bedrooms  Klngtberry Homes Town Hoxse. IH batta. bvllt-in Hotpotat KUcImim. oentral air condition, fnliy carpeted. 10 x 1$ concrete patio wHh redwood fence, swimming pool. Dial 7I$-3459 or see resident manager. New Bern Higbwav.</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA. 1 BR FURN. APT.</p>
        <p>Air cond., carpeting, patio, laundry rm.. vacuuming. Couple or</p>
        <p>adults. PL 2-8378,</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR FOR RENT See our new 10* wide, 2 bedreom mobile hfunea for $3.2Ki. $2$l uown and $54 per month. AZALEA MOBILE HOMES Phono 7M 4174 3012 East lOth Streel</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 3 BDRMS., BRICK. Built-in kitchen, large famUy room with 'fireplace and screened In back pereh., 2 baths. OaU 786-2517.</p>
        <p>RIVERFRONT APTS. ON* I RM. completely furnished apt. CaU</p>
        <p>758-2773 or 752-5807.</p>
        <p>2 COTTAGES - ATLANTIC Beacli, $75 veekly. Pungo River, $35 weekly. Jackson's Uphqlsiery, OreenvlUe. Day 7S6-S276. nlgbl 758-1505.</p>
        <p>R##ma For R'</p>
        <p>2 ROOMS FOR RENT WITH OR without alrconditlonlng. 112 East 9th St.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONED ROOMS FOR rent for woriclng men. Available Immediately. ChiU PL 2-543u.</p>
        <p>MEN STUDENTS: IF YOU NEED a room for faU quarter. caU PL 6-351S.</p>
        <p>KHOOLS-INSTRUCTIONS</p>
        <p>REGISTER FOR 9 MO. 8EC-retarial course and night classes starting Sept. Greenville School of Commerce, 752-3177.</p>
        <p>GUITAR LESSONS . . . WISH you could play worlds most popular Instrument? Master Degree Xoatruotor. 25 yra. guitar playing-teaching experience, Students* Guitar Purobaaing Comultant. PL 6428.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOnCK</p>
        <p>ITS TERRIFIC THE WAY WE-re selling Blue Laistre for dean-Ing rugs and upholstery. Rent electrie ahampooer $1. Belk Ty-lera.</p>
        <p>10 BY 60' MOBILE HOBE. COM pletely furnished. CtmvenienUy located. Ready for occupancy. CaU PL 8-4919 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>NOW AVAILABLE  ARM-trong floors on the time payment plan. Check with us now. White-burst Floors. 758-3189.</p>
        <p>15,000 H(IEMAKERS EACH week prove Abbitts Com Nhial best by the taste test. Available at your local grocers.</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE DIAL-A-MA-tic twin needle zig zag In beautiful modem cabinet Just like new. Buttonholes, dams, fancy stitches, etc. without attachments. Wanted someone in this area with good credit to finish payments $11.15 monthly or pay conmlete balance of $41.17. Can be seen and tried out locaUy. Write Nationals Credit Manager, Mr. Beane. Box 280, Asheboro, N. C.</p>
        <p>PREPARE FOR HOT WEATHER, select WesUnghouae room air con-ditimer to fit your requirementii. Smith Electric Co. 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>CHEAP TIRES ARENT SAFE . . . safe tires arent cheap! Get premium Mohawk from Pitt Tire Service today. 752-3645.</p>
        <p>UWN BOY MOWERS</p>
        <p>1 Year Warranty See Our Riders And Sava Lawnmower Repair</p>
        <p>R.F. McUwhon &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>*We Service What We SelK*</p>
        <p>N. Greene St.  FL  2-3281</p>
        <p>REPOSSESSED SPECIALS TOUCH AND SEW SINGER in cabinet. Like new. Some&amp;lt;Hie with good credit assume six ^.92 per nxxith paymmts. Also 23G ZAG SINGER CXJNSOLE sewing machine. Makes BUTTONHOLES, EM-BROS. ALL WITHOUT ATTACHMENTS. Five payments of $9.65. Can be tried out locaUy. Write District Office, P.O. Box 882, Dunn. N.C. 28334.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYESi and EMPLOYEES gUka are helped through daail-fled AGlI</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISMAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Cl#xn CoHien Rags FfWW Of iirttons</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>MnOYMINT</p>
