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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>PwHy dMdy wd warm with pTMpect of showers today .</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>89th Year</p>
        <p>NO. 105</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. SUNDAY MORNING, MAY 3, 1970  56  PAGES    4  SECTIONS</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Phgc 3 - Pitt Vote ThUt Pige  - Broom Side Bcghm Phge IS - EC WhM BaaeteU</p>
        <p>Pric 15 Cnft</p>
        <p>Voters Said 'No' Soturday</p>
        <p>Community College Plan Rejected</p>
        <p>By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Pitt County voters Saturday rejected Pitt Technical fa-stitutes bid to become a community college.</p>
        <p>Unofficially, by a margin of 4562 to 3700, the much - debated issue was settled, ending Pitt Techs hopes, at least for the present, of becoming Pitt Community College and Technical Insitute.</p>
        <p>VYith voters turning out in relatively light numbers in most of the countys 26 precincts, the issue was decided soon after</p>
        <p>tabulations came in hrom some of the larger precincts.</p>
        <p>In rejecting the community college bid, voters said no to the choice of giving the Board of Cbunty Cbmmissioners the authority to appropriate finds, either from non  tax - revenues or from a special annual levy of taxes, or from both revenue sources, for the financial support of the proposed comminity college.</p>
        <p>Instead, Pitt voters, after being assured by administrators of Pitt Tech that approval of community college status would not</p>
        <p>lesson the emphstis on technical and vocational courses, chose to have the Institute remain technically oriented.</p>
        <p>Ik. William Fiford, president of PTl, noted Satirday night</p>
        <p>that ... the people have qx&amp;gt;ken and now we will just have to try</p>
        <p>and make Pitt Technical Institute the finest technical institution ffit)und.</p>
        <p>Expressing disappiwtment at the light voter timout. Dr. Flford added, Itn afraid sne of the people just viewed the matter as a tax issue.</p>
        <p>. . . hi a Democratic society as we have when the pe&amp;lt;^le speak, we have to accept their decision and go on from there. When it comes down to a vote, you never can tell how an issue will turn out, Dr. Fulford added.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina General Assembly had passed legislation during its term allowing for Pitt Technical Institute to add a two - year college - transfer program to its existing services, ^proval of the change to two - year college transfer level rested in the hands of Pitt voters in the Saturday primary.</p>
        <p>Light Turnout In Off-Year ElectionI ..  .  Rouse Takes Bundy Unseats Reid In House Contest Judge's Race</p>
        <p>JULIAN R. ALLSBROOK</p>
        <p>Farmville educator Sam Bundy pulled House Seat from beneath incumbent Dave Reid, at least insofar as the Democratic race is concerned.</p>
        <p>The Farmville vote called in late, was his right arm. His margin was 728: Farmville gave him 1,096 votes.</p>
        <p>Republican Frank Steinbeck, a Greenville merchant, will challenge Bundy for the seat in November.</p>
        <p>Incumbent Horton Rountree was returned to the House defeating first time entrant in a political race, Charlie Tyer. Rountree has no opposition in the general election.</p>
        <p>Vance Perkinss challenger for the Greenville seat on the</p>
        <p>VERNON E. WHITE</p>
        <p>County Board of Commissioners Bob Ramey, took over a third of the countywide vote, but Perkins was given another term with 4,400 votes.</p>
        <p>The voters decided that E. W. Harvey should continue in his job as county coroner. His first -time - runner opponent. John Gray, polled something over two - fifths of the vote.</p>
        <p>In races in which votes from other counties ugured, Pitt went with the winners. Walter Jones, Robert Rouse, F&amp;gt;ed Hedrick, Julian Allsbrook, and Vernon White, were the men chosen in their particular races by the majority of the Pitt Countians who voted. Jones, Rouse, and White are from Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Unofficial Complete Returns</p>
        <p>Superior Court .wdg</p>
        <p>COUNTIES Carta ret Craven</p>
        <p>Pitt TOTAL</p>
        <p>ICO</p>
        <p>ROUSE</p>
        <p>WHEDBEE</p>
        <p>1386</p>
        <p>1048</p>
        <p>3517</p>
        <p>2669</p>
        <p>789</p>
        <p>976</p>
        <p>4014</p>
        <p>3943</p>
        <p>9706</p>
        <p>8636</p>
        <p>E. W. HARVEY, JR.</p>
        <p>I. B. Koonce, chairman of the County Board of Elections, called this off - year election turnout a light vote. An unofficial count of the number of ballots cast was 8,262.</p>
        <p>Good Samaritan Beaten, Robbed</p>
        <p>GRAHAM, N.C. (AP) - A Greensboro man who tried to be a good Samaritan along 1-85 Saturday was rewarded with a broken nose, bruises and having all his money taken.</p>
        <p>James E. Corlett told police he was driving on 1-85 in the early morning darkness when he stopped to assist two men who appeared to be having car trouble.</p>
        <p>Corlett said the two men beat him, took $35 from him and then roared off into the night.</p>
        <p>Corlett, a 29-year-old Bennett College teacher, managed to drive to the home of a friend in Burlington who took him to a hospital.</p>
        <p>Ttie Alamance County Sheriffs Department said the 5 a.m. robbery occurred about nine miles south of Graham.</p>
        <p>J. VANCE PERKINS</p>
        <p>H. HORTON ROUNTREE</p>
        <p>I White Leads |</p>
        <p>With only five precincts from Warren County not reported in, it seemed the fairly close race Miiich developed between incumbent Vernon E. White and first  time bidder |larvin Blount, Jr. of Gfreoiville for State Senate Seat No. 2, wOtdd io to White.</p>
        <p>At 11:00 pjn. last night, unofficial returns from the four counties comprising the Fourth District of the North Carolina Senate  Pitt, Edgecombe, Halifax and Warren, showed a total of 9,713 votes cast for White and 8,923 for Blount, giving White a lead of 790 votes of those rqx)rted.</p>
        <p>Fbr Seat No. 1, victory for incumbent State Senator Julian Allsbrook was never in doubt. Unofficial tallies fit)m 80of the 85 four county precincts resulted in 14,248 votes for Allsbrook and 4,352 for Jerry Paul, 27 year old Greenville candidate making his first bid for the senate.</p>
        <p>A breakdown of votes for candidates by individual counties shows the following figures.</p>
        <p>Unofficial Returns</p>
        <p>Three In High</p>
        <p>Seat 1</p>
        <p>Seat 2</p>
        <p>Allsbrook</p>
        <p>Paul</p>
        <p>Blount</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Pitt 4794</p>
        <p>1724</p>
        <p>3492</p>
        <p>4047</p>
        <p>Edgecombe 3095</p>
        <p>1018</p>
        <p>2469</p>
        <p>1656</p>
        <p>Halifax 5540</p>
        <p>1342</p>
        <p>2666</p>
        <p>3282</p>
        <p>Warren 819</p>
        <p>268</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>728</p>
        <p>Totals 14248</p>
        <p>4352</p>
        <p>8923</p>
        <p>9713</p>
        <p>Warren County shows 9 counties complete</p>
        <p>of 14 precincts.</p>
        <p>Other</p>
        <p>SAM D. BUNDY</p>
        <p>Behind</p>
        <p>Nixon</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Gov. Bob Scott has told President Nixon he strongly supports the FVesidents decision to send American troops into Cambodia.</p>
        <p>Scott noted that the President has information on military matters and foreign affairs not available to citizens gierally on which to base a decision.</p>
        <p>The governor said in a elegram to the President:</p>
        <p>Though I may differ with you on domestic policy, I siqiport you as President of our United States of America in your decision to said troops into Cambodia.</p>
        <p>I pray the decision is correct. I urge all citizens to unite b^ind you.</p>
        <p>Robert D. Rouse. Farmville attorney and former district solicitor, defeated Charles H. Whedbee for the Democratic nomination for Third Judicial District Superior Court Judge Saturday, based on unofficial returns.</p>
        <p>Voting tabulations showed Rouse with 9.706 votes to Whedbees 8.636 in the four county district.</p>
        <p>His nomination as Democratic candidate is tantamont to election since he has no Republican opposition in the November general election</p>
        <p>Rouse led in Carteret. Craven and Pitt Counties while Whedbee led in Pamlico. The unofficial totals were complete for all the counties.</p>
        <p>The two men were seeking nomination for the judgeship now held by William J. Bundy, who announced that he would not seek re - election.</p>
        <p>Rouse served as solicitor in Superior Court for eight years beginning in 1955. He did not</p>
        <p>ROBERT D. ROUSE</p>
        <p>seek re - election in 1963 but returned to law practice in Farmville, where he is senior partner in the law firm of Lewis and Rouse.</p>
        <p>He attended Farmville schools. UNC and UNC law school. He is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert D. Rouse of Farmville and he is married to the former Letha Holloman of Farmville. They have one son Robert D. Rouse III.</p>
        <p>Ballots Are Impounded</p>
        <p>BRYSON CITY, N. C. (UPI) -Superior Ctourt Judge Thad Bryson impounded the primary ballots in Swain Cfounty when the polls closed Saturday and held them for counting at the Swain County Courthouse.</p>
        <p>Bryscm took the 9^on at (he request of Sheriff candidate James FVanklin, Who ii opposing incumbent Vincent Gasaway for the Democratic nomination.</p>
        <p>Gasaway was accused of winning the election four years ago through ballot stuffing and other illegal procedures. A recount of the ballots gave him a 66-vote victory over Republican Fred Winchester.</p>
        <p>According to Brysons order, the ballots from all seven precincts were to be gathered by the Board of Elections at 6:30pjn., sealed, and placed in the grand jury room of the Swain County Gourthouse. Bryson said the proper officials would make the county before his court, bik he did not say v^en.</p>
        <p>Students Instantly Die Speed Wreck Saturday</p>
        <p>By STUART SAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - You might as well call the funeral home. And have them come prepared to pick up three bodies, Pitt County Coroner E. W. Harvey told the Highway Patrolman.</p>
        <p>Harvey had just checked three East Carolina University students, lying dead in a field and in a patch of woods. They had become "the victims of a</p>
        <p>high-speed wreck about a half-hour before.</p>
        <p>Dead were Kenneth Reide Hayes. 20, of Route 1, Coates, the owner and apparently the driver of the car; Michael Benton Cannady. 25. of Route 1, Benson; and Teddy Woodrow Matthews, 25. of Bunnlevel.</p>
        <p>Trooper F. L. Owens, the investigating officer, as well as Trooper George Russ and Sgt. L. M, Lemmond were at the crash scene. All agreed it was bad.</p>
        <p>One of the worst I have seen, PtI. Owens said.</p>
        <p>The officers said the Hayes vehicle was traveling along U.S. 264A toward Farmville, about a half-mile North of the Langs Cross Roads intersection Saturday when the 2 a.m. wreck occured.</p>
        <p>The car ran onto the right shoulder of the road for 216 feet, then traveled 308 feet, crossing the highway to the left shoulder where it traveled another 24 feet</p>
        <p>hREE died . . . When this car vertvve&amp;lt;l ,3H miles South of Farm-</p>
        <p>before stricking a mail box. Hayes auto, termed a high performance car by Trooper Owens, traveled another 76 more feet crossing a ditch and into a field before becoming airborne for 24 feet. It then hit a farm tractor and trailer parked in the field, moving the tractor some 20 feet, and traveled on another 148 feet overturning two times, before coming to rest on its wheels.</p>
        <p>Sgt. Lemmond theorized the vehicle was upside down when it hit the tractOT. That impact, he said, pealed the top on the 1969 two-door hard-top off of the car.</p>
        <p>The three occupants were catapulted from the wreckage as it overturned, and all had been slammed against trees. (Canady was found 24 feet further on at the edge (rf the fidd, while Hayes was found 44 feet from the wreckage just over a fence at the edge of the woods. Matthews, the officers said, had been hurled 50 feet from the wreckage and some 25 feet into the woods.</p>
        <p>Harvey, who ruled the deaths accidental, said the university students apparently died instantly. Their local address was Route 3, Grenville.</p>
        <p>Officers set daifiage to the Hayes car, which was completely demolished, at $3,000 While damage to the farm</p>
        <p>vm*nniT  MJA t ^  w  Hie  farm</p>
        <p>Road. Sairday.</p>
        <p>Horatio Algor Awards For Ten</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Ten Americans vdio achieved outstanding success in their chosen fields will receive Horatio Alger Awards ho% next Wednesday, it was announced Saturday.</p>
        <p>The name of the 24th annuQi award stems fr(n the rags to riches success stories of the fictional Horatio Alger novels.</p>
        <p>Bronze plaques will be presented by Dr. Norman Vincent Peale.</p>
        <p>Among those to receive the awards is:</p>
        <p>Luther H. Hodges of Raleigh, N.C., former governor of North Carolina, Secretary of Oom-merce under President John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson, and board ^airman of Research Triangle Foundation.</p>
        <p>Hijocked Plane Returns To U. S.</p>
        <p>MIAMI (UPI)^A hijacked British West Indies Airlines jetliner returned to the Uiited States Saturday after a Mxmr layover in Havana, Cuba where two hijackers tried to force the flight to Africa*</p>
        <p>The Boeing 727, with 60 passengers and a crew of eight, was commandeered Friday on a flight from Kingrtui, Jamaica to Miami. The plane took off from Havanas Jose MsrU airport it 5:02 pm. EDT and landed in isiMwi itTnhiiitss istsr</p>
        <p>First Ballot For Three Entitles Them To Seats</p>
        <p>The first vote each Pitt County Board of Education candidate received yesterday entitled him to serve since each of the thre was unopposed and this was a non-partisan election separate from the Democratic Primary held simultaneously.</p>
        <p>Each is to represent his school district, but the election was county - wide the Farmville area seat, Mark Owens Jr. fix* the Fountain - Falkland - Belvoir seat, and William Bill McLawhom for the Ayden area seat.</p>
        <p>Owens is the only incumbent. He lives in Fountain, but has a law office in Farmville. He has three children.</p>
        <p>Dr. Patterson, who replaces Robert Pierce in representing the Farmville district, lives in Farmville where he is a general practicioner. He has four school - aged children. BUI McLawhom of Route 1, Ayden, who replaces T. G. Worthington in representing the Ayden district, is a farmer. He has three chUdren, two school - aged.</p>
        <p>Other Board of Education members, whose terms have not expired, include A.D. McLawhom of Winterville; Roland Brinson (rf Simpson, J. B. Congleton Jr. of Stokes, Dr. W. A. Moody oi Bethel; Sam Nelson of Griftonand lchard Worsley of GreenvUle.</p>
        <p>BILL MCLAWHORN</p>
        <p>DR. THOMAS PA1TER80N</p>
        <p>Today's Reading</p>
        <p>V-E DAY ANNIVERSARY is just around the comer and a correspondent who attended * the surrender - signing re - tells events ^ an historic day. Page 13.</p>
        <p>WILUAM HEIRENS - an almost - forgotten torso - slayer who shocked Americans a score of years ago has acquired an education in prison. Page 14.</p>
        <p>SIDEWALK ART SHOW, which coincides with 10th anniversgry of the Gr^aville Art Center at its present site, is caught by the camera of Reflector staffer Jerry Raynor on Page 19.</p>
        <p>CONDEMN DECISION MOSCOW (UPI)-&amp;gt; Hie Soviet Union Saturday described Prasidmt Nixons decision to scDd U.S. troops into Cambodia at an act of unditguiaed aggreask. a ^</p>
        <p>Abb/.'.------</p>
        <p>Art.............</p>
        <p>Bridge........</p>
        <p>Building........</p>
        <p>Business........</p>
        <p>..12  Classified.........25-26-27</p>
        <p>.. 21  Crossword.  .....;28</p>
        <p>..28  Editorials  ...4</p>
        <p>..22  Entertainment........20</p>
        <p>.24  Opinion ..........5</p>
        <p> i ^ C -Jr</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0002" />
        <p>2Tli Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.^unday, May 3,1S76</p>
        <p>Festival's Final Program Today</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>PerMjif</p>
        <p>Mr. Zeno Perkins of Route 1, Rokes, died at his home this morning. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>PRACTICING... members of the brass section of the East Carolina Symphonic Orchestra practice their scores for the fifth and final of ECUs Spring Music</p>
        <p>The final of East Cardina Universitys five programs of the Spring Music Festival, 1970 will provide a grand finale to a time of music climaxing the April flower season and ushering in the first warm days of May.</p>
        <p>Two of ECUs well - known student musicians will appear with the East Carolina Symphony Orchestra under conductor Robert Hasue in the concert being held this afternoon at 3:15 p.m. at Wright Auditorium.</p>
        <p>Like the earlier Symphony Orchestra concert in February, this one will be open to the public with admission free of charge.</p>
        <p>Jacqueline Willis Rausch, soprano, will open today's concert when she sings He Has Come: Do Not Utter A Word, from Samuel Barbers opera "Vanessa. This opera, only 12 years old, was premiered at the Metropolitan Opera House in 1958.</p>
        <p>Jac McCrackens solo work in</p>
        <p>Grlmesland School Menu</p>
        <p>Lunchroom menus for the coming week at Grimesland Elementary School have been announced as follow:</p>
        <p>Monday  spaghetti with meat sauce, tossed salad, pear halves, hush puppies, milk;</p>
        <p>Wednesday - chicken with rice, green peas, carrot strips, cheese biscuit, orange juice, milk;</p>
        <p>Thursday  fish stickes blackeyed peas, buttered potatoes, apple rings, hush puppies, milk;</p>
        <p>Friday  peanut butter and jelly sandwich, vegetable soup and crackers, orange juice, cookie, milk.</p>
        <p>this concert is Concerto for the Left Hand by Maurice Ravel. This was written for the pianist Wittgenstein who lost his right hand during World War I. with the music weight toward the left side of the keyboard.</p>
        <p>The orchestra will be heard in two symphonic selections. Igor Stravinsky's Divertimento (Suite Symphonique)in four movements  Sinfonia; Danses Suises; Scherzo; and Pas de Deux. The second selection is Capriccio Espagnal by the Russian composer Rimsky -Korsakov, a work divided into five movements  Alborada; Variazioni; Alborada; Scena e canto gitano; and Fandango asturiano. Rimsky - Korsakov is noted for his brilliantly textured music of national flavors  Russian. Spanish or Oriental.</p>
        <p>Chicod School Lunch Menu</p>
        <p>Lunchroom menus for the coming week at Chicod High School have been announced as follow:</p>
        <p>Monday  beef vegetable soup, peanut butter and jelly sandwich, strawberry shortcake;</p>
        <p>Tuesday  beans and franks, creamed potatoes, stewed corn, apple sauce, fruit Jello, rolls;</p>
        <p>Wednesday  tenderized ham, steamed cabbage, potato salad, sliced beets, corn bread;</p>
        <p>Festival 1970 concerts, to be held at 3:15 p.in. today at Wright Auditorium.</p>
        <p>Greenville Jaycees Honor 2 Members</p>
        <p>Daniels</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mrs. Retha I^iels of Simpson, who died Thursday morning in a Brooklyn, N. Y. hospital, will be conducted tomorrow at 2 p jn. at St. Bethel Baptist Church, Edwards.</p>
        <p>Rev. Wilson will officiate and burial will follow in the Edwards Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Surviving her are three sons, David Daniels of Simpson and Oscar and Carlton Daniels, both Brooklyn, six daughters, Mrs. [elen Hart. Mrs. Barnita Fayton, Miss Shirley Daniels, Miss Retha Daniels, Miss Virginia Daniels, and Miss Evelyn Daniels, all of Brooklyn; one sister. Mrs. Mel vina Stilley of Edwards; one brother, Willie M. McKinley of Newport News, Va.; 27 grandchildren; and 19 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home here. The family will meet friends at the funeral home Sunday from 8 to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>JAYCEE AWARD WINNERS ... Bob Turner (left) and Don Brady (right) pose with their plaques.</p>
        <p>Readiness Test On Wednesday</p>
        <p>Thursday  fish sticks, cole slaw, french fries, pickles, corn bread, cookie;</p>
        <p>Friday  Sloppy Joe, green peas and carrots, steamed rice, orange juice.</p>
        <p>Report Two-Car Collision Friday</p>
        <p>Bob Turner and Don Brady were recognized by the Greenville Jaycees 'Ihursday night as Spoke of the Year and Spark Plug of the Year respectively.</p>
        <p>Turner, who is head of the mechanical drafting department at Pitt Technical Institute, was the recipient of the Spoke award given annually to the first -year Jaycee who, through his participation in Jaycee activities, has amassed the best record of involvement of any new member.</p>
        <p>Brady, who is associated with W. E. Dansey Construction Cbmpany, was recognized as the</p>
        <p>Jaycee Spark Plug, award this year are Vernon Clarawan, iiay (^rbett, Jerry Cox, Jerry Oeech, Skip Browder, CTiarles Hargett, Ralph Martin, Rick Miller, the late Jim Payne, Mike Peters, Tony Smith, Warren Stroud, and Wallace West.</p>
        <p>Other ^ark Plug award recipients include Allen Adams, Mike Bell, award recipients include Allen Adams, Mike Bell, John Bell, Charles Carter, Bill Dansey, Dave Gordon, Bill Hudson, Sam Keel, Doug Mewborn, Jim Lesley, Gene Prescott,Tom Reese, Hal Smith, O.J. Shiith, Bruce Thompson, Dick Ullom, and Jack Wall.</p>
        <p>Briley</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mr. Joe Wilkes Briley, who died Tuesday in N. C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill, will be conducted Monday at 4 p.m. at St. Marys Baptist Church, with the Rev. J. E. James officiating.</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>He was the son of the late Joe and Melissa Briley.</p>
        <p>His survivors include two sons, Joseph Choper of New Yofk Qty and Floyd Briley of Hampton, Va.; two brothers. Will of Greenville and Paul of the U.S. Army in Vietnam; four sisters, Mrs. Rosa Wiggins, Mrs. Josephine Perkins, Mrs. Zenora Newton, and Mrs. Melissa Daniels, all of Greenville: and seven grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will meet friends at Phillips Brothers Mortuary Sunday evening from 8 to 9 oclock.</p>
        <p>.\nderson Mrs. Effie Edwards Anderson. 70, widow of Issac Ervin Anderson, died in Craven (^unty Hospital in New Bern Friday night at 7 oclock. She had been in failing health for serveral years and critically ill for the past four weeks.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at three oclock Sunday afternoon at Juniper Chapel Free Will Baptist Church by the Rev. Sam Worthington</p>
        <p>and the Rev. Alfred Wetherington, Holiness Ministers of Vanceboro. Burial will be in the Church Cemetery. The body will be taken from the WUkerson Fmeral Home to the Church one hour prior to the time of service.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Anderson, a native of Pitt County, had spent most of her life in Oaven County near Vanceboro. Her husband died in 1949.</p>
        <p>Surviving are a daughter, Mrs. Ruby A. Moran of Stafford, Virginia; four sons: FVed L. and James D. Anderson of Emul, Luther E. (Pat) Anderson of Vanceboro, and Chrtis F. (Tink) Anderson of Greenville; 25 grandchildren; 19 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Moral Issue In Decisions</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO (AP)- North Carolina Gov. Bob Scott told Baptist youth Saturday that nearly every decision a public official makes is a moral issue " because it affects people.</p>
        <p>Scott said most people are not conscious of the moral aspects when we make a decision.</p>
        <p>But I think that if we at the decision-making level are Christians, and if we believe in the teachings and principles of Jesus Christ, then we act within the moral framew'ork of Christianity, whether we are conscious of it or not, he said.</p>
        <p>Scott spoke at the annual Baptist State Youth convention.</p>
        <p>He asked the young people, I wonder, does it surprise you to hear a leader in government profess his love for God?</p>
        <p>He said men who hold office dont preach about it and make a big thing of it. But we have no qualms about it, no shame about it, and we dont care who knows we feel that way.</p>
        <p>Scott said that even with people around all the time, the office of governor is lonely sometimes.</p>
        <p>Sometimes you get in a position where you cant share your concerns, your thoughts even with close personal, founds, or with members of your family because you know that only you, as governor, can make that decision. he stated.</p>
        <p>BYRNES ANNIVERSARY COLUMBIA, S.C. (AP) -James F. Byrnes, former South Carolina governor, U.S. secretary of state and Supreme 0)urt justice, observed his 91st birthday and 64th wedding anniversary Saturday.</p>
        <p>A two-car collision was reported at the corner of Tenth STOKES  A Readiness Test and Elm Streets here at five</p>
        <p>will be given at Stokes Elementary School, Wednesday, May 6 for all children who will be first graders next fall.</p>
        <p>The children may either be brought to school or ride the school bus.</p>
        <p>Regular first graders will not come to school Wednesday so that the teachers may administer the test.</p>
        <p>minutes after noon Friday.</p>
        <p>Drivers involved were Thomas Edward Tripp of 407 West Village Drive, Greenville, and John Henry Correy of 1300 West Third Street here.</p>
        <p>Damage was set at $130 to Tripps car and $25 to Correys. Correy was charged by police with failure to see safe movement.</p>
        <p>May Designated Mental Health Month</p>
        <p> ALL neD TO</p>
        <p>conTinuouR</p>
        <p>Community Notes</p>
        <p>A board meeting will be held at Haddocks C^pel Qiurch Monday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>Noahs Ark FWB Church.</p>
        <p>The Lambs Social dub will meet at the hwne of Mrs. Ann Mason, 1916-A S. Pitt St., this afternoon at five oclock.</p>
        <p>Youth services will be held " this morning at 11 a.m. at Bells Chapel Holiness Church. The Rev. Ernest T. Forbes, pastor, will preach.</p>
        <p>The Rev. West Siields Jr. will preach tonight at 7:30 in observance of the Usher Board No. 2s annual program at Phillipi Disciple Church.</p>
        <p>The following services have been announced for Wynn Chapel FWB Church: tonight, 7:30, the Rev. J. E. James of St. Mary; Tuesday,the Rev. Bryant of Bethel Chapel; Wednesday, the Rev. Il^n of Cedar Cktive; Ihirsday, the Rev. J. Taylor of Selvia Chapel; Sunday, 2 pin., die Rev. E. McNair of ^ring ^Garden.</p>
        <p>The Rock Spring Senior Choir dub will meet at the home of Mrs. Roberta Payton, Sixth Street, today at five oclock.</p>
        <p>The Rock ^ing Senior Ushe dub will meet with Jame Tatum, Third Street, today at five oclock.</p>
        <p>A weeks service will be held at English Chapel FWB Church Monday through FYiday night. The Rev. J. N. GUbert will preach Mmday, Tuesday and Thursday nights. The Rev. W. J. Best will preach Wednesday night and the Rev. F. C. Mitchell will c(Miduct services Friday night.  A</p>
        <p>MENTAL HEALTH MONTH ... newstettera are prepared for mailing. The help of Mayor Fr, ik Wooten, Dave Reid, and Dr. Me Pou (left to right)</p>
        <p>May was designated as Mental the number of persons oc-H^lth Month and GreenviUe cupying hospital space in the ^idents were encouraged to nation today, the Mayor called support the work of the Pitt upon citizens to help speed their County Mental Health Mental Health Associations Association in a proclamatim research, service, and social Mgned today by Mayor Frank M. action program through their</p>
        <p>was enUst^ by Mrs. J. N. LeConte (far left).</p>
        <p>Legislative Metal Health Committee, and Dr. J.W. Pou, past president of the Pitt County</p>
        <p>Mental Health Association and treasurer of the State association.</p>
        <p>Wooten Jr.</p>
        <p>Noting that mental accounts for about 50 percent of</p>
        <p>cooperation and volunteer ef-illness forts.</p>
        <p>The Rev. J.H. Parker will preadi at Sycamore Chapel today at ll.Najn.and at Odar Qxive this afternoon at three dock.</p>
        <p>^Elder Dave Payton will conduct revival services Monday through FViday at the House of Prayer, Fleming Street.</p>
        <p>Present for the proclamation The hig^t point in Rhode Is- going were David E. Reid, 1970</p>
        <p>Mental Health Month Chairman</p>
        <p>and a member of the State</p>
        <p>land is Jerimoth Hill, at 812 feet.</p>
        <p>The foUowing services have boso aoBOimced for Nazarene tapio rWB Church, W. Eight StoiM; loitoy, dedteatory serta; May 4^ rivhral services mUartit by the Vice Btohop Oflea I UardDor of Balhmore,</p>
        <p>fht Caoviag cbetre will ,  laibt</p>
        <p>Gbew</p>
        <p>Mrs. Maggie Tyson is a patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room 141.</p>
        <p>Youth services wiD be held at Rouse Chapel Church today . The Rev. Joanna Garris will be the 11 am. speaker.</p>
        <p>The Rev. (arris will speak at St. Matthews FWB Church tonight at 7:30.</p>
        <p>The Eastern Travelers of Ctaaville will present a pai^at Rook Tahwaacle in ita iHb Itay it 7 p m.</p>
        <p> THANK YOU </p>
        <p>^  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>AW TROUBLE TO Jf VOTE FOR ME IN SATURDAY'S PRIMARY. 3^</p>
        <p>I shall do my best to deserve your </p>
        <p>^CONFIDENCE.  T</p>
        <p>^  CHARLES  H.WHEDBEE^</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SPECIALMEETINGOF MEMBERS OF FIRST FEDERAL</p>
        <p>SAVINGS AND LOAN ASSOCIATION OF GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>Notice is hereby given that the special meeting of members of the above-named Association will be held at the home office of the Association at 324 ^uth Evans Street, Greenville, North Carolina on the 14th day of May, 1970, at the hour of 3:45 p. m. of said day. The business to be taken up at said annual mpeting shafl be:</p>
        <p>1. Considerincf and voting upon changing Section 10 of its chapter.  .</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE BOARD OF DIRECTORS DATED AT GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>ON</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;   APRIL9,1970</p>
        <p>C B. Tuowtll Prttant</p>
        <p>CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>SUNDAY ONLY!</p>
        <p>Thrift Brand</p>
        <p>ICE MILK</p>
        <p>Sun., Mon., Tues. Specials</p>
        <p>$2.30 VALUE 10OZ. DECANTER</p>
        <p>MENNEN</p>
        <p>SKIN</p>
        <p>BRACER</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>Eckerd's A ^ 89</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>IS OZ. SIZE MAX FACTOR</p>
        <p>SPRAY AWAVE</p>
        <p>HAIR</p>
        <p>SPRAY</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>98c VALUE</p>
        <p>BOHLE OF 50</p>
        <p>EXCEDRIN</p>
        <p>P.M.</p>
        <p>(Night Time Pam ^Ittt)</p>
        <p>Eckerds</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>$1.00 VALUE 11 OZ. SIZE</p>
        <p>MANPOWER</p>
        <p>SHAVE</p>
        <p>CREAM</p>
        <p>(Reg. or Menthol)</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>S2.25 VALUE EUROPEAN NATURAL</p>
        <p>SHAMPOO IN</p>
        <p>HAIR</p>
        <p>COLOR</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>2 F.. 12^</p>
        <p>98c VALUE 102 COUNT</p>
        <p>CURAD OUCHLESS</p>
        <p>BAND-</p>
        <p>AID</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>$1.54 VALUE TWIN PAKOF 400</p>
        <p>J&amp;amp;J DOUBLE TIPPED</p>
        <p>COTTON SWASS</p>
        <p>oat</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>$1.19 VALUE 14 OZ. SIZE</p>
        <p>LISTERINE</p>
        <p>ANTISEPTIC</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>$1.90 VALUE GIANT SIZE</p>
        <p>SECRET ROLL-ON ANTIPERSPIRRNT</p>
        <p>DEODORANT</p>
        <p>Eckerd's</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>1.29</p>
        <p>Vitalis</p>
        <p>LIQUID HAIR GROOM</p>
        <p>GROOMS HAIR WITHOUT GREASE</p>
        <p>$1.2S VALUE 7 or SIZE</p>
        <p>W YOt</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>HEMORRHOIDS?</p>
        <p>liBiew pah, Hdihg and hrning...</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0003" />
        <p>Tli Dally Deflector^  N.  C</p>
        <p>yMayS,mN*</p>
        <p>Unolficiai Returns On Saturday's Votina</p>
        <p>LBJ Felt 'Undermined' By JFK Team</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (UPI) Former President Lyndon B. Johnson feels the holdover staff from the Kennedy administration undermined" his administration and bored from within to create problems for us.</p>
        <p>He also accused the holdovers of leaking slanted information to the news media when asked about his most painful moments in the White House.</p>
        <p>nie LBJ interview was the third in a series of interviews with Columbia Broadcasting Systems Walter Cronkite. The hour-long interview as shown on CBS Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Asked to amplify on his painful moments. Johnson said;</p>
        <p>"Well, the difference in viewpoints and the very fact that some of the people who served did not share either the desire or the hopes that I had for the country and for the government. and that</p>
        <p>they, in effect, undermined the administration and boredjrom within to create problems for us and leaked information that was slanted' and things of that nature.</p>
        <p>A good many of them resigned at certain periods and left the impression that the government was not inkeeping with their views and so forth."</p>
        <p>Johnson did not name anybody and rejected the idea that Robert F Kennedy had led a clique with a political objective within the administration. I dont believe that all of those who lett, Johnson said, left because someone directed or urged them to. I think they were grief-stricken."</p>
        <p>Johnson also revealed that he was concerned about the fatal trip to Dallas by John F. Kennedy at the time it was being planned and rejected reports Kennedy had planned to dump him as</p>
        <p>vice president in the upcoming 1964 election.</p>
        <p>His first thought when he learned that he was President, Johnson said, was that this is a terrifying thing that may have international consequences, that this might be an international conspiracy of some kind.</p>
        <p>Johnson said he was concerned about Kennedys safety in Dallas because so many of our friends were concerned. We got letters on it. TTiere were very ugly things being said... </p>
        <p>Some of Johnsons responses in the interview filmed last fall at the LBJ Ranch in Texas were deleted at Johnsonr request. He said national security was involvea Informed sources have said, however, that the deleted portions omit Johnsons opinion stated often in the privacy of the White House that he questions the single assassin theory of the Warren Commission which attributed the</p>
        <p>assassination solely to Lee Harvey Oswald.</p>
        <p>Johnson admitted in the interview that his relationship with President Kennedy vas not personally intimate.</p>
        <p>We were not like brothers, we were not constant companions. I dont recall that we ever had an element of bitterness or deep feeling enter into any of our discussions. We were friendly, cordial, but not personally intimate."</p>
        <p>He said he trusted Kennedy and believed he had positive assurances, despite talk of his being dumped, that he would be on the ticket with Kennedy in the 1964 election.</p>
        <p>Johnson said Kennedys last words to him were spoken in Fort Worth, Tex., after lie had enthused over the crowds he was drawing. He said Kennedy told him, You can be sure of one thing, were going to carry two states next yearMassachusetts and Texas.</p>
        <p>Wins In irnary Race</p>
        <p>HALldGll uVl ) Rep. Wal Carolmas largely rural 1st Di.s ter Jones, seeking a third full Jnet, easily turned back a term m eongre.,.s Iroin North lone Negro challenger in Salur</p>
        <p>day's iX'moeratie primary.</p>
        <p>Jones. r&amp;gt;(), headed toward a 1 majority over L C. Nixon. IV. the only black congressional Av;  candidate  in  the  state.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Laird Says Red Sanctuaries To Be Wiped Out</p>
        <p>U.S. 'Might' Resume Bombing North Vietnam</p>
        <p>By DARRELL GARWOOD</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (UPI) -Defense Secretary Melvin R. Laird said Saturday the United States might resume bombing North Vietnam if the Communists try to offset loss of their Cambodian supply line by renewing shipments of war material across the Demilitarized Zone.</p>
        <p>He also told a news conference that U.S. and South Vietnamese troops would destroy all five Communist sanctuaries along the supply line, the southern Ho Chi Minh Trail, not just the two that are now under ground attack. President Nixon had indicated in his Thursday night address</p>
        <p>to the nation that all would Ix* eliminated.</p>
        <p>Since the bombing halt in November, 1968,  by  tacit</p>
        <p>understanding the North Vietnamese have not moved extensive supplies across the Demilitarized Zone that separates the two Vietnams.</p>
        <p>.\sked .About Bombing Asked if the United States would resume the bombings if the Communists, with their Cambodian link severed, renewed their violations of the Demilitarized Zone. Laird replied.</p>
        <p>I would so recommend</p>
        <p>But Laird refused to elaborate. declining to say whether he meant limited or full-scale</p>
        <p>Copters Rescue 43 In Airliner Crash</p>
        <p>St. CROIX, Virgin Islands (UPI)A Dutch Antilles Airlines (ALM) DC9 jetliner with 63 persons aboard crashed into the Caribbean Sea east of St. Croix Saturday, touching off a major rescue operation by the U.S. Coast Guard.</p>
        <p>A Coast Guard spokesman said 43 persons had been rescued by helicopter within three hours after the plane slammed into the choppy sea. Twenty persons were missing, he said.</p>
        <p>Tliose rescued were flown to hospitals here and at the Coast</p>
        <p>Guard base at Rossevelt Roads, Puerto Rico. At least seven persons were reported injured, the spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Four helicopters were involved in the rescue operation, first dropping life rafts ard then swooping in to pick up survivors from the rafts.</p>
        <p>There were 57 passengers and six erewmembers reported to be aboard the plane.</p>
        <p>We have no reporton just what happened to the DC9, but its emergency call said it was low on fuel, said the Coast Guard spokesman.</p>
        <p>Iximbing.</p>
        <p>North Vietnam charged Saturday that .American planes bomlxd its territory Friday and Saturday, killing or wounding "many civilians, including 20 children.</p>
        <p>There was no immediate comment from U.S. officials on the Radio Hanoi broadcast monitored in Tokyo.</p>
        <p>Although Laird said only two of the facilities in Cambodia are under ground attack, he said some of the others had kt'en under aerial attack.</p>
        <p>.\o. 3 Facility American combat troops are engaged only at one of the five |X)intsthe Fishhook, which is the No. 3 facility if numbered from north to south.</p>
        <p>In other developments: Senate Democratic leader Mike Mansfield, shaken over President Nixons decision to send Americans to battle in Cambodia, and never so down in the dumps in my lifetime, vowed to vote against all future foreign aid bills. He said the aid program had been subverted around the world for military ends and was used in Indochina as a prelude to U.S. involvement.</p>
        <p>Sens, (^leorge McGovern, S-S.D., Mark Hatfield, R-Ore., Citarles Goodell, R-N.Y., and Harold E. Hughes, D-Iowa, announced they would force a Senate floor showdown on the war with an attempt to reduce military spending.</p>
        <p>The four senators also sharply criticized Lairds news conference statements. McGovern said they were a nightmare and incredible. Goodell said, the ultimate sanctuaries are in China and the Soviet Union. I wonder just how far we are going to go.</p>
        <p>A dozen senators, nine Democrats and three Republi-</p>
        <p>Reports Home Entered, Robbed</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>Dr. Christine Wilton of 612 Oak Street here reported a breaking and entering and larceny at her home some time between Sunday and Wednesday while she was out of town.</p>
        <p>The East Carolina University professor told police she returned home from Manteo Wednesday to find that a glass in a door that enters the house from the carport had been broken and that several items were missing.</p>
        <p>Believed stolen were a portable black and white television set, a console stereo record player, a $50 travelers check, and a stamp collection the owner deemed not valuable.</p>
        <p>SERVICE AWARD RALEIGH (AP) - The Meritorious Service Award for contributions to North Carolina State University was made to Roy H. Park, of Ithaca, N.Y., by the NCSU Alumni Assn &amp;amp;turday.</p>
        <p>cans, promised to subject the $73 billion military budget to a rigorous and detailed examination when the two bills come before the Senate, possibly later this month. They said particular attention would be given to the Antiballistic Missile System, multiple warhead rockets, a new aircraft carrier. Army supertank and an intercontinental missile fred from submarines.</p>
        <p>Drug Pushers Work In Prisons</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -The first director of drug abuse programs in the North Carolina Mental Health Department, Dr. Ben Britt, says that even though you put drug pushers in jail, they find all kinds of channels for getting drugs into prisons.</p>
        <p>Dr. Britt, a Raleigh psychiatrist and former medical director of the state Department of Prisons, said Friday that drug traffic in the prison system not only caters to addicts, but introduces drugs to prisoners who have not used them before.</p>
        <p>He offered no solution to the problem in a speech in Char-^ lotte.</p>
        <p>EMBASSY STONED</p>
        <p>HELSINKI, Finland (UPI) -A group of youths believed to be protesting U.S. involvement in Cambodia stoned the U.S. Embassy Saturday and broke 18 windows.</p>
        <p>The Americans for Democratic Action called fur a $10 billion cut in the furthcoming military budget and additional savings by taking Americans out of Vietnam. Late Friday night, the ADA said Nixons dispatch of U.S. soldiers into Cambodia was just cause for impeachment proceedings against him.</p>
        <p>Hedrick Wins Court Contest</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Ineumlxm! FVed Hedrick retained his seat on the North Carolina (Jourt of ispeis with a resounding victory over Superior Court Judge Harry C. Martin of Asheville in the Democratic Primary .Saturday.</p>
        <p>Returns from 1.258 of the states 2,224 precincts gave Hedrick 112,067 votes to 85,886 for Martin.</p>
        <p>Hedrick, 47, blind since the age of 13, automatically won election since there is no opixi-sition from any other party in the November General Election. He was appointed to the court last year by (Jov. Bob Scott.</p>
        <p>WALTFK B. .JONES</p>
        <p>Returns from 148 of the 242 precincts in the sprawling district in North Carolinas north-r-ast showed .Iones with 26,025 votes and Nixon with 3,707.</p>
        <p>The district is composed of the counties of Beaufort. Bertie, Camden, Chowan, Cravi'ii. Cur rituck. Dare, Cates, Hertford, Hyde, .Jones, I.enoir, .Martin, Pamheo, Pa.srpiotaiik. Penjui-mans, Put, Tyrrell and Wash ington</p>
        <p>It was the second straight ek'ction in which Nixon trii'd to wrest the Democratic noiiim.i tion from .Jones</p>
        <p>Is Appointed To Education Post</p>
        <p>CELEBRATE VE DAY LONDON (UPI) - Four hundred World War II re.sistance fighters met Saturday for a thanksgiving service at a Royal Air Force chapel to commemorate the impending 25th anniversary of victory in Europe. </p>
        <p>Koy .Marsh has resigned as Dirietor of Elementary i'lueation in (ireenville to enter piT' ate business, Wahl  Coates IMeimmtarv .School principal Charles Ross has been apjxiinted to till the post of director. These changes were revealed in today by Dr. Ch*et C. Cleetwood, superintendent oi the (Meenville City .School.s.</p>
        <p>Dr Cleetwood expressed rei'i'et on .Marsh's resignation, to Ik (fleciive at the end of the curri'iit scIkmiI year. He expressed appreciation for .Marsh's ye'ars c/f service iirihe field of education. Marsh has served for three years as Director of Ehunent.iry Education, Dr. Cleetwood pointed out that Mar.sh's service was during a period winch has seen the occupancy of two new elementary scho(,l buildings, the development of a unitary and nongraded elementary school program and the major reas.signment of staff and  students in  school</p>
        <p>desegregation.</p>
        <p>In announcing the ap-jxiintrnent of Ross to fill the</p>
        <p>director post. Dr. Cleetwood said that Ross had for five years tx'en firincipal at Wahl  Coates, and prior to that had served as principal of Third Street Elementary School and as a classroom teacher at Elmhurst Elementary School.</p>
        <p>Expressing satisfaction of Ross's acceptance of the director |K)sI. Dr. ('leetwood commented; he has proven himself a dedicated and higlilv competent specialist m elementary education 1U has great love for children and pride in their educational develop ment " Dr. Cleetwood added: "Ross has earned the professional and personal respect of his colleages and patrons.</p>
        <p>Dr, Cleetwood indicated no immediate plans for filling (lie vacancy which will be left at Wahl - Coates, but did note, This position will be filled in consultation and cooperation with officials of the .ScTiool of Education at East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Louis Williams Named Farmville 'Man Of Year'</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Louis Williams, secretary of the local Chamber of Commerce, was named Man of the Year by Farmville citizens Friday night.</p>
        <p>Cedric Davis, who introduced the recipient of this annual award at the Chamber of Commerce Awards Dinner, cited Williams distinguished service to the community and said promotion of Farmville is not Williams job, but his life.</p>
        <p>Bom in Battleboro in Nash County, Williams graduated from the local high school and then attended Oak Ridge</p>
        <p>Military Academy for one year. He continued his education in pre - medicine at Duke University and Tulane University in New Orleans, until his fathers illness demanded that he go home and operate his fathers business.</p>
        <p>He later worked for nine years as a supervisor for a grocery chain in Durham before going in 1943 to Farmville, where he worked with his brother in a grocery business until he took the position he now holds some 11 years ago.</p>
        <p>Besides being Chamber of</p>
        <p>Compierce secretary, Williams serves as sales supervisor of the towns Tobacco BoLrd of Trade.</p>
        <p>He and his wife, the former Daisy Quincy of Edgecombe County have three children, Louis Jr. of Richmond, Va., Mrs. Jimmy Nichols Greenville, and Bobby of Farmville, and three grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Davis said, The basis of this award is the general character of the man. Louis Williams always seeks to help his neighbor and to .prpmote hhis community. A steady, hard workW, he is the kind of person who.</p>
        <p>of force, gets necessary things done.</p>
        <p>Hes the kind of man who does little things that mean so much to people. For instance, for the past several years he has daily called an elderly Farmville who lives alone to inquire about his well being.</p>
        <p>During the 11 years he has held his present job, he has never taken a vacatioh. I daresay he has piarticipated in every community project that has been carried out here since he took the job.</p>
        <p>A charter member of the local Kiwanis Club, he recently received an award for 25 years perfect attendance. Having served the club as president, he has worked faithfully in all its projects.</p>
        <p>He has been treasurer of Emmanuel Episcopal Church here for 16 years and has served on the vestry of that church and as a Sunday School teacher.</p>
        <p>Speaker for the evening was William H. Neal of Neal and Associates consulting firm in without any great flare or show</p>
        <p>Winston Salem. A polished after - dinner speaker, Neal has filled</p>
        <p>engagements in 47 states and many of the countrys major cities. A world traveler, he dealt in his speech entitled, The Challenge of Change with these changing time and the critical nature of mans actions as an individual, as a community, and</p>
        <p>as a nation. He said it is-necessary that the bjusinessiiiCT) and civic persons he spoke to be able to deal with change from outside and to initiate changes from, also.</p>
        <p>CHARLES ROSS</p>
        <p>ROY P. MARSH</p>
        <p>Ik  V ^</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0004" />
        <p>Uniform System's Next Step</p>
        <p>BMqumt of the Pitt Board of Education to the Owmty CommisaioDen for a uniform current ex-penK levy throughout the county deserves careful cooiideration of the latter body.</p>
        <p>In recent years Pitt County has taken great strides toward a uniform school system through its ooosohdation progrant It has rapidfy moved away from the old distr^ system under which it operated for so long, and under which a number of aspects of public education suffered</p>
        <p>In keeping with this effort to establish a uniform school system with better educational opportunities fw all youngsters, old school bond districts have disappeared in favor of a county-wide system of issuing bonds for new construction and a county-wide levy for funding this indebtedness.</p>
        <p>The proposal that ttie county now take a similar step in connection with its current expense levies is both logical, and in our judgment, a move that would benefit the educational effort throughout the county.</p>
        <p>The old district lines have all but disappeared in the county school system. The time when one particular district was willing to put more extra money into iU school program than its neighbor through a higher current expense levy should have also passed. Kids no longer atteiid school strictly</p>
        <p>Building For Our Tomorrows</p>
        <p>(Todays column was written by Hcrit McPherson, Editor, High Point Entoprise)</p>
        <p>By Holt McPherson</p>
        <p>One of Good Aftmioons more pleasant responsibilities over the past 30 years has been to reprint the Southern Newspaper industry on the American Council for Education in Journalism. It is the official accrediting body in which the various trade and professional educators from their respective organizations join forces to lift the standard of journalism education in this country.</p>
        <p>Here for the annual meeting and accreditaticm session, which precedes Newspaper Week, we are pleased at the state of journalism education nationally, and particularly in the South under the powerful prodding of the Sourthern Newspaper Publishers Assn. But at the same time we are distressed about the journalistic situation in a New Yoiic facing strike demands that could constrict further publishing in this city.</p>
        <p>We cant get in on the fun of Newspaper Week here as we have to go to San Francisco from here for the sessions of the Assn. of Governing Boards of Universities and Colleges holding its annual meeting there. It promises to be an enriching session in light of prospects in American education today.</p>
        <p>It is my reasoned belief, as stated before many times, that education and morality constitute the force and character of free government. And I think the most wholesome and lasting contribution any of us can make is in the sound ongoing of our educational institutions, and particularly those which are church related such as High Pmnt College. If I could write my own epiUph Id hope it could be thusly said, He believed in and served well the advancement of higher education, believing the h(^ of a better nation rides theron.</p>
        <p>New York has been described recently as a detonators paradise, reflecting the sulking ex</p>
        <p>pressions of displeasure so rife throughout this country.</p>
        <p>Some see this great city regaining stature as a place (rf opportunity. Job increases in the financial and business services, medical and health services, and private education, added 50,000 new jobs in the private sector last year. At the same time 20,000 new government jobs were also added  70,000 in all - to the work force. But at the same time, paradoxically, when employment appears to be rising, public welfare rolls continue mounting. Four out of five on relief rolls are either persons under 21 or adults with dependent children.</p>
        <p>There are some psychologists saying these days that the next generation, fathered and mothered by present - day laxity and , promiscuity, is likely to bring up the succeeding generation in the strictest atmosphere ever, recognizing the errors and misconceptions of their own gieration. The pendulum of change has a way of swinging back as far as it had gone in the other direction.</p>
        <p>For New York that could be well, for there needs be a rebuilding of moral fibre and civic character quite as much as physical property, which seems impossible to many who despair of Gothams capacity for self renewal.</p>
        <p>To illustrate, a fellow we know here undertook, following his return from the Korean War, purchase of an eight - unit apartment in a good sectimi of Queens. He thought it would in time pay for itself and be an investment giving security for him and his family later. Things went well the first few years despite rent controls which slowed the debt retirement he had anticipated. The neighborhood deterioating, and the better tenants moved out, leaving him to rent to a lower class with more upkeep costs while taxes mounted. Soon Negroes took over with ever increasing difficulties; then Puerto Ricans swept in, pushing out the Negroes. He found them so surly and unruly that they would strip his car of everything removable when he went to (ContinuedOn Page5)</p>
        <p>The Dolly Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 2MC3CaMhe Street. Greenville, N. C. 27S34 Established 1882 Pnhlished AMay Hra|h FYMay Afternoon aniSMiayMsming</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD. ChaimiaB of the Board JOHN 8. WHICHARD-OAVID J. WHICHARD POUishers Second Qass FMtagePaid at Greenviile.N.C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES PayaUe In Advance HenM Delivery By Owrler Motor Rente Mmlhly  |2.2S</p>
        <p>%Mal.</p>
        <p>OneYenr</p>
        <p>flxMmths</p>
        <p>IHJ8</p>
        <p>ISJ8</p>
        <p>f.n</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;Maet Incindo sales lax</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOaATED PRESS me Associated Press b ex clnsivdy entitled to ase for pnMlcalien Ml news dtapat ches credited to tt or no( otherwise credUed to ttib paper and also Me local news pnhUohed herein. AB righto of pnMications of special dispatches here are also</p>
        <p>mSMttMUftoMaaiidiadlMoi aviBohls ipin rognest Member</p>
        <p>within the boundaries of the old districts in which they live. The location of elementary schools as wdl as high schools has in recent years been determined on the basis of the total need of the county rather than with respect to district lines.</p>
        <p>The old system of levying special district taxes for current expoise items is antiquated here in Pitt County. We still cling to it as a matter of convenience, perhaps because some people will have to pay more taxes if it is changed, and maybe for some other less obvious reasons.</p>
        <p>If Pitt is to provide its youngsters with the benefits of a uniform school system, it is evident that schools at the elementary as well as at the high school levels must be uniformly supported by the county. This can best be done through a uniform levy for current expenses in the place of the outmoded, district-by-district current expense levy system now being utilized here in Pitt.</p>
        <p>Looking Forward To A</p>
        <p>New School Building</p>
        <p>Bids for the new Wahl - Coates Elementary School were over the funds allocated for the building when bids were added up last Week.</p>
        <p>University authorities are hopeful that the bids can be negotiated so that contracts can be awarded.</p>
        <p>We, too, hope that this can be done so that there will be no further delay in construction of this school.</p>
        <p>When it is completed on East Fifth Street it will offer outstanding facilities for the laboratory school. It will also free the old Wahl - Coates building on the campus for use by the university.</p>
        <p>Nixon Program In Crossfire</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON -President Nixons attempts to ease school desegregation in the Deep South, a vital part of his Southern strategy, are running into a Southern crossfire that may compel the Administration to file several statewide suits to compel desegregation.</p>
        <p>Jerris Leonard, the assistant attorney general in charge of civil rights, sent letters of mild warning to five Deep-South states earlier this month that statewide suits might be filed after a 20-day grace period from the date of the letters.</p>
        <p>Leonards first letter went to state school officials in Arkansas. It was dated April 14  exactly 20 days before the Alabama gubernatorial primary. George Wallace is running in that primary against incumbent Gov. Albert Brewer, hoping to gain the governors office as a springboard for another Presidential race in 1972. The timing of the Arkansas letter, and the others which followed it, strongly suggests that the Administration is gravely worried about the adverse political impact down South of any desegregation suits filed by the Justice Department in this election year.</p>
        <p>Consequently, to avoid that show of Federal compulsion  even after next Tuesdays Alabama primary  Mr. Nixon has sent Letmard and Robert Mardian as goodwill missionaries to all five states: Arkansas, South Carolina, North Carolina, Mississippi, and Flmda.</p>
        <p>Mardian, a conservative, is on leave as general counsel for the Health, Education and Welfare Department. His current assignment is staff chief to Vice President Spiro Agnews Cabinet committee on school desegregation.</p>
        <p>The assignment of Leonard and Mardian is to persuade holdout school districts that have refused to draft desegregation plans to do so immediately. Otherwise, they are politely warning that Atty. Gen. John Mitchell will file a statewide suit, similar</p>
        <p>.to the suit against the state of Georgia last December, compelling desegregation by court order.</p>
        <p>Although the Administration would much prefer not to file more statewide suits, it has ruled out enforcement action by HEW and abolished the old and Southern hated HEW guidelines. Thus, having killed off the administrative remedy, action by the Federal courts is the only alternative. Federal court action is also preferable to the old cut-off of Federal funds because it shifts the political onus away from the Nixon administration and onto the courts.</p>
        <p>But although the Administration would much rather not file court suits, the hope for voluntary acti(i by the hold-out Southern districts is running into hard obstacles. Consider Mississippi.</p>
        <p>Some 42 local Mississippi school districts still operate dual, segregated systems. The persuasion now being applied by Leonard and Mardian might be effective in about half those cases, but some will bow- only to the compulsion of a court order and even then may set up private schools for white students.</p>
        <p>More to the point, even the Administrations best political friends in the Deep South realize that it is far more palatable for local school boards and state officials to bow reluctantly to Federal court orders than to move voluntarily. Accordingly, these politicians say privately they are not at all displeased by the prospect of Federal court action brought by the Justice Department.</p>
        <p>A dramatic example of this political crossfire was the uproar in Columbia, S.C., on Tuesday after Leonard and Mardian finished explaining to local school officials from all over the state why they should voluntarily desegregate their hold-out districts.</p>
        <p>A member of the Flwence</p>
        <p>(Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>THE MIRROR One of the greatest difficulties in lif is to judge ourselves objectively. We are all too prone to point the filler at the other fellow and to suspect him and to see his faults and sins, and not our own. Most of us have a lofty opinion of self, and we often excuse ourselves for our mistakes. We are not quite so kind with our fellows, and if we be numbered ammg the strong,'we pity the weak, and if we be among the weak, we scorn the strong. An unknown author has eiq&amp;gt;ressed this thought so well;</p>
        <p>JtKt go to the mirror and look at yourself</p>
        <p>And see what that man has to say;</p>
        <p>For it isnt your father, or mother, or wife.</p>
        <p>Who judgment upon you</p>
        <p>must pass.</p>
        <p>The fellow whose verdict counts most in your life</p>
        <p>Is the one staring back from the glass.</p>
        <p>How would you say most people feel when they look at their countenance staring at them from the mirror? We know, of course, how the vail feel. Years ago a kid used to sit fascinated as he looked at a great-uncle who had half his face cahied away with a bullet in a Civil War battle. Yet he married three wives after he came luxne frrnn the war and died in an heroic (and successful) attempt to save his third wife from a horrible death when they were taking a shortcut across a railroad trestle. .</p>
        <p>And what a guy! Everybody loved him.</p>
        <p>By EARL L. DOUGLASS</p>
        <p>Decide Piir Is Blessing</p>
        <p>^  lkM*s  ll  I  here.  Sir  ... Well Have lliat OT</p>
        <p>By ALVIN TAYLOR</p>
        <p>(&amp;gt;niii)iiil\ &amp;lt;a|&amp;gt; (Jiesed Tiwe V'Kiioh Ii'*</p>
        <p>Sunday Morning Notes</p>
        <p>In one of those fast food restaurants a customer opened a hood that covered the hot dog container. A blast of steam poured out and the customer groped around  but found no hot dogs.</p>
        <p>Would you like a hot</p>
        <p>dog? a clerk asked.</p>
        <p>No, lady, the customer replied. I thought this was the town suana </p>
        <p>And in Ihe Daily Reflector newsroom we have carried on a diligent safety campaign to make sure that none of us</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say A Leisurely Pace</p>
        <p>were injured making the necessary trips back and forth through the downstairs construction where our new quarters will be.</p>
        <p>Only one casualty so far  myself. I received a scratched forehead when I walked into some ceiling material sticking off a platform.</p>
        <p>(Charlotte News)</p>
        <p>As he promised in January, President Nixon yesterday ended new draft deferments for occupaticmal and paternal reasons and asked Congress for the authority to end new college deferments.</p>
        <p>If the proposals are only patchwork reforms, they still represent a progress toward fairness.</p>
        <p>Which is to say, toward a more uniform distribution of the burdens of compulsory military service. That some young men have been able to delay, or even evade, military service required of others is unfair.</p>
        <p>The deferments for job and school have been justified on the grounds of national need, but men returning from the armed forces now provide a steady flow of educated personnel. As  for the</p>
        <p>paternity deferment, fatherhood should no more be a reason for  avoiding</p>
        <p>military duty than it is reason for discharging men now in the service.</p>
        <p>Since the ordered and proposed changes will not affect men currently holding deferments, the impact on the economy and the schools should be minimal.</p>
        <p>The principal effect will be on this years college - bound high school seniors, who must face their year under the draft lottery while in college instead of after college, and</p>
        <p>on college seniors who had planned to enter such deferred occupations as elementary school teachers.</p>
        <p>In both cases, the burden is that already imposed on other young men.</p>
        <p>The occupational and paternal deferments were ended by executive order.</p>
        <p>We hope that Congress will act quickly doubtful since two key members of to grant the President authority to end the college deferments.</p>
        <p>But whether Congress will act at all is the House have announced their opposition.</p>
        <p>Rep. L. Mendel Rivers (D.S.C.), the chaiman of the House Armed Services Committee, said he does not plan for his committee to consider any draft legislation this year since the larger question of extending the draft must be considered next year. _</p>
        <p>And Rep. F. Edward Hebert (D.-La.), chairman of the House draft subcommittee, opposes action now because, he says, considering draft legislation during an election year would be inviting disaster.</p>
        <p>Such a leisurely pace on matters affecting young men facing the draft may be understandable to the two elderly congressmen who never served in the armed forces. Whether it will be understandable to the voters is hopefully another matter.</p>
        <p>Last week I also warned everyone to be particularly careful because painting was underway downstairs. I was</p>
        <p>ALVIN</p>
        <p>By CONSTANCE HARRIS SAN JUAN. P R. (UPI)-In the controversy over oral contraceptives, a Puerto Rican research team has decided after an eight-hour study that The Pill is more probably a lifesaver than a killer.</p>
        <p>The study, involving 9,633 Puerto Rican women between the ages of 20 and 49, was conducted from July 1961 to May 1969 by a team of doctors from the department of obstetrics and gynecology at the University of Puerto Rico Medical School.</p>
        <p>Dr. Abelardo Fuertes de la Haba said no evidence was fbund linkjng deaths from blood clots to use of the oral contraceptives.</p>
        <p>On the contrary, the rep&amp;lt;'t indicated The Pill could save lives. Twenty per cent of the deaths in the study group were caused by complications in fwegnancies.</p>
        <p>All of these deaths would have been avoidable if pregnancy had been effectively prevented no mattr what the method of prevention. Dr. Fuertes said. </p>
        <p>Of the 9,6.33 women participating. 4,846 (50.3 per cent) were assigned to the oral contraceptive group and 4,787 (49.7 per cent) were provided with Vaginal contraveptives. Intracervical. or intrauterine devices were not used.</p>
        <p>Thirty verified deaths were recorded within the study group during the eight-year period, 12 in the oral group and 18 in the vaginal group. The death rate for women in the oral group was lower* than in the vaginal group in all but two of the years studied.</p>
        <p>The average death rate was considerably lower for the oral group (four per 10,000 as opposed to 7.5 per 10,000 for the vaginal group), and well below that of the general population in all of the years studied.</p>
        <p>TAYLOR</p>
        <p>in 10 of the 12 deaths in the oral group, or 83 per cent, there was a well established cause of death negating the possibility that the contraceptive drug was a cause of or a direct factor in the cause of death, the report said.</p>
        <p>determined not to mess up this time, so I touched nothing in the new area all week.</p>
        <p>On one trip I made it safely to the composing room which was painted weeks ago. There I relaxed and leaned up against a door. There was just one little thing though. The door had been cut into the composing room since' painting was done there. The side I was leaning against had been painted just that day.</p>
        <p>The causes of death in the project population are the same as the most frequent causes of death of women in the same age group in the general population, it said.</p>
        <p>The most common causes of death in the study group were cancer and heart disease, which caused six deaths each, five in the oral group and seven in the vaginal group.</p>
        <p>Those two illnesses, along with accidents, are the biggest killers in the general population in Puerto Rico.</p>
        <p>Speaking of the Daily Reflector construction, last week was the time to put up the tally board for the state election held yesterday.</p>
        <p>There are several lights in conduits which are mounted at the top of the board each time it is erected.</p>
        <p>Staffer Stuart Savage went looking for them when it came time to install the lights.</p>
        <p>He finally found them. They were hung around in the new construction area for temporary lights.</p>
        <p>Stuart liberated them.</p>
        <p>No evidence was obtained &amp;lt;rf a relation between the use of oral contraceptives and death from pulmonary embolism, coronary thrombosis or infarction (clotting) in the absence of predisposing medical condition." the report cwicluded.</p>
        <p>Puerto Rican women have been using oral contraceptives longer than anyone else. A pilot test program involving the pill was begun here in 1956 by the Family Planning Association of Puerto Rico, with the help of the Worcester Foundation for Experimental Biology and Medicine.</p>
        <p>Unit Costs Pushing Up Prices</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER Most economists and commentators have overlooked the relationship between productivity and the health o the economy, the Morgan Guaranty Survey</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>points out on in its current issue.</p>
        <p>In 1969, output per man-hour in the private econcany rose by less than 1 per cent, the second smallest annual increase since World War II, the survey added.</p>
        <p>During the past year, the discrepancy between average jxoductivity gains and average wage increases has been unusually large, the Morgan bank declared. The increase for 1969 of less than 1 per cent recorded in output per man-hour in the</p>
        <p>private economy occurred at a time when compensation per man-hour (including fringes as well as wages) was climbing by 7.3 per cent.</p>
        <p>As a result, labor costs per unit of output rose by 6.3 per cent, a figure that has been equalled twice before in the postwar years (1951 and 1956) but never exceeded. Thats Inflation</p>
        <p>It is obvious that when costs (rf production rise faster than productivity, inflation will follow. Manufacturers have to increase prices to pay for higher costs. The Survey points out that years of large increases in unit labor costs (1948, 1951, 1954, and 1969) wa-e also years of large increases in prices.</p>
        <p>If the government maintains restraints ( the rate of inflation, price increases to cover wage rises will be difficult to obtain, and this can  produce  fairly</p>
        <p>restrained bargaining, th^ bank pointed out.</p>
        <p>It  observed,  Labor'</p>
        <p>militancy in fact is clearly on the rise, reflecting in large part bitterness over the extent to which price hikes have negated previous wage increases. For most workers, the advance of real wages has been minimal over the last several years.</p>
        <p>Sees Hope Ahead The baipk holds out h&amp;lt;^e that an increase in productivity will soon help the fight on inflation, citing:</p>
        <p>1. Greater attention is being given to cost ccmtrol by managers who have seen profit margins and profits decline.</p>
        <p>2. More concern by employees over job security may lead to reduced absenteeism and better performance.</p>
        <p>3. Shortages of skilled labor and high labor turnover which tended to retard productivity gains last year, may ease.</p>
        <p>Some observers will doubt the last two points. Labor unions have been showing</p>
        <p>greater determination to gain even higher wage increases, and layoffs so far have not increased the supply of skilled labor much, although it has improved the supply of warm bodies.</p>
        <p>Furthermore, the major cause of increased and productivity has always been the, introduction (rf better machinery and techniques, and the cost of borrowed money has been forced so high by the administration that many corporations are now reassessing their plans for spending for capital improvements.</p>
        <p>Japanese Join Frozen Food Boom The Japanese, like citizei of most other countries, ai taking to frozen food, "n total frozen food productic of five major firms In 19894 was 14,165 metric tons a yea In 1968 it was 77,108 metri tons and n^y reach ipOJX tons this year, Ab^t or third is seafood,</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0005" />
        <p>The Daily Rcnector, Greenville* N. C.Sunday. May 3.197^Observations From Editorial Columns</p>
        <p>A Conservative View</p>
        <p>PROTECTING THE SOURCES</p>
        <p>Federal Judge Alfonso J. 2Srpoli of San FVandaco struck so important Wow for freedom of the press when he curbed the governments power to force a reporter to reveal informatkn obtained in confidence. Ibis should be of coosideraWe hdp in protecting newsmensand news medias professional rights against damaging inb*usions by authority.</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;ich intrusions, if allowed by the courts, would gravely impair the ability of the press to present an accurate pktire of events. An investigative reporter must develop confidential sources of information if he is to learn what is going on beneath the surface. Such news sources would dry up in a hurry if the government were allowed to fwce disclosire by newsmen.</p>