        <p>Fxmelx H#lp WanlMl</p>
        <p>PERMANENT SBOIUBTAKY TO</p>
        <p>leara home loan buelnesa. Ou^ standing sklUs requliwd, Ibreept-ional opportunity. Mr. Bowen at 752-2489.</p>
        <p>EUTTRA MONEY COMBS YOUR way when yeu eeli thinga you dont need with Oaaeified Ada ItMal FL M168 today.</p>
        <p>d</p>
        <p>ONE HOUSE TRAILER FOR rent. Teleptume 752-4993.</p>
        <p>Adebll# Homxs Fpr Sal#</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM 1963 HORIZON Mobile home to. good condition. Cell 75^S382.</p>
        <p>COMINO OR GOINO YOU CANT teU the difference; the new Parkway mobile home has bay windows (HI each end. See it at Cirele M Homes. Ino. Ebt lOth Street. GreenvUle, N.C.</p>
        <p>MONEY TO LOAN</p>
        <p>AHENTION World War II VETERANS . . . </p>
        <p>If you are eligible for X VA bome loan, your eligibility will expira July 25, 1967. It is not too bite to use this opportnnity. Wa eaa also arrange faians for Korean A Cold War Veterans. Saa ar can</p>
        <p>DAVID EVANS, JR.</p>
        <p>752-2106</p>
        <p>Garrie-Evaxe Lumber</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DlirUY</p>
        <p>HARDWARE - ROOFING STORM WINDOWS A DOORS  AWNINOI</p>
        <p>C L LUPTON Ca num</p>
        <p>2605 CHIROKII</p>
        <p>New Horae Just Completed</p>
        <p>IH Bathe* 8 Bedroams; Carport. Large Lot. Financing Can Easily Be Arranged. NO DOWN PAYMENT IN MANY CASES.</p>
        <p>Sea</p>
        <p>DavfO Evans, Jr.</p>
        <p>|\ 752.2101</p>
        <p>Cbirris-Evana Lumber</p>
        <p>PARKVIEW MANOR</p>
        <p>1 and 9 badroom fnmlsl^ apis. Feataraei carpat, Mr caxdMlaning, walk*ia doaats* hmndry raoms, swimming pool. CMl M.E. SM&amp;gt; toa or C.L. Thlgpea, 752*6122.</p>
        <p>FUNDI AVAIUBLI</p>
        <p>for first and secoxd norigag# loans 01 commercial, faidustria^ tneoiao yroduclag  $25,-</p>
        <p>900 to $10.009,000. Resklantia] (FHA-VA-Coxveattonal). Alto fl-nanclng rm accounts raeetvable. tnvoatory, worii la prooasi. ttmo depoeHa. ete.</p>
        <p>P. i. CAMPBBJ.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box m. Saafard. NXL Pboaa 7714518</p>
        <p>REDWOOD APT8. 802 BAiT 3RD St. Complataly fum. 1 bdzm apt. CU day 7524137. night 758-2386.</p>
        <p>VILLAGB GREEN APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>900 HEATH 712-5100</p>
        <p>LAKEWOOD PINES  101 LAKE-wood Dr. 3 BR, 3 bathe, double gantge, central air. Reduced to sell. BUI WilUame Beal Eetate, 752-2615.</p>
        <p>NFURN. APT; LIVING ROOM, &amp;gt; dining room. 2 bdrm., klteben, ! bath. Near College. CaU deye 752-</p>
        <p>2114 or after 5 p. m. 752-2940.</p>
        <p>WANTB</p>
        <p>Wentori T# Buy</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY LOT NEAR ECU emied for duplex apartments. Write Floyd A. Roberson. Bt. 2. Box 85. Halifax, N.C.</p>
        <p>Wenfod T# Ront</p>
        <p>NEW ECU PROFESSOR AND wife want wfftimlsbed house or large duplex to rent beginning Aug. WUl be in OreenvlUe July 17 I looking. Reply to W. A. McAUis-ter, Cbemlstiy Dept., VanderbUt U., NaebvUle. Tena., 87203.</p>
        <p>FOB SALE BY OWNER: 3 BR. utiUty room with carport, ww carpet, fenced-in yard, drapes and blinds furnished. Pay equity and assume 5%% loan. CaU 756-2245 after 5 pjn. Mcm.-Fri. or aU day Saturday and Sunday.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE ON N. LIBRARY ST. AttraMive 3 BR house with smaU down payment. House costs 212,-000, FHA loan commitment $11,-600, and monthly payments of $91.7$ including taxes and insurance. Call Smith loauraneo A Realty. 752-2764.</p>
        <p>5 BOOM FURNISHED HOUSE 2 blocks from business. $8,900. CaU 718-2773.</p>
        <p>OOLLVCTORS OP ALL SORTS Of things add to their bobUae by dally reading MiaceUaneeuy** Id (AS Classified Section.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITION</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>Add cooling to yon&amp;lt;- exieliag warm air system. Be comfortable this summer, l^ompt enrice, terms available.</p>