        <p>It can be carried a step further: To the extent that news sources are closed off, the publics ri^t to know is damaged. The government should depend on its own investigative efibrts, not on newsmen trying to do their job.-West Point (Miss.) Daily Times Leader</p>
        <p>DRINKING TEA?</p>
        <p>The opposition candidate, having apparently extracted all the profit from discussing the Postmaster (generals 2&amp;amp;hathroom house (which really has only eight) has now turned to another favorite target: newsps^ editors.</p>
        <p>To quote him: The big newspaper edit(*s dont know how the average man feels because all they ever do is go to the Oountry Qub and drink tea with their little fingers stuck out.</p>
        <p>Ihe candidate knows vdiat the people want to hear, bik Heaven knows he doesnt know a great deal about the drinking habits of newspapermen.Montgomery (Ala.) Alabama Journal</p>
        <p>CONGRATULATIONS TO MR.</p>
        <p>MARTINEZ</p>
        <p>We are happy to extend our congratulations to Roger Martinez, a 19-year-old engineering student at St. Marys University in San Antonio, Tex.</p>
        <p>Mr. Martinez, a sophomore, dropped 225live goldfish down in his gullet in 42 minutes and is now claimant to the worlds goldfishswallowing record.</p>
        <p>There was a time, we admit, \i1ien we would have scoffed at such an activity on campus. But not any more, friends, not any more.Anderson (S.C.) Independent COLD PLATES</p>
        <p>Stephen Young, Ohios caustic gift to the U.S. Senate, says he has the ideal diet drink. He fills up a glass with ice cubes and burns off 10 calories chewing them up.</p>
        <p>We agree with Sen. Young that people should consume more water, frozen and fluid, but we doubt the Democrats claim that chewing ice will make you lose weight.</p>
        <p>If working the mouth was a reducer, we in Georgia would have some of the lankiest politicians around.Atlanta (Ga.) Journal MEDIOCRITY IN AMPLE SUPPLY</p>
        <p>A recent help wanted advertisement in the Wall Street Journal for a Mediocre Acct. drew over 50 replies within a day after it was run. Placed as a gag by Cbanko Associates, a New York employment agency, the ad announced:</p>
        <p>Disreputable company has recently acquired obscure widget firm as a tax loss and wishes to continue its unprofitable operation by hiring an inept, apathetic accountant. A disinterested attitude while working for this bewildered management is the key to securing this job. Position offers little and gives less, with probably reduction in your current earnings.</p>
        <p>James Chanko, president of the agency, was shocked at the avalache of replies, ex{daining that he dreamed up the ad because he was annoyed at so many ads using the same words, like unlimited opportunity and top salary.</p>
        <p>WHOS IN CHARGE?</p>
        <p>TTie woment liberation groip demand that cctisus forms not force a husband and wife to decide who is head of the house and who is that also-ran wife of the head came too late, alas, for the printers to do anything about the situation in 1970.</p>
        <p>TTie 1980 census forms, we have no doubt, will clear up this silly business for once and all. At our home and surely at yours, theres no question whos head of the house. her name goes on that line. Ours will go right after it, on the line Uiat says head of all else.Louisville (Ky.) Courier-JournalToday In History</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Today is Sunday, May 3, the 123rd day of 1970. There are 242 days left in the year.</p>
        <p>Todays highlight in history: On this date in 1802, Washington, D.C., was incorporated.</p>
        <p>On this date:</p>
        <p>In 1494, Christopher Columbus discovered the island of Jamai</p>
        <p>ca.</p>
        <p>isters of 10 British Commonwealth nations met in London to discuss the racial situati(xi in South Africa.</p>
        <p>Five years ago  an earthquake in El Salvador killed at least 125 persons and left 7,000 homeless.</p>
        <p>One year ago  Indias first Moslem president, Zakir Husain, died at the age of 72.</p>
        <p>In 1865, the body of Abraham Lincoln arrived back in his home town of Springfield, 111., after a 1,700-mile rail journey from Washington.</p>
        <p>In 1892, the British financier, Cecil Rhodes, became premier of the Cape Colony, South Africa.</p>
        <p>In 1919, airplane passenger service was inaugurated when Robert Hewitt flew two women from New York to Atlantic City, N.J. ^</p>
        <p>In 1923, Navy Lt. Oakley G. Kelly and John A. Macready completed the first nonstop transcontinental flight, landing at Coronado Beach, Calif.</p>
        <p>In 1944, synthetic quinine was produced in a Harvard University laboratory.</p>
        <p>Ten years ago  Prime Min-</p>
        <p>Evans-Novak</p>
        <p>(Continued FVom Page 4)</p>
        <p>County school board pointedly asked about Mr. Nixons campaign support for freedom-of-choice by white and black parents. Leonard replied that that was a political statement in an election campaign, and that, for all practical purposes, freedom of choice is dead. You are spinning your wheels over freedom of choice, the soft-spoken Leonard said. But for all his patience and careful explanation, LecHiard was kept on the defensive. As he and Mardian left the meeting. State Atty Gen. Daniel McLeod said: I was hoping</p>
        <p>Of Boston Then And The Santo Barbara Of Now</p>
        <p>By JJ. KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO -Nearly 900 yMTt have pased liDce the December day that Sam Adams urged .'hit militants down the cdbUed streets of Boston, biA William Kunstler still is upping today on their example. As an advocate of non - violence, up to a point, I wish him no harm; but all the same, I hope he chokes on this bogus cup of tea.</p>
        <p>Kuntsler trotted out the Tea Party parallel in a recent debate at Vanderbilt, and I see by press accounts that he is having on the same theme elsewhere. As chief counsel to the purported revcrfutionaries of today, he is entitled to seize any dirfenses he can lay his hands on. Yet some distinctions ought to be drawn before the notion takes hold that the Boston Tea Party and the Santa Barbara bank -burning are cousins across the years.</p>
        <p>Superficially, it is true, some plausible points  even frivolous pmnts  can be made. Thus it is remarked that todays militants wear their hair long; so, too, with Tom Jefferson two centuries</p>
        <p>ago. Today's demonstrators look at fife through granny passes; they go garbed in oddcostumo. But behold the benign visage of bespectacled Ben Franklin and recaD the Adams' men were painted iq&amp;gt; as llohaiHc Indians.</p>
        <p>Further analogies are prened upon us. Kunstlers rebdlious clioits are mostly men under thirty. Some of the greatest figures of the Revolution were as young. Hamilton was a fiery pamphleteer at 19; Henry took the Parsons cause at 23. Marshall, Madison, Jefferson, Gouvemeur Morris were no older than some of the firebrands of Berkeley. It is recalled that the revolutionary leaders of 1776 were literate men, well versed in classic learning; and it is noted that student leaders of 1970 are often honor students, class presidents, and student editors.</p>
        <p>Still more: The most shining document in American history clearly asserts the right to throw off oppressive authority, once repeated petitions have resulted only in repeated</p>
        <p>injuries. Hus is precisdy the cry of the Haydens and Rubins of today. The parallel that Kunstler draws between yesterday's Crown and today's Establishment  Justice Dou^as draws the analogy alsohas a splendid rhinestone appeal.</p>
        <p>Yet it is sham. The American Revolution was a ture revolution. Washington, Adams and Jefferson proposed to transform the colonies into free and independent states; they oi-visioned an oitfrdy new form of government. They had a deeper vision also  of a new freedom for men. Their ideals and concepts were cleariy defined, first in the Declaration, then in the Articles of Confederation, still later in the Constitutkm and Bill rf Rights.</p>
        <p>The revdutkmaries of 1776 proclaimed their intention out rf a decent respect to the opinions of mankind. They (riaced their reliance upon Divine Providence, and they committed to their cause their lives, their fortunes and their sacred honor.</p>
        <p>No such parallels exist today. Most of todays</p>
        <p>Report Nearly Half Of Legislative Candidates Against Death Penalty</p>
        <p>By YVONNE BASKIN Associated Press Writer RALEIGH (AP)-A group working for an end to North Carolinas death penalty says that 49 per cent of the legislative candidates who have responded to its questionnaire have said they would vote for abolition of capital punishment.</p>
        <p>As of Thursday the North Carolina Women to Save Marie Hill had received replies from about one^ourth of the candidates running in Saturdays primary for seats in the state House and Senate.</p>
        <p>The  group received</p>
        <p>respmses from 93 of the 392 candidates. The iH'eakdown showed 46 favwed abolition of ca(Ntal punishment, seven favored retention, and 40 said they were loicommitted and woidd like to receive material on the subject.</p>
        <p>The  committee was</p>
        <p>organized last year in an attempt to save an 18-year-old Negro girl from the gas chamber. The girl was (XHivicted last December in the 1968 slaying of a Rocky Mount grocer and sentenced to die.</p>
        <p>The questionnaire mailed out by the group posed the question: In the N. C. General Assembly, I would support: ... Abolition of caintal punishment; or ... Retention of capital punishment. It also asked whether the candidate would like to receive literature from the committee.</p>
        <p>Included in the letters was a statement that the committee plans vigorous participation in the legislative campaigns in each district against candidates who favor retention.</p>
        <p>The chairman of the group.</p>
        <p>for some clarification but after wrestling with you people for 10 years. Ive about given up.</p>
        <p>Caught in that crossfire, Mr. Nixon may now have no alternative but to (x*der his Justice Department to file its statewide suits. He may wonder, too,  whatever</p>
        <p>happened to  Southern</p>
        <p>gratitude.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Edna Richards, of Raleigh, said most of the women in the cmnmittee are active in other organizations and would work through contacts in each district to (X'ganize opposition to candidates favoring retenti(m.</p>
        <p>The group said it was making some calls to muster opposition to certain candidates before Saturdays primary, but most of the eff(H*t wl be made prior to the general election in November.</p>
        <p>Included in the replies were responses fr(xn 68 of the 281 candidates for the House. Of these, 35 favored abolition, five favored retention, and 28 asked for infmnation.</p>
        <p>Ten Republicans and 25 Democrats favored abolition. The list opposed to the death penalty included three of the five Negro Candidates running.</p>
        <p>The responses favoring abdition came from a large section of the state, from Haywood County in the west to Onslow and Pitt counties in the east. The largest response came from the more urbanized central counties of Mecklenburg, Forsyth, Guilford, Alamance, Orange and Wake.</p>
        <p>IWo Democrats and three Republicans running for the House said they favored retention. They came from five counties across the state from Buncombe to Onslow.</p>
        <p>Of the 111 candidates running fw the Senate, 25 replied to the questionnaire. EHevoi favored abolition, two favored retention, and 12 asked fix: material on the subject.</p>
        <p>Those in faw of abolition included eight Democrats and tlu%e R^ublicans. The respmsesfrom the senatorial candidates in favor of abditim also came largely fron the large Piedmont counties.</p>
        <p>Both Senate candidates favoring retention were Republicans, one from Rowan County and one from Cherdcee.</p>
        <p>No replies were received from any of the seven American party candidates. Also, the committee received</p>
        <p>dozens d unsigned reifies. The groi^) has sit out a second round of letters to those who have not responded.</p>
        <p>The committee said it had not expected a large response from candidates who favor keeping the death penalty. But the replies favoring abolition may represent most of the strength of the forces against capital punishment.</p>
        <p>A strong opponent of abdition was W. R. (Buddy) Makepeace III d Sanford, a candidate for the 22nd House IMstrict seat. He checked that he would vote for retention and added Forever!</p>
        <p>However, another candidate who checked retention, Phil Kirk Jr. of Salisbury, a Republican running for the Senate in the 23rd District, added: But my previously hard line positi(Mi, aft^ careful study and research, is weakening s(newhat.</p>
        <p>Many of the legislators who have suKKM'ted abdition in the past, such as Rep. Howard Twiggs, Wake (jounty Democrat, said they would do so again.</p>
        <p>Rep. Richard Clark, Union County Democrat, said, Ive voted this way before Marie Hill, and indicated he would vote for abolition again.</p>
        <p>A democratic candidate frmn the 27th House district, James Wayne Frye of Asheboro, called capital punishment an attempt to legalize ihurder by the state.</p>
        <p>collect rents or make repairs It came to vriiere none paid rent and threatened his Ufe wbai he pressed collections. FinaUy he decided it was his life (H* abandon the property  he chose the latter.</p>
        <p>That, you might say, was an isdated case. But in the last three years 100,000 rental units throughout New Y(xrk have become uninhabitable. The prospect is that 800,000 housing units, built in the 20s and 30s, will become victims of rent control and civic</p>
        <p>destmctioQ hat no rational purpose. Respect is a word with three Mcrt too many: It does not fit in the foul mouths of todays pam-phleleers. You will find no prayers in the underground press. And it is a curious balancing that equates Boston then with Boston now. Todays destroyers are the only marchers in history, as someone has said, who</p>
        <p>demand at the outset that they be thrown, if at all, to toothless lions.</p>
        <p>And what of freedom? The very word dies underfoot in the howls of todays campus despots. 0, they are very full of free speech for themselves, but they would deny free speech to others. These are not young Jeffersons. Some of them are cradle Hitlers, whose sandaled feet are</p>
        <p>waiting to be shod Well, the reputation of Adams, Washington and Jefferson will survive todays brazen effort to rub respectability off their bones. What they built has endured. And so long as mericans are willing to fight for the structure of freedom they created, no Jacobins come -lately are likely to tear it down.</p>
        <p>THEY GO TOGETHER!</p>
        <p>Saving The Holy Temples Of Philae Enters Final Stages</p>
        <p>By RAY WILKINSON ASWAN, Egypt (UPI)-Scho-lars this summer will begin to dismantle the holy temples of Philaethe Pearl of Egyptin the final phase of a multinational campaign to save a huge chunk of mans ancient history from the rising waters (rf the river Nile.</p>
        <p>The work to cut up the temples and to rebuild them on the nearby rocky island of Ajlika will take four years and $6 million. It has been</p>
        <p>McPherson . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued FVom Page 4)</p>
        <p>blight as present loans expire and refinancing at doubled rates makes them too unprofitable to maintain ownership. So you can see its something that worries financing officials and threatens the well-being of a great city without capability of renewing itself.</p>
        <p>Oh, yes, Mayor Lindsay calls it Fun City  others call it Sin City and other names equally uncomplimentary  but the truth is it is a dying city. Mayor Lindsay blithely calls for more taxes to swell the public pay and welfare rolls. Theyve put a charge of $50 for towing away an automobile from a No Parking area, plus $25 court cos^. TTiats ruinous unless you have political or Mafia contacts that can get it nullified.</p>
        <p>Yes, New York has got to rebuild moral fibre by displacing the hippies, weirdos, pimps, procurers, prostitutes, political and labor racketeers, yes, the Mafia, with honest citizens intent on renewing the city and bettering it, or therell be little  or need for such!</p>
        <p>described as the most remarkable harvesting of history the world has ever witnessed.</p>
        <p>The $70 million project, started in 1960, was made necessary by construction of the Aswan dam and the 312-miles long Lake Nasser forming behind it. Scores of monuments of Nubia would be permanently submerged by the rising waters unless they were moved to higher ground.</p>
        <p>The Egyptian government and the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) began a campaign to save all the major works. This ultimately involved at least 60 countries which either made cash contributions or sent experts and thousands of laborers to work in Nubia.</p>
        <p>Opinions In Brief</p>
        <p>The better part of ones life consists of his friendships.  Abraham Lincoln.</p>
        <p>Not being able to control events, 1 control myself and adapt myself to them if they do not adapt themselves to me.  Montaigne.</p>
        <p>You do ill if you praise, and still worse if you reprove in a matter you do not understand.  Leonardo de Vinci.</p>
        <p>We are apt to say that money talks; but it speaks a broken, poverty - stricken language. Hearts talk better, clearer and with wider intelligence.  William Allen White.</p>
        <p>UNESCO Director Dr. Vil lor i-no Veronese, appealing to the world at the beginning of Ihe project, said, The Aswan Dam will bring fertility to huge si ret ches of desert; but the ofxming of new fields to the tractors, (he provisions of new courses of power to future factories, threatens to exact a terrible price.</p>
        <p>The resultant campaign has been succes.sful. When I lie Philae monuments are relocal ed alwve the Nile waters, the project will have achieved all its major aims and to a large extent, helped to avoid that terrible price.</p>
        <p>The money for Philae is being raised throughout IIm-world by voluntary donations.</p>
        <p>The island is located on Ihe remains of a granite shelf, trapped in that stretcji of Nile between the new Aswan Dam. and the old Aswan Dam built by the British in 1902.</p>
        <p>The oldest parts of Ihe Philae temples date from around ir)!) B.C. The work on the island was continued through the Ptolemaic period and by Roman Emperors Augusts, Claudius, Trujan, Hadrian and Diocletian. Christians later built churches or converted Ihe temples for (heir wor.ship.</p>
        <p>The save-the-monuments campaign involved innovations and technology that rivalled even Ihe high dam itself.</p>
        <p>For instance, the largest project undertaken was a $;V million plan to .save Ihe 3,2(Ki year-old temples of Abu Sim bel This involved the dismantling of the temples, built into solid rock, by sawing them into blocks 20 to 30 tons each. The blocks were then lifmi to a plateau 200 feet above the old site and rebuilt.Cleaning Up Environment Means Controls You Never Dreamed</p>
        <p>By GEORGE BRYANT l^ecific proposals for tiai to protect the en-ronment are coming thick id fast in the wake of the cent Earth Day turn - outs id turn - ins all across the luntry.</p>
        <p>They are many and varied. me are simple, calling for t more than what might be tiled attention to individual iiness. But others call for ajor policy changes by )vernment, business and dustry  changes which ill reach just about ^eryone, in one way or lother.</p>
        <p>A$ many and as different as le propoaate are, there is one &amp;gt;mmoii denominator which</p>
        <p>can be applied to just about all of them. And that is the cost cost in terms of dollars and also in changes in living and working habits. And they point to cdntrols over who gets what and vriien.</p>
        <p>The notion that government funds and business and industry profits can be used to pick ig) the tab without cost to the individual is a lot of bunk and should be recognized as that right from the start. But it is a notion that is firmly estaUished in ttiis nation and it is going to be a problem.</p>
        <p>fit and {x-oper to live the good life today by borrowing from Uxnorrow. The old idea of getting things as they are^ earned was junked. Years of bigger and betto* government deficits set the pattern. The climate was scnnething for nothing.</p>
        <p>its a good bet that there will be more tomorrows. The harsh fact is they may not be as rich and lush as has been hoped.</p>
        <p>housing their famUies. A two -car garage is much more important than a PHD degree.</p>
        <p>For 40-years the American people have been brain washed by their political leaders with the idea that it is</p>
        <p>Thus, it is much more than any mere coincidence that the pollution crisis comes at a time inflation is an acute ttireat to this nations economic and political system, b a way, it is sim{dy die bill collecU* catching up with us am) forcing a realization that essential resources are limited. Deleite the dire predictiens.</p>
        <p>The automobile has been singled out as die chief offender, both direcdy and, perhaps, indirecdy. It is a product of this century. And with the possible exception of dectricity it plays a bigger rde in die economy, in living standards, than any other manufactured product.</p>
        <p>tt's a status symbol of the first order. There are many,' many people who lpend more of their workiog life buying and supporting automobiles than they do feeding and</p>
        <p>As an economic force, the auto is basic. Some hundreds of diousands are em|doyed in direct manufacture. But related jobs, in ore fields, steel mills, rubber plants, fabric plants, petroleum, etc., runs into millions. And so do those engaged in distribution, service, financing, insurance, etc. And then there are the uses, the siervices, to which the auto is put.</p>
        <p>percentage of the population. One suggesUon is to limit the number of cars per family and limit the horse power, to say a small'engine of'69hp. Taxes would be used as the enforcement device. Anything beyond the limits would be hit at a prohibitive, for most, rate. At first glance, it doesnt seem unreasonable. People could still get about and with less exhaust in the air.</p>
        <p>but probably with a full weeks pay.</p>
        <p>same goes for dish washers and home laundry machines.</p>
        <p>The end result of this proposal might 'well be cleaner air. But the achievement will not be without cost. The dollar price of buying and supporting the small car might well exceed todays charges. Intangibles are invdved, too, such as (xnnfOTt and the freedom to have what you want and use as you wish.</p>
        <p>There are many other examples which might be considered, such as new industrial processes and products. But each entails a cost, a sacrifice.</p>
        <p>Now, to do something about automobiles means doing something to a very Mgh</p>
        <p>But thats far from the whole story . The impact on the supply of jobs would be tremendous, all up and down the Une. This would mean work sharing, a work week of feur,fluee or even two days,</p>
        <p>Wator can be ctxiserved and in many ways. The multiple bath home is another status symbol. And it is reasonably new. Theres no doubt it results in higher water consumption. The</p>
        <p>Thus, while the idea of Ieserving the environment has wide and immediate appeal in the abstract, doing something about it is another matter. No society has willingly given iq) what it has, or even foregone what is within its reach. Any crash program will need priorities, and these mean more government intrusion  controls.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0006" />
        <p>8The Diily Renector. GrecniRle. N. C.-^nnday. May 3, mo</p>
        <p>Lions Club Broom Sole Week Poinfs To Older Workers</p>
        <p>Begins Monday Evening</p>
        <p>The Employment Security Commission here will be par-tictpating in a special statewide campaign, Hire an Older Worker Week, beginning Monday.</p>
        <p>The week has been proclaimed as Hire an Older Worker Week" by President Richard Nixon, Governor Bob Scott and Greenville Mayor Frank Wooten.</p>
        <p>The Older W(x*ker Committee met Thursday to kickoff the observance. Members of the committee include; Mayor Wooten, honorary chairman; the Rev. Adrian Brown, Senior Citizens of Greenville; Mrs. Beth Clark and Mrs. Doris Cayton, of Social Services; H. H. Hendrix, manager of the North Carolina Vocational Rehabilitation Commission; Samuel Bryant, North Carolina Oommissicm for the Blind; and Dscar Moore, assistant district</p>
        <p>manager of the Department of, Veteran Affairs.</p>
        <p>The committee met with Lloyd Nooe, manager of the local ESC officji, Mrs. Audrey Andrews and William Batchelor.</p>
        <p>The annual observance of Senior Citizens Month has brought the employment problems of the middle - aged and the older worker to the attention of the community and the nation," Nooe said. This has hi^lighted a year - round employment service program for this group."</p>
        <p>Congress passed the Age Discrimination in Empk^ment Act of 1967" to protect individuals between the ages of 40 and 65, and to promote their emplcyment based on ability rather than age.</p>
        <p>Explaining the national and state emphasis on older worker employment, Nooe said, umemployment among</p>
        <p>workers 45 years is relatively les than that among other age groups, but, if an old^ worker loses his job and remains unemployed for a period of time, it is very difficult to place him on a job.</p>
        <p>About one third of North Carolina's labor force is made up of workers 45 years (dd and older. Many of the senior workers are unemployed," Nooe explained. The average older worker has more to offer than the young job seekers, but many employers have the mistaken idea that a perstm who has reached 45 will not produce as much on the job as a younger person."</p>
        <p>The local ESC ^fice has 663 active applications! file from workers 45 years old or older. The group includes 416 females, 247 males and 72 are veterans.</p>
        <p>S(ie of the occupations listed include; office managers.</p>
        <p>teachers, store managers, salespersons, cashiers, secretaries, timekeepers, industrial engineers, general office clerks, stock clerks, cooks, waitresses, yard men and domestic maids.</p>
        <p>We hope we can convince employers to consider these experienced applicants when they seek employees, Nooe</p>
        <p>emphasized.</p>
        <p>Emi^oyers should list their job openings with the local ESC office, located at 1002 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>Scientists estimate deserts existed on earth over 200 million years ago, although todays deserts are believed to be only about five million years old.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE LEHER SERVICE</p>
        <p>TYPING</p>
        <p>ADDRESSING</p>
        <p> DUPLICATING</p>
        <p> STAMPING</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL LETTER SERVICE</p>
        <p>CLAY STROUD-AYDEN, N. C.</p>
        <p>TELEPHON E-Day 74-42M, NigM 74-M32</p>
        <p>BUYS FIRST BROOM ... Mrs. Joe Pecheles of Granville Drive buys the first broom of this years Lions Club</p>
        <p>broom sale campaign from club presidenta. D. Wilson (L) as publicity chairman Ray Brewer looks on.</p>
        <p>The Greenville Lions Club will conduct its annual spring household broom sale Monday night with members beginning a house to house canvass of the city around 6:30.</p>
        <p>air for the Pitt County Lions Club president J. D. Wilson pointed out that proceeds from the sale are used primarily for helping the blind. Much of the money, he said, is channeled into</p>
        <p>Parking Meter h Now 35 Years Old</p>
        <p>OKLAHOMA CITY (UPD-The parking meter, that little tattletale box on the curb, celebrates its 35th birthday this year. It should live so long!</p>
        <p>The first parking meter ordinance was submitted to the Oklahoma City Council in April, 1935, and the worlds first parking meters were installed on Oklahoma City streets in July of that year.</p>
        <p>H.G. Theusen, a retired Oklahoma State University professor, bravely admits to being one of the designers of the first parking meter, and has not forgotten the hostility shown by some citizens when the newborn meters were installed July 16, 1935, in Oklahoma City.</p>
        <p>Qustered around each parking meter, he recalls, was a group of citizens voicing their opinions on the new device. Theusen confesses he and the other designer, fellow professor Gerald A. Hale, were somewhat disturbed by the resentment expressed.</p>
        <p>Still, it was an event, and newspaper writers and newsreel cameramen were busy taking notes and shooting scenes of those who used and talked about those first parking meters.</p>
        <p>For a day Oklahoma City was the source of a major news story nationally and abroad. Theusen says the original push for a parking meter came from Oklahoma City newspaper editor Carl Magee.</p>
        <p>Magee had become widely known earlier when as an Albuquerque, N.M., newspaper editor he played a major role in uncovering the Teapot Dome scandal which rocked Washington in the 1920s.</p>
        <p>.Magee was on the traffic committee for the Oklahoma City Chamber of Commerce, TTieusen explains. Tbey were having trouble with people parking in the downtown area."</p>
        <p>Laws had been passed setting time limits for parking, but they were almost impossible to enforce, so as Theusen remembers it Magee conceived the parking meter idea.</p>
        <p>The big deal was not the mechanism, Theusen acknowledges. It was the c(cept of charging a fee for traffic control and then to make a violator visible.</p>
        <p>ALWAYS AVAIIABLE</p>
        <p>Our Skill 3nd Knowledge</p>
        <p>PAVILION PHARMACY!</p>
        <p>Harold E. Harris and Anne H. Harris</p>
        <p>The first meters brought more than cries of outrage from the citizenry. They brought law suits, too.</p>
        <p>There was a legal point there, Theusen explains. You could collect a fee for policing traffic, but you couldnt charge rental space for streets, because they were dedicated to the people. That was the first hurdle.</p>
        <p>Association of the Blind.</p>
        <p>Wilson added that the Lions will make an effort to cover as much of the city as possible on Monday night but persons who are not contacted and who wish to purchase a broom may contact a member or call 756-3385 or 752-4261.</p>
        <p>This year, the president noted, the sale of roughly 750 household brooms will be goal for the 45 active Lions who will participate on Monday night. In case of bad weather the sale will be held on May 11.</p>
        <p>Publicity chairman Ray Brewer said that persons throughout the city could help by leaving their porch lights on until a member knocks at their door.</p>
        <p>Overall chairman for the broom campaign is Ralph Tyson.</p>
        <p>mow</p>
        <p>ANNOUNCING</p>
        <p>LEDERS MOTHERS DAY WINDOW WISHING CONTEST FREE. TO ANY PERSON, ANY AGE.</p>
        <p>nomal</p>
        <p>rABOVf</p>
        <p>i I</p>
        <p>NtAS NOemAl</p>
        <p>J --</p>
        <p>R.I</p>
        <p>invite you to participate in !LEDERS mothers day WINDOW ^WISHING CONTEST. SELECT ANY JTEM. IN OUR MOTHER'S DAY jiWINDOW that you would wish to give your Mother for Mother's Day. Fill out .a contest blank provided by the store 'and write item and item number you i have selected in the window. The blank [ will then be deposited in a registration I box and a drawing will be held Friday, May 8th, at 8: 00 P.M. Two winners will be selected, a child winner and an adult winner. Contest is open to all ages.</p>
        <p>./special PANTY HOSE</p>
        <p>Seamless Stretch Assorted colors.</p>
        <p>Sizes Petite, Medium, Tall</p>
        <p>SPECIAL! MONDAY NIGHT CHILDREN AND DADS NIGHT</p>
        <p>Salespeople will be available to assist your children in making their AAother's Day gift selection. Your child will be given Red Carpet Courtesy during our special Kid's night, Monday, May 4th, from 4:00 P. M. to 9:00 P. M.</p>
        <p>10% DISCOUNT</p>
        <p>A 10 percent discount will be given to adults and children during these hours by presenting this Adv. All gifts will be wrapped Free of charge. We will also have Free balloons for the kids.</p>
        <p>LADIES BAGS</p>
        <p>U.OO</p>
        <p>Leather Look, Crushed Patent, and Many others.</p>
        <p>LADIES STRAW BAGS</p>
        <p>Assorted styles in White and Beige. Leather trim, leather and metal handles.</p>
        <p>mow</p>
        <p>W'QAf rtMMMAtUtt OUTlOOA</p>
        <p>MAS NOHMAl</p>
        <p>J.</p>
        <p>mow</p>
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        <p>^StUCM</p>
        <p>,A30Vt</p>
        <p>iABOVi</p>
        <p>At the beach or lake, by the pool or just sunning in the backyard ... look your best in our sun-fun swimsuits.</p>
        <p>LADIES SWIMWEAR</p>
        <p>1-2-and 3 Piece Styles New prints and solids.</p>
        <p>5.00 to &amp;gt;17.00</p>
        <p>UDIES SCARFS</p>
        <p>Choose from Long, Square or Apache in Silk, Nylon Rayon.</p>
        <p>1.00 to *2.50</p>
        <p>SCOOTER SKIRTS</p>
        <p>by</p>
        <p>BRADLEY</p>
        <p>Solids, Prints, Plaids</p>
        <p>LADIES DUSTERS</p>
        <p>Dacron &amp;amp; Cotton Permanent Press. Assorted new spring colors. Sizes S, M, L, 32-44.</p>
        <p>u s WtATMtS SUSiAU^tUA</p>
        <p>FORECAST MAP  Map shows outlook for precipitation and temperatures for the next thirty days, according to the U.S. Weather Bureau in Washington. (AP Wirephoto Map)</p>
        <p>BABY DOLL AND TAILORED</p>
        <p>PAJAMAS</p>
        <p>Cotton or nylon, in beautiful pastel colors. All permanent press.</p>
        <p>4.0C 5.00 6.00 10.00</p>
        <p>LADIES GLOVES</p>
        <p>Your choice of lengths in basic black and white, or navy.</p>
        <p>2.00 to 3.50</p>
        <p>MOTHERS DAY DRESSES</p>
        <p>Only the best is good enough for Mom. And we have the finest of 100 percent Polyester Knits, Arnel Jersey, 100 percent Cottons and F*olyester &amp;amp; Cotton by such fine names as Jerri Lurie  Helen Whiting  Puritan  Mynette  C. M. Coventry</p>
        <p>COLUMBIA BEDSPREADS</p>
        <p>by</p>
        <p>Morgan Jones ttreMaster Weavers ColorsWhite, Beige, Pink, Yellow</p>
        <p>'3.00</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;7.00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;3.00</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;4.00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;5.00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1Z00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;5.00</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;9.00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;10.00</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;15!oO</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;15.00</p>
        <p>y</p>
        <p>LADIES SLACKS</p>
        <p>A variety of fabricsNylon knit. Dacron &amp;amp; Cotton, All Cotton, Cotton Knits</p>
        <p>'4.00 to '10.00</p>
        <p>CANNON NO-IRON MONTICELU) SHEETS</p>
        <p>New Deep Tone Colors. Full Fitted or Flat 81 X 104</p>
        <p>5 ^10</p>
        <p>PLAVTEX</p>
        <p>Cross Your Heart Bra</p>
        <p>Assures better uplift, separation. Fit and comfort. Sizes 32.-40, A, B, C cups.</p>
        <p>'3.00</p>
        <p>RPH.</p>
        <p>Veedy</p>
        <p>DELIVERY . . . Courteous Service</p>
        <p>Need hMttti aidsT Just call, we'll deliver. Prescriptions promptly filied. Why leave the houser A phone call will do it.</p>
        <p>JUST CALL-75B-3141</p>
        <p>For Those Whod like to save a dime on eye care . . . theres always the dime store.</p>
        <p>Which is not a holier-than-thou attitude.</p>
        <p>What is sacred, however, is the sense of sight.</p>
        <p>We dont think you can haggle when it comes to protecting it. Thats why we wont stint on quality of materials, equipmen^t^ craftsmanship.</p>
        <p>It may cost a little more, but isnt it worth it?</p>
        <p>Hie way we look at it, better eyesight is a bargain at any ixice.</p>
        <p>' lawa^</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>LADIES SUMMER</p>
        <p>STRAW HATS &amp;amp; WHIMSIES</p>
        <p>AAany colors and styles.</p>
        <p>HATS 4.00 lo 9.00 WHIMSIES 2.00 to 6.00</p>
        <p>LADIES HANDKERCHIEFS</p>
        <p>Large selection of linens, colorful floral applique, lace trims, and many others.</p>
        <p>69 to 1.00</p>
        <p>PILLOW CASE SETS</p>
        <p>Imported Fine Cotton.</p>
        <p>LUXURY SATIN PILLOWCASES</p>
        <p>Holds your hair without curlers or clips.</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>PEIGNOIR SETS</p>
        <p>. By</p>
        <p>MOVIE STAR</p>
        <p>AAany assorted colors.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;7.00 &amp;amp; &amp;gt;10.00</p>
        <p>Talk Of the Town</p>
        <p>LADIES JEWELRY</p>
        <p>LADIES SLIPS</p>
        <p>Tailored and lace trimmed styles. Cotton and nylon. SizesShort Short, Short, Average, Long</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;3.00 to &amp;gt;6.00</p>
        <p>A large assortment of earrings, necklaces, rings, pint</p>
        <p>1.00 &amp;amp; 2.00</p>
        <p>'3.77</p>
        <p>Cases 2.00 pair</p>
        <p>'4.00</p>
        <p>'2.00</p>
        <p>'3.00</p>
        <p>PAVILION</p>
        <p>PHAl^ACY</p>
        <p>180 W.fifth SIM DIAL 7914141</p>
        <p>OPTICIANS, INC.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL BLOG,, RALEIGH, N. C.</p>
        <p>502 EVANS ST., GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>122 W. AAARKET ST., GBEENSBORO, N. C.</p>
        <p>04 ST. AAARY'S ST., RALEIGH, N. C.</p>
        <p>1000-A KINGS OR., CHARLOTTE, N. C.</p>
        <p>122 North AAain St., Greenville, S. C.</p>
        <p>1000-A KINGS DR., CHARLOTTE, N. C. MEDICAL CENTER, 24 VARDRY ST., GREENVILLE, S. C.</p>
        <p>, Uadiaf Opticians in the CareHnas</p>
        <p>CONE VELOUR TOWELS</p>
        <p>Rich new colors.</p>
        <p>BATH TOWEL  *2.50</p>
        <p>HAND TOWEL  1.50</p>
        <p>WASH CLOTH_59*</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>/IEINM&amp;gt;M UICGME  ___</p>
        <p>.uio  KATIES</p>
        <p>DCftWIT LASE 12.00 lace TRIM OR PLAIN</p>
        <p>3is_59&amp;gt; to &amp;gt;1.25</p>
        <p>Downtown 1 E. 5th St.</p>
        <p>21 O'NITE</p>
        <p>BB</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0007" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N. C.Snnday, May 3, IfTi7</p>
        <p>Tornado Scourge Is Still Mystery To Scientists</p>
        <p>Rv JAV mrDirnkie   .  __</p>
        <p>By JAY PERKINS AuMlatd PreM Writer NORMAN. Oku. (AP)  R comet koilUg ot of the bUck sky. a teethUg snake of tiirbtt-lence. and wken It Uu. maa's accomplishmeaU become to much chaff scattered on the wind.</p>
        <p>No one knows exactly what it is. Or what causes it.</p>
        <p>And no one knows how to stop</p>
        <p>it.</p>
        <p>Inch for inch the most powerful of natures windy children, the tornado is by far the most caiH'icious.</p>
        <p>Skipping and dancing across the sky, the whirlwinds sometimes carve a crooked path through miles of mans achievements, playing havoc with homes and turning trees into timber, like a petulant child who has grown tired of his t(^s.</p>
        <p>The National Severe SttNin Labwatory here has been studying the killer winds for 10 years. Dr. Ekiwin Kessler, director of the facility, said scientists still are not sure just what creates a tornado.</p>
        <p>And, he says, theyre certainly not about to try and destroy one.</p>
        <p>We dont feel we know enough about them to tamper with them, he said. So I think we had just better leave them alone and let it be Gods work for the time being.</p>
        <p>A t(nado, basically, is a wind wrapped around a near vacuum. Several factors are present each time a twister is born, but their presence doesnt insure a successful birth.</p>
        <p>Kessler said a tornado is created under conditions similar to boiling water in a sauce pan. Theres the earths surface, which is being heated by the sun, the low layer of moist air, and an upper layer of dry and cooler air.</p>
        <p>The moist, hot air suddenly becomes heated enough for it to break through the upper layer much like a bubble breaks the waters surface. The surrounding air rushes into the resulting vacuum, and the cold upper air is pulled downward.</p>
        <p>This is the process that cre</p>
        <p>ates thunderstorms andunder the right circumstancestornadoes.  _</p>
        <p>Its much more comfdicated than that, Kessler explained. Heat interchange plays an important role. And its possible that atmospheric electricity has a function.</p>
        <p>When we get down to the nitty gritty, were not sure, he said. It may be a matter of degree.</p>
        <p>The center of a t(Hnadothe near vacuumis created by the sudden upsurge of warm air. But no one is sure what causes the winds to wrap round it.</p>
        <p>Basically, the whirling is present in all air, Kessler said. If rotation is not present initially, it doesnt develop. But the air is always rotating because the earth is rotating.</p>
        <p>The winds of a tornado are believed to move faster than those of a hurricaneabout 300 miles per hour, Kessler said. But the tremendous destructive effect comes not from the wind, but from the rapid pressure changes.</p>
        <p>The action causes houses to literally explode.</p>
        <p>Most tornadoes occur in the Great Plains area, and Oklahoma, Texas, Kansas and Missouri are known as tornado alley from April to June.</p>
        <p>Other areas of the nation have different periods in which tornadoes are most frequent, depending on when the warm.</p>
        <p>No Cold Turkey Treatment</p>
        <p>LIVERPOOL, England (UPI) Nick Watson, having a run of bad business at his cafe, added 18-year-old Diane Bell as waitressin a see-through negligee.</p>
        <p>It perked up the customers interest but also that of the police. They told Diane to get some clothes on. But she decided to wear the negligee for another week first.</p>
        <p>It wouldnt be fair to the customers if I stopped coming in bra-less straight away, she sid.</p>
        <p>RECEIVES AWARDL. Ray Hardee, right, is presented a Superior Accomplishment Award for his work at the local post office by Acting Postmaster Don Hargy. Hardee received the award and a check for his work in moving to the new postal facility and for his manner in dealing with the public. A Greenville native, Hardee graduated from Greenville High School in 1953. He began working with the post office in I960 after serving in the Armed Services for three years. He has been with the Greenville Post Office for 10 years. (Reflector Staff Photo)</p>
        <p>moist air from the Gulf of Mexico collides with the colder northern air.</p>
        <p>There were 607 confirmed tornadoes in 196931 of them in Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>The worst series of tornadoes on record occurred on March 18, 1925, in Missouri, Illinois and Indiana, when 689 people died and 1,980 were injured.</p>
        <p>In recent years tornado deaths are down, largely due to better detection measures and warning procedures.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Weather Bureau has launched a SKYWARN 70 program to identify areas wtere conditions favor the formation of Uxnadoes, and issues daily tornado watch warnings where necessary.</p>
        <p>In addition, the Weather Bureau tracks all stcxm cells on radar and issues warnings when a twister is confirmed by radar</p>
        <p>Privacy In Phone Booth</p>
        <p>SAN ANTONIO, Tex. (UPD-A San Antonio famiily with five daughters have found their own answer to the use of a telephone and its privacy.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Clinton Rowe renovated an old telephone booth and placed it in the hall of their home. They equipped it with a yellow wall phone to provide exclusive use for their five daughters, three of whom are teen-agers.</p>
        <p>With five daughters needing a phone and privacy to use it a phone booth seemed ideal, said Mrs. Rowe. I contacted the local telephone company and they told me how to get an old booth.</p>
        <p>After sanding the booth and repainting it silver, orange and mustard, the Rowes placed it in a hallway of the house, centrally located to their daughters bedrooms.</p>
        <p>The girlsJanet, 17; Karen, 15; Donna, 13; Angie, 11; and Mindy, 9agree the booth provides the privacy they want.</p>
        <p>Its become quite a conversation piece, said Mrs. Rowe. With five daughters you know it gets plenty of use.</p>
        <p>Irate Motorist Tells Them Off</p>
        <p>SALEM, Ore. (UPD-An irate motorist who didnt like the way his license application was handled by a computer in the Division of Motor Vehicles, wrote:</p>
        <p>Your kindness warms my heart. May your computer blow a fuse, the State go bankrupt, and all your children spit on you.</p>
        <p>CHURCH</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>PEWS</p>
        <p>PULPITS</p>
        <p>ALTARS</p>
        <p>fonts</p>
        <p>SCREENS</p>
        <p>lecterns</p>
        <p>READING</p>
        <p>STANDS</p>
        <p>OFFERING</p>
        <p>PLATES</p>
        <p>CHAIRS</p>
        <p>TABLES</p>
        <p>Free Estimates and Plan-nine</p>
        <p>For Information Write FREE WILL BAPTIST PRESS P.O. BoxIM Ayden, N. C. 2SSI3</p>
        <p>Waldrop Acres</p>
        <p>Day Comp</p>
        <p>P.O. BOX 481-WINTERVILLE, N.C. (On The Old Tar Road)Phone 756-5956 For Children Ages 7-12 Yrs.</p>
        <p>3 Camp Sessions2 Weeks Each June 22July 3 July 6July 17 July 20July 31 8:30To 11:30 Each Morning Mon. Thru Fri.</p>
        <p>TOTAL COST$50.00 per session (Registration Fee of $10.00 included with application; Remainder to be paid by first day of camp)</p>
        <p>ACTIVITIES HORSEBACK RIDING INSTRUCTION (Under Direction of Instructor: G. W. ''Sarge^' Bryson</p>
        <p>ARCHERY INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>NATURE STUDY</p>
        <p>ONE OVERNIGHT CAMPOUT EACH SESSION</p>
        <p>CAMP DIRECTOR:</p>
        <p>MRS. J. H. WALDROP</p>
        <p>^iiiiniiiiiiAPPLICATION</p>
        <p>5 Child'sNatne:..............   Age:......</p>
        <p>5 street;............ .^...aty:............ ;..  Phone:...........</p>
        <p> Camp Session To Be Attended: (Check One)</p>
        <p>JUNE I2-JULY sHjULY -JULY 17 fl JULY lO-JULY 31 $10.00 Registration Fee Enclosed With This Application</p>
        <p>S  PARENT'S  SIGNATURE  I</p>
        <p>or seen from the ground.</p>
        <p>Observations are made throu^ a network of ground stations, the use of radar and through aerial survey.</p>
        <p>Some of the projects at the NSSL this year include det^-mining if electricity has any</p>
        <p>part in the formation of a tornado, charting the internal, movement of a storm ceil, and deto*-rainiog the speed of a tornado.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma State University has a project under way to listen to storms. Scienti^ hope to learn if storm development can</p>
        <p>be iHedicted by the riectronic static given off.</p>
        <p>The average tornado is about a quarter of a mile wide and seldrxn lasts more than 16 miles. However, a tornado that killed 101 persons in Oklahonia in 1947 was estimated at two</p>
        <p>miles wide.</p>
        <p>And in 1917 a tornado traveled 293 miles across Illinois and Indiana.</p>
        <p>The mathematical chance of any one location being hit by a tornado in any one year is extremely  smallabout  three</p>
        <p>chances out of 19,000 in this ares, Keasler said. But Oklahoma Gty has been hit 26 times since 1892.</p>
        <p>And CodeO, Kan., was hit three successive yearsfrom 1916 to 1918and each time on May 20.</p>
        <p>I B AL</p>
        <p>I NOW!</p>
        <p>TECHMATKf</p>
        <p>Adiustabie RazorBand byOillCktto StOO</p>
        <p>r.'</p>
        <p>ioNBmi/</p>
        <p>t ^</p>
        <p>n 'jr /</p>
        <p>ffCHMAItcl ::</p>
        <p>5 Super statr^ss steel ed^</p>
        <p>REGULAR $1.00</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>HOURAFTER HOUR ANTI-PERSPIRANT</p>
        <p>SOZ. REG. &amp;lt;1.19</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>8 0Z.REG. S1.69</p>
        <p>$ I 29</p>
        <p>Excedrin*</p>
        <p>THf fXTRA STRENGTH PAIN REllEVfR</p>
        <p>0 TABLETS REGULARSEOS</p>
        <p>BIG</p>
        <p>VALUE</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 36'</p>
        <p>MINT</p>
        <p>FLAVORED</p>
        <p>rPMIUIPS-</p>
        <p>' MILK OP</p>
        <p>MAGNESIA</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>PNIUJPS</p>
        <p>MIIK OP</p>
        <p>MAGNESIA</p>
        <p>MMOCit UtS'WI</p>
        <p>REGULAR</p>
        <p>REGULAR 49'</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>4 OZ. MINT FLAVORED REG. 49'</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>12 OZ. MINT FLAVORED REG.</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE 59</p>
        <p>93</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>HOUR AFTER HOUR</p>
        <p>DEODORANT</p>
        <p>4 0Z. REG. $1.00</p>
        <p>59*</p>
        <p>7 OZ. REG. $1.49 </p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>BUFERIN</p>
        <p>190'S REG. $1.49</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 60c</p>
        <p>HAIR</p>
        <p>SPRAY</p>
        <p>Regular 99c</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 40c</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>AMMENS</p>
        <p>POWDER</p>
        <p>Regular 99c</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 30c</p>
        <p>GROOM &amp;amp; CLEAN</p>
        <p>REGULAR il.lf</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE SOc</p>
        <p>ALKA</p>
        <p>SELTZER</p>
        <p>M'S REG. &amp;lt;1.09</p>
        <p>69'</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 40c</p>
        <p>BACTINE</p>
        <p>4Va OZ. Bomb Reg. $1.59</p>
        <p>99</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 60c</p>
        <p>ALLEREST</p>
        <p>REGULAR $1.35</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 46c</p>
        <p>RIGHT GUARD</p>
        <p>Anti-Perspirant</p>
        <p>OiHeH*</p>
        <p>AMERICAS No. 1 DEFENSE AGAINST ODOR.</p>
        <p>REGULAR 4.19 5 OZ. SPRAY</p>
        <p>DESINEX</p>
        <p>POWDER OR OINTMENT REGULAR $1.19</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>^ YOU SAVE 40'</p>
        <p>"BIG VALUE DISCOUNT DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>Have Your Doctor Call Your Next Prescription  Transfer Your Regular Prescription  We Think We Have The Lowest Prices In Town. Open 9 a.m. - 9 p.m. Phone 758-2181.</p>
        <p>LUSTRE CREME</p>
        <p>^ HAIR SPRAY</p>
        <p>12 OZ. REG. 79c</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 30c</p>
        <p>S-|69</p>
        <p>Oillette</p>
        <p>PLATINUM-PLUS</p>
        <p>INLECTWaACES</p>
        <p>7 BLADES REG. 4.15</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE PRICE</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 36'</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>11 BLADES REG. 4.69</p>
        <p>VALUE QQ^ PRICE</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 70*</p>
        <p>BRYLCREEM</p>
        <p>Regular 4.29 KING SIZE</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 50'</p>
        <p>SALE STARTS MAY 3rd.</p>
        <p>[ Discount</p>
        <p>HEALTH &amp;amp; BEAUTY AIDS</p>
        <p>"We Think We Have The Lowest Prices in Town</p>
        <p>Big Value Discount Drugs - 2800 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>Big Value Discount - Downtown, 429 Evans St. Big Value Discount - Main Street, Formville</p>
        <p>PH</p>
        <p>30 Tablets REGULAR 39 c</p>
        <p>27*</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 12c</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0008" />
        <p>1-MRS. MOSES DOW LASITTER</p>
        <p>-MISS PATTIE DARLENE MURRAY</p>
        <p>'W' J ' '</p>
        <p>lAatAlU LOUK JOHNKm</p>
        <p>2-MlSS DEBRA CECELIA DAYSONWith Thfi Women</p>
        <p>8~The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N. C.Sunday, May 3,1970</p>
        <p>1MRS. LASITTER... is the former Paula Memory Marks, daughter of Mrs. E. Clay Hodgin of Greensboro and the late Mr. James Ray Marks, whose marriage to Mr. Lasitter, son of Mrs. Moses Dow Lasitter of Morehead City and the late Mr. Lasitter, took place Saturday.</p>
        <p>2MISS DAYSON ... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Patrick Joseph Dayson of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Thomas Gluyas Nisbet Jr., son of Dr. and Mrs. Thomas Gluyas Nisbet of Charlotte. The wedding will take place July 11.</p>
        <p>3MISS ROSSO... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Casper Rosso of Kinston, who announce her engagement to Ellis Parker Stokes, son of Mrs. Rufus Tyree Stokes of Stokes and the late Mr. Stokes. The wedding will take place June 13.</p>
        <p>4MISS MURRAY... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Murray of Greenville, who announce her engagement to Stephen Ray Nichols, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Ray Nichols (rf Greenville. The wedding will take place June 6.</p>
        <p>5MISS LEE ... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Noel Lee Jr. of Rt. 3, Washington, who announce her engagement toOliver Key Joyner Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Key Joyner Sr. of Woodland. The wedding will take place July 19.</p>
        <p>6MISS JOHNSON... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Hubert Edward Johnson of Raleigh, who announce her engagement to Robert Ingram Barnes Jr. of Greenville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Ingram Barnes Sr. of Washington, D.C. The wedding will take place July 5.</p>
        <p>7MISS BARBRE... is the daughter of Mrs. William Davis Barbre Sr. of Greenville, who announces her engagement to Mark Edward Price, son of Mr. and Mrs. Bill Price Sr. of Burlington. The wedding will take place June 27.</p>
        <p>8MISS ROEBUCK ... is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James C. Roebuck of Rt 1, Stokes, who announce her engagement to Benjamin WayneBryan, son of Mr. andMrs. J.P. Bryan of Greenville. The wedding will take place June 20.</p>
        <p>-life- -  .</p>
        <p>S'7-MiaS EUZABS1H ANNE BARBRE</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>3-MISS DONNA BARBARA ROSSO</p>
        <p>5-MISS MARGARET ANN LEE</p>
        <p>I.-MISS NANCY MARIENE ROEBUCK</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>atf.</p>
        <p>rr</p>
        <p>jr</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;n*i</p>
        <p>1^</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>. I  I</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>iB</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>B</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>S</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0009" />
        <p>IW Daly Kelleelw, Gmmee. N. C-eeeyr. May I. ll-</p>
        <p>BurkeStell Vows S&amp;amp;id Miss Paula Marks Weds In Saturday Ceremony</p>
        <p>In Ceremony Saturday</p>
        <p>RIVER PORBST, m. - St. ViDotat Ewrw GmUc Oiivdi wM tlM aeoit f the veddh f Mte Jotn Loiritt SIdl mi rhmm Burke m Sturiaf at</p>
        <p>Hw Rav. John Aibertioa of.</p>
        <p>Adatad at the mi^ttal MaiB and</p>
        <p>doble line oerenony.</p>
        <p>Pucnti af the couple are Ifr. and Mn. Robert John SteD of Greanville.N.C.and lire. Jamei FVands Burke o IndtanopUa,</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>Ihe ckurcli altar was decorated ith two large arraneamenta ei white ip-(kagona, pom pone and muma. Pewe were marhed with whMe aatin born.</p>
        <p>Giren in marriage bf her Cither, the bride wore an empire atyle gown of ivory aatin faille. The floor length gown was MbioQed with a acaop neckline andan A4ine skirt trimmed with</p>
        <p>iOn The</p>
        <p>Local Scene</p>
        <p>Hoscte Tnknan</p>
        <p>Donna Barbara Rosso and Parker Stokes will exchange wedding vdwi on Timein Holy Trinity Catholic Church, Kinston.</p>
        <p>The cou|^ met whUe they were students at East Carolina University. After dating for three years, tiey became engaged on May 9, Parkers birthday.</p>
        <p>A graduate of Grainger High School, Donna is a 1999 graduate ECU with a B.S. degree in primary education. She is presently teaching third grade at Moss Hill School.</p>
        <p>Parker is a graduate of Stokes  Pactohis High School and attended ECU for two and a half years. He is preseny serving in the U.S. Marine Corp. Upon completion of his military obligation, he plans to return to ECU and major in psychology.</p>
        <p>Also planning a June wedding are Harriet La Foille and Capt. Scott Smiley. The scene of their wedding will be the Immanuel Baptist Church here on June 26.</p>
        <p>Tte couple met in England shortly after Christmas when Scott reported for duty at Lakenheath APB near Cambridge.</p>
        <p>Harriet teaches second grade in the military dependents sfhool on th base. She is from Manistigue, Mich., on the northern pemnsula.</p>
        <p>The Pactolus Baptist Church will be the scene of the July 19 wedding of Margaret Lee and Oliver Joyner.</p>
        <p>A graduate of Stokes  Pactolus High School and East Carolina University, Margaret is presently teaching the fifth grade at a Virginia Beach, Va., school. She was a member of Delta Zeta sorority.</p>
        <p>Oliver is a graduate of Florida Central Academy and attended Richmond Professional Institute, Richmond, Va. He is presently employed as hotel manager at the Dundee Inn, Virgida Beach.</p>
        <p>The couple met on Labor Day, September, 1967, while Margaret was a guest at the Dundee Inn. Thrw years later on Valentines Day, Magaret received a rose from Oliver and with ita card which read with thee I wed and inside the card was her ring.</p>
        <p>Anne Barbre and Mark Price have set June 27 as the date for their wedding, which will take place in St. James United Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>Anne and Mark are both graduates of Brevard Junior College, where they met. She will graduate from Greensboro College on May 31 with a bachelor of music degree in church music.</p>
        <p>Mark is a graduate of Duke University with a B. A. degree in r^ion. He is associated with his father in business in Burlingtoa</p>
        <p>GIVE OUR BEST TO</p>
        <p>Your mrnl% special and individual... We give * special and individual attention to youc^ants and her likes in flowers.</p>
        <p>i </p>
        <p>Don't forget to wear a brtght red flower to honor yovr Mother ... or a white flower in memory of her.</p>
        <p>IheFTDlUW tarty igf gia</p>
        <p>Give Mom</p>
        <p>aBUm</p>
        <p>MeNitr's Oiy it  sfwcial day. . . Say I lare yaa wHb m F.T.D. Big Hug baagref ...</p>
        <p>Sand yoar OidaMawH</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>COX FLORAL SERVICE</p>
        <p>117 West Feurth St</p>
        <p>lace appHqpre wbkh fell into a cathedral train. The Bkhop ileevee trere ef EangUah net and lenccn lace.</p>
        <p>She eere a hretiered fingertip refl and carried a doaed boaqpet ef yeDo reaet and atephanoUs.</p>
        <p>Iliaa Eileen Mary SteD of St)ringfieid, Va., aiater of the Mde, wat maid of honor, ftideamaidf wm'c Mist Genevieve Hnet of New York, Mitt Sharon Baker of Greenville, N.C., Mrs. Robert Kroute of Columbut, Ohio, and Miss Maureen Burke of bidianopolis, bd., sister of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>The attendants wore floor length empire style gowns designed with moss green chiffon bodices and fuD Bishop sleeves with ivory satin cuffs and matching coid necklines. The ivory satin skirts were trimmed at the waistline with moss green ribbons tied into a bow which fell in long streamers.</p>
        <p>Iheir headpieces were of ivory faiUe bows with matching tuUe veils. They carried bouquets of udiite and ydlow daisies.</p>
        <p>James Francis Burke of Indianapolis, Ind., broflier of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Charles Balmer of Urbana, (Mo, Dennis Bischoff and Frank Sdieer, boti of Indianapolis, Ind., and Bairy SteD of GreenviUe, brother of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>FoUowing a wedding trip to (^lifornia, the couple wiU reside in Indianapolis.</p>
        <p>The bride and bridegroom are graduates of the University of Dayton. She teadies schod in Indianapolis and her husband is mployed by American Fletcher National Bank.</p>
        <p>A reception and dinner v/ere held at the Seven Eagles Restaurant in Des Plaines, Dl., foUowing the ceremony. The brides table was adorned with a large arrangmoit &amp;lt;rf vdiite mums and pom pons. Individual tables held wrought iron candelabra entwined with vhite carnations and fern.</p>
        <p>Guests danced to the music of The Music Men.</p>
        <p>A rdiearsal dinno* was given on Friday night at Charlottes in Chicago. Hostess was Mrs. James Francis Burke and guests included ttie Ixidal party and rdatives.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harry Edwin Stell, grandmother oi the bride - elect, honored Miss Joan SteD at a luncheon on Friday at her hiane.</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO - The First Presbyterian Church here was the scene of the weddii of Miss Paula Memory Marks and Moees Dow Laaitmr on Saturday at 11:30 a.m.</p>
        <p>The Rev. William M. Currie officiated at the ceremopy. A program of weddmg music was presented by J. FraidElin Pethel, organist.</p>
        <p>The bride is the daighter of Mrs. E. aay Hodgin of Oeensboro and the late Mr. James Ray Marks. The bridegroom is the son of Mrs. Moses Dow Lasitter of Morehead City and the late Mr. Lasitter.</p>
        <p>The church was decorated with two seven branch brass candelabra and a large arrangement of white flowers on the altar.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by her uncle, Frank Percival Shields, of Rodty Mount, wore a gown of while chantifly lace with a wide panel of whit satin down the front continuing as a border</p>
        <p>encircling the train. The neckliac was fashkmed with a satin collar with seed pearls and ttM bdl sleeves featured a rantchinf satin border and seed purb.</p>
        <p>She wore a headpiece of white Chantilly lace trimmed with seed pearls and an iBusk veil. She carried a cascade bouquet of white roses and stcpiwnotis around pale green cymbidkun orchids.</p>
        <p>Mrs. James David Brening Jr. of (keensboro, sister of the bride, was matron of honor. Bridesmaids were Mrs. AiMrey Flynt of Elizabethtown, stepsister of the bride, Mias Barbara Tucker of Pittsburg, Pa., Mias Jane Sauve and Mias Jean Sauve of (keenville, cousins of the bridegroom, and Miss Jgne Taft of Virginia Beach, Va., niece of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Miss Tucker, Mrs. Brening and Mrs. Flynt wore romance blue taffets gowns wifli diiffon overskirts. The gowns were trimmed in white lace around</p>
        <p>Annual Meeting Announced For Home Economics Agents</p>
        <p>the collar and down the front. The other bridesmaids wore similar gowns of soft sunshine yellow. They carried bouquets of mixed spring flowers with matching blue and yellow streamers.</p>
        <p>Tyre Beaman Lasitter of Chapel HiU, brother of the bridegroom, was best man. Ushers were Fredrick Sauve of Greenville, cousin of the bridegroom, Frank H. Shields of Scotland Neck, cousin of the bride, Samuel McConkey of Chapd HiU and Zack Taft of Virginia Beach, Va., both brothers-in-law of the bridegroom, Ckxtlon Aycock and Michael Henry, both of Chapel HiU.</p>
        <p>The bride is a graduate of Meredith College. The bridegroom is a graduate of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, where he received his Masters degree. He was a member of Phi Gamma Delta fraternity. He served in the U.S. Army Special Forces for three years.</p>
        <p>A reception followed the ceremony at the home of the bride. The couple will take a two and half month European wedding trip.</p>
        <p>INTERIORS</p>
        <p>TODAY</p>
        <p>Prtttnltd by Jack Thamas lac (Soma PoinffartOa Pidurts)</p>
        <p>$ Pidwrat ara paraanaL ^Tkay raprasant your $:diaica.</p>
        <p>Da not parmit your friafids to Inftuaaca you to ttia paint  of</p>
        <p>accapting somattiing that you ara not  a</p>
        <p>hundrad |parcant sold on.</p>
        <p>A goad tast Is to ask ^yaursaK: "Am I willing i$to look at that pidura $iday aftar day# parhaps $for yaars and continua i$to anjoy it? Would the ^ipictura do somathing for :$ma giva ma tha mood ::::l dasira avary tima I see ^^it? Or will it laava me i:-:cold?" Only you can :dacidel</p>
        <p>Bacausa of pradominaatly low cailings, select vertical picturas instead of wtda ones. This tends to "push" tha ceiling upward.</p>
        <p>The same affad may be achieved by hanging two horiiontai pictures one above the otnar in a vertical pattern.</p>
        <p>WATCH NEXT WEEK FOR</p>
        <p>(Draperies)</p>
        <p>JACK</p>
        <p>THOMAS,</p>
        <p>S. Memorial Or. Greenville. N. C. Phone 756-140)</p>
        <p>Inc.</p>
        <p>WINSTON - Salem - Using the theme, The Creative Woman, Home Economics Extension agents from North Carolina will meet here for their annual meeting May 7 4 8 Thursday and Friday.</p>
        <p>This program wiU be presided over by Mrs. Frances Wagoner, state president of N.C. Association oi Extension Home Economists. There wiU be a tea honoring all new agents and a special program honoring Miss Lorna Langley, retired state home economics leader.</p>
        <p>One district will present a skit entitled, The Creative Woman. Tours to R. J. Reynoldss Tobacco Co., Old Salem, Garners Food Co., and Decorators Show House wiU also be conducted for interested persms.</p>
        <p>HighUghting the two - day event will be a special presentation given by Miss Wilma Scott, graduate assistant in the Schod of Home Economics, UNC-G. Miss Scotts presentation will focus on new design and furnishings of a mobile home, a project currently underway at the university in cooperation with several manufacturing companies.</p>
        <p>Entertainment for the conference will.be given by Mrs.</p>
        <p>Beth Tarton, home economics news editor in Winston - Salem and the Adult Women BeU -ringers. Home Moravin Onirch of Winston - Salem.</p>
        <p>Attending from Pitt County will be Mrs. Sue May, Mrs. Evelyn Spangler, Miss Addie Gore and Mrs. PhyUis Wooten.</p>
        <p>Prior to the Winston - Salem meeting, a child care seminar wiU be held in Greensboro at UNC on Wednesday and Thursday. Visits wiU be made to the Toddlers School, the In-fancts School and the Learnii^ Institute of N.C.</p>
        <p>Arrange canned pear halves on lettuce; fill the centers of the pear halves with mint jelly. Serve this salad as an accompa-rament to roast lamb.</p>
        <p> ORGANS</p>
        <p>PIANOS</p>
        <p>TERMS AVAILABLE Theyf/T</p>
        <p>. 'E 5fh ST. GREENVILLE TELEPHONE 752 5 1 10</p>
        <p>Shes mad for Expo *70 and HOWaFlD WOhF</p>
        <p>PtotNt: The beautiful American. RedwhH-and blue . . .tri-color fashion In easy to live with Dacron(R)polyesterdoubleknlttwlll. A perfect salute to summer ...Sizes 6-16  $45.00</p>
        <p>Canter: Grand Illusion. Two-piece: brief pleated skirt topped by a superb and separate maxi over-, blouse. Dacron (R) polyester and cotton sheer. Brown, Wacfc.</p>
        <p>Sizes 6-16</p>
        <p>$40.00</p>
        <p>Right: Easy knit that holds Its shlp-shape lines In peaks and valleys outlined with welt srems. A dashing polka-dotted scarf to fling windward.. .carefree In Dacron (R) polyester double knit. ^ Brown-whHe.black-whlte... Sizes 6-16</p>
        <p>FASHIONS-SECOND FL&amp;lt;X)R</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0010" />
        <p>l^Tht Daily RcfkeUr. GrMavOle. N. C.Snnday. May 3.1170 -</p>
        <p>Engagements Announced</p>
        <p>MISS HARRIET LA FOILLE is the daughter of</p>
        <p>Mrs. Harry La Foille of Manistique, Mich., and the late Mr. La Foille, who announces her engagement to Capt. Scott Landram Smiley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wendell Wayne Smiley of Greenville. The wedding will take place June 26.</p>
        <p>PACE</p>
        <p>ACADEMY</p>
        <p>Memorial Drive</p>
        <p> Quality Education</p>
        <p> Low Pupil-Teacher Ratio</p>
        <p>Applications being accepted for , grades 1 through 7</p>
        <p>Registration at the Academy from 2:00 p.m. until 3 P.M. Monday through Friday or call 758-4107 or 746-3191.</p>
        <p>mill</p>
        <p>MISS MARIE DIANNE BAILEY... is the daughter of Mr. Hassell H. Bailey of Greenville and Mrs. R.C. Chandler (rf Colorado Springs, Colo., who announce her engagement to Thomas Neil Deaton Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas N. Deaton of Warsaw. The wedding will take place May 31.</p>
        <p>IN THE EXCLUSIVE 200 BLOCK</p>
        <p>EAST FIFTH STREET</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>Her</p>
        <p>She</p>
        <p>Day</p>
        <p>Love</p>
        <p>Simulated Pearls /</p>
        <p>50 to 90</p>
        <p>From 7.00 to 15.00</p>
        <p>USE YOUR CHARGE ACCOUNT OR</p>
        <p>FAVORITE CHARGE CARD</p>
        <p>By ARLEEN ABRAHAMS AP Newsfeatures Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Shes the youngest woman ever to capture two Intercollegiate Womens Fencing Association championships, but New York Universitys Sally Pechinsky would rather talk about her family than her success.</p>
        <p>Fencing is a way of life with me but its not the most important thing. People are. My mother and father, and my brother Frank and sister Joy are my No. 1 interests, said Sally, a 20-year-old sophomore from Peabody, Mass.</p>
        <p>On a recent weekend, at NYUs School of Education Gym, Sally won all 27 of her bouts to gain the IWFA crown. She secured her victory by defeating her teammate, Ruth White, 4-3, in the final round.</p>
        <p>You can never let down anytime you fence, said Sally. And against an aggressive girl like Ruth, the pressure is always on. In last years National Junior championships, Ruth defeated Sally for the title.</p>
        <p>It was in a YMCA in Salem, Mass., that Sally, an 11-year-old sixth grader at the time, first began to fence.</p>
        <p>My uncle was my teacher, said Sally. He is a coach up there and he also fences in amateur competition himself</p>
        <p>But Sally almost turned to ice skating instead of fencing. I had skated since I was a little</p>
        <p>COOKING IS FUN!</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTONE AP Food Editor FAMILY DINNER</p>
        <p>Theres an ample amount of custard atop the rice in this pudding.</p>
        <p>Broiled Chicken Broccoli Corn Muffins Cranberry Relish Rice Custard Pudding</p>
        <p>Beverage RICE CUSTARD PUDDING</p>
        <p>1 cup cooked rice l-3rd cup raisins</p>
        <p>2 large eggs l-3rd cup sugar Va teaspoon salt</p>
        <p>*/4 teaspoon nutmeg teaspoon vanilla 2 cups milk, scalded In a one-quart round glass</p>
        <p>casserole {6^^ by 2^/z inches) or similar baking dish, with a fork, mix the rice and raisins. In a small mixing bowl beat eggs enough to combine yolks and whites. Stir in the sugar, salt, nutmeg and vanilla. Gradually stir in the scalding-hot milk; pour over rice-raisins.</p>
        <p>Place casserole in another pan and add enough hot tap water to the pan to come up high. Bake in a preheated 350-degrec oven until a knife inserted about V/ inches from edge comes out clean or with only a few shreds of custard clinging to it50 to 60 minutes. Makes six servings. There will be a thick layer of custard at top of pudding.</p>
        <p>^Lop ^lie Ixciuwe 200^6</p>
        <p>EASr FIFTH STREET</p>
        <p>GREENVILLES FINEST SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>FIFTH</p>
        <p>The Campus Corner</p>
        <p>FIFTH</p>
        <p>The Snooty Fox</p>
        <p>FIFTH</p>
        <p>Proctors Ltd.</p>
        <p>FIFtH</p>
        <p>The College Shop</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>The Pappagallo Gallery</p>
        <p>On The Young Side</p>
        <p>By JANE JACKSON</p>
        <p>Fencing Champion Says: You Don Y HaveToHateTo Win</p>
        <p>kid, she said. And I really loved it. But fencing became more of a challenge to me. Its not just a physical sport; it involves so much mental thinking.</p>
        <p>At 13, Sally won the New England championship, and as a high school junior in 1967, she captured the National Junior title.</p>
        <p>Vivacious, yet sensitive, Sallys formula for success may be different than that of most champions.</p>
        <p>I was always told that you had to hate to win, but thats not so, she said. If youre friendly and nice, you can accomplish the same things. Fencing has given me a totally new outlook on life.</p>
        <p>Aside from fencing, Sally likes to play badminton, mountain climb in Vermont and New Hampshire, and run on the beaches in the summer to stay in trim.</p>
        <p>I like athletic men, she said. And I like to do sporty things, but I dont talk about fencing on dates.</p>
        <p>Sallys main goal is to compete in the 1972 Olympics in Munich I want to do. it very badly, she said. My parents are both hard-working pecle and theyve never seen me fence in college. I really felt badly that they couldnt come to Mexico City with me. I hope things work out differently this time.</p>
        <p>Since hot weather has once again come to Greenville, students at Rose High School are taking advantage of it wearing cooler clothes, urging teachers to hold dasses outside, and looking toward to the summer.</p>
        <p>Cheerleaders for the coming 1970-1970 school year have been chosen. They are led by Ginger Scales, head, and Sheila Teel, co - head.</p>