        <p>POLLARD^S</p>
        <p>Hnmbiag. Htg. A Air CendMioniag Otw 809 E. nird SI.</p>
        <p>PhMM PL ^72S2 er PL 2402</p>
        <p>BUSINESS PROPERTY FOR RENT</p>
        <p>^ MODERN BUILDING 34' X 100'</p>
        <p>G Private Parking Area # Located At One Of The Busiest Intersections In Gr#enville</p>
        <p>ADDRESS INQUIRES TO:</p>
        <p>P.O. sox 3036 GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>GBEENSPRINGS APARTMKNI*</p>
        <p>Twe bedreom Tawa Honaa apai$&amp;gt; mente. FumUed nd frm nisluM. Ftatareat carpet, air earn ditoning and walfc-la riraets. Call M. E. Suttox ar C. L. Thlgyex.</p>
        <p>752-6121.</p>
        <p>Housof For Ront</p>
        <p>2 BR. UVING ROOM. KITCHEN and washroom. (Hrden area. CaU PL 6-0882 or PL 6-1159.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT: SMALL OOMPACT 2 bdrm. houae near collage. If interested. caU 752-422$ after</p>
        <p>5:30 pm.</p>
        <p>CIASIIFIID DI5PUY</p>
        <p>SURVEYOR</p>
        <p>TEXAS GULF SULPHUR CO.</p>
        <p>Hit An Immedieto Vacancy For A Licensed Surveyor.</p>
        <p>Selectod Applicanta Will Be ReaponsibI# For Land Sur-voyort To Determino And Defino Land ioundariaa, Topographic Surveye, And Engineering Surveys Including Lay-out Of Lines, Grades And Detailed Dimension Would lorve At Guide Linos or Construction Crow. N. C. Surveyor CorHRcoto Roguirod-</p>
        <p>This Poaltion Offers Rxcollont Storting lalgry And Lib-oral Benefits.  ^</p>
        <p>Send Complete Resume Te:</p>
        <p>Industrial Relation! Supgrintgndent TEXAI GULF SULPHUR CO,</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 41, AURORA, N.C.</p>
        <p> AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>11 NIW APTS.</p>
        <p>For Rent</p>
        <p>TO COLLEGE STUDSNTB</p>
        <p>REASONABLE</p>
        <p>RENT</p>
        <p>FOR INFORBIATION CAU.</p>
        <p>752-2403</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPUY</p>
        <p>STRATFORD</p>
        <p>ARMS</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>tmi. CherlaaM.</p>
        <p>1 end 2 bedroom apert-ments frem $109*81. On-chidof heat, hot watie md cooking.)</p>
        <p>G Swimming Poil G Central Air Conditioning</p>
        <p># Wall 10 wail oipot</p>
        <p> PuHy oqulpped Hofimint Kltdiona</p>
        <p>G Diehwaalior topHofial)</p>
        <p>G Pumifhed Apattmonia AvatlaMo</p>
        <p>Call 752-5721</p>
        <p>H IMB*P-lb</p>
        <p>RoaMeef Aenaaea</p>
        <p>Apaitmont AA</p>
        <p>Daily Rofloctor Clesalllod Ada odd oxira money to your budget regularly by bringing you buyers for the worthwhile things your family doesn't need anymore. It*s the eeay way to get extra ceah ii| e hurryi</p>
        <p>Make  list of your ^Hablet** and cHal PL 2-6166 today to start your ad on its way to Cash Buyeie.</p>
        <p>RAPID RESULTS</p>
        <p>That*s what Mr. J. L. Brown of Greenville thinks M Classified Advertising. He sold all his hems below oa the tint day!</p>
        <p>14 800TCRAPT BOAT, 25  .  Anrw  MAHOGAmr</p>
        <p>$180. CaU 756-  796-XXXX.</p>
        <p>-f?r- '  "  '  '  i. .....</p>
        <p>,  *  ;  X   a-</p>
        <pb facs="00088472_0010" />
        <p>.A</p>
        <p>KMTIi* Daily Raflacfer, Oraanvilla, N. C.-^TiMtday, July 11, 1967</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NQDA)| At noon the Dow Jones indus-Sbrth Carolina e^ naarkets h-ial average was up 3.TO at stronger. Supplies generally 879.22.</p>
        <p>ad^uate demand fair to good. Prices paid producers and handlers for consumer grade eggs in</p>
        <p>Auto stocks were apparently dampened by the start of negotiations with the United Auto</p>
        <p>Cntzc Enjoys How To Succeed Comedy</p>
        <p>Student Engineer Training With CP&amp;amp;L Company ^</p>
        <p>BALEIGH-Charles U Worth-,</p>