        <p>The cheerleaders on the squad include Kathy Williams, Elfreda Smith, Linda Branch, Brenda Branch, Josie Rawl,</p>
        <p>Val Hooper, Betty Battle, Peggy Jones, Patti Sanders, Linda Brown, and Susie Still. These girls will participate on the varsity squad.</p>
        <p>Senior Eric Vernon learned Wednesday that he was recipient of the National Honor Society Scholarship. He i^ans to attend Davidson College. Eric is president of the Student Government Association at RHS.</p>
        <p>Scholarship Finalists Three other seniors have been recognized. Tommy Durham, Karen Colvard, and Billy Armistead have received the National Merit Scholarship. They were among 3,(X)0 seniors chosen from 15,000 other finalists for the award.</p>
        <p>Seniors are anxiously looking ahead in the future because graduation is a little over a month away.</p>
        <p>Graduation ceremonies will take place June 9 at Ficklen Stadium. Practice for seniors will take place that morning.</p>
        <p>Seniors will take their exams early this year as they take three a day, June 4 and Jime S. They will not attend school Monday as will all other students.</p>
        <p>Baccalaaerate Servkc Baccalaureate will take l^ace May 31 at 8:00 p.m. in the Rose High gym. Practice for this event will be the previous Friday, May 29. Seniors received their invitations for graduation Friday.</p>
        <p>It is time again f(nr student elections at RHS. This week, any student running for an office must get a petition and have it signed by students. Next week the various campaigns will take place with elections the following week.</p>
        <p>COMPLETE BRIDAL SERVICE</p>
        <p>Picas* accept our invitation to step in and discuss your wedding flowers, ctiurcli deceratiens, reccptien, bouquets, and wadding invitations. &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>You con depend on us to help make your wedding plans the most treasured moments of your life. Every detail will be planned with special care. AAakc an appointment with us soon.</p>
        <p>Cox Floraf Service</p>
        <p>II7W. 4th Street</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Dixon</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Connie B. Dixon, Rt. 2, Greenville, a daughter, Karla Jean, on April 28, 1970, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Phillips</p>
        <p>Born to Mr. and Mrs. Carlton R. Phillips, Rt. 2, Greenville, a son, Carlton Ray Jr., on April 29, 1970, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>By holiday time next year, predicts Gentlemens Quarterly, the white shirt will be back, but it wont be totally white. Shirts will appear in soft colors, washed here and there with white. Fabrics will be delicate, such as dotted Swiss, laces and embroidered cottons. For men.</p>
        <p>EAT OUT</p>
        <p>TONIGHT</p>
        <p>AT THE</p>
        <p>CANDLEWICK</p>
        <p>INN</p>
        <p>SEAFOOD BUFFET</p>
        <p>2.75</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>Special Introductory V2 Price Offer</p>
        <p>GlArfcf o| lL</p>
        <p>LIQUID</p>
        <p>REVENESCENCE</p>
        <p>The finest moisturizer you can</p>
        <p>give your tace In a new un- tfcn breakable 6 oz. bottle.  * fOU</p>
        <p>(After May 31st the price is 15.00)</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWM PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0011" />
        <p>TIm Daily Reflactar. GmsviHt. N. C. iiiiy, Mtjra Wi II</p>
        <p>Calendar Events</p>
        <p>SUNDAY 12 NoonBuffet at Greenville Golf and Country aub</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>10:00 i.m.Greenville Service League meets at Elm Street Recreation Center 0:45 p.m.Optimist Chib meets at Three Steers, Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Lions Club meets at Moose Lodge 7:30 p.m,Woodmen of the World, Simpson Lodge meet at Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Lodge No. 885, Loyal Order of the Moose TUESDAY 1:00 p.ni.Christian Business Men's Committee meets at Three Steers, Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Greenville Toastmasters Club meets at Three Steers, Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Creasy K. Proctor, Order of DeMolay meets at Masonic Hall 8:00 p.m.Chapter No. 149 Order of Elastem Star 8:00  p.m.Pitt Co.</p>
        <p>Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA Bldg. on Farmville Hwy. Telephone 752-2%l</p>
        <p>8:00' p.m.The Greenville TOPS Club meets upstairs at the Elm Street gym</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 1:00 p.m.Worsbfip services will be held in chapel at Pitt Memorial Hospital 1:45  p.m.Wednesday</p>
        <p>Afternoon Duplicate Bridge</p>
        <p>COOKING</p>
        <p>IS FUN!</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTONE</p>
        <p>AP Food Editor DINNER FOR FOUR</p>
        <p>Cream sauce, plus onion and bacon, give spinach allure. Hamburgers</p>
        <p>FrenchFriedPotatoes Savory Cream Spinach Cherry Pie  Beverage</p>
        <p>SAVORY CREAMED SPINACH 1 bag (12 ounces) fresh spinach 4 slices bacon, finely diced</p>
        <p>1 medium onion, peeled and finely</p>
        <p>diced</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons flour</p>
        <p>teaspoon salt teaspoon white pepper 1 clove garlic, peeled and minced 1 cup milk Remove any tough stem ends frtnn spinach; thoroughly wash spinach in cold water; drain lightly; turn into large sauce-pot. Over moderate heat, turning with a long-handle fork, briefly cook spinach in the water clinging to the leaves until wilted-about five minutes. Drain if necessary. Chop coarsely.</p>
        <p>In a 10-inch skillet gently cook the bacon and onion, stirring often, until onion is soft and bacon is cooked but not crisp-about 10 minutes. Remove from heat. Stir in flour, salt, pepper and garlic; gradually stir in milk, keeping smooth. Cook over moderately low heat, stirring constantly, until thickened and boiling; add spinach and reheat. Makes four servings.</p>
        <p>Vary that homemade quick-style nut bread! Add some diced candied orange peel along with the nuts. Candied orange peel is available in small containers in supermarkets; it may also be bought by the pound in many candy shops.</p>
        <p>For a happy</p>
        <p>MOTHER'S DAY</p>
        <p>it's cards by</p>
        <p>PITT PLAlA^tHOPPIIM CINTlll</p>
        <p>Chib weekly game at Planters Baidt 1:00 p.m.Pitt County Al-Anon Group meets at Alcoholic Information</p>
        <p>Center. Telephone 7sm or 7584)587 8:00 p.m.Junior Woman's Club of Greenville meets at dub bldg.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 18:00 a.raSenior Qtiaens</p>
        <p>meet</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Exchange Chd&amp;gt; meets</p>
        <p>7:00  p.m.Winterville</p>
        <p>Kiwanis Club meets at Community Bldg.</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Alpha  Nu</p>
        <p>Chapter of Al|rfia Delta</p>
        <p>Kappa meets at Holiday Inn 8:00 pjn.-VFW meets at Post Home 8:00 p.m.Coochee Council No. 00, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Redmens Hall 8:00  p.m.American</p>
        <p>Legion Auxiliary meets at Legion Home</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.r-Regttlar meeting of Greenville Elks Lodge No. 1045. Dinner prior to meetii^  '  '</p>
        <p>FRIDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 a.m.Ladies day at Greenville Gdf and Country Chib</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Redmen meet</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.Regular aeseion of Faculty Duplicate Club at Planters Bank 7:30 p.m.Pitt Coin Chd&amp;gt; 'meets at Wachovia Bank SATURDAY 7:30  a.m.Christian</p>
        <p>Business Mens breakfast at Three Steers, Memorial Dr.</p>
        <p>1:30 p.m.^Rngalar Saturday Aftnnota Duplicaia Bridm at Elm Street Racraatlaa corner</p>
        <p>SUNDAY 12 ' NOOBnffat  at</p>
        <p>Greenville Gotf and Country Chib</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0012" />
        <p>ij. fwmmj m, M.wtw</p>
        <p>WIVES OF MISSING SERVICEMEN... lefttonght,  directions by a London bobbie outside of the  U. S.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Shirley Appleby, Mrs. Virginia Guttersen, Mrs.  Embassy. (UPI Telephoto from file)</p>
        <p>Verna v.in Loan and Mrs. Daren Woods are given</p>
        <p>Wives Tell Of 'Living Nightmare'</p>
        <p>By RICHARD M. SUDHALTER</p>
        <p>BELGRADE (UPI)-Its a living nightmare, said Karen Wood.</p>
        <p>"nie elfin brunette on the hotel room couch delivered her judgment without heat, in a crisp matter-of-fact voice. A display of emotion would have been superfluous.</p>
        <p>Its worse than knowing the worst, this being suspended, she said. At least you can deal with the fact of death. You know what it is and where you are. But</p>
        <p>this, this frustratiwi its plain hell.</p>
        <p>Karen Woods nig.htmare began Feb. 6, 1967, the day her husband Patrick, a U.S. Air Force lieutenant colonel, went down in enemy fire over Quang Binh province. North Vietnam. He never was confirmed as killed in action, and the North Vietnamese do not release names of prisoners of war. So Col. Woods 32-year-old wife and six children still do not know whether he is alive or dead.</p>
        <p>I iipfKu^wid  Kilim</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>222 E. 5th St.</p>
        <p>Group of Early</p>
        <p>Spring Ensembles Dresses And</p>
        <p>&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Reduced</p>
        <p>Pant Suits</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>. USE YOURCHAR6E0R</p>
        <p>. MASTER</p>
        <p>Im not under any illusions, Mrs. Wood said. Tlie circumstances of his, his accident were extremely bad. Only a miracle could bring him back to me now. But until a list of names comes out or until the North Vietnamese tell me he is not in a {M*ison camp in North Vietnam we sit here suspended.</p>
        <p>Many Wives Plight Karen Woods plight is not unique in the history of the Vietnam War. But recently she and a group of wives in Tucson, Ariz., whose husbands also are missing in combat took some action of their own. They set out (Ml a tour of European capitals seeking official support for a campaign to get Hanoi to release names of U.S. servicemen held prisoner.</p>
        <p>Belgrade was the only Communist capital on the itinerary.</p>
        <p>It yielded a promise of help from Red Cross officials but little else concrete.</p>
        <p>Its been tough going especially at home. Karen Wood, Verna van Loan and Shirley Appleby have been without their men for three years. All have children.</p>
        <p>Until mid-April, when Verna van Loan learned by long distance telephone that a letter from her husband Jack, a major, had arrived for her in Tucson, she also did not know for sure whether she still had a husband.</p>
        <p>Im a very optimistic person in all respects, Mrs. van Loan said. A trim blonde of 35, she displayed more surface assurance than either of her two companions.</p>
        <p>When I was notified of my husbands accident I was also told of the complete situation that he ejected successfully and</p>
        <p>had a good parachute. He went down in a heavily populated area.</p>
        <p>So I added up the odds and decided his chances of being alive were excellent. I relayed this to the children ... told them I was almost sure their father was a prisoner, she said. So theyve talked for the last three years about when Daddy comes home rathern than if.</p>
        <p>Fighting Pessimism TTiings have been less hopeful for Shirley Appleby, 34. One man was seen bailing out of her husbands two-seater F4 jet Oct. 7, 1967, before it plunged out of control into clouds southwest of Hanoi. Tliat man probably was not her husband, according to available evidence.</p>
        <p>I really feel as though it would be a miracle if my husband is brought back to me under these circumstances, she said. But things have to go on, dont they? I teach school part-time-^nathematics, afternoons.</p>
        <p>I couldnt run a house by myself so its up to the children to help. TTie summer my husband was in Vietnam I got my degree in chemistry, but I didnt know whether to pursue it further or go once and for all into teaching.</p>
        <p>I still dont know.</p>
        <p>The effects of the uncertainty, all three women agreed, are seen most graphically in children.</p>
        <p>KAREN WOODS: By the middle of August, 1967, we had moved from our home in Wisconsin to Tucson. 7110 first | year there was very difficult. Tlie children really withdrew. Christopher, whos now 11, and Paul, 9, went completely into : their shells. You could see : Continued on Page 13</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Prirrs Effective Monday iV* Tuesday</p>
        <p>HOPPER</p>
        <p>TOPPERS</p>
        <p>FUS. LENGTH</p>
        <p>Door Mirrors</p>
        <p>16 Inches Wide By 54 Inches Long. All Hardwood Frame.</p>
        <p>24^' X 36'^ FRAMED</p>
        <p>PICTURES</p>
        <p>fssssmssm</p>
        <p>I In a Varied lAssortment of 'subjects and Moulding Styles.</p>
        <p>Reg. &amp;gt;4.37</p>
        <p>8  ,  Diere  8  STANDARD  54  INCH  8</p>
        <p>s Ironing Boardsi</p>
        <p>IH All AAa#! '  ^^8</p>
        <p>Tea Set</p>
        <p>6-sixteen ounce Coolers And 1-Forty-Five ounce  Pitcher. Choice of Avocado and Gold.</p>
        <p>All Metal Model. Sturdily Built. Finger Tip Adjustment For standing or sitting Position.</p>
        <p>.V.'.'</p>
        <p>Si.:</p>
        <p>.vI-</p>
        <p>8 Regular  Price</p>
        <p>s ^3.99</p>
        <p>Choosing Betvvpc Loyalty And Truth</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Bureri</p>
        <p>love to have ourselves.</p>
        <p>DIES</p>
        <p>fc 1f7 Or CMtm TrOI M. V. Hnrt  Imc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Some time ago, you publijfKd  ' g</p>
        <p>regarding the difference between being a i J*lcUle or stoolie and a person who is not afraid, to provifle information regvding violation of the law, etc.</p>
        <p>This very issue is facing many of our young pv *ple today as they see tbeif friends involved in illeil activitks. They are tom between their loyalty to the frk ids and their responsibility as a good citizen.</p>
        <p>Your statement in this regard is the best analy.sif of the problem I have ever seen. I have saved it and herewith inclose same. You would be doing all of us a favor if you would print it again. Thank you.  J.  G.  JOHNSON</p>
        <p>Assistant County Attorney Oelwoin. la.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: We are a group of girb who wwdd lit li  wh it you think of the MAXI-COATS.</p>
        <p>toe GIRLS AT t II</p>
        <p>DEAR GIRLS: I think theyre great--fir the 4^ ohh o rail in her stocking.  *</p>
        <p>DEAR J. G. J.: Here it is. originally published tUr -r years ago, but still timely.</p>
        <p>ARIANE CLARK</p>
        <p>Reaches All The Way To Hong Kong To Bring You Peacock Chairs, Tables, Hanging Baskets, Bead</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY; I am going to wTite *hi.s quickly and mail it, so I wont have a chance to reconsider and close my eyes to a wrong.</p>
        <p>My son recently told me about some youngsters in our neighborhcMxl who steal bikes, remove tlie parts, rebuild and sell both rebuilt bikes and extra parts. I asked him how the.se youngsters managed to get away with it withtmt tht ir parents knowing about it, and he says the kiJs lel! their parents that the bike belongs to another boy. and they bougut the spare parts with their allowances.</p>
        <p>I am appalled at the whole thing. I ( unt e.\pcct rny bey to reveal the names of these boys, and r.iy hu baiiJ voad think it unseemly if I were to bring this to the atUntion .f the authorities.</p>
        <p>You are the only way I have of warning parent.s wl.o unknowingly may be allowing their children to continue (&amp;gt;;is practice.</p>
        <p>I do not condone my own childs acceptance of this behavior and have asked him to avoid this group of friends until they, too, become aware of their unacceptable behavior and stop it.  C : RN: D</p>
        <p>Curtains, And Wall Decor In</p>
        <p>RAHAN</p>
        <p>Come By, Won't You? Pitt Plaza</p>
        <p>DEAR CONCERNED: A boy who is old eneugh U&amp;gt; rebuild a bike is old enough to know he is breaking the law. While your son may not be guilty of stealing, he is guilty of another crime. fKnowing of thievery and kt'eping quiet.) I do not approve of friends infonniug on one icotlier, but a real friend would do all in his pov. r to i his companions straight.</p>
        <p>I hope the parents of the guilty boys see tjus, i d c' &amp;gt;ck out the stories their sons tell about buyim: pare parts, and repairing another boys bike. And if they dis. over that their sons have stolen bikes, they should in.iit t!icy are returned to their rightful owners. Otherwise th=y shoold report their own sons to the authorities. Smaling is stealing. And the successful petty thief goes on to bigger things. </p>
        <p>A THINKING MANS MESSAGE about Diamonds</p>
        <p>Biiving a diamond soon? Confused about diamond pi ing? Vvc wuuklnt blame you a bit. A 'A carat diamond rnav cost a variety of prices. The size may remain the same, but the quality of every diamond differs slighii\ trom that of every other stone mined. Diamond; are a unique gem that require specialized k:iov, ledge on the part of a jeweler. As members of the . menean Ciem Society, you may depend on our dia-1 lor J specialists to properly explain the subtle differ-!;  ome in soon and see for yourself.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY; To the reader who was always sp&amp;lt;^ccb.!ess when her friend would give her a gift and remark (h.at she wished she could have kept it for her.self. Irv qu. fing .-,c little poem next time:</p>
        <p>I love the Christmas time, and y t,</p>
        <p>I notice this. Each year i live;</p>
        <p>I always love the gifts I get.</p>
        <p>But how I love the gifts I give!</p>
        <p>'This could apply to any time of year. And iyn t t the truth! So many times we choose for gifts those which we</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0013" />
        <p>The DaQst Reflectar, Greeirille, N. C.Swiiy, May S. ItnUWorld War In Europe Reached End 25 Years Ago</p>
        <p>ESitr* U:  Tweatjr.five</p>
        <p>jtvt aga tUa veak Wfrid War n la Earape esdedi wMi Iht pcaadHtfcwial aarrcader af Mail GerflMiay at Rkatau aad BcrUa. jaaeph W. Grigg, aaw chief in*I Eraapeaa carreapaadcat. eevered the aorreadcr aa war carreapaadeat repreaeaOag the comMaed Allied press, la the follawiBg diapateh he dcacrihea agaia the twa aarreader cere-monies and the tatai destrac-tion he faoad in Berlin.</p>
        <p>By JOSEPH W. GRIGG RHEIMS, France (UPD-The maps on the war room walls are fading and yellowing with age. The Sightseers who once descended in busloads on the little red schoolhouse in Rheims have dwindled to a trickle.</p>
        <p>It was here that 25 years ago this week  Nazi Germany</p>
        <p>surrendered to the Allies and, for Ehirope^ the Second Wcnrld War was over.</p>
        <p>Prom his Supreme Allied Headquarters in Rheims, Gen. Dwight D. Eisenhower cabled the cmnbined chiefs of staff in Washington:</p>
        <p>The mission of this Allied force was fulfilled at 0241 local time. May 7, 1945.</p>
        <p>What Actually Happened Thirty-six hours later I was one of two American war correspondents who flew from here to cover the ratification of the Nazi surrender in a second ceremony at Marshal Gecnrgi K. Zhukhovs Red Army headquarters amid the apocalyptic ruins of Berlin.^</p>
        <p>Adolf Hitler, the Nazi fuehrer, was deada suicide in his bomb-proof shelter alongside Eva Braun, the mistress he married a few hours earlier.</p>
        <p>At 11:01 p.m. (Central European Time) on May 8, 1945, the guns in Europe suddenly were silent. For the first time in five years, eight months and seven days, the slaughter on this war-shattered continent ceased.</p>
        <p>Now the Allies could switch their full might to the Pacific and the destruction of Japan only a few months later.</p>
        <p>Already Some Forget That was VE-Day a quartm* of a century ago. But memories are short.</p>
        <p>The sightseers dont come the way they used to, laments Emile Edeline, 70, a small, spry, white-haired Frenchman, who for 15 of the past 25 years has been custodian of the former war room in Eisenhowers Rheims headquarters where the Nazis surrendered.</p>
        <p>Even the torchlight watch in the war room by French war veterans on the night of May 6-7 has been abandoned in recent years, although it may be held again this year.</p>
        <p>lime Stands Still Everything in the war room remains exactly as it was 25 years ago. It is as if time had stood still for a generation.</p>
        <p>The maps on the walls show the exact positions of the Allied and German armies at the moment of the Nazi surrender.</p>
        <p>One map shows Allied railroads, oil pipelines and gasoline supply depots. Another shows all American and British airfields in Europe and the missions assigned on May 6,</p>
        <p>1945.</p>
        <p>A Urge red swastika, with a thermometer superimposed on it, marks the pwing bag of German war prisoners since the Allied invasin of Europe, June , 1944. The grand total registered on May 7. 1945, showed 4,085,051 prisoners or the equivalent of loi German (fi visions.</p>
        <p>EverytMag Preserved</p>
        <p>In the middle of the room still stands the scarred oak table on which the surrender' was signed. Cards mark the places where the Allied leaders and the beaten Germans sat.</p>
        <p>Some of the few sightseers who come today arent even sure which war ended here, Edeline muses sadly. A lot of them are Germans. Some of the younger ones come in giggling and wearing paper hats. I make them take them (tff and tell them Uiey should show respect for the millions of dead.</p>
        <p>Incidentally, the name little red schoolhouse is a misnomer.</p>
        <p>The former supreme headquarters is, in fact, a sprawling reddish brick technical college built around a large courtyard. It has a student body of about 3,000.</p>
        <p>Edeline, who was personal chauffeur of the mayor of Rheims at the time, says few, if any, citizens of this city knew history was being made there on the night of May 6-7, 1945.</p>
        <p>Surrender Was Secret</p>
        <p>Of course, it was common knowledge the building was used by the military, he says. But there was no barbed wire and only a few sentries. I doubt if anyone here knew it was Eisenhowers advance headquarters. It was only after the French radio broadcast the surrender announcement that we knew the signing took place here.</p>
        <p>It was around 5 p.m. on May 5 that the German surrender delegation reached Rheims by plane, headed by Adm. Hans-Georg von Friedeburg, (German navy commander-in-chief.</p>
        <p>He told Allied officers he had come to negotiate but had no authority to sign. He was informed curtly there would be no negotiations, only unconditional surrender.</p>
        <p>Next day von Friedeburg was joined by Gen. Alfred Jodi, German army chief of staff. Jpdl demanded 48 hours respite.</p>
        <p>Germans Caved In</p>
        <p>Eisenhower replied through an aide, tell them that 48 hours from midnight tonight I shall close my lines on the western front so no more Germans can get through, whether they sign or not.</p>
        <p>Faced with this ultimatum, the Germans agreed to sign.</p>
        <p>At 2 a.m. on May 7 they were led into the war room. At the table facing them was Eisenhowers chief of staff, Gen. Walter Bedell Smith.</p>
        <p>On Bedell Smiths left were the Soviet representative, Maj. Gen. Ivan Susloparov, Gen. Carl Spaatz of the U.S. Air Force and British Air Marshal Sir James M. Robb.</p>
        <p>On his right^were Adm. Sir Harold BurroiiglC^ef of staff of Allied naval forces, Gen.</p>
        <p>Francois Sevez, Frendi duef of Suff, and LL Gen. Sir Frederidc Morgan of Britain.</p>
        <p>Captarialton</p>
        <p>Eisenhower waited in his office next to the war room.</p>
        <p>BedeU Smith asked  the</p>
        <p>Germans if they were ready to Jodi nodded assent. He signed first with a gold-plated fountain pen.</p>
        <p>It was exactly 2:41 a.m., Double British Summer Time.</p>
        <p>Jodi then stood and said to Bedell Smith in German:</p>
        <p>General, wii this signature the German people and German armed forces are, for better or worse, ddivered into the victors hands. In this war, which has lasted more than five years, both have achieved and suffered more than periiaps any othr people in the world. In</p>
        <p>this hour I can only express the hope that the victor will treat them generously.</p>
        <p>Jodi and von Friedeburg were led into Eisenhower's office, where he ataed temly if they fully understood the terms and were prepared to carry them out. They answered ja, bowed stiffly and wen escorted out.</p>
        <p>The Second Sarrender Early on May 8 I flew in Bedell Smiths C47 tranqxrt to Bo^lin f(Hr the second surrender this time at Red Army headquarters. I had covered the first two-and-a-half years of the war in Berlin and left it as a prisoner of the gestapo iNazi secret police) on Dec. 14, 1941, a week after Pearl Harbor.</p>
        <p>The sight of Bolin from the air that morning was one of</p>
        <p>total jievastatk.</p>
        <p>In the (fispatch I filed May 9, 1945, as **pool reporter for the combined Alhed press, I wrote: The city undemeatti looked like 1 incredible Wdbian setting. Mile after mile of gaunt, roofless, gutted sbdls of houses stood silent and tade-Um-like. there was no traffic in the streets except Russian military vehicles. Ovor the whole dead capital there was a thick smoke haze. Columns of smoke from buildings still burning could be seen curiing lazily into the still air. Stabbora Deflance Five minutes after midnight on May 9 the Germans were brought into Marshal Zlnikhovs headquartersa formar German army technical school in the East Beriin sdburb of</p>
        <p>THE WAR ROOM-Maps on the walls are fading and yellowing in the little red schoolhouse in Rheims where 25 years ago this week Nazi Germany surrendered. At top, representatives of</p>
        <p>Germany and the Allies sit around the table. At bottom, the same room, the same table and wall maps as they are today. (UPI Telephoto)</p>
        <p>For Mother...</p>
        <p>A Zale Diamond</p>
        <p>Christine Stimley met her husband while he was stationed in 3ermany. Her German-ityle :eoking won hb heart When he was transferred to rhailand, she weighed 205 lbs. Yet Christine was only 24 yean 3ld. thats when she decided to try Ayds. She took one or two before meab as directed and ^ helped her eat less, without hannfiil drugs. - -py the,time her husband came home, she was down to 119 lbs., and able to wear a fitted swim-</p>
        <p>ECKERDS DRUG STORES</p>
        <p>Karishont Heatfing the delegation was field Marshal WUheim Keitel, Wehrmacht chief of staff. With him were von Friedeburg and Col. Gen. Paul Stumpff, Luftwaffe commander-in-diiefi Keitel, haughty and/s^-poasessed, hb face mam-like and sli^tly flushed, slammed Ms marshals baton on the table and sat down looking stonily ahead. Once or twice he fingered hb collar and wetted hit lips nervously.</p>
        <p>Britains Air Chief Marshal Sir Arthur Tedder, deputizing for Eisoihower, asked coldly in English, I ask you: Have you read thb documoit of unconditional surrender? Are you prepared to sign it?</p>
        <p>I Am Ready</p>
        <p>Keitel picked up the sheet paper and answered in a rasping Prussian accent in German, ja, ich bin beireit (Yes I am ready).</p>
        <p>Wives . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 12)</p>
        <p>everything falling apart. You couldnt tdl whether they accepted what had happened or not because there was just no discussion of it. The next year was a little better. But it still goes frtan day to daywhether they have a daddy or whether they dont have a daddy.</p>
        <p>The youngest children have just made iqi stories about him frwn what Ive been able to tell them, from what the older ones know, from pictures they see. Theyve ccmibined a grmidfath-er, their frioids fathers, everything into one composite picture.</p>
        <p>VERNA VAN LOAN: My 4-year-cld, Douglas, looks at airplanes in the sky and asks if thats his daddy up there. We were in Scotland when I was notified my husband mi^t be a prisoner. I told the diUdren, and ttiey looked at me, all three of them, as though I were telling^ ttion something theyd known all al(Hig. Yet, when we got back to Tucfon, my lO-yeanold, Stqdien, went dfrectly into his romn and came out in about five minutes wearing one of those huge buttons with a message you can make yoursdf. It read My Dad is alive. I realized only ttien that hed been living with a lot more uncertainty than he had (XHnmunicated. He wore the button for two days.</p>
        <p>T &amp;amp; C TAKES TO BRIGHT WHITE PATENT</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0014" />
        <p>14-TIwDty Reneetar, GrceavOle, N. C.Sonday, Mty S, 1170Former 'Torso Slayer' Now An Educated Prisoner</p>
        <p>By rAMELA REEVES</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (UPI)  WilliAm lieirem to a pleasant-Caced, iKMy po4Gf man of 41 wt hM wotry wiinktea around , his eyea and 150 hours of college credit and 1900 in aitistss aofnings to his name.</p>
        <p>He seems to have little in oomrooo with the suky-faced youth he was 94 years ago when he was convicted of three sex murders which vied in shock power with Chicagos most infamous crimes.</p>
        <p>He was known nationwide then as the torso slayer. 'Tatoatcd Man</p>
        <p>Now, Stateville Penitentiary Warden Frank Pate calls him an industrious, congenial prisoner and a Ulented man. A rehabilitation worker says Hei-rens is the brightest man I have met in any prison Ive been to.</p>
        <p>He has worked hard to improve his reputation. But Bill Heirens is still in prison and</p>
        <p>not likely to get out in the foreseeable future.</p>
        <p>Recently he sold the largest number of paintinfs-&amp;gt;77--at a nationwide penal art Aow. His small, finely detailed pen and ink drawings, mostly pastoral scenes, brought him about MOO.</p>
        <p>It has been only in the last three years that he has sold his paintings, but girls he dated in college said even then he spoke to them with feeling of watercolors he was doing.</p>
        <p>College CredH His interest in study also has roots in the past. Heirens was a B student at the University of Chicago in a general study course before he was sent to prison. Behind bars, he has accumulated 150 hours of credit through correspondence courses from at least 10 universities.</p>
        <p>He maintains a high B average in subjects which range from Shakespeare, socio-l(^y and journalism to calculus, horticulture and data process-</p>
        <p>He has Uught in the prison, too, specializing in radio and television rquiir courses. Currently he assisto one of the prisons civilian school principals. And he writes a column for the prison newspaper describing q)eakers who appear inside the gates.</p>
        <p>He also makes regular and, so far, fruitless appeals for freedom.</p>
        <p>Psychiatrists who examined Heirens 24 years ago said he lacked a moral sensethat quality that enables one to fit normally into society.</p>
        <p>The nations courts have concurred in the opinion since.</p>
        <p>The Heirens murders began when the body of Mrs. Josephine Ross, 43, was found in her apartment in June, 1945. Her throat had been slashed four times, the wounds stopped with adhesive tape, her hgrfw washed clean and her night-</p>
        <p>dothes rinsed in a bathtub.</p>
        <p>Bread Kaife In December, 1945, Frances Brown, 35, was found with a 10-inch bread knife thrust into her skull. On the wall of her apartment the words help me before I kill more, I cannot control myself were scrawled.</p>
        <p>In January, 1946, Suzanne Degnan, 6, was kidnaped from her bed. Her dismembered body was found in the sewers of</p>
        <p>her neighborhood.</p>
        <p>All the slayings occurred on Chicagos far North Side, not far from suburban Evanston where Heirens was bom.</p>
        <p>Heirens was linked to the Degnan murder through fingerprints after he was arrested on a burglary charge. In September, 1946, he was sentenced to three consecutive life terms after he confessed the murders and a series of burglaries and</p>
        <p>robberies. He received sentences ranging frwn one year to life for the less serious crimes.</p>
        <p>First Appeal Heirens made his first appeal for freedom in 1952, when he prepared by himself a 27-page brief asking for a new trial. He charged he was beaten and intimidated before he confessed, was represented by incompetent counsel, and had been deprived of his constitu-</p>
        <p>Alinsky Earns Title Of 'Professional Radical'</p>
        <p>By PAUL H. ANDERSON</p>
        <p>SEATTLE, Wash. (UPI )-Saul Alinsky doesnt exactly fit Americas stereotype o the fXJtside agitator or rev(dutiona-ry organizer.</p>
        <p>But if anyone in the United States today deserves the title of professional radical. its Alinsky. He wears the title proudly.</p>
        <p>With his receding gray hair, clear plastic frame glasses and conservative clothes, Alinsky. 61. looks more like a grandfath-crly shopkeeper than a full-time radical trying to get the middle class to fight for social reform. When he opens his mouth, however, all resemblance to the kindly grandfather disappears.</p>
        <p>Training Future Organizers</p>
        <p>Nowadays Alinsky devotes much of his time to his school for organizers in Chicago, which is turning out professional radicals for tomOTrows social battles. The rest of his schedule is taken up with speeches and seminars where he delights in killing sacred cows with language very salty and very direct. Or, as he told a seminar for urban organizers here:</p>
        <p>The first rule of organizing is to never go outside the experience of the people you are talking to. And the two things that everyone has had experience with are sex and the toilet so I figure Im safe if I describe things in those terms. Alinsky organized the poor and dispossessed for more than 20 years before he turned his attention to the middle class a few years ago.</p>
        <p>Uniting The Oppressed His decision to go afta* the middle class was not a whimsical nor emotional one. It was based on the one thing Alinsky probably understands better than any organizer in Americapower.</p>
        <p>If you are successful in organizing all of the blacks, Puerto Ricanos, Chicanos and poor whites in the country, you still dont have enough, he says. You will still need to form a coalition with the middle class. So, why not just go after the middle class in the beginning?</p>
        <p>equal opportunities for blacks.</p>
        <p>Proxies Wedge A Success The idea of using stock proxies to force corporate policy changes seemed to appeal to Alinskys middle-class admirers and he said he was deluged with offers of proxies in various corporations.</p>
        <p>In all my years in the arena. Ive never seen the enemy so uptight as they are about this stock proxy thing. Alinsky says proudly.</p>
        <p>The section of the middle class that Alinsky is now concentrating on is the group that earns from $7,500 to $13,000 a year. He calls this the lower middle class and emphasizes that its problems are quite different from the middle or upper middle class.</p>
        <p>Pushed, They Push Back There are very few college people in the lower middle class. he said. This is the group that is sufferii^ inflation, is left out of welfare and leaned toward Wallace in the last election.</p>
        <p>There is a great deal of racism in this group because of the financial threat posed by their neighborhoods becoming integrated.</p>
        <p>Youve got to remember that the blacks arent moving into middle and upper middle class neighborhoods.</p>
        <p>Alinsky says the cdlege-educated middle class can be appealed to and organized around abstract and moral issues because they are more economically secure.</p>
        <p>Ability To Outrage The grape boycott, led by Alinskys star pupil, Cesar Chavez, is an example of organizing the middle class, he said. It is the refusal of the white middle class to buy California table grapes that makes the whole thing so effective.</p>
        <p>Since he began wganizing for the CIO uni(Mis in the 1930s, Alinsky says he has found that an ability to outrage staid officials and citizenry can oftoi do the organizers work for him.</p>
        <p>Your best wganizer is the oi^ition, he told the Seattle</p>
        <p>seminar. Properly goaded, people like the Southern police during the days of the civil rights demonstrations can do all of your organizational work for you. If it hadnt been for the cops in the South, the great civil rights movement would not have gotten off the ground </p>
        <p>But Alinsky is not a supporter of the violent tactics of such groups as the Weatherman faction of the Students for a Democratic Society.</p>
        <p>In organizing, the worst thing you can do is to do something that brings on a worse reaction from the authorities. he said. And thats exactly what these violent demonstrations by the nuts are doing.</p>
        <p>Tread Ground By Heavyfooted</p>
        <p>AKRON, Ohio (UPD-Heavy-footed motorists can grind as much as 5,000 miles of tread life off a set of tires in one evening of jackrabbit starts, screeching turns and panic stops, say experts of the Goodyear Tire &amp;amp; Rubber Company.</p>
        <p>Thats more mileage than the average driver puts on his car in six months, they warn. Trade war is affected by many factors, but drag starts and sliding turns and stops rank among the worst abuses of tires.</p>
        <p>Old Soldiers Are Shockproof</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) - Chelsea Barracks Old Soldiers Home stopped six pensioners from seeing a film called Sex Is a Pleasure as the guests of theater owners who planned to drive them into London in limousines.</p>
        <p>Its ridiculous to prevent the lads going, said Sgt. Robert Shepherd, 65. In two world wars theyve seen as much sex as anyone in the world.</p>
        <p>His first major attempt at organizing the middle and upper middle classes for social change came in Rochester, N.Y., in 1964, where he used stock proxies in Eastman Kodak and Xerox to fight for</p>
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        <p>A  *n|  Mrtnuou,  o(</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE FLOWER SHOP</p>
        <p> ywir prt mnitru.l period I FamiVlie Amering new X-PEL I</p>
        <p>\ 1  JOHN'S flowers a gifts</p>
        <p>keve body-Woeting puffi- MOORE'S FLOWER-SHOP</p>
        <p>new. Wwst eMsiiwiwit. end water reten I hve fwelling - c  legi and arm. I r armVIII</p>
        <p>tyson's flower shop</p>
        <p>Wataf WH** today at  I ^</p>
        <p>AYDEN flower SHOP</p>
        <p>ECKERD'S I BETHEL FLOWER SHOP DRUG STORES</p>
        <p>I gsrjtattwr*</p>
        <p>i~: :: ; 11 pitt county</p>
        <p>"S-11 FLORAL ASSOCIATION</p>
        <p>tional rights.</p>
        <p>He abo said be was given a truth Stonim, sodium pentothal, against hb will.</p>
        <p>Judge Harold Ware, who had sentenced Heirens, turned down the appeal. It was the first of a string of curt rejections.</p>
        <p>Heirens subsequ)tly appealed unsuccessfuUy to all the state courts, asked for executive clemency four times and attempted three times futilely to get his case before the U.S. Supreme Cfourt.</p>
        <p>In 1966, however he was granted parole on his first life sentence, two years after he became eligible. Currently he b serving his second life sentence. It will be six years before he b</p>
        <p>digible for parole on that terms, and thoi 10 more years before he could be paroled on the third life term. After that he still would have time for the burglary convictions to serve.</p>
        <p>Heirens only chances of earlier release are if executive clemency is granted, a new trial ordered, or his jail terms are reduced or reversed. If past actions are an indication, his chances are dim.</p>
        <p>Lemon Custard Pie</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakeiy</p>
        <p>IS Dickinson Avenua</p>
        <p>WILLIAM HEIRENS, who 24 years ago was convicted of three sex murders and is serving a life sentence,</p>
        <p>paints and sketches in his cell as he squats atop a triple deck bunk. (UPI Telephoto)</p>
        <p>Mr. Johnny W. Nobon, Jr. of Btfhtl, N.C. has boon named the Leading Ordinary Ufa Producer for the year inf for Coastal Plain Life Insurance Company which recently merged with Lykes Corporation. Mr. Wyatt Tucker of Greenville, N.C. has been honored with an award as the Leading Ordinary Life Producer for the district. These awards were announced by Mr. Marshall P. Scott, President of Coastal Plain Ufe Insurance Company. Pictured above (left to right) Mr. Sherwood T. Bullock, Vice President of the company, is shown presenting the award to Mr. Johnny W. Nelson, Jr.</p>
        <p>c</p>
        <p>Announeiiiq</p>
        <p>A New Savings Certificate Plan Effective Immediately:</p>
        <p>On Two Year Savings Certificates in the Amount of $20,000 or Integrals of $1,000 Thereof.</p>
        <p>Be Sure to Ask About Our Other Savings Plans That Are Available to You</p>
        <p>Free Safety Deposit Boxes to All Our Customers Who Maintain a Savings Balance of $3,000 Or More.</p>
        <p>AND LOAN ASSOCIATION</p>
        <p>543 EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>PHONE 758-3421</p>
        <p>BRANCH OFFICES-PLYMUTH, N. C. &amp;amp; BETHEL, N. C.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0015" />
        <p>Sports xfTR DAILY REFLECTOR Classified</p>
        <p>SUNDAY MORNING. MAY 3, 1970Pirates Gain Split; Take The Title</p>
        <p>DAVIDSON  East Carolina Universitys Pirates split a pair of baseball games with Davidson Oollegf yesterday, and won their way into the Southern Conference title playoffs.</p>
        <p>The Pirates 4-1 victory in the opaiing game assured them of the Southern Division title in the conference. Tliey will now meet the winner of the Northern Division for the title. That match will take place as a best of three series to be held Friday and Saturday at Ft. Eustis, Va. The winner of that will claim the conference crown and go on to represent the league in the District Three NCAA Playoffs.</p>
        <p>The opponent for the Pirates, however, will not be known until sometime Monday. William &amp;amp; Mary and George Washington</p>
        <p>went into Saturday games with othCT Northern Divisim winners tied for the league. The two also have to make up a doubleheader on Monday before the title is decided.</p>
        <p>The Bucs got fine pitching from their ace in the opening game, as Ron Hastings tossed a six - hitter at Davidson. The lone run scored off him was unearned, protecting his less than 0.50 ERA.</p>
        <p>The Bucs threatened in the first inning, loading the bases with none out, but they were imable to get a run across. Dick Corrada singled to open the game, and both Len Dowd and Stan Sneeden singled on bunts. Skip Taylor hit into a fielders choice,getting Corrada at home, however, and the next two men</p>
        <p>went down with no damage done.</p>
        <p>hi the second, howevo*, the Bucs jumped on Davidson starter Marhall Case, scoring all four of their runs. Dennis Vick led off with a single into left and Stu Garrett followed with a walk. Both rinnos moved up a base on a wild pitch.</p>
        <p>Gorrada then singled between short and the mound, souring Vick with the first Pirate run. Dowd sacrificed to drive in Garrett, and Bryan McNeely slammed a double to center, driving in Corrada. Taylor walked, and Larry Walters banged a single to right, luinging in McNeely with the fourth Buc run.</p>
        <p>That was it as far as the Bucs were concerned. They pushed Corrada to second in the fourth.</p>
        <p>on a single and a sacrifice, but he died fiiere. Gorrada doubled in the sixth to end a perfect four  for - four game, but died again, h the seventh, Taylor singled and moved around to third on a single by Matt Walker, but again, the Bucs couldn't push him over.</p>
        <p>Davidson had a mild threat in the first as Bill Barnhill and Mike FVye both singled, but a doifole play erased the tlu*eat.</p>
        <p>In the fourth, they struck for their only run. With one out, 9ade doubled into center, but the next man struck out. Jack Latimer singled back to third, beating out the throw, which was thrown away. Slade sped home on the error, while Latimer moved on to second.</p>
        <p>Hastings kept out of trouble</p>
        <p>the rest of the way, however, to take the win.</p>
        <p>to the second game, it looked like the Bucs were going to move away with another win, but Davidson came back late in the game.</p>
        <p>Dowd opened things up with a walk in the first, and Hal Baird slammed a homer to left to give East Carolina a 2-0 lead. They threatened again in the second, when Vick doubled, but to no avail.</p>
        <p>to the third. East Carolina pushed over its third rm. Baird doubled to ri(^t and scored on Mike Aldridges single to left. Aldridge reached third before the inning was over, but could not scxxre.</p>
        <p>Davidson came back, however, and didnt allow</p>
        <p>another Buc threat, while they made their own comeback.</p>
        <p>They bad another mild threat in the first, with a'single and a walk off starter Sonny Robinson. He left the game after the first inning, however, with a sore arm, as Wayne Post came on.</p>
        <p>Post kept the Wildcats at bay mtil the fifth, when they struck for three to tie it iq&amp;gt;. Wagner led off with a single and Barnhill got a hit to center to follow that 14). FVye hit into a fielders choice, however, getting Wagner at fiiird.</p>
        <p>9ade came up with a single to center, scoring Barnhill. Latimer hit back to third, and Sade was caught at second. A wild pitdi moved Latimer to second, but FVye didnt try to score. Wilkerson then singled.</p>
        <p>driving in Frye. Case finished things off with a single to center diving in Latimer for The 3-3 deadlock.</p>
        <p>The final run came off Don Oxidine in the sixth, and was an iiieamed riii. With two out. Barnhill drew a walk. Frye single to left, but Slade reached on an error, with Barnhill scoring from third on the play.</p>
        <p>The Bucs were unable to come back after that, and Davidson</p>
        <p>gained the split.</p>
        <p>The Pirates rest now until FViday. when they travel to Ft. Eustis to meet their as yet unknown opponent in the title series.</p>
        <p>BCU</p>
        <p>C'rada, ss Dowt&amp;gt;.3b S'den.c McN'ly, 3b T'lor,3b W'ter, U Baird, H W'lier,pf ViGk, G'reft.cf H'fings, p Totalt</p>
        <p>ab r h rb 4 14 1</p>
        <p>2 0 11 10 10 3 111</p>
        <p>3 0 10</p>
        <p>4 0 11 0 0 0 0 4 0 10 3 110 3 10 0 3 0 10</p>
        <p>30 4 12 4</p>
        <p>Oavidsan</p>
        <p>W'ner. 1b B bill cf Frye rf  Slade 1 Wson. c L'mer ss Case p H'ligan 3b M'dows. 3b B'sfon p Mapes, pb Totals</p>
        <p>ab r h bi</p>
        <p>3 0 0 0 3 0 10 3 0 10 3 110 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 10 10 0 0 34 1 4 0</p>
        <p>East Carolina</p>
        <p>Davidson</p>
        <p>Pitching</p>
        <p>H'tings (W)</p>
        <p>Case(L)</p>
        <p>Beaston</p>
        <p>040 OOO 04 13 1 000 100 0-1 4 0 ip r  er  h  so  bb</p>
        <p>3 1  0  6  3  0</p>
        <p>3 4  4  7  0  3</p>
        <p>5 0  0  5  3  1</p>
        <p>ECU</p>
        <p>C rada, ss Doud.c Wtars ph Baird If T'lor. 1b Aldga, rf G rett.cf McN'ly. 3b Vick. 2b R son,p B'venfo, pn Post.p Odina. p W'ker, ph Totals</p>
        <p>East Carolina</p>
        <p>Davidson</p>
        <p>Pitching</p>
        <p>Robinson</p>
        <p>Post</p>
        <p>Oxidioe (LI Shepard Pipan (W)</p>
        <p>ab r h rb</p>
        <p>4 0 0 0 2 10 0 10 0 0 3 2 2 2 3 0 10 3 0 2 1 2 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 3 0 10 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0  ISO 10 0 0 37 3 4 J</p>
        <p>O'san Wagnar. lb</p>
        <p>B'hili.Sb Frya, rf Wada. If L'mar.tt W'son.c Casa. 3b H'ligan. 2b S'pard. p Pipan, p Tatals</p>
        <p>Ibrhrb</p>
        <p>4 0 7 0</p>
        <p>3 2 10</p>
        <p>4 110</p>
        <p>3 0 11</p>
        <p>4 10 0 3 0 11 3 0 11 3 0 10 10 0 0 7 0 0 0</p>
        <p>7t 4 I 3</p>
        <p>701 MO -3 4 3</p>
        <p>NO 031 14 0 1 ip r tr h M bb</p>
        <p>I 00131 32 3 3 3 S 113 10 7 22 3 3 3 5 4 1 3 0 0 1</p>
        <p>I I 3 1 1 2 3 0Dusf Commander Runs To Derby Victory</p>
        <p>By BOB COOPER Associated Press Sports Writer LOUISVILLE, Ky. (AP) -</p>
        <p>Dust Commander, a bargain on the rail Saturday and won basement yearling. Purchased the 96th Kentucky Derby going for only $6,500, roared through away from a field that included</p>
        <p>Thundering To Derby Victory</p>
        <p>Dust Commander has his four hoofs off the ground as he takes jockey Mike Manganello across the finish line Saturday to win the 96th Kentucky</p>
        <p>Derby. He was well ahead of the field, spread out ^ behind him. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>McCovey's Rap Helps Perry To 7-1 Victory</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Willie McCovey drove in four</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA</p>
        <p>ab r n bi Doyle 2b  4  0  10</p>
        <p>Money 3b  4  12  1</p>
        <p>Briggs If  4  0  0  0</p>
        <p>DJohnson 1b  4  0  0  0</p>
        <p>MCarver c  2  0  0  0</p>
        <p>MRyan c Hufto c Hisle cf Browne rf Palmer p Joseph ph</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO</p>
        <p>aCTTS Di</p>
        <p>Bonds rf Hunt 2b Mays ct McCovey 1b Burda 1b Hendersn If Dietz c Gallagher 3b 4 0 l 0 Lanier ss 3 0 10 Perry p 3 0 0 0</p>
        <p>4 0 10 3 10 0 3 2 10</p>
        <p>3 2 2 4 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>4 12 0 4 113</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 2 0 10 10 0 0 2 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 GJackson p 0 0  0 0</p>
        <p>Bowa ss  3 0  10</p>
        <p>CShort p  10  0 0</p>
        <p>RStone rf  2 0  10</p>
        <p>Total 30 1 6 I Total 31 7 9 7 Philadelphia  000000 1001</p>
        <p>San Francisco . 000 31 03x7 DPSan Francisco 3. LOB Philadelphia 4, San Francisco 3. 2B McCovey, Henderson. HR McCgvey (7), Money (2), Diefz (7),</p>
        <p>runs with a three-run homer and a double Saturday, powering the San Francisco Giants and Gaylord Perry to a 7-1 victory over Philadelphia.</p>
        <p>Dick Dietz cracked a threerun homer in the ninth for the Giants, tying him with McCovey for the team lead with seven home runs.</p>
        <p>McCbvey slammed his seventh after Ron Hunt was hit by a Pitch and Willie Mays walked in</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO C Short (L,2 3)  4  3  3  3  1  4</p>
        <p>Palmer  2  3  110  3</p>
        <p>G Jackson  2  33311</p>
        <p>Perry (W.3 3)  9  6  1  1  2  5</p>
        <p>HBP by CShort (Hunt). PB-Diefz. T-2 20. A- 7,422.</p>
        <p>Twins Take 4-2 Win Over Birds</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE (AP) - Harmon Killerbrews two-out double scored Minny Mendoza in the eighth inning, helping the Minnesota Twins to a 4-2 victory over the Baltimore Orjoles Saturday.</p>
        <p>Mendoza, pinch-hitting for pitcher Jim Perry, singled with one out to start Minnesotas winning rally after Perry and Baltimores Mike Cuellar had waged a strong mound duel for seven innings.</p>
        <p>With two out, Leo Cardenas moved Mendoza to second with a single before Killebrew delivered his key hit. Cuellar was removed after intentionally walking Tony Oliva and the Twins pushed across an insurance run wben rdievor Eddie Watt hit &amp;amp;*ant Alyea with a-pitch.</p>
        <p>The Orioles had taken a 1-0 lead in first inning on Paul Blairs icrifioi-fly.</p>
        <p>Georil litterwald blasted his</p>
        <p>first home run with a man aboard to giv the Twins the lead in the second, but Boog Powell tied it in the Baltimore sixth with his sixth homer.</p>
        <p>The victory was Perrys fourth in five decisions while Cuellars record slipped to 3-2.</p>
        <p>MINNESOTA</p>
        <p>ab</p>
        <p>Tovar cf 3 Cardenas ss 3 Killebrew 3b 4 3 3 0</p>
        <p>3 1</p>
        <p>4 4 2</p>
        <p>Oliva rf Alyea If Perrnoski p Allison lb Holt If Mitterwld c Quilici 2b J Perry p Mendoza ph 1 Reese lb 1</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE</p>
        <p>r n 01  ao r n 01</p>
        <p>0 1 0 Belanger ss 4 0 0 0 110 Rettenmd ph 1 0 0 0 Oil Crowley If 3100 0 1 0  FRobinsn rf  3  0  2 0</p>
        <p>0 0 1  JPowell lb  3  1  2 1</p>
        <p>0 0 0  Blair cf  3  0  0 1</p>
        <p>10 0 BRobinsn 3b 4 0 1 0</p>
        <p>0 0 0  DJohnson 2b  4  0  0 0</p>
        <p>1 2 2  Hendrcks c  3  0  10</p>
        <p>0 0 0  Buford ph  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>0 1 0  Leonhard pr  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>1 10  Cuellar p  3  0  0 0</p>
        <p>0 0 0  Watt p  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>Aaotton ph 10 0 0</p>
        <p>Total 32 4 8 4 Total 32 2 6 2</p>
        <p>Minnesota ..... 070 000 0704</p>
        <p>Baltimore ......... 1 0 0 0 0 1 0 0 02</p>
        <p>DPBaltimore 1. LOBMinnesota 5, Baltimore 8.  2BKillebrew. HR</p>
        <p>Mitterwald (1), J.Powell (6). STovar, Cardenas. SFBlair.</p>
        <p>IP</p>
        <p>J.Perry (W,4-l/)  , 7</p>
        <p>Perranosfci ...... 7</p>
        <p>Cuellar (L.3 7) .  7  23</p>
        <p>Watt ............113</p>
        <p>jHBP-by Watt (Atyco). PB-Hendricks T-2:36. A-74,779.</p>
        <p>R ER BBSO 2 2 2 0 0 0 2 4  4  1</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>the fourth inning. The 365-foot blow came off loser Chris Siort,</p>
        <p>2-3.</p>
        <p>Mays leadoff single and Mc-Coveys double added a run off reliever Lowell Palmer in the sixth, as the Giants posted their lOth consecutive victory over the Phillies at Candlestick Park.</p>
        <p>Perry, 3-3, lost his shutout bid when Don Money belted his second homer of the season leading off the seventh. Perry struck out four and scattered six hits.</p>
        <p>Cowan is N-S Champ</p>
        <p>PINEHURST, N.C. (AP) -Gary Cowans brilliant combination of power and finesse overcame Dale Morey and the Canadian scored a 5 and 4 victory Saturday in the finals of the North and South Amateur Golf Tournament.</p>
        <p>The 31-year-old Kitchener, Ont., insurance man became the first foreign player to win the 70-year-old tournament as he knocked six strokes from par with booming tee shots and strong putting over the 7,051-yard No. 2 course of the Pine-hurst Country^ Qub.</p>
        <p>Cowan started with a flurry of tnrdies, shooting the first 10 holes in 5-under-par for a 3-up lead.</p>
        <p>S.C. Playoff George Washington and IMlliam &amp;amp; Mary ) will meet Monday to decide the winner of the Northern Division of the Southern Conference.</p>
        <p>The O^onials, a half game ahead of theibdians needs to win only one gaAe to take the title. WUliaiiii&amp;amp; Mary must win both to take the crown</p>
        <p>more than half a dozen 3-year-old thoroughbred stars.</p>
        <p>Jockey Mike Mangandlo sent the colt through a narrow hole as the field of 17 pounded into the home stretch and had plenty of daylight, with the margin widening as he swept past the 16th pole.</p>
        <p>My Dad George, the betting favorite off his Flamingo and Florida Derby victories, finished second, with High Echelon third and Naskra fourth.</p>
        <p>Diane Oump, the first female to ride in the Derby, finished 16th aboard W.L. Browns Fathom;</p>
        <p>Dust Commander is owned by Robert E. Lehman, who has given control of his Ohio construction to a son and sold his banking interests in Florida so he could ccmcentrate on his hobby  thoroughbred racing.</p>
        <p>His colt had won only two of eight starts this year, but the third sent his earnings to $178,603. Hie Derby, richest in its history, grossed $170,300 with $127,800 to the winner.</p>
        <p>Holy Land threw jockey Hector Pilar near the half^nile pole and the rider appeared to fall into the rail or just beside it. He was takoi by ambulance to the first aid station at the race track, where a doctor reported his c(xidition was good aifter a preliminary examinati(m.</p>
        <p>However, to insure against any possiUe back injury. Pilar was taken to a Louisville hospital for further tests.</p>
        <p>In this year when there was no outstanding 3-year-old racer, the Derby was turned in a mediocre 2:03 2-5, with fractions of : 281-5,</p>
        <p>: 464-5, 1:12, and 1:372-5. The Derby record, set by Northern Dancer in 1964, is 2:00.0.</p>
        <p>Overlooked by the estimated 100,000 fans that jammed Churchill Downs and turned its infield into a sea of weaving colors, Dust Commander paid $32.60, $12.60 and $7.</p>
        <p>My Dad George Paid $5 and $3.20 and the betting entry of High Echleon and Personality returned $4.40.</p>
        <p>Behind the first four, strung out below the famed twin spires, after the lV4-mile American classic, were Silent Screen, Admirals Shield, Com Off The Cob, Personality, Native Royalty, Robins Bug, Terlago, Dr. Behrman, Action Getter, George Lewis, Fathom and Racho Lejos.</p>
        <p>Holy Land fell and did not finish.</p>
        <p>It was beautiful, said Manganello. Its bem a good year for me. He did everything perfect.</p>
        <p>He got off slow and I was laying in sixth. I had to weave my way in and around a few horses around the turn and had to use him sooner than  wanted to to keep him from getting bothered. Then the breaks came out right coming home.</p>
        <p>I knew for another horse to catch me he had to be really flying, Manganello added.</p>
        <p>Governor Louie Nunn of Kentucky presented the Derby trophy to Manganello and told him You told me at the Blue Grass youd be seeing me, and here you are.</p>
        <p>Dust Commander was never considered by mose fans a serious Kentucky Derby candidate until he won the 1^-mile Blue Grass Stakes at Keeneland just nine days ago.</p>
        <p>His trainer, 31-year-old Don Combs, thou^t of him as a serious contender only on a sloppy track, but the Clhurchill Downs</p>
        <p>strip for the Derby was rated good and was very close to fast.</p>
        <p>An early morning thunderstorm that dwindled to showers made the track sloppy for the first race of the long Derby Day program. But a bright sun that appeared about noon had dried the surface long before the field paraded onto the track while bands played My Old Kentucky Home.</p>
        <p>Manganello, who said his horse got pinched (rff a little at the first turn, had Dust Commander in ninth place as the field swept under the finish line in their first trip around the one-mile track.</p>
        <p>The next time he sped under the wire, however, he was five lengths in front and gaining speed with every jump.</p>
        <p>My Dad George, owned by Broadway producer Raymond Curtis, had half a length on High Echelon, who was a head in front of Naskra.</p>
        <p>Ray Broussard, aboard My Dad George, said he couldnt give him any excuse. My horse</p>
        <p>handled it okay. Hiere were a few holes in front in the track.</p>
        <p>Rancho Lejos, the late-arriving colt from the West Ckiast, set the early pace and opened as much as three lengths in the first half-mile with California Derby winner Gieorge Lewis, flying the colors of Mr. and Mrs. Alan Magerman, giving chase in search of a record sixth Derby victory for jockey Bill Hartack.</p>
        <p>With nearly half a mile to go, Sonny Werblins Slent Screen, the juvenile champion of last season, went to the front and at the head of the stretch held a one4ength lead over George Lewis.</p>
        <p>At that point. Dust (command er still was seventh and My Dad George was fifth, but the two passed the tiring leaders. George Lewis ended up 14th and Silent Screen fifth.</p>
        <p>Fathom, with Miss Crump on his back, was never better than ninth with three-quarters of a mile left in Americas favorite horserace. Miss Crump, however, was not in favor of riding</p>
        <p>Fathom on anything but a fast race track.</p>
        <p>She and trainer Don Devine were overruled by the owner of the horse.</p>
        <p>As she hopped off the longshot colt, she said, lie felt pretty good coming to the quarterpole, then he just ran out of gas.</p>
        <p>Miss Oump said she was next to Holy Land when he went down.</p>
        <p>"He was right on the inside of me, she said. He just ran up on another horses heels.</p>
        <p>Manganello,a popular ridor at Churchill Downs, was making only his second Derby start. He finished 10th aboard Te Vega two years ago.</p>
        <p>The 29-year-old native of Hartford, Conn. said he was whipping his horse on every jump as he raced down the stretch as the nation watched and listened on television and radio (CBS).</p>
        <p>'Die smiling jockey said after the race this was his first victory in any event that offered more than a $100,000 purse.</p>
        <p>Furman Edges Bucs By Point For Second In S.C. Track Meet</p>
        <p>FT. EUSTIS, Va. (AP) -Irresistible MTilliam and Mary, sweeping to victory in 13 of the meets 18 events, ixnnped to its fifth consecutive Southern Conference track and field champ-icmship Saturday with a grand total of 116 pointsa modem record for the league.</p>
        <p>Distance star Howell Michael, voted the meets outstanduig athlete, led the Indians to the team title with a winning 4:05.2 clocking in the mile run Saturday after capturing the steeide-chse in 9:27.6 FViday.</p>
        <p>Michael also ran the second leg of the mile relay for W&amp;amp;M Saturday as the Inmans four-srnne of Tom Wood, Michad, Bill Findler and Dave Satson iqiset favored Furman in 3:14.1 a meet record.</p>
        <p>Furman finished second in the team competition with 53 points, with East Carolina, 52'/^, just to the rear. Trailing were Hie Qtadel, 22; Davidscm, 21; Virginia Military, 16, and Richmond, 7.</p>
        <p>Besides the record in the mile relay, F\irmans Gary Stratton sent a meet mark tumbling by taking the 440 in 47.9 seconds, and W&amp;amp;Ms Bruce Dallas added more than two inches to his Mgh</p>
        <p>jump record, set last year, with a leap of 6 feet, inches.</p>
        <p>W&amp;amp;Ms Mike Fratkin was a brilliant workhorse for the Indians in the sprints, capturing the 100-yard dash in 9.7 seconds and the 220 in 21 seconds flat, thoi running the anchor leg on his teams winning 440-yard relay foursome, timed in a txrisk 42 seconds flat.</p>
        <p>(Xher douUe winners were East Carolinas Walter Davenport in the long jump and triple jump and W&amp;amp;Ms Dennis Cambal in the shot put and discus.</p>
        <p>William and Mary swept the last six events reported Saturday while boosting its already large margin over the other conference teams to huge pro{XY)r-tions. The Indians, overpowering in the distance events, had a 1-2-3 sweep  with freshmen Steve Shyder, Randy Fidlds and Irvin Lyerlyin the three</p>
        <p>mile. Shyder won in 14:35.8.</p>
        <p>FT. EUSTIS, Va, (AP)  Summaries of second day events in the Southern Conference track and field champion ships;</p>
        <p>440 yard relay - 1, William 8, Mary (Bud Tamea, Bill Findler, Mike Gra ham, Mike Fratkin), 47 0 seconds 7, Fur man, 42.0. 3, Davidson, 42.4  4. East</p>
        <p>Carolina, 42.5. 5, VMI, 44 0 One mile run  1, Howell Michael, William 8&amp;lt; Mary, 4 05.2 2, Neill Ross, East Carolina, 4:17.9 3, Peter Dowd, Wil liam 8i Mary, 4 + 23 5. 4, Tony Price, William Si Mary, 4:24.8. 5, Paul O'Reilly, Citadel, 4:24.9.</p>
        <p>120 yard high hurdles  1, Tom AAalik, Furman, 14 6 seconds. 2, Randy Bennett, Furman, 14.9. 3, Ron Smith, East Caro lina, 15.0. 4, Paul Vincent, Furman, 15 I. 5, David Stephens, Citadel, 15 2 Triple jump  1, Walter Davenport. East Carolina, 47 feet, 11 inches 2, Wade Sellers, Furman, 47 1. 3, Mike Graham William A Mary, 46 2' 2. 4. Ray Swetenburg, Davidson, 45 5 5, Bud Tam ea, William &amp;amp; Mary, 45 1 440 yard dash  I, Gary Stratton, Fur man, 47.9 seconds (meet record. Pre vious record 48.0 set by BiM Findler, W8iM, 1968). 2, Barry Johnson, East Carolina, 49.2. 3, Jerry Covington, East Carolina, 498 4, Bob Kelsey, Furman, 49.8. 5, Dan Campbell, Furman, 50.0 100 yard dash  1, Mike Fratkin, Wil liam Si Mary, 9 7 seconds 2, Dick Mur ray. Citadel, 9 8 3, Rick Lyons, David son, 9.8. 4, Tom Richardson, Davidson, 10.0, 5, Bill Mitchell, East Carolina, 10.0.</p>
        <p>High jump  I, Bruce Dallas, William 8i Mary, 6 teef 8''2 inches (meet recrod. Previous record 6 6 by Dallas, 1969 ) 2, Fred Toepke, William 8i Mary, 6 4  3,</p>
        <p>Bo Thomas, Citadel, 6 2 4, Tie, Bill Hoi lis, Furman and Ty Roork, East Carolina, 60</p>
        <p>880 yard run  1, Jim Kidd, East Carolina, 1:513 2, Ted Wood, William Si Mary, 1:53.2 3, John Averett, William 8i Mary, 1:53.5. 4, Larry Chowning, Rich mond, 1:54 8 . 5, Charlie David, Citadel, 1 55,3.</p>
        <p>440 yard intermediate hurdles I, Dave Watson, William &amp;amp; Mary, 53.4 sec onds 2, Paul Vincent, Furman, 53,5 3, Gordon Barber, Citadel, 54 7  4, Tom</p>
        <p>Malik, Furman, 55.4. 5, Jack Matthews, William 8i Mary, 55.6.</p>
        <p>Discus - 1, Dennis Cambal, William 8i Mary, 153 teef, 10 inches. 2, Tom Louizzi, VMI, 149 1. 3, Steve Kirley, Da vidson, 145 8, 4, Mark Skinner, Rich mond, 143 3 5, Tim Dixon, East Caro lina. 1417.</p>
        <p>220 yard dash 1, Mike Fratkin, Wil liam i Mary, 210 seconds. 2, Rick Lyon, Davidson, 22.0. 3, Dan Campbell, Furman, 220 4, Gary Stretfon, Furman. 22 2 5, Wade Sellers, Furman, 22 2.</p>
        <p>Three mile run  I, Steve Snyder, Wil liam &amp;amp; Mary, 14:35.8 2, Rgndy Fields, William 8. Mary, 14:38 2 3, Irvin Lyerly. William &amp;amp; Mary, 14 40.6. 4, Ken Voss. East Carolina, U 41.8  5, Neill Ross,</p>
        <p>East Carolina. U;5I.0 Pole vault - 1, Dan Henneberg, Wil liam Si Mary,. 14 feet, 6 inches. 2, Charles Strode. William &amp;amp; Mary, 14 6 3, Gordon Williams, VMI, 14 0 4, Richard McDut fie. East Carolina, 14 0 5, David Fyne, Richmond, 13 0.</p>
        <p>One mile relay - I, William t, Mary (Tom Wood, Howed Michael, Bill Find ler, Dave Watson), 3:14 1 (meet record Previous record 3 16 set by William &amp;amp; Mary, 1969). 2, Furman, 3:14 4 3. Easl Carolina, 3 )8.2 4, Richmond, 3 20 3. 5, The Citadel. 3:23.2 Team scores: William 8t Mary 1)6, Furman, 53', East Carolina, 52' ?, The Citadel, 22, Davidson. 21, VMI, 16, Rich mond, 7.</p>
        <p>Nicklaus Takes Two Shot Lead Over Arnie</p>
        <p>I Scoreboard I</p>
        <p>East</p>
        <p>Bialtimore</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>"73</p>
        <p>0- , T</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>.667</p>
        <p>GB</p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>.632</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>.571</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>.524</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>.478</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>.421</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Minnesota</p>
        <p>West</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>.650</p>
        <p>California</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>.636</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>Oakland</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>.455</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>.400</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Kansas Cfty</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>.350</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>.227</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>Results</p>
        <p>Cleveland at Kansas City Detroit at Chicago California 1, Boston 4 Oakland 6, Washington 3 Minnesota 4, Baltimore 3 New York 7, Milwaukee 6 NatioiMl Laague East</p>
        <p>L .Ret.</p>
        <p>Chicago IT 6 .604</p>
        <p>GS</p>
        <p>St LouisI</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>.539</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>.534</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>J24</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Philadelphia</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>474</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Montreal</p>
        <p> 1</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>.314</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>Cincinnati</p>
        <p>West</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>.750</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>S Francisco</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Atlanta</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>.474 ^</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Los Angolas</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>4VS</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>.344</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>San Diogo</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>.341</p>
        <p>9Vi</p>
        <p>RmvHs</p>
        <p>Chicago  at Atlanta</p>
        <p>Montreal  at Los Angeles</p>
        <p>San Diego  5, New York  4</p>
        <p>S Francisco 7, Philadlphia  1</p>
        <p>Cincinnati  7, Pittsburgh  7</p>
        <p>Houston at St Louis</p>
        <p>AMERICAN 'LIAOUB SUNDAY'S DAMES</p>
        <p>Liegitand (Moort 2-1) at Kansas Oty (Rocker l-l).</p>
        <p>Detroit (Kilkenny 10 at Chicago (Wynne 0-0).</p>
        <p>Minnota (Kaat 3-1) at Baltintort (Palmar 3-1).</p>
        <p>Calitornia (Massarsmith i3-3) at Boston (Saibart 1-1).  /</p>
        <p>Oakland (Fingars 04) and Dobson 1-4) at Washington (Bosman 3-3 and Shtllan-back 041), 7.</p>
        <p>AMIwaukaa (KrausM 3-4 and Lauzariqvt 13) at Naw York (Burbach 0-3 and Cum-btiiand 1-1), 3.</p>
        <p>NATIONAL LIAOUl SUNDAY'S OAMNS  ,</p>
        <p>Houston (Wilson DO and LomMtar 1-3l at St. Louis (Brilos D1 ond Griffin 04), 3.</p>
        <p>Chicago (Hands 44) of Atlanta (Noib 31).</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh (MoM 1-3) at CIncinnaN (Morritt S-1).</p>
        <p>Monlraai (Ronka L3&amp;gt; at Laa AngaNs (Ostaan 3-3).</p>
        <p>Naw York (Gantry 14 at Kaaaman 43) at San Otaga (CarWna 43 bp;.* r. ion I-3). 3.</p>
        <p>PMMalBliNRtWlaa 1-1 one xiS4) at San Pnncfacb iMarklte. 4 and ryant 3 . 1</p>
        <p>By BOB GREEN Associated Press Golf VWiter DALLAS (AP) - Big Jack NTicklaus tamed the gusty, shifting winds for a two-under-par 68 Saturday and swept past struggling Arnold Palmer into the secondHX)und lead in the $100,000 Dyron Nelson Golf Qassic.</p>
        <p>Ttie powerful Nicklaus, who has finished in the top eight in nine ofhis last 10starts,hada 36-hold scire of 135, five-under par on the tou^, rolling Preston Ital Goif Qub course.</p>
        <p>Pdmcr, the firstroind leader with a 66, sli|q;&amp;gt;ed to a one-over-par 71 but held second place going into Sundays 36-hole windup with a half-way score of 137, two strokes back of hTick-laus.</p>
        <p>I (dayed a pretty steady round, said Palmer, who has ^ to win thia year. I didnt particularly wdl, but I think my putting is improving. You just cant have 26 putts ev* ary day.  i</p>
        <p>Vetaran Dan Sikes and de-</p>
        <p>N</p>
        <p>fending charnpion Bruce Devlin leaped into contention for the $20,000 first prize.</p>
        <p>Sikes, the golfing attorney from Jacksonville, Fla., had a 67 f(r 137 and was tied with Palmer for second place. Devlin, a one-time master plumber from Australia who won the Bob Hope Desert Classic earlier this year, had a sparkling 66 and was alone at 138.</p>
        <p>He was followed by Ted Schroeder, son of former tennis star Ted Schroeder, and Andy Williams-San Diego champion Pete Brown at 139.,Schroeder had a 66 and Brown a 70.</p>
        <p>South African Gary Player had his troubles and came in with a 75 for 145,10 strokes off the pace and far back in the field.</p>
        <p>The double round of 36 h(ries for Sunday was forced when Thursdays scheduled opening round was postponed by a steady rain,</p>
        <p>Nicklaus. who has made over $103,000 in his last 10 starts, was a smfpe stroke back of Palmer</p>
        <p>going into Saturdays round, but caught him with a two-putt birdie on the short par five 10th hole, the first one Jack (dayed.</p>
        <p>Palmer, who also started on he back nine, bogeyed the llth and 12th and Big Jack was in front to stay, Palmer three-putted the llth and failed to get up and down from a trap on the 12th.</p>
        <p>Nicklaus, who didnt make a putt over five feet, bogeyed the 14th when he missed the green and missed a three-footer.</p>
        <p>A four-iron shot on No. 1 left him a three-footer, which he liiade, for a birdie. He also bir-died the third from five feet, three-putted from 30 feet on the fifth and'Stretched his leading margin to two strokes when he chi|^ in from 35 feet on his final hole.</p>
        <p>Palmer ran in an 18 foot tord-ie putt on the 13th, and canned a 20 footer on the 16th. but the all-time leading Money winner three-putted from 11 feet on the fourth to go bedpto oneuover per for the day. '</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0016" />
        <p>ItThe Daily Renector, Greenville. N. C.Sunday. May 3.1970</p>
        <p>Rose</p>
        <p>Past</p>
        <p>Early Scores Win For A's</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Oakland jumped on Washington starter Joe Coleman for three frst inning runs and added consecutive stAo homers 1^ Reggie Jackson and Sal Bando in the fifth as the As belted the Senators 6-3 Saturday.</p>
        <p>Winner A1 Downing, 3-2, left in the seventh after big FYank Howard drilled his ninth home rin of the season, leading off the inning.</p>
        <p>Hie As quickly jianped on Ooleman in the first with run-scoring singles by Bando and Ffelipe Alou and a sacrifice fly by Don Mincher. Alou also drove in a riii in the third on a sacrifice fly.</p>
        <p>Jackson, benched for the first time this season Friday night, connected for his fourth homer of the season in the fifth and Bando followed with his third of the year.</p>
        <p>Hie Senators scored twice in the third on a pair of walks, a single by Hank Allen, a double play and Aurelio Rodriguez single.</p>
        <p>OAKLAND  WASHINOTON</p>
        <p>0 r n 01  aoriTBi</p>
        <p>Campf&amp;gt;''&amp;gt;s ss  4 0  0 0  Brnkman ss  4 10 0</p>