        <p>ington of m Meade St., Grten-. (EDITORS NOTE: Miss Wol- He has selected an able, com-iing the insinuating jealousy of Thnrsdav ville, a rising junior at North,ter, arts reporter on the Wins- petent company, some of them Mordred in Camelot, a role jnhr </p>
        <p>Carolina State University in .ton-Salem Journal &amp;amp; Sentinel, pros of long-standing, some new-be has played.  ^</p>
        <p>Second Half Of Summer School At ECU To Begin</p>
        <p>East Carolina University begins the second half (tf its 1967 summer session this week with registration Wednesday, July 12|</p>
        <p>mechanical engineering, is gain-was guest critic for the opening ing first-hand experience in the performance of How to Suc-</p>
        <p>cartons delivered nearby out-i Workers Union, but General Mo-lets.  </p>
        <p>Grade A large whites: 36 to 40 mostly to 40, medium, w ites: 26 to 31 mostly 29 to 31, sm-ll, whites: 20 to 24 mostly 22 to 24.</p>
        <p>^RAIFIGH (AP)~Hog market mostly steady, with instances of 25 cents lower, tops 22.25-22.75 Rocky Mount; 21.50-22.50 Kin-ston, New Bern, Benson, Mount Cftjye, Newton Grove, Albertson, Lmnberton; 21.50-22.50 Hickory. 22.25 Greensboro, Selma; 22.00 Salisbury, Statesville; 21.75 Siler City, Denton.</p>
        <p>AS to Johnnie Mffler as Hedy, .tudents for the second rtx-week</p>
        <p>Officials expect about 3,300</p>
        <p>ly Tryii^ at the East Carolina University Summer Theatre on</p>
        <p>electric power industry as a summer employe of Carolina Power and Light Company.</p>
        <p>J. S. Newbold, CP&amp;amp;L director tors held steady while Ford,|of personnel, said Worthington Chrysler and American Motors is uue of 70 young college and yielded fractions.  j  university  students  hired by the 'ditorium.)</p>
        <p>The Associated Press average utility company to relieve regu-:  By  BEVERLY WOLTER</p>
        <p>of 60 stocks at nocm was up 1.4 lar employees for summer va-| The pleasure of their comat 330.5 with industrials up 1.5,cations and as a possible pre- pany, to paraphrase the title Cf rails up 1.4 and utilities up .2.Iliminary step toward full-time a popular play is what this American Telephone opened employment after graduation, viewer has come to expect from</p>
        <p>iy-fledged, and some still in  ___</p>
        <p>school but giving every promise it is fair to say ttiarwhen'sh  .  .</p>
        <p>ceed m Business Without Real- of joining the professlonaLwas wi stage, she took the au-  exanunations  Tuea-</p>
        <p>runks.  (fiences  attention.  Hedy is a</p>
        <p>Snedens contribution is a se- secretary, who has caught Big-Monday night, July 10. The play.ries of sets that are a visual  * runs through Saturday, July 15, pleasure, aside from tie fact</p>
        <p>gleys eye. Never mind that she</p>
        <p>day ended the first tom whidi enrolled some 4,300.</p>
        <p>The second term todudes sev-</p>
        <p>nightly at 8:15 in McGinnis An- that they ara workable.  SwetaS*hI</p>
        <p>He has d(me them as geomet-ig great wiggle below. -  luies,  pius  me  annual  ommner</p>
        <p>Music Caam the Sdiobl of Mik sic is coniettig lor soma 8St hi^ school musicians.</p>
        <p>Another second term isaturt is the majmity d the fois*th season of the ECU Summer Theatre.</p>
        <p>Final exams for the summat are scheduled Thursday, Aug. 17. Then classes recess n n t fl Se^ 5 when East Cvolhia be-gins the 1967-*68 sdiod year, itt first as a univenrity, with an expected corofiment d 9,500 to 10,000.</p>
        <p>ric designs in the manner of Mondrian paintings, for example. The device is effective, visually and technically.</p>
        <p>Also, the distinctive squares</p>
        <p>This is enough for Biggley, and it was enough for spectators, too.</p>
        <p>She also can act and has a</p>
        <p> --------^  I  viewer nas come 10 expect irom  engp  of  nn^aanoa.</p>
        <p>late on a block of 40 COO shares, I The student workers c o m e the East Carolina University;  rectangles uwd as the ba-i</p>
        <p>up y* at 51%, and slightly wid-Trom North and South Carolina Summer Theatre.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  The stock market continued to rally earty this afternoon as industrial blue chipa and rails showed ftrength.</p>
        <p>Advances topped declines by Ciutto* than a 3-2 ratio, trimming the earlier proportion o: 2-L At the session continuted, however, the average improvec s high-quality, pivotal stodcs did tetter.</p>
        <p>Community</p>
        <p>Announcements</p>
        <p>*91 Matrons C3ub wiH meet at the fa(Hne d Mrs. Hattie !on-igan, S14 Vance St, WediMsday at  p. m.</p>
        <p>The Empire Social Chib will have a speda! meetiqg Wed-nesdi^ at 3 p. m. at the home d Mia Ludllt Brown, 1114' Ward fit</p>
        <p>19 Greenfidd Terrace Oom-ffiimity Chib wfi] meet at the home d Bfr. and kfrs. Joe C. Daniels, 203 Woodside Road, Wednesday at 8 p. m.</p>
        <p>Revival services are being conducted this week at Cedar Grove Holiness Chiffch, Choco-winlty.</p>
        <p>*&amp;gt;. * ' "</p>
        <p>:;3rhe J. A. Nimmo Oidr of  -i more Hill Baptist Cbardi V  have its regular rehearsal V. Jnesday at 8 p. m. at the c-.urch.</p>
        <p>ened its recovery later on. It was the first real sign of some kind of equilibrium buying and selling since AT&amp;amp;T began to slide last week under the impact of the rate-lowering decision of the FCC.</p>
        <p>Sperry Rand, which dived 3% points Monday on news of a $6.5-million writeoff of earnings fOT the June quarter, also recovered a fraction.</p>
        <p>Averages were strengthened further by gains of about 2 points in such key stodcs as Du Pont, Uidted Air Lines, Johns-Manville and General Electric.</p>
        <p>6-point jump by CJhicago &amp;amp; North Western spurred the rail average toward another new high.</p>
        <p>It was another active day on the American Stock Exchange. The ti(^er tape ran as much as 16 minutes late and the trend was generally higher despite IH-oflt-taking in some recent gainers.</p>
        <p>and Virginia. TTiey are perform-; Their production this week of ing duties in a wide range of How to Succeed in Business between;  engi-  ; Without Really Trying did not</p>
        <p>pressure neering to sales, from a^icul-! disappoint.</p>
        <p>tural development to district ad-: Before going any further, let ministration.</p>
        <p>sic patterns can be interpreted as saying something about the business world that is under discussion in tl plot The only thing venturesome in the business world presented to</p>
        <p>Special Tag For Rescue Squad</p>
        <p>I US note that the school has lost  H?  Pie^epont</p>
        <p>I no time in grabbing onto its uni-  P|nch.  He raises  himself from</p>
        <p>versity status. The souvenir  chairman  of</p>
        <p>grams, printed earlier for the   by followng a inanual</p>
        <p>summer theatre, say East Ca^-  ^^.''^ich  one of  the first con-</p>
        <p>rolina College. The free play-</p>
        <p>Supporting roles are well-cast. Among those who should be mentioned are: Robert Neu as Twimble; Curry Freer as Bratt; Catherine Murphy as Miss Jones; and Eugene Smitii as Wom-per.</p>
        <p>The last two mentioned deserve a special Une, the one as a staid secretary who breaks over the edge of decorum to</p>
        <p>. bill, printed later, says Univer-AYDENThe purchase of a gity</p>
        <p>distinctive towm tag for ^e by; The designation of the school</p>
        <p>members of the Ayden ^scue ^ nothing to do with the qual-</p>
        <p>^uad was authorized by the.i^y jjg theatrical productions.</p>
        <p>Ayden Board of Commissioners, ) For the past three years I</p>
        <p>meeting here Monday night, jjgyg coming to the thea-, ,  ,, ,  ,  .  .</p>