        <p>Tartabull cf  4 7 2 0  HAllen cl  4 ) 1 0</p>
        <p>RJackson rf  7 7  11  Stroud pb  10 10</p>
        <p>Bando 31)  3  7  7 7  FHoward If  3 111</p>
        <p>FAlou If  3 0  12  Reichardf rf  3 0 10</p>
        <p>Minchar lb  3 0 0 1  ARodrger 3b  3 0 7 I</p>
        <p>3 0 0 0 Epstein lb 4 0 0 0</p>
        <p>4 0 0 0 Cullen 7b 3 0 0 0 Unser ph 0 0 0 0 Grzenda p</p>
        <p>Casanova c B Allen 7b Coleman p ONelson ph Hannan p French c</p>
        <p>Fernandz c DGreen 2b Downing p Segui p</p>
        <p>Total 79 6 6 6 Total 32 3 7 7 Oakland  301  070  0004</p>
        <p>Washington  002  000  1003</p>
        <p>E Epstein, B Allen DP -Oakland 2, Washington 3 LOB Oakland 7, Washington 10 7B Tartabull HR-R Jackson (4). Bando (4), F Howard (9). SF Mincher, F Alou</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO Downing (W,3 7)  6  5  3  3  7  4</p>
        <p>Segui  3  2  0  0</p>
        <p>Coleman (L,l  7)  6  6  6  5</p>
        <p>Hannan  2  000</p>
        <p>Gr/enda  1  0  0  0</p>
        <p>HBP by Downing (Reichardt) Fernande; T  2 32  A  5.977</p>
        <p>0 1 2 4</p>
        <p>2 1 0 0 PB</p>
        <p>Yankee</p>
        <p>Downs</p>
        <p>Rally</p>
        <p>Brewers</p>
        <p>Mount By 4-3</p>
        <p>Rampants Rally Twice To Hold To Victory</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNT - Rose High School squeezed past Rocky Mount Friday, 4-3to stay close to league leading Kinston in the Eastern 4-A, Division II baseball race.</p>
        <p>Hie Rampants now post a 4-2 record, while leader Kanston droi^ied its first of the season to Wilson yesterday and is now 4-1. Hie Rampants are expected to get a ruling Wednesday on the outcome of a protest in the Wilson loss. A favorable ruling could push them into a tie with Kinston, pending the final outcome of the replay.</p>
        <p>Rose didnt play a good game against Rocky Mount. Twice the Gryphons loaded the bases on the Rampants, but Rose got out of the jam. At the same time, the Rampants did only what was</p>
        <p>absolutely necessary to get the win, as they left six men standing in the game.</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount struck for the lead first. With one out in the bottom of the first, Pete Hiompson smacked a triple into deep center field. Mike Ruffin groinded out to second, but Hiompson scored on the play for a 1-0 lead.</p>
        <p>Rose came back to score twice in theseomd,moving ahead, 2-1. With one out, Jimmy Paige walked. Kim Harbin singled to second, and moved Paige to third. Byrcm Dickens sacrificed, but only Harbin advanced. Bill Lee then slammed a single into left field, scoring both Paige and Harbin for the lead.</p>
        <p>But things were still rough for the Rampants. In the bottfmi of the second, the Gh*yphons loaded</p>
        <p>No Place To Hide</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Bobby Murcers tying two-run homer and Thurmon Munsons run-scoring single in the ninth inning, gave the New York Yankees a 7-6 victory over Milwaukee Saturday.</p>
        <p>Hie Yanks had trailed 5-4 after the Brewers scored twice in the eighth when Mioison was called for an obstruction call on a rundown play and Gerry Mc-Nertney added a solo homer for the Brewers in the ninth.</p>
        <p>But after Jerry Kenney opened the Yanks ninth with an infield single, Murcer clubbed his two-run shot in to the right field seats to tie it at 6-6.</p>
        <p>After Roy White doubled off John Gelnar, Bob Bolin, came on to strike out Danny Cater but Munson came through with a soft liner to right, scoring White with the winner.</p>
        <p>Hie Yanks had taken a 4-0 lead in the opening inning helped by</p>
        <p>Murcers run-scoring double and a two-run single by White.</p>
        <p>Yankees Jerry Kenney is caught bet&amp;gt;veen Milwaukee Brewers catcher Jerry McNerthey (15). left and third baseman John Kennedy, right (who has the ball) Friday during the third</p>
        <p>inning. Kenney was tagged out on the play. In the background watching are umpire Jim Odom and Yanks third base coach Dick Howser. New York won, 6-3. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Boyer Is For The</p>
        <p>MILWAUKEE NEW YORK</p>
        <p>ao r n 01  SD  r  n  Di</p>
        <p>Harper 3b Kubiak ss Savage cl Walton If Hrshbrgr rf Goossen lb Hegan lb MNerfny c Kennedy 2b Paftin p Morris p Rollins ph ODnghue p Snyder ph Gelnar p Bolin p</p>
        <p>3 10 0 Clarke 2b 5 2 3 1 Kenney 3b 5 110 Murcer cf</p>
        <p>4 0 11 White If 4 0 2 Cater lb</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 Blefary rf</p>
        <p>2 0 0 0 Lytfle rf 4 111 Munson f</p>
        <p>3 110 Michael ss</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 Tepedino ph 10 10 Hansen ss</p>
        <p>1 0 0 0 FPefersn p</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 McDaniel p 10 0 0 Aker p</p>
        <p>1 0 0 0 Ward ph</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 Verbanic p SHamiltn p</p>
        <p>4 110</p>
        <p>5 2 3 0 5 2 2 3 5 12 2 5 12 0 4 0 10 0 0 0 0 3 0 11 2 0 2 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Southern Will Study Tourney Possibilities</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>36 6 9 5 Total 38 7 14 6 One out when winning run scored Milwaukee  ooo  003 021  6</p>
        <p>New York ....... 400  000 0037</p>
        <p>E- Walton, Harper, Munson LOB-Milwaukee 7,  New  York  11. 2B-Murcer,</p>
        <p>Clarke, White  HR McNertney (1)!</p>
        <p>Murcer (4). SB Harper, Kubiak.</p>
        <p>IP  H  R ER BB SO</p>
        <p>1354410 42350031 1  0  0  0  0  2</p>
        <p>7  3  3  3  0  0</p>
        <p>131  00  1  1</p>
        <p>5234  3  3  2  5</p>
        <p>1232  2  1  0  2</p>
        <p>23  I</p>
        <p>1 3  2</p>
        <p>23  0</p>
        <p>McDaniel.</p>
        <p>Paftin Morris ODonoghue Gelnar (L 0 2)</p>
        <p>Bolin</p>
        <p>F Peterson AAc Daniel Aker Verbanic</p>
        <p>S Hamilton (W,1 0) WP Morris,</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA BEACH, Va. (AP) A decade ago, it was a matter of choosing the lesser of existing evils for the site of the annual Southern Conference basketball tournament. But today, the number of modem sports coliseums has dazzled the conferences top officials into inaction.</p>
        <p>At the close of the</p>
        <p>con-</p>
        <p>0 0</p>
        <p>7,813</p>
        <p>0 0 T- 3 01</p>
        <p>Cincy In 7-2 Win</p>
        <p>Fregosi Leads Angel Victory</p>
        <p>By DAVE OHARA Associated Press Sports VWiter BOSTON (AP) - Jim FVegosi drove in three runs, inciuding a pair with a tie-breaking double in the seventh inning, in leading the California Angels to an 8-4 victory over Boston Saturday, snapping the Red Sox fivegame winning streak.</p>
        <p>grounder in the sixth and then broke loose for three deciding runs in the seventh.</p>
        <p>Two Boston errors, Fregosis double and a single by Alex Johnson got the runs home in the seventh. Roger Repoz added a solo homer in the ninth.</p>
        <p>CALIFORNIA BOSTON</p>
        <p>ao r n Di</p>
        <p>The Angels spotted the Red Sox a 4-0 lead on Rico Petrocel-lis three-run homer in the first and sacrifice fly in the third.</p>
        <p>Fregosi got the Angels rolling after he apparently had stmck out with Roger Repoz on first base in the fourth. The pitch was nullified by Boston Starter Vince Romos balk and Fregosi, given another chance, lined a run-scoring single to center.</p>
        <p>Jim Spencer tripled home Fregosi and then scored on an infield hit by Carl Voss.</p>
        <p>The Angels tied the count on singles by Alex Jonhson and Spencer and a double play</p>
        <p>Alomar 2b Repoz cf Fregosi ss AJohnson If Spencer lb McMulln 3b Voss rf Ruiz ph JTatum p Azcue c Wright p Garrett p Silveho cf</p>
        <p>ao r h bi 4 110 Andrews 2b 5 0 0 0</p>
        <p>4 2 11 RSmith cf 4 12 0</p>
        <p>5 2 2  3  Ystrmski If  3  110</p>
        <p>5 12  1  TConigIro rf  3  1 1  0</p>
        <p>4 12  1  Pefroclti ss  4  13  4</p>
        <p>3 0 0  0  Scott 1b  5  0 2  0</p>
        <p>2 0 11 Alvarado 3b 3 0 10 1 0  0 0  Matchick 3b  2 0  0 0</p>
        <p>0 0  0 0  Moses c  4  0  10</p>
        <p>3 0  10  Romo p  2  0  0 0</p>
        <p>1 0  0 0  Jarvis p  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>1 0  0 0  Brett p  0  0  0 0</p>
        <p>2 1-0 0 Schofield ph 10 0 0</p>
        <p>Phillips p 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>35 8 10 7 Total 36 4 11 4</p>
        <p>California ....... oOO  301 3018</p>
        <p>Boston .......... 301  000 0004</p>
        <p>^Alvarado, Jarvis. DPBoston 1. LOB-California 7, Boston 12. 2B- Azcue, Petrocelli, Fregosi. 3BSpencer, Scott. HR-Petrdcelli (4), Repoz (4). SB-A.Johnson. S-Alomar. SFPetrocelli.</p>
        <p>IP H R ER BB SO Wright  3 2 3  6  4  4  3  0</p>
        <p>Garrett (W,1 0).  2132 0 0 2 2</p>
        <p>JTatum  3  3  0  0  0  3</p>
        <p>Romo  5  7  4  4  2  0</p>
        <p>Jarvis (L.O 1) .  .  1 1 3  2  3  0  1  0</p>
        <p>Brett ........... 123  0  0  0  2  2</p>
        <p>Phillips . .  1  11110</p>
        <p>HBPby Wright (Romo). WPWright. Balk-Romo, Garrett T-2;56. A26,344</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI (AP) - Righthander Jim McGlothlin rapped a bases-loaded triple in the seventh inning, helping Cincinnati to a 7-2 victory over Pittsburgh Saturday. It was the Reds fourth straight triumph.</p>
        <p>McGlothlin, 2-2, stopped the Pirates on five hits and rapped his triple in a four-run eighth, breaking open the contest.</p>
        <p>The Pirates scored both their runs on A1 Olivers two-run homer in the second but the Reds scored an unearned run in the first and tied it in the third on Pat Corrales run-scoring single.</p>
        <p>Lee May drove in Bobby Tolan in the fifth with a sacrifice fly after Tolan had doubled, putting the Reds ahead 5-2.</p>
        <p>The Pirates Roberto Clemente, who did not start, was ejected from the game by umpire Nick Colosi in the second inning for remarks made from the dugout.</p>
        <p>ferences spring meeting here Friday, it was announced that the basketball committee had failed to recommend a site for the 1971 tournament and the matter was being put off pending a study of available facilities.</p>
        <p>This proved disappointing to Paul Buck, manager of the Charlotte Coliseum where the tournament has been held the last seven years, who said he had kept the 1971 date open because he felt sure the conference was ready to return to Charlotte.</p>
        <p>Lyles Alley, Furman athletic director and chairman of the basketball committee, said, however, the committee wanted to make a thorough study of new coliseums at Hampton and Roanoke before arriving at a final decision.</p>
        <p>The Hampton facility already is in use but there is some doubt whether the Roanoke coliseum, now under construction, will be ready for the 1970-71 basketball season.</p>
        <p>In other action Friday, the conference took under consideration a bid by Appalachian State University to become the leagues eighth member.</p>
        <p>Roy Clogston, retired N.C. State atliletic director and now representing Appalachian, said he believed the school would make an ideal addition to the conference which shrank to sevn members with withdrawal earlier this year of George Washington University.</p>
        <p>Our athletic facilities are better than most schools in the conference, Clogston said.</p>
        <p>The conference rejected a proposal by VMI to permit freshmen to play varsity football and basketball and also turned down a proposal to limit traveling squads in football to 44 players and in basketball to 12.</p>
        <p>The question of the Southern Conferences participation in the post-season Tangerine Bowl at Orlando, Fla., was assigned to Col. John Barrett of VMI and conference Commissioner Lloyd Jordan for further study.</p>
        <p>Red Sox Homers Drill Angels</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI</p>
        <p>ao r D Di</p>
        <p>PITTSBURGH</p>
        <p>ao r n 0 MAlou cf  5  0 10  Rose rf</p>
        <p>Hebner 3b  4  110  Helms 2b</p>
        <p>AOIiver If  4  17 2  Tolan cf</p>
        <p>Stargell rf  3  0 10  Perez 3b</p>
        <p>BRobrtsn 1b  4  0 0 0  LMay 1b</p>
        <p>Sanguilln c  4  0 0 0  McRae If</p>
        <p>3 0 0 0 Stewart If 3 0 0 0 Corrales c 3  0 0 0  Bench c</p>
        <p>0  0 0 0  Concepcn ss  3  0  0  0</p>
        <p>10 10  Carbo ph  0  10  0</p>
        <p>Chaney ss  0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>MGIOthin p 3 0 13</p>
        <p>Alley ss Martinez 2b Veale p Giusti p Pagan ph</p>
        <p>4 12 0</p>
        <p>5 0 0 0 4 2 2 0 4 0 0 0 12 11 3 0 2 0 0 10 0 3 0 11 10 0 0</p>
        <p>Padres Hold Off New York</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>Rally</p>
        <p>SAN DIEGO (AP)  The San Diego Padres erupted for four runs in the second inning.</p>
        <p>Cats Take  S. C. Tennis</p>
        <p>DAVIDSON, N. e. (AP) -The Davidson Wildcats captured their fifth SouthiHn Oonference tennis championship in six years Satiffday.ou^acing second-running George Washington Udvwsity by 10 points.</p>
        <p>Hie Wildcats pinned down four singlis victorias and three dou* Uaswiasto earn their convincing tida. One of dieir wins caiM in a four-hour, SS^njnute Budflh betwiin Jim Harrison of Fbnnan and Jttt Chatwood of</p>
        <p>M'</p>
        <p>playors moved sH^lmmialake</p>
        <p>irftiiMMii. aHM  Mownd</p>
        <p>wrnmm 0k m mim. fv-</p>
        <p>scored another in the fourth on Chris Cannizzaro double and held off the New York Mets 5-4 Saturday.</p>
        <p>Starter Qay Kirby held the Mets hitless for five innings they also failed to get a hit in the last five innings of Friday nights game-4)ut Dave Marshalls pinch triple, Tommie Agees home risi, a douUe by Bud Harrelson and two long fly balls accounted for three runs in the sixth.</p>
        <p>Hie Mets added a run off reliever Ron Herbel in the seventh on Wayne Garretts tripleand tti infield out.</p>
        <p>Hie Padres knocked out starter Jim McAndrew in the second inning. Doubles by Nate Colbert and Ollie Brown, fdlowed by Ed S^iiezios single, netted the first two runs. Cannizzaro followed with a siiqfle, driving McAndrew from the mound.</p>
        <p>Donn Cardwell 1^ in bug run on a wild pitch md ano^r aoored on Dave CampbeUs sac-rttke fly.</p>
        <p> .......4</p>
        <p> lit SSh-S</p>
        <p>34 2 6 2 Total 31 7 9 5</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh ...... 007 000 0002</p>
        <p>Cincinnati ...... ioi 010 40*7</p>
        <p>ESanguillen, Hebner, Martinez, Perez, Concepcion DPCincinnati 1. lOB Pittsburgh 9, Cincinnati 9. 2BHebner, Tolan. 38McGlothlin. HRA.OIiver (2). SBRose, Tolan. SFL.May.</p>
        <p> P  H  R ER  BB SO</p>
        <p>Veale (L,1  3)..... 6 1  3  8  6  6  6  5</p>
        <p>Giusti ........... 12  3  1  1  1  1  1</p>
        <p>McGlothlin  (W,2 2) 9  6  2  2  4  5</p>
        <p>HBPby Veale (Tolan). WP McGlothlin, Giusti. T7:34. A 7,721,</p>
        <p>Allen Wins Loop Title</p>
        <p>FAYETTEVILLE - Rose High Schools entries into the Eastern 4-A lYack meet Friday, guided the team to an dghth place finish among the 18 schools of the conference.</p>
        <p>Hie Rampants finished the meet with one conference champion and 15 points.</p>
        <p>Alec Allen won the 8804*un with a time of 1:59.9, to become Roses only conference champ.</p>
        <p>Joe Hunter finished fourth in the discus, Qifton Edwards was second in the pole vault and Afike Harrington was third in the high jump.</p>
        <p>Hie Rose track team meet to be held Tuesday at East</p>
        <p>By TOM SALADINO Associated Press Sports Writer Eddie Kasko knew his Boston Red Sox had power so he waited patiently for the explosion. It finally came, leaving the California Angels slightly shellshocked.</p>
        <p>The Red Sox warmed up for Friday nights four home run barrage with three the previous night against Oakland with ringleader Carl Yazstrzemski drill ing two roundtripers and George Scott and Reggie Smith one apiece in Bostons 8-3 pounding of the Angels.</p>
        <p>In other A1 contests, Oakland buried Washington 12-5, Baltimore blasted Minnesota 9-3, New York trimmed Milwaukee 6-3, Cleveland stopped Kansas City 7-5 and Chicago belted Detroit 13-6.</p>
        <p>Over in the National League, Cincinnati got past Pittsburgh 6-4, Atlanta nipped Chicago 3-2, Houston dropped St. Louis 9-3 New York beat San Diego 2-1, San Francisco edged Philadelphia 3-1 and Montreal topped Los Angeles 3-1.</p>
        <p>The Red Sox, who led the majors with 197 homers last year, upped their output to 22 in 20 games with seven in their last two games.</p>
        <p>Yastrzemski started the shelling of Angels starter Tom Murphy with a two - run belt in the opening inning, Scott creamed his fourth of the season leading off the second and Smith clubbed his fourth of the year in the seventh.</p>
        <p>Yaz connected for a solo shot off reliever Eddie Fisher in the fifth.</p>
        <p>Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Walter Davenport of East Scott also drillad a run-scor-&amp;lt;)brolina also capturad first 1^ double and tingle, backing place in the long jump held on the route-going performance or</p>
        <p>Ray Culp, who ratired 17 batters</p>
        <p>Friday. Davenport had a le^ of 2} feet. 16 inphea to take the victory.</p>
        <p>in a row at one point, and allowed^lix hita in all.</p>
        <p>Dick Greens three-run homer and a bases-loaded triple by winning pitcher Jim Hunter helped the As snap a five-game losing string. Aurelio Rodriguez and Lee Maye cracked homers for the Senators.</p>
        <p>Rookie Terry Crowley, given a starting opportunity while outfielder Frank Robinson rested, slammed a three-run homer his first in the majorsto help Dave McNally to his fourth victory of the season. Dave May added a bases-loaded triple for the Orioles while Cesar Tover crashed a homer for the Twins.</p>
        <p>Jerry Kenney and Bobby Murcer, each with two hits, also drove in a pair of runs, backing Mel Stottlemyres second victory after three losses.</p>
        <p>Danny Walton drove in three runs for the Brewers with a single and a tremendous two-run 440-foot home run into Yankee Stadiums left center field bleachers. The circuit was Waltons eight of the season and gave him 23 runs batted in.</p>
        <p>Pinch-hitter Chuck Hinton drilled a two-run double, keying the Indians four-run eighth inning which sent the Royals reeling to their eighth consecutive loss. Lou Piniella had a three-run blast for the losers and Amos Otis cracked five straight hits in vain.</p>
        <p>Bobby Knoops three-run homer sparked an eight run sixth inning in Chicagos victory which featured a fist fight between Detroits Dick McAuliffe and Bill Melton of the Sox.</p>
        <p>McAuliffe tagged Melton for an out in the opening inning on a dose play and seconds later both players started throwing punches with players from both dub6 joining the action. Mdton and McAuliffe and Tiger Man-agw Mayo Smith were ejected from the game.</p>
        <p>By HERSCHEL NISSENSON Associated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Theyre just^ild about Clete Boyer in Atlanta  Morganna, an exotic dancer; Phil Niekro, an ecstatic pitcher, and a 17-year-old high school girl who  had no qualms about puckering up with $40 on the line.</p>
        <p>Boyer got his annual kiss in the fourth inning of the Braves 3-2 triumph over the Chicago Cubs Friday night but it didnt have the same effect as last years smooch by Morganna. That time, Boyer followed with a double. This time, his next at-bat resulted in a liner to left.</p>
        <p>She said she wanted to kiss me, Boyer explained, and I said to let me take my chewing tobacco out first. She was better looking than Morganna. She may not have been built better, but she was better looking. She was cute. Thats why I had to get the tobacco out. Niekro didnt kiss Boyer but he probably wanted to after the slickfielding third baseman came up with two defensive gems, starting a double play in the eighth and going far to his left to throw out Ron Santo in the ninth.</p>
        <p>He has saved me two games already, said Niekro, who has \von only two. I like to see a ground ball hit his way. You just cant find a better man to play third, I dont care where you look.</p>
        <p>The Braves touched loser Joe Decker for two runs in the first inning on Hank Aarons ninth homer and Felix Millans RBI double. They got what proved to be the winning run in the fifth on Sonny Jacksos single. Deckers pickoff throwing error and a sacrifice fly by Tony Gonzalez. Niekro yielded solo homers to Decker and Billy Williams.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in the National League, Cincinnati tripped Pittsburgh 6-4, the New York Mets nipped San Diego 2-1, San Francisco beat Philadelphia 3-1, Houston whipped St. Louis 9-3 and Montreal defeated Los Angeles 3-1.</p>
        <p>In the American League, it was Boston 8, California 3, Oakland 12, Washinigton 5; Baltimore 9, Minnesota 3; the New York Yankees 6, Milwaukee 3;</p>
        <p>Rams Nip Oak City</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE -Robersonville High School nipped Oak Qty, 2-1, yesterday, to throw the Martin County Ctonference lead into a tie between the two teams.</p>
        <p>Oak City scored its only run in the fourth. Jess Oisp led off with a single, and advanced on an error on the {day. Afta- he moved to third on a passed ball, Cliff Mobley Ivought him home, reaching on another Ram miscue.</p>
        <p>In the fifth, Robersmville came back for two to take the win. Hal Knox walked and Hmmy James singled. Daimy Stalls singled, and an oror on the play let both Knox and James come a^bund.</p>
        <p>Oakaty 9Mlf0 6&amp;gt;-l4l RobcrioAvUle M9 029 x2 3 3</p>
        <p>Whitfield, Smith (6) and Crisp; Forbes add Knox.</p>
        <p>Mondays Sports Church Softban Mt. Pleasant vs. Grace Meadowbrook vs. Trinity</p>
        <p>Hero</p>
        <p>Braves</p>
        <p>Cleveland 7, Kansas City 5, and the Chicago White Sox 13, Detroit 6.</p>
        <p>Johnny Bench cracked a three-run homer as the Reds piled up a 6-0 lead and then survived a grand slam homer by Pittsburghs Willie Stargell.</p>
        <p>Donn Clendenon drilled a two-run single and Tom Seaver hurled a four-hitter for his 15th consecutive regular season victory as the Mets shaded San Diego. Steve Huntz homered for the Padres run.</p>
        <p>Rich Robertsons two-hitter and Bobby Bonds two-run homer boosted the Giants past Philadelphia. Denny Doyles two-out double in the fifth and Deron Johnsons two-out single in the eighth were the only hits off the right-hander.</p>
        <p>Jesus Alou drove in three runs with a double and set up two others with another two-bagger</p>
        <p>the bases, without scoring. George Hamm and Carson Robinson both walked. Qenn Medlin hit into a fidders choice, getting Hamm, but Howard McCullough walked, loading the bases.</p>
        <p>David Wallace, however, grounded back to the pitcher, and the Rampants pulled off a double play to get out of the jam.</p>
        <p>hi the third. Rocky Mount threatened again. Thompson walked and Ruffin reached on an ernn*. Ricky Leonard readied on a fidders choice, loading the bases. But the nest two men wait out in order to end the threat.</p>
        <p>Finally, in the fourth. Rocky Moimt got what they wanted, scoring twice, and chasing starter Jimmy Bond Medlin (^&amp;gt;ened the inning with a double into left field, against the fence. A wild {Mtch moved him into third. McCullough bunted a slow roller back to the mound, and Medlin, on the move, made it home with the tidng um.</p>
        <p>Wallace reached on an error as he attempted to sacrifice, and Earl Warren did sacrifice, putting runners on second and third. Hiompson hit a sacrifice to center, scoring McCullough with the go - ahead run, and the Gryphons led again.</p>
        <p>Rose struggled back and scored twice in the sixth to regain the lead for good. Russ Sknith walked and moved to third when Paige singled to deep second. Paige stole second, and Harbin singled into center, driving in both Smith and Paige for a 4-3 lead, the final score.</p>
        <p>Rose threatened again in the seventh,putting riainers on first and third. Rocky Mount also put up a threat in the bottom of the seventh, putting runners on second and third before Shiith struck out the final batter to end the game.</p>
        <p>Rose plays host to Wilson on Tuesday, seeking revenge for its first conference defeat.</p>
        <p>Rom</p>
        <p>.U * .  J  . . H'ton.rt</p>
        <p>as the Astros snapped an eight- west, c game losing streak against the Cards. Houstons Joe Pepitone and Lou Brock of St. Louis hit solo homers.</p>
        <p>The victory was only the second (Ml the road this season for the Astros. They had lost 10 straight away from home since defeating Giants op opening day. Ironically, both Candlestick Park in San Francisco and Busch Stadium in St. Louis have Artificial turf just like the Astrodome.</p>
        <p>Carl Morton, a one-time outfielder, baffled the Dodgers on three hits as the Expos rode Mack Jones two-run double to their victory.</p>
        <p>V'cent, lb D'ham.ss Paige, cf H'bin, 3b D'kens, If Pate, If Lee, 2b Bond, p Totals</p>
        <p>ab r h rb R. Mount</p>
        <p>3 0 0 0 W'ren, 2b 3 0 0 0 T'soo,rf</p>
        <p>3 110 R'fin, tb</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 L'nard, 3b</p>
        <p>4 0 0 0 Hamm,ss</p>
        <p>2 2 10 Rson.lf</p>
        <p>3 17 2 Medlin, cf</p>
        <p>2 0 10 A6cC'gh, c 0 0 0 0 BeILp</p>
        <p>3 0 12 W'ker, p 2 0 0 0 S'row, ph</p>
        <p>2$ 4 6 4 Hardy, p Totals</p>
        <p>abrb rb</p>
        <p>3 0 I 0 2 12 1</p>
        <p>4 0 0 1 4 0 0 0 3 0 0 0 2 0 0 0 3 110 2 111 0 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>25.3.S.3</p>
        <p>RMe</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount Pitching</p>
        <p>Bond</p>
        <p>Smith (W) Bell</p>
        <p>Wallace (L) Hardy</p>
        <p>020 002 0-4 6 2 100 200 0-1 S3 ip rerhMbb</p>
        <p>3  22224</p>
        <p>4  10340 1 2 3 2 2 2 0 3 41 3 2 2 4 3 1 1 00011</p>
        <p>Saad's Shoe Shop</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0017" />
        <p>Buc Neffers Finish Fifthloeuauy neitecior, ureenviue, iv. i;.</p>
        <p>Davidson  East Carolina Universitys tennis team finished fifth in the Southern Conference, scoring five points, for their best finish ever.</p>
        <p>The Bucs got five matches into the second round, but lost out there. Of the second roimd matches, however, four wait to the third set, and in three of those, it took 7*5 efforts to oust the Pirates.</p>
        <p>We got the poorest draw of the tournament, Coach Bill Dickens said. But we did well. It was our best finish in the tournament.</p>
        <p>Dickens also noted that there is a good possibility that next years tournament could be held at E^st Carolina, on the courts how under construction next to Minges Coliseum.</p>
        <p>First round summary: Graham Felton (EC) defeated Paul Dickinson (VMI), 6-1, 6-0. Bill Ransone (EC) defeated</p>
        <p>Yates, 6-4, 6-1.</p>
        <p>Geier (GW) defeated Bill Van Middlesworth, 4-6, 6-4, 6-1.</p>
        <p>Mike Grady (EC) defeated Bobby Brown (VMI), 6-3, 6-1.</p>
        <p>Sickler (GW) defeated Bruce Linton, 8-6, 6-0.</p>
        <p>Kirk Jones (EC) defeated Levin (R), 3-6, 6-2, 6-4.</p>
        <p>Jones - Geier (GW) defeated Felton - Ransone, 6-3, 6-1.</p>
        <p>Koury - Dumansky (D) defeated Van Middlesworth -Grady, 6-1, 6-4.</p>
        <p>Linton - Dumansky (D) defeated Tyree - ODonnell (VMI), 6-1, 6-2.</p>
        <p>Second round summary:</p>
        <p>Ellison (F) defeated Felton, 6-4, 1-6, 7-5.</p>
        <p>Applefield (F) defeated Ransone, 2-6. 6-1, 7-5.</p>
        <p>Rhett Wolfe (C) defeated Grady, 6-8, 6-2, 7-5.</p>
        <p>Harrison (F)defeated Jones, 4-6, 8-6, 6-2.</p>
        <p>Sickler - Kitt (GW) defeated Linton - Jones, 6-3, 6-3.</p>
        <p>FergusonDecides Safer To Switch</p>
        <p>Albert Ralph Ferguson, East Carolina Universitys newest member of Mike McGees football coaching staff would rather switch than fight and hes glad he did.</p>
        <p>Fergie as he is known by his friends was a rodeo performer on the side while he played and coached football in his younger days.</p>
        <p>He began riding in rodeos when he was 16 and he rode in his last one when he was 25. Now 30, he readily admits hes glad he quit.</p>
        <p>I almost got killed in that racket, Ferguson said between puffs on his cigar. Between my junior and senior years in college, a horse fell on me and really messed up my right arm.</p>
        <p>I guess it was fun though, riding in rodeos I mean. I did just about everything from wrestling steers to riding bucking broncos.</p>
        <p>A native of Joe Wheeler Dam, Ala,, Ferguson calls Town Creek, Ala., his home now because he hasnt been in one place long enough since he left Alabama to call it home.</p>
        <p>A bachelor, he attended both Auburn and Florence State, where he graduated with a degree in chemistry in 1962. He played quarterback at both schools and was named all -conference at Florence State his senior year.</p>
        <p>Following graduation. Ferguson went into high school coaching where he stayed until 1966. His record for the five years as a head coach was a neat 42-7-2 and he had a high school bowl team.</p>
        <p>He began his career at Madison County High in Gurley, Ala., where he stayed one year and compiled a 6-3 record. From there he moved to Loretto, Tenn., the next year and his last season there his teair won the</p>
        <p>Natchez Trace Kovvi in Waynesboro, Tenn. After coaching there for two years, he moved back to Alabama and coached the Lawrence County High team in Moulton.</p>
        <p>Ferguson got his start in college coaching at DuFauw University in Greencastle. Ind., where he coached the offensive line for two years. While coaching at DePauw he worked on his masters in Science Education before moving to Washington University in St. .Louis, Mo.</p>
        <p>He was offensive backfield coach at Washington a year before moving to the University of Maryland in 1969 as defensive line coach.</p>
        <p>At East Carolina, under new head coach Mike McGee, Ferguson will coach the offensive line, which is what he likes best.</p>
        <p>Being a quarterback. I played behind some good offensive linemen and some bad ones, he said. I can usually tell the good ones and the bad ones because if the linemen arent good, the quarterback takes all the punishment</p>
        <p>A colorful fellow. Fergie calls himself a country boy at heart. His favorite food is good ole Southern cooking, especially black - eyed peas. Ive never been known to turn down a good steak, either. he added in his deep, huisky voice.</p>
        <p>Besides hunting and lishing, Fergie likes to play golf. He labels himself the world's worst golfer.</p>
        <p>If I could figure a way to get that little white ball in the hole a little quicker than I do now, I might be pretty good, he joked. But as it stands now it takes too many strokes to get in there. His most memorable moment besides falling off the horse and ruining his throwing arm was</p>
        <p>Ayden Downs Belvoir; Wraps Up Pitt Crown</p>
        <p>BELVOIR - The Ayden Tornadoes wrapped up another Pitt Cowity Conference baseball championship j^terday, taking a 6-5 victory over Belvoir-Falkland.</p>
        <p>The champions will move into the state playoffs, following the end of the regular season. Ayden will be seeking its second state championship over the past three years.</p>
        <p>Ayden picked up a pair of runs</p>
        <p>in the sei ond, and another in the third Belvoir scored first in the third, and^ trailed 3-1 going into the bottom of the fifth.</p>
        <p>But in. the fifth, Wooten reached on a fielder s choice and Harrell singled. Coburn then tripled, svei ing both runners to tie it at 3-3.</p>
        <p>In the seventh. Ayden came up with thrti runs. Debro Blount singled and Robert Twilley</p>
        <p>walked. Mike Griffin singled Blount over and moved Twilley to third. A passed ball la Twilley score. Ken Cleaton walked and Dail Griffin grounded out, scoring Mike Griffin on the play.</p>
        <p>It proved to be just enough as Belvoir came up with two in the bottom of the seventh to nearly pull it out. Burroughs reached on an error and Coburn reached on a fielder's choice. Joyners long sacrifice brought both runners in. cutting the score to 6-5 tx'fore Ayden ended it.</p>
        <p>Ayden  21  IWO  36 6 1</p>
        <p>Belvoir  01  20  23 4 1</p>
        <p>Tvson and Tripp; Tyner and Cobb.</p>
        <p>Pardon My Slide</p>
        <p>Donn Ciendenon of the New York Mets slides into San Diego Padres Steve Huntz in attempt to break up double play in the second inning Friday.</p>
        <p>Ciendenon was out as was batter Joe Foy who was thrown out at first base by the falling Huntz. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNT - Rocky Mounts Wilson Junior High School nipped E. B. Ay cock Junior High here Friday. 5-4.</p>
        <p>But the game was not without controversey, highlighttnl by a call in the sixth which prevented Aycock from moving into the lead in the game.</p>
        <p>Wilson pushed over tw o runs in the first inning. Hinton Sykes walked and Randy Warwick slammed a homer for a 2-0 lead In the top of the fourth. Ayei'ck came back to pick up two aiul tie it up. Steve Bostic walked and Wayne Bailey also got a free trip. Howard Adams singU-il to load the bases, and walks to Stanley Cobb and Mike Hooks brought in Bostic and Bailov.</p>
        <p>In the bottom of the fourth however, two more Wilson runs came over. Jimmy Woolard reached on an error, and Lari \</p>
        <p>Dandndge slammed (he second homer of the game In the sixtli, .Aycoek struck again, Adams smgleil and Cobb got a  Pmner  litted the</p>
        <p>Wolves Nip Bethel</p>
        <p>ball :)\ir Ilu' tense for what appeared to li&amp;gt; a luimc' run Ad.iii.-. le j Colio eru.s.-ed salel\. but Piniii r u.is .dk\i out by the umpire a iu e! usm-o t!ie plate. The umpire ei.iaiud tfiat ,i Ihantam [)la&amp;gt;er liad touched Imiu r bel.ift he re.iched home, thus vioi itmg the rules,</p>
        <p>\\li.-on then l ame up with the wmiiiih: I nil III the (lottom of the sixth. .);i\i' Lood.st'li reached on a licldii s Cioice, and Dan' dridgc re u lual on ,i sineh , .and an error on ()  ploy brought Cukk.'- li honii'</p>
        <p>\&amp;gt; HU k  e.tii  2il2 0I I 2</p>
        <p>Wilson  _(MI  201  6 I</p>
        <p>(ot)l) and .Iones; Dandridge .ind .Svke.^</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLF  The</p>
        <p>Winterville Wolves rallied to o\ ereome upstart Bethel Fnda&amp;gt; .ind take a 5-4 victory It would have Ix'en the first Bethel win of the year had they held off the Wolves</p>
        <p>Wintervilh' scored once in the first inning, liut Bethel came tqi with tliree in the third Another Btttu'1 run in die fifth made it 4</p>
        <p>West Leads Lakers To Win In Friday's Game</p>
        <p>Williamsfoin Rolls To Win</p>
        <p>By J.\CK STEVENSON Associated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)-Coach Red Holzman of the New York Knickerbockers declared, I didnt notice anything wrong with Jerry Wests hand out there.</p>
        <p>There had^en fears that a jammed left thumb might keep the Los Angeles Lakers ace out of the fourth game of the National Basketball Association championship playoffs on Friday night.</p>
        <p>/Vll West did was play 52 minutes out of a possible 53 as</p>
        <p>when DePauw beat Indiana State, 17-14, in 1967.</p>
        <p>Indiana State had 85 .scholarships and seven fulltime coaches and we had only two fulltime coaches and we didnt even have any scholarships. He admits he moves around a lot but says each move is made to better himself.</p>
        <p>That was his reason behind coming to East Carolina.</p>
        <p>We are really going to have some football program here in the next couple of years and I am glad to be a part of it and be associated with such a fine head coach as Mike McGee.</p>
        <p>the Lakers won 121-115 in overtime. He scored 37 points and contributed 18 assists, which is just one short of the final playoff record of 19 held by former Boston Celtic star Bob Cousy.</p>
        <p>As the pair of evenly matched teams head back to New York and Mondays fifth game at Madison Square Garden, the best four-of-seven series stands at two apiece. The last two have gone to overtimethe Knicks winning 111-108 on Wednesday night.</p>
        <p>A crowd of 17,509 at the Forum saw the regulation period end 99-99 thanks in part to a great defensive play by reserve John Tresvant. He came on with 56 seconds remaining and, with nine seconds to go, knocked away an inbounded ball aimed for Willis Reed.</p>
        <p>Holzman said he felt his team played well in spots but we missed too many fast-break opportunities.</p>
        <p>There really is little, if any, difference between these two teams, Holzman added.</p>
        <p>Tresvant hadnt seen action in any of the previous three games against the Knicks although his play in the fifth game of the opening playoff series against Phoenix had been outstanding.</p>
        <p>The Knicks, hitting nine of their first 11 shots, five of them by Dick Barnett, built an early lead and a 27-24 advantage at the quarter. By halftime, the Lakers led 54-47 and held a 71-67 advantage at the end of three stanzas.</p>