        <p>The only other business car-|tre as a guest drama critic. Thei^"^ be made on tiie singmg</p>
        <p>ditions for success in business,suppwt Finch, and the other as is choosing the right company one who makes a diairman oi one big enough so that no-the board seem the real, domi-body knows what anybody else is doing.</p>
        <p>From there on, its a matter of one-upmanship.</p>
        <p>As this is a musical, comment</p>
        <p>NDEA InstHute At ECU Enrolls Thirty Librarians</p>
        <p>SclKXd librarians from three states began Monday a six-week Study of how their Ubraries might render better so*vice.</p>
        <p>Chosen from sdiools in the two Carolinas and Virginia, ttie 30 Ubrarians attended first sessions of a Ubrai^ science institute at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>The institute, conducted by the universitys Ubrary science department, is supported by National Defense Educati(m Act funds.</p>
        <p>ried out by the board was to i year before that program was establish the per-front-foot cost; started, I was on hand as a of a pavmg project on Jo5mer guest music critic and while on</p>
        <p>Street at $1.42.</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Israel, Egypt Accept UN Observers</p>
        <p>JERUSALEM (AP) - Israel agreed today to the posting of UJ4. observers along the Suez</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>Mr.</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>the grounds, looked in on the theatre. Each time I have been delighted with what I have seen.</p>
        <p>It is all good, but not spectacular.</p>
        <p>The instrumentalists, directed by Gene Namour, play wefl, and have the positive virtue, often rare in musicals, of not</p>
        <p>Twice here I have seen shows  out the singers,</p>
        <p>that I had not seen before, be-!  comes to acting  their</p>
        <p>cause no one had mounted them  player-singers</p>
        <p>score</p>
        <p>I in the area, and I had not seen of 603A fSiurch St. an-j^hem elsewhere. How to Suc-</p>
        <p>nounce the birth and death of an infant son, Dewey Ray, Jr. today at Pitt Memorial Hospital. Graveside services are being</p>
        <p>ceed was one of these, which</p>
        <p>high.</p>
        <p>Bailey Davis as Finch has a pleasant voice and handles it</p>
        <p>must put me among the f e w  gains  as  much  bv  his</p>
        <p>theatre-minded or movie-minded who have not. But I did not want</p>
        <p>HiU</p>
        <p>The Rev. W. J. Bert of Greenville will be the guest spertmr at Mt. Calvary WB Church Sunday at 11 a. m Musk wiH be rend^ed by a mixed choral group of the church. 11 group will be accompanied by Mrs. M. Dddlqy.</p>
        <p>The Senior Chofr of Mt Cal-nay FWB Churdi will have re-heancd Friday ni^ at the bvdi at 8 ododL</p>
        <p>11 Ugfat of Ufe BiUe Class WiH mart at the home of James Bvrif, 7U McDoweH St. to-Bight at 8 oclock.</p>
        <p>H Ooi^ Choros of Sehia CSmpel will have rehearsal to-Bi^t at 8 ododr at the dNirch.</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>BOM TONIGHT</p>
        <p>lamDMMHi )i \MUUia8.</p>
        <p>ISSSS.</p>
        <p>MiMUlM fWM MMIM</p>
        <p>.ARMNflHMG. mPPMD</p>
        <p>cnwrnmrio</p>
        <p>WPORU^'</p>
        <p>,  ^jgjNUw</p>
        <p>held m Pmewood Memorial Park! to see it in New York, other at-^ay at 4:30 by the Rev. Frank tractions seeming more ai^eal-</p>
        <p>ing, and the movie I deliberately avoided because I wanted to see what ECC  sorry, ECU  was gomg to do with it I am glad I waited.</p>
        <p>demonstrations of Soviet support! ing at his home, 300 East Twelth The show is bright, lively and or the Arab cause.  Street, following a heart attack j sparkling, thanks to the book by</p>
        <p>An Israeli Forei^ Ministry j suffered a few minutes earlier. Abe Burrows, Jack Weinstock</p>
        <p>, Mr. Ek-nest M. (Mike) HUl, Cajial cease-fire line amid new 140, died at 5:45 Tuesday morn-</p>
        <p>announcement said its agreement was conchtional on the establishment of observation points on both sides of the cease-fire line on a mutual basis.</p>
        <p>Egypt informed U.N. Secre-tary-Gieneral U Thant Monday that it accepted the Security Ckiuncil resoluticm calling for! the stationing of U.N. military observers along the canal in an dfort to prevent truce viola-</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are in-1 and Willie Gilbert, and the mu-complete.  jsic  and  lyrices  by  Frank  Loes-</p>
        <p>Mr. Hill, a native of Lenoir County, attended the Kinston</p>
        <p>Mad Mockingbird Is At It Again</p>
        <p>MIAMI BEACH, Fla. (AP) -The mad mockingbird of Atiami Beach was at it again Monday, but sorehead residrats had to put away their air rifles and slingshots.</p>
        <p>Almost all of Florida is a bird sanctuary and the menac-ingmockingbird is protected.</p>
        <p>ibe latert attack was just as aaky as those of the past two ireeks: a swoop out of the sun and a nasty little knock on the back of a womans head.</p>
        <p>Kenneth McGovern of tiie hmeme society jiBt suggested that everyboity keep  cool and covered head.</p>
        <p>Ha said ^e attacks were most Hkely a seasonal thing, the birds are nesting now.</p>
        <p>He said feat to remove the bird, permissiMi would have to be received from the Fish and Wildlife Service, U.S. Department of fee Riterior.</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVEJN</p>
        <p>THiATRI</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>tnairo/wtwiiMRWHw</p>
        <p>NiMarncTaoiaM</p>
        <p>I nortrt</p>
        <p>tj^Mamimis HungYbu In The Closet Andl'mFeeinSoSed</p>
        <p>nCHAROQUiNEwKiw  ^</p>
        <p>tMMI</p>
        <p>Strategy Failed, Did It Herself</p>
        <p>HOT SPRINGS, Ark. (AP) -Whi she had a flat tire (m her way to fee Miss Arkansas Pageant Monday, Sharron Ann Ev-| ans, 20, of North Little Rock,! remembered her fathers ad-1 vice; Raise the hood of the car and someone will stop.  !</p>
        <p>Miss Evans, representing i Ouachita Baptist University ini the pageant, ran into one hitch.</p>
        <p>T couldnt find fee hood latch, she said.</p>
        <p>Miss Evans had to change the tire herself.</p>
        <p>Schools and served in the United States Navy during World War II. He moved from Dayton, Ohio, to Greenville six years years ago and was a salesman.</p>
        <p>Surviving ^are his wife, Mrs. Betty Spitler Hill; a son, Gary Hill of the home; his mother, Mrs. Coy Hill of Kinston; and three brofeers: Ross and Rudolph Hill of Kinston, and Chief Petty Officer Fred W. HiU of the United States Navy, now stationed at San Diego, California.</p>
        <p>The show could be otherwise in presentation.</p>
        <p>The fact that here it is not is due to the efforts of Edgar R. Loessin as director, John Sne-den as set designer and many other capable people,</p>
        <p>Loessin has set a lively pace.</p>
        <p>famous for good food</p>
        <p>CAROLINA</p>
        <p>GRILL</p>
        <p>neat turn of expression and phrase.</p>
        <p>Hansford Rowe as Biggley, Finch boss, is a gifted player. His singing falls in the patter line, but as an actor, he ii a distinctive personality.</p>
        <p>Jane Barrett as Rosemary, who is in love with Finch, has a lovely if light voice. But she is vivacious and attractive. Her friend, Smitty, as played by Lynda Moyer, is another role to be noted for its expressiveness.</p>
        <p>John Moran as Frump, Big-gleys incompetent n^hew, is required to be a oeep, and does</p>
        <p>nating character he often is, although he is supposed to be retired.  Emily  S.  Boyce,  university  fa</p>
        <p>Tbe dialogue and the plot are culty member and director of delightfully witty, and satirical, the institute, says courses,in; the and, put together as they are institute deal with innovations in with an able cast, add up to a materials, administration and</p>
        <p>automation of the school library.</p>
        <p>University</p>
        <p>fun-filled evening.</p>
        <p>Charge Driver In Monday Mishal</p>
        <p>shab</p>
        <p>iby, A7, of iilCT/ Pai'k</p>
        <p>Thomas Earl Hemby,</p>
        <p>West End Circle TrailCTj was chiu-ged with failii^ to keep a propo* lookout while backmg following an invertigation into a 2:10 p.m. mishap yesterday on West Street, 500 feet East of the Memorial Ifrive intersection.</p>
        <p>PoUce said the Hemby auto colUded wife a car driven by Laura Johnson Little, Route 1, Winterville.</p>
        <p>Damage to the car driven by Mrs. Utile was placed at $200 while damage to the Hemby auto was set at $30.</p>
        <p>library</p>
        <p>science</p>
        <p>DEMOTED</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP)  Alexander Shelepin, former head of the Soviet secret police and long a contender for top power, was</p>
        <p>named today to the powerless it beautifully. He kept suggest- post of Soviet trade union boss.</p>
        <p>SPEAKER BAN HEARING MONTGOMVERY, Ala. (AP)</p>
        <p> A speaker ban bill,^ which would bar known communists from speaking on campuses of state-supported colleges and universities, was schedided for public hearing before fee Alabama Senates Education Committee today.</p>
        <p>Oudrman Geoe D. Enier ia coKiirector of the institute.</p>
        <p>School librarians iriio pre-re^ istered for the institute include: MARTIN COUNTY^ Roberson-ville  Mrs. C. N. carry, li bruian at G. R. Whitfield School k Grimesland.</p>
        <p>PITT COUNTY Greenville-Mrs. Leigii W. Le(fi&amp;gt;etter, 1618 Longwood Drive, librtfian at Chicod High Sclwd; and Mrs. C. N. Cbany, Robersonville, 11-briffian at G. R. Wlii^eld High School in Grimedand.</p>
        <p>kamilimm</p>
        <p>Featana M: 18:40 - 2:41 4:50 - 1:55 and 1:00 pm</p>
        <p>Famous Dan River Carpet SPECIAL</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>100% Nylon Carpot  Centlnous Filamont</p>
        <p>*3</p>
        <p>95</p>
        <p>PiR YARD</p>
        <p>MURRAY'S APPLIANCE</p>
        <p>m, ia-tsi4</p>
        <p>S18 S. EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>All5Rrwc\ been sayi 21 Oldsmobes bdcjw</p>
        <p>HELD OVER FOR THE SECOND BIG WEEK!</p>
        <p>THE CROWDS ARE STILL COMING. THEY WONT LET THIS ONE GOI "HURRY SUNDOWN" WILL HAVE TO WAIT.</p>
        <p>iHlay began wliennie</p>
        <p>dirty dozen were done!</p>
        <p>pesarQ</p>
        <p>AKENNEIH</p>
        <p>nm</p>
        <p>fffioucnoN</p>
        <p>BMd on th axating t&amp;gt;ot&amp;gt;Mller.</p>
        <p>CARRY OUT OR EAT IN</p>
        <p>mtDER BY</p>
        <p>FOm F</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>POONE TSC-fWl</p>
        <p>ereawvliit NIAB I</p>
        <p>aivd.OM Sy^aM} WTT PLAXA .  .</p>
        <p>EwnT</p>
        <p>MIIHI BMW BHM M CttRIEIB</p>
        <p>EoaeE liM RMM aoaoT mir  cunt norot</p>
        <p>um m w m vmu ma mm</p>
        <p>NNNWYJOHNSOI^UJKASHEIIBb;.  "</p>
        <p>METROCOLOR</p>
        <p>WEST</p>
        <p>Children 50c Adulta 1.00 Showa: 1;25 4:00 -6:35 -0:011</p>
        <p>But check our prices now!</p>
        <p>There never was a better time to buy a beautifully aigineered Rocket-Actkio CXdl Olds Dealers annual Year End Sale! Selections great Savings are even greater. IbfOOMliv MbRl^4^ElC 88, Cutlass, Vista-Cruiser, 4-4-2, F-85arc all priced for big savings. So see your ddi DtMhr lodiy. Hc*s saying YJE.S. to cvciy reasonable offi^. Drive in quick, take your pick- Drive otet io  VI Olds! GoOhismobikatyowBearest^tiaiisirtetioni^^</p>
        <p>X-</p>
        <p>Stafford Oldsmobile Co., Inc. Hooker Rd. &amp;amp; Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>.  Phone  756-3115    N.C.  Dealer  License  No.  801  ~  Greenville.  N. C!.</p>
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