        <p>Barnett led the Knicks scorers with 29 points including five in the overtime while Reed had 23 and Dave Debusschere 20. Debusscjiere and Bill Bradley both fouled out during the overtime.</p>
        <p>Wilt Chamberlain hauled down 25 rebounds to lead that department for the winners.</p>
        <p>PERQUIMANS - William ston High School rolled to an 11-.5 victory over Perquimans High School Friday, to remain in first place in the Albemarle Conference.</p>
        <p>The victory boosted the Green Waves record to 8-2 in the loop, and left them a full game ahead of second place Edenton.</p>
        <p>Williamston hopped on Perquimans for four runs in the top of the second inning, Sammy Roberson started things off with a single, and Danny Jenkins walked. Greg Godard singled.</p>
        <p>loading (lie bases. Tlu tliree I fanners uorkitl a triple sie.il. with HolK-rson seoring.</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Tuesday Bowlettes</p>
        <p>Greene Cenfrai Edges Knights</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>I.</p>
        <p>Toppers</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>2H</p>
        <p>Strikers</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>4H</p>
        <p>Rockettes</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>Goofers</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>Eightballs</p>
        <p>.67</p>
        <p>6)</p>
        <p>Pixies</p>
        <p>5.6'.</p>
        <p>68',</p>
        <p>Three Bears</p>
        <p>40';.</p>
        <p>8.3',</p>
        <p>Mini Pins</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>9;)</p>
        <p>High game</p>
        <p>and ser</p>
        <p>i e.s,</p>
        <p>Margaret Smart,</p>
        <p>206, 489.</p>
        <p>Don () Neal lollowed vvilli a walk, .itul Jo(l Thigpen doubled, driving in Jenkins, Godard and O'Neal for a 4-0 li&amp;gt;ad.</p>
        <p>In the third, Williamston came up with four more, insuring the victory. Kenn\ ilaslip doubled and Roberson walki'd. Jenkins singled over Haslip, and Godard hit a sacrifice fly to score Uobeisoii. Mike Bundy walked and ONeal singled, scoring (xith .Jenkins and Bundy.</p>
        <p>WiHiauisli/ii picked up one more in the fourth and scored twice in the sixth. Perquimans picked up all six of its runs in the sixth.</p>
        <p>Winterville then exploeded lor three runs in the bottom of the tilth to tie It up Liiwrence Glisson walked and stole secoiul He scored when .Mark Webb singled Wayne Eubanks reaclu'd on a fielders choice, and Ronald Carraway reached on an error, scoring both Webb and Eubanks.</p>
        <p>The .score remained tied at 4 4 until the Ixittom of the seventh With two outs, Tim Simtli doubled, and moved into third on a wild pitch, Jim Heidenreich hit liack to short and the play was made at the plate, but was tiMi ate to catch .Smith.</p>
        <p>Mark Webb and Roger Gates led the Winterville hitting with two each, while Abeyounis had two for Bethel.</p>
        <p>Ifelhel  (i:i3  10  (-!  3  ;!</p>
        <p>Winterville  100 ;i t.5  (i 3</p>
        <p>Alii'younis and Martin; Smith, Webb (4) and Evans, Eubanks</p>
        <p>(5),</p>
        <p>EAT OUT</p>
        <p>TONIGHT</p>
        <p>AT THE</p>
        <p>Haslip and Godard led the Williamston hilling with two</p>
        <p>(aeh.</p>
        <p>CANDLEWICK</p>
        <p>INN</p>
        <p>SEAFOOD BUFFET</p>
        <p>Williamston OH 102 0II II 2 Iei'juimans 000 00.5 0 .5 8 2</p>
        <p>(lodard, Jenkins (6), Godard i6) and Haslip; Win.slow, Webb (3) and bh'ctwiMxl.</p>
        <p>2.75</p>
        <p>5:30 TIL 9:00</p>
        <p>Colonels, L. A. Win</p>
        <p>New Buc Assistant</p>
        <p>A1 Person is the latest addition to Coach Mike McGees football staff at East Carolina University. Ferguson, who once was a rodeo rough rider decided that it was safer to be on the football field than on a bucking bronco.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>The Denver Rockets ran out of gas ... and the Indiana Pacers ran into Darel Carrier.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles outgunned cold-shooting Denver 114-105 and Carrier flipped in six points in the final two minutes of overtime to pull Kentucky over Indiana 114-110 in the American Basketball Association playoffs Friday night.</p>
        <p>The Stars victory evened their best-of-7 Western Division finals at one game apiece. The Colonels took a 1-0 lead in their Eastern Division windup series.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles wiped out an 11-point Denver halftime lead in the third period and pulled even at 81 going into the final stanza. ITien, sparked by the sharp-shooting of Mack Calvin and Merv Jackson, the Stars quickly took command.</p>
        <p>Jackson had 21 of his 23 points in the second half, and Calvin wound up with 25, 16 of them in the second half.</p>
        <p>'Die Rockets made their last threat when Jeff C!ongdon sank a three-pointer with 4:55 re-mgining and cut the lead to nine points at 107-98. Then Denver ran out of firepower and went for more than two minutes without a basket while Los Angeles pu^ed its lead to 13 points.</p>
        <p>A free throw by Carrier broke a 106 tie and put the Colonels in front for good.</p>
        <p>After Carrier broke the deadlock, Gene Moore sank a field goal. Bob Netolicky brought Indiana within one 109-108 with a tip4n, but the Pacers could never come (^loser.</p>
        <p>SNOW HILL - Greene Central edged out Northern Nash, 8-6, here Friday to maintain its control of first place in the Eastern Plains Conference baseball race.</p>
        <p>Northern Nash took command in the first inning, pushing over three runs. Greene Central came back with one in the bottom of the first, then added three more in the second to gain the lead. The Knights scored once in the third, however, tieing it at 4-4.</p>
        <p>In the bottom of the fourth, the Rams scored four, and that proved enough. Danny Whitley singled and Ronnie Creech got a hit. Both were sacrificed up, and Donald Taylor got a hit, bringing both across. Donnie Harris singled, and both he and Taylor</p>
        <p>scored on Bob Scotts double.</p>
        <p>That gave Greene Central an 8-4 lead, but Northern Nash tried to rally in the seventh. Nay led off with a double and advanced on an out. Price doubled to score Nay, and Hedgepeth got another double, scoring Prince. A walk put the tieing run on first, but the next two men struck out to end the game.</p>
        <p>Taylor had three hits, while Billy Albritton and Scott each had two for Greene Central; Prince had three for Northern Nash.</p>
        <p>Askyourbrother'inJaw</p>
        <p>for a $5,000loan.</p>
        <p>Nor. Nash  301 000 26 8 3</p>
        <p>G. Central  130 400 x8 12 3</p>
        <p>Jones, Mozingo (5) and Bunn; Kearney, Johnson (7) and Harris.</p>
        <p>Chicod Rallies To Down Stokes</p>
        <p>STOKES - Chicod High School spotted Stokes-Pactolus a 5-0 lead, then stormed back to take a 10-5 victory over the Blue Jays Friday,</p>
        <p>Stokes moved out into the lead in the first inning, pushing over two runs. Briley led off with a single and stole both second and third. White reached on aa error, scoring Briley. He movea up on a passed ball, and scored (m an error when he stole third.</p>
        <p>Stokes added one more in the second, and pushed over two more in the third fen* a 5-0 edge.</p>
        <p>But Chicod came up with nine in the fifth to blast into the lead. Randy Hudson doubled and Charles i Cashion singled. A passed ball scored Hudson and Jerry Mills was hit by a pitch. Danny Edwards singled over</p>
        <p>Cashion, and Billy Evans walked, loading the bases. A walk to Phil Page scored Mills, and Jay Brown singled td drive in Edwards.</p>
        <p>Billy Jones walked, forcing in Evans, and a passed ball let Page come in. Hudson singled to score Brown and Jones, and after Cashion and Mills walked, reloading the bases, Evans singled to score Hudson.</p>
        <p>Chicod added one more in the sixth for the 10-5 win.</p>
        <p>Edwards and Hudson led the Chicod hitting with two each, while Wynn had two for Stokes. Chicod  900  091  (K-tO 9 4</p>
        <p>Stokes  212  000  0- 5 5 2</p>
        <p>Brown, Mills , (3), Brown (5) and Warren, Mills (5); White, Wynn (5). Brown (5) and Cherry,</p>
        <p>Hell tell you his froubles.</p>
        <p>Guys like this must be good for sotriett) i ng. Think hard. Harder yet. Like maybe holding a board while you do the hammei ing. And providing the wife a place to visit. And there must be something else. How about when you need help? Its like talking to</p>
        <p>yourself out in the middle of the woods. Come where youll be listened to. At our place. With more than 500 offices coast to coast we do a lot of listening. And a lot of helping. Need money?</p>
        <p> Thats what were here for.</p>
        <p>See Commercial Credit</p>
        <p>Loans up to $5,000</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0018" />
        <p>T*sts Show Boat Engines Do Not Rod And Gun: Pollution Report Pollute Waters They Are Used In Added To Those On Weather</p>
        <p>jr JACK WOLBTON</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI)-Do raa-rine CBfiiics poUiite the watm in wtbdi they are operated?</p>
        <p>An extcoaive atndy at Lake X in Florida, cooductod by Environmental Engineering, toe. at the requeat of the Kiekhnefer Mercury Division of Bitmswock Corp., showed very conclusively that they do not.</p>
        <p>Lake X is a marine engine testing complex establiahed more than a decade ago to test Mercury engines. Since then, ei^neers have burned about 3 million gallons of fuel and oil in a continuous around-the-clock testing program on the lake involving outboard, inboard and stem drive marine engine types.</p>
        <p>The six-month study by Environmental Engineering showed no adverse effects on plants, water quality and aquatic life.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, the exhaust-fuel controversy continues and, as a result, outboard motor manufacturers have teamed up to conduct further studies to try to settle the matter "once and for all.</p>
        <p>This new project, launched under auspices of the Boating</p>
        <p>todustry Aasociatkm, is bdng by an independent testing organization on both warm and cold water lakes.</p>
        <p>As Matt J. Kaufman, actii^ executive director of BIA, e]q(dained it;</p>
        <p>The current study wont be the work of just one company at one site-though the Lake X experience will be an important starting point. The whole industry has gotten together, and we expectand welcome dose attention from the federal government and state agencies.</p>
        <p>If the extended study exonerates motorboating, so much the better. If it doesnt, we think it will at least point the way to corrective measures that must  be taken by</p>
        <p>manufacturers.</p>
        <p>fiid or exhaust gases, he said.</p>
        <p>In the study sprasored by Kiekhaefer Mercury, inaccessi-Ue and never used by powerboats. The latter was included in the examination as a basis for comparison.</p>
        <p>A.T. DuBose, analytical die-mist for Environmental Engineering, in his repcMt on the study said;</p>
        <p>Numerous samples from both lakes were collected by our team and analyzed for organic compounds known to be found in exhaust emissions of intomal combustion engines.</p>
        <p>Ndther Lake X nor Cat Lake were found to contain any of toe organic compounds found in gasoline and oil.</p>
        <p>These organics are readily broken down into harmless nuiterial by the bacteria already in the water, or are in such minute quantity our best equipment cannot detect them.</p>
        <p>Lake X is noted for its prolific black bass and is part of a conservation and wildlife r^uge included in the programs of the Florida Game and Fresh Water Fish Commission. .</p>
        <p>By ROD AMUNDSON "njere is an idea kicking around which, if put into effect, could have a tremendous impact on public awareness of poUutm. The U. S. Department of Commerce, in addition to providing periodic weather reports, woidd give information on the local air pollution index, and the degree of pollution in nearby lakes and streams. This would give people daily * hourly reminders of the condition of their environment.</p>
        <p>Everybody is interested in the weather. They can see it and hear it, and most important, feel it. But people dont notice poUution unless toe air becomes so fouled it makes their eyes water and smart, or they happen to look at a stream that is clogged with fUth.</p>
        <p>Everyone is more or less persuaded that nothing much can be done about the weather, but more people are convinced something can be done about pollution, and periodic reminder of the pollution content of local atmosphere and water would help build up toe demand for action.</p>
        <p>Kaufman said that sites for the new tests would probably include Lake X but cold water lakes also would be studied. The test, he said could run as long as three years.</p>
        <p>Scientists will take extensive samples of waters at the surface and below, and they will also check plants, fish and the lake bottoms for evidence of harmful residue caused by</p>
        <p>Ducks Unlimited Plans Spending Of Two Million Dollars In 1970</p>
        <p>The equipment for measuring pollution ia already avaflabto, but thus far there isnt enou^ to go around, and thm are not enou^ people trained to use this equijunent and report its fmdings.</p>
        <p>Youd hardly call pine pollen a pollutant, but there aeema to have been an unusual amount this year, and fiah pondinear pine trees have been covered wito the yellow powder, plus the little wormlike catkim that produce it. Hus hasnt done any damngf to the fish, but in many cases has made bait and fly castii^ ikterly futUe.</p>
        <p>Bluegills, shellcrackers, and largemouth bass in most parts of toe state have gone about their spring spawning activity. This will mean a period when bass will be a little harder to come by, but Uuegiil and shellcracker fishing should be excellent until the hotter part of summer. It is still a little early to use dry flies or popping bugs successfully, but wet flies fished slowly just under toe surface will usually get results. A recent hot lure has been the black ant. During the bedding period, shellcrackers will take almost any small bait or lure offered them, but later on they become more selective in their diet, but will take tiny pieces of cut bait. Shrimp, cut in small pieces, will sometimes take shellcrackers when everything else fails.</p>
        <p>Pier Fishing Picks Up Speed</p>
        <p>By FRANK SWANSON Anglers who went pier fishing over the week-end, and on Monday, went home with smiles on their faces. David Hardison of Morehead City, used silver jerk-jegger plugs, and decked 30 blue fish about 1 pound apiece. He was fishing from the Oceanana Fishing Pier. Other anglers aboard had their share of blues also, and some reeled in scattered sea mullets along with spots and hog fish.</p>
        <p>Pier master, Shelby Freeman of toe Iron Streamer pier reports that one pound blue fish are being taken with bucktail plugs from his pier. Some anglers have been lucky enough to snag two at a time. There are also catches of sea mullets and spots. Mr. Ed Nelson, Havelock, fishing Sunday night on the high tide, rounded up a good supply of hog fish and spots. Mr. Grey Keyser, Raleigh, picked up the first Spanish mackerel of the new season, at 13 ounces.</p>
        <p>Calico Jack of Harkers</p>
        <p>Island, reported in about some good blue fish catches in the Cape Lookout area. Jerry McManus, and party, Raleigh, recently brought home 150 blu, and these averaged about l pound apiece. The small outboard, and inboard trolling boats can be on the lookout for plenty of good fishing along the beaches if the season continues to get thicker with the early run of our variety of fish.</p>
        <p>Charter boats have picked up some king mackerel in the regular fishing runs, along with good catches of the hard-fighting albacore. The best king catches have been offshore, with 26 being taken, aboard Dolphin One, with skipper Geo. Bedsworth, on a two day trip. The party was headed by Mr. Walter Huffman, Hickory. Kings are on the run, and they are working inshore each day. Tuna were popular in the sports boats catches Sunday Uroy Goulds Mattie G II, captured 200 pounds of black bass on Saturday.</p>
        <p>SAN ANTONIO, TEXAS -Two million dollars! Thats the record amount which Ducks Unlimited will be spending in the building and rehabilitation of 63 high quality wetlands projects across Canadas  prime</p>
        <p>waterfowl nesting regions during 1970.</p>
        <p>Unanimous approval of the $2-million allocation by its Board of Trustees keynoted the 33rd Annual Convention of Ducks Unlimited, Inc. The convention, held in San Antonio, adjourned last weekend (April 18) following four days of productive sessions.</p>
        <p>The $2,000,000 appropriation to DUs construction affiliate. Ducks Unlimited (Canada), is described by Ducks Unlimited officials as a positive step toward making our Master pian for the 1970s a reality. By 1980 we plan to acquire control on another four and a half million acres of important nesting habitat, bringing our total to 6.5 million acres before the end of the decade. To finance this record - breaking assignment, it will be necessary for DU to increase its income by at least 20 per cent annually over the next ten years.</p>
        <p>The allocation for the first year of this decade is almost one third higher than the previous record, set last year. It will bring to the 16 - million dollar level the total conservation funds sent to Canada during DUs 33year history.</p>
        <p>Proof of the concern for our waterfowl and their environment was underscored by</p>
        <p>the fact that 117 delegates from all over the U.S., Canada and Mexico attended the conference.</p>
        <p>Another highlight saw the DU Board giving unanimous approval to a resolution commending the officers and members of the newly organized Ducks Unlimited de Mexico, and expressing full cooperation in thrir projects to raise funds in Mexico for developing waterfowl programs in that nation. Board Chairman Charles B. Allen presented the resolution to the President of Ducks Unlimited de Mexico, Nick S. Covacevich.</p>
        <p>Another action of the DU convention was the election of new Trustees and officers. Unanimously re - elected to new one year terms was the full slate of current officers  President William P. Elser, of La Jolla, California; Board Chairman Charles B. Allen, of Baltimore; Executive Committee Chairman Henry G. Schmidt, of Cleveland; Secretary Henry E. Coe, III, of New York City; Treasurer Wyndham Hasler, of Chicago, and Assistant Treasurer Jay Neubauer, of Long Grove, Illinois. Also elected as Assistant Treasurer was Robert E. Maguiness of Park Ridge, Illinois.</p>
        <p>Re - elected by the Board were ten Regional Vice Presidents: South Pacific Region, Chester F. DoUey, of Los Angeles; North Pacific Region, Randolph F. Cunningham, of Yakima, Washington; South Central Region, R. Withers Cool, Colorado Springs; North Central Region, Robert D. Marcotte, of Omaha; South Mississippi</p>
        <p>Region, Herman Taylor, Jr., of Natchitoches, Lousisiana; Central Mississippi Region, Lee C. Howley, of Cleveland; North Mississippi Region, Norman H. Ott, of Milwaukee, and Archie D. Walker, Jr., of Wayzata, Minn.; South Atlantic Region, Eugene duPont, III,of Lobeco, S. C., North Atlantic Region, William K. duPont, of Wilmington, Delaware.</p>
        <p>Fifteen outstanding sportsmen</p>
        <p>V.HIICO uacK 01 Marxers bass on Saturday.  ^  ^</p>
        <p>Planting Cover P** ^'*''"9 Helos Huntn  Planning</p>
        <p>11 I 111  RALEIGHFishing provides  that can be employed to impr</p>
        <p>O   l_  fichintf</p>
        <p>By LUTHER PAR'HN RALEIGH, NC - The folks around Guppys Crossroads are still talking about what happened to old Jack. You wouldnt get an arguement if you said he was the best pointo* that ever hit the country, that is, before he got lazy.</p>
        <p>It all started at the end of the quail season three years ago. Luke Guppy swore he was through stomping through briars, reeds and swamps looking for quail that Jack had pointed. Old Jack coul^ find birds, make no mistake about that. But the day after the season opened, they all seemed to head for the swamp, and that ^ was what had Luke disgusted.</p>
        <p>About the same time, one of the neighborhood boys who was taking agriculture in high school told about a game biologist who talked to his class and told them about the Wildlife Commission. He also mentioned an annual food mixture for upland game that was especially good for quail. Lukes ears really perked up when the boy said the mixture had so many different foods quail lUte that they usually stayed somewhere close to it during the winter, except when they were hunted too hard or something. To top it off it was free  paid for from the sale of hunting and fishing licoises.</p>
        <p>The biologist had left some applications at the school so Luke got one and filled it out and sent it to Ralei^. Pretty soon a part  time farm game worker delivered the bags of seed and explained what was in the mixture and how to plant it. As soon as Us oops were in the rennd. Luke planted his wUdlife patebas. Each five  pound bag eootaiaed enough soybeans, paas, millet, milo, buckwheat and anmial toepedeia to plant a 1-f acre plot. Luke had had with most of the to the mixtiire, except toNibi^ Aid ha ksav good Hi Wptol to ha the key to</p>
        <p>Tto&amp;amp;|BlBdli aaar cover</p>
        <p>J..    I</p>
        <p>on his best cropland that was not being used that year, plus a couple of old plant beds that were getting too thicl for a dog to get through. He disked in 50 pounds of 8-8-8 for each plot and raked it in lightly with a weeder. Quail were whistling around the patches all summer and by late August they were already feeding on the millet.</p>
        <p>To make a long story short, Lukes quail hunting was a whole lot easier next season. The birds grew up around the food patches and were pretty well hooked on the plentiful food supply when the season opened, so they didnt light out for the swamp the first day. They usually stayed somewhere around the food unless the hunting pressure got too heavy or something else bothered them.</p>
        <p>Lukes hunting habits changed too. He found he could put old Jack in the back of the truck and drive to a food patch, shoot the covey, get back in the truck and drive to the next food patch and go through the same routine again. Well, the hitch was old Jack got to liking the ride so much he would point the covey and then head back for the truck before Luke could shoot sometimes. Now Luke can shoot quail with the best, but hell never win any medals for retrieving. Anyway, the food patches improved his hunting so much he dorant mind picking up toe birds.</p>
        <p>Nobody can guarantee your quail hunting will improve like Lukes if you try some annual food plantings. But anybody whos had smne will tell you its worth a try. The only cost is a little time and fratilizer. Most farms now have srnne good land lying idle, in rotation, or &amp;lt;xie of the cropland diversion programs (check with the local ASCS office before planting on diverted land). If youre a landless hunter, its good public relafions to offer to make some plantings for someone who has the land but not the time.</p>
        <p>RALEIGHFishing provides a world of pleasure to people who love to fish. If you need another reason, there seems to be a low incidence of ulcers and other stress - related c(M)ditions among those who fish for the love of it.</p>
        <p>Good fishing in your pond doesnt just happen. Its the result of either a fortunate combination of circumstances or some good planning and hard work.</p>
        <p>In the interest of getting keeping go&amp;lt;^ pond fishing, it should be pointed out that an important part of pond management is fertilization. Of course, fertility alone cannot {x-oduce good fishing  all the other factors (rf location, con-. struction, stocking, etc., must be in balance. But fertilizing is certainly (xie of the easiest and least time - consuming practices</p>
        <p>that can be employed to improve fishing.</p>
        <p>ThCTe are two notable instances where pond fertilization may not be practical. The cost will average around $25.00 per surface acre, so big ponds may get too expensive to fertilize. Another example would be a pond built on a stream with a good head of water all year. In this case the fertilizer may not stay in the pond long enough to do much good.</p>
        <p>In ponds that would benefit from fertilization, recommendations call for 40 pounds of 20-20-5 or 100 pounds of 8-8-2 for each surface acre. Repeat every three weeks until the water turns green (or brown) and you cant see a bright object deeper than 12 inches under the water. Hold off further applications until the water clears enough to see a bright object 18 inches under water.</p>
        <p>- conservationists were elected as new Trustees of Ducks Unlimited. These include; James Camp, of Bakersfield, Calif.; Daniel Chapin, of Atherton, Calif.; Frederic C. Hamilton, of Denver, Colo.; R. Withers Cool, of Colorado Springs, Colo; G. Christian Crosby, of Englewood, Colo.; S. Hallock duPont, Jr., of Miami, Florida; C. Charles Jackson, Jr., of St. Paul, Minn.; Richard T. Baker, of Cleveland, Ohio; Nashville, Tenn.; Meredith J.D. Long, of Houston, Texas; Clive Runnells, of Houston, Texas; Henry F. Stern, of Richmond, Va.; Francis J. Trecker, of Milwaukee, Wise.; and David V. Uihlein, of Milwaukee, Wise.; and David V. Uihlein, of Milwaukee, Wise.</p>
        <p>In addition, 19 members of the Board were re - elected to serve new three - year terms ending in 1973; 33 Honorary Trustees were re - elected to one - year terms.</p>
        <p>Six widely recognized out-doorsmen were honored for their contributions to water - fowl conservation with election as Honorary Trustees: these include General Richard King Mellon, of Pittsburgh; renowned aitertainment personality Bing Crosby, of Hollywood, California; veteran DU Trustee G. E. Karlen, of Tacoma, Wash.; waterfowl artist Roy Mason, of San Diego, Calif.; outdoor journalist Jimmy Robinson, of Minneapolis, Minn.; and wildlife painter John A. Ruthven, of Cincinnati.</p>
        <p>Also at the convention. Ducks Unlimited President Lome Cameron and his staff outlined the 2 - million dollar construction program for 1970. The building agenda, already well underway.</p>
        <p>calls tor completion of a record 63 wetlands projects, reaching across Canadas duck production regions from the Atlantic to the Pacific.</p>
        <p>In his keynote address to the 33rd Annual Ducks Unlimited convention. President William P. Elser called for continued progress, in these words: As we stand on the threshold of the 70s, we firmly believe that this is truly the decade of decision. If we are to build our blueprint for tomorrow into reality, we must vigorously accept the challenge facing us  a challenge to preserve these Canadian marshlands, before they are destroyed by drainage or the onrush of civilization.</p>
        <p>The mail brings a question on the longest copperhead or highland moccasin recorded in North Carolina. According to State Museum Director Bill Hamnett, the largest recorded there is about 36 inches. Replologist Raymond L. Ditmars recorded a copperhead four feet, five inches long. It is likely that Tarheels have killed copperheads well over the 36-inch length, but these have never been officially recorded.</p>
        <p>Things are beginning to get lively around the worlds first striped bass hatchery at Weldon. The other day Ernest Parker, Halifax, brought in a roe striper that probably will tip the scales well above 40 pounds. The fish has not been weighed. She was in condition green, i.e., with unripe eggs. Biologists who operate the hatchery have injected her with a fertility hormone, and Parker will be paid for the fish at the rate of $20.00 per million fry produced A fish this size could easily net Parker as much as $60.00. He can never bake the fish or use it for rockfish muddle. Once injected with the potent hormone, fish are dangerous for human comsumption. With a name like "chorionic gonadotrope it should be dangerous.</p>
        <p>Thus far none of the stripers brought to the hatchery has been ripe for spawning, but a few days of warm weather and warm water will correct this, however, and an excellent run of stripers is expected this year.</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0019" />
        <p>Txt and Photographs by Jorry Raynoi</p>
        <p>A Pictorial Look AtGreenville's 16th Annual Sidewalk Art Show</p>
        <p>The Sidewalk Art Show coincides with the tenth anniversary of the Greenville Art Center at its iM*esent site.</p>
        <p>It was early May 1960 that dedication of the two story brick home, converted into a gracious center, took place. Although the facilities have not grown in size in the past decade, art activity has increased impressively. When the Art Center was founded, the Sidewalk Art Show was in its sixth annual round. Thus 1970 marks the 16th annual spring show to be installed m the sidewalks of Greenville.</p>
        <p>It is a time of hard work, fun and excitement. Artists  from high school level (m throi^h seasoned pnrfessimals  spend the week prior to the show deciding on entries, trying to choose those works most likely to appeal to the public  and hopefully, a chance to take part of the prize money.</p>
        <p>As the years pass, the scope and number categories for entries have increased until now an artist can enter nearly any type of work, including photography.</p>
        <p>A Sidewalk Art Show is a family affair, when parents and children take advantage of the warm weatho* to comtxne art viewing with a s{ing outing Artists come to see vidiat other di lists are doing, and to compare notes on new trends in painting and sculpture.</p>
        <p>^ring is an appropriate seas&amp;lt;m for an art show in the open. Tlie lM*ight colors used by artists in modem pidnting seem a continuation of natures vivid spring colors  the two go well together.</p>
        <p>I970s show again proved to be a festive affair, as can be seen in the photographs taken Friday as the first day of the two day Sidewalk Art Show got underway.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0020" />
        <p>21^Tlic Diily Reflector, Greenvffie, N. C.~8iuiday, May 3, ItTO</p>
        <p>At The</p>
        <p>MOVIES</p>
        <p>italian Fans Make tv Log An Alabaman Rich</p>
        <p>WNCT</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>~ Ch. 9</p>
        <p>Tice</p>
        <p>EASY RIDER ~ A strange pair  one (Peter FYnda) with American flags paii^ on his helmet and jacket, the other (Dennis Hopper) kng  haired, bearded, in buckskins  ride their shiny new motorcades from California to New Orims, financed by smuggling drugs. Ibe two meet friendship, bigotry and death. (R) Sunday through Tuesday.</p>
        <p>BATTLE OF BRITAIN  Against overwhdming odds the young ill  equipped RAF pilots turn back Ifitlo-s mighty Luftwaffe in this graphic recreation of the Battle of Britain. (G) Wednesday and Ibursday.</p>
        <p>BUONA SERA, MRS. CAMPBELL  An enterprising Italian matron (Gino Lollowbrigida) tries to cope with the sudden return visit of three American World War II veterans, each of whom thinks he is the father of her daughter. (GP) Friday and Saturday.</p>
        <p>Also playing Friday and Saturday nights is 2000 Years</p>
        <p>Later."</p>
        <p>Myers</p>
        <p>THE WICKED DIE SLOW A post - Qvil War adventure of a 19th Ontury paladin, 'The Kid" and his shotgun -toting amigo, Armadillo. The avenging duo winds its way through the violent and untamed west  their lives as brutal and wild as the country in which they ride. (X) Sunday through Wednesday.</p>
        <p>A MAN CALLED HORSE  An English lord is captured by the Sioux Indians in 1825and made a beast of burden of the tribe, forced to prove his right to be a man. The cast includes Richard Harris and Dame Judith Anderson. (GP) Thursday through Saturday.</p>
        <p>State</p>
        <p>PUTNEY SWOPE  No infwrnation available. (X) Sunday through Saturday.</p>
        <p>FEMALE ANIMALS  No information available. Late show Saturday night, beginning at 11:30.</p>
        <p>Plaza Cinema</p>
        <p>MAROONED  The story of three American astronauts unable to return to Earth following an extended space voyage. The cast includes Gregory Peck, Richard Oenna, David Janssen, James Franciscos and Gene Hackman. (G) Sunday through Wednesday.</p>
        <p>A MAN CALLED HORSE  An Elnglish lord (Richard Harris) is captured by the Sioux Indians in 1825 and made a beast of burden of the tribe, forced to prove his right to be a man. (GP) Thursday through Wednesday.</p>
        <p>Meadowbrook</p>
        <p>CACTUS FLOWER  Prosperous dentist Walter Matthau drafts his proper nurse Ingrid Bergman to masquerade as his estranged wife and rescue him from a complicated situation with zany little blonde Goldie Hawn. (GP) Sunday through Tuesday.</p>
        <p>THE BLOOD SUCKERS - THE LIVER EATERS - Special horror double feature for Wednesday through Friday.</p>
        <p>BANDOLERO - SECRET WORLD  Bandolero", a post -Qvil War western is the story of two ouaw brothers (James Stewart and Dean Martin), who join forces with the sheriff when the posse pursing them is attacked by savage Mexican bandidos. (GP)</p>
        <p>Secret World"  An 11- year -old orfdian, living with his aunt in the French countryside, forms a quasi - erotic relationship with a young girl from England. (GP) Saturday double feature.</p>
        <p>Pitt</p>
        <p>M-A-S-H  This film concerns an unorthodox team of three highly skilled army surgeons stationed at a mobile army surgical h(pital on Koreas 38th parallel during the Korean War. (GP) Sunday through Saturday.</p>
        <p>THAR SHE BLOWS  A sea captain accepts a charter trip and tortured memories are revived. (X) Saturday late show, beginning at 11:15 p.m.</p>
        <p>TV Notes</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPD-NBC brings Dinah Shore back to its air in July with a Monday-through-Friday half-hour series to be called Dinahs Place, visible from 10 to 10:30 a.m. The singing star and guests will deal with contemporary matters affecting the daily lives of women.</p>
        <p>Recording star Ricky Nelson will be a special guest star on the CBS telecast of the finals of the Miss USA Beauty Pageant at Miami Beach May 16. June Lockhart and Bob Barker are back as hostess and master of ceremonies for the fourth consecutive year.</p>
        <p>Football, anyone? ABC begins its 1970 telecasts of National Collegiate Athletic Association games the night of Sept. 12; Stanford vs. Arkansas. There will be a total of 35 games, 11 nationally telecast and 24 on a regional basis, through Dec. 5. Four national telecasts involve night games.</p>
        <p>Tricia Nixon takes CBS News correspondents Harry Reasoner and Mike Wallace on a video tour of the White House for the May 26 60 Minutes" program.</p>
        <p>ABCs fall schedule calls for 11 new nighttime programs as well as Monday night National Football League games through Dec. 14.</p>
        <p>Jack Gaver</p>
        <p>PLAZA</p>
        <p>756-0088 * Pin-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>By CHARLES W. BELL ROME (UPI) - Ex-ailor Oiaries Rocky" Roberts bom in Tanners, Ala., sounds on his records as thoi^ he was bora in Florence, Italy, and his Italian fans are making him rich.</p>
        <p>One of Rockys records titled Stasera Mi Buttolulian slang for Tonight Ill Do It sold 3.7 million copies and stayed on the Hit Parade for five months.</p>
        <p>Rocky works hard on his recordings. He has to tape each one about 30 times. Then the technicians take over. They snip here, snip there, and paste the pieces together.</p>
        <p>It sounds okay to me the first lime, the 31-year-old Roberts said in an interview, but the Italians want me to sound like I was born in Florence. Thats why all the extra work.</p>
        <p>Rocky Roberts is one of about 500 American Negro musicians now crisscrossing Europe more or less as permanent residents. But hes by far one of the most successful.</p>
        <p>In addition to his records, he has starred in five Italian films and he appears on the state-run television network almost weekly as one of the highest paid singers in the country.</p>
        <p>This good life began nine years ago in the French spa of Juan-les-Pins when Roberts rode the national twist craze to first place in a singing contest.</p>
        <p>I didnt stay in Europe because of American racism or any of that, he said. It just happened.</p>
        <p>Roberts intended to stay in the U.S. Navy until he met Tennessee-born Doug Fowlkes, a countiy-oriented musician who led a group known as the Airdales (Navy slang for naval pilots) in Key West, Fla.</p>
        <p>At the time, Roberts was more interested in fighting. He was all-U.S. Navy welterweight boxing champion, a title that kept him off duty rosters and made him a fleet hero.</p>
        <p>Fowlkes heard Roberts singing to himself while shadow boxing and persuaded him to sign at an appearance with the Airdales. The applause convinced Roberts to hang up his gloves.</p>
        <p>Europe entered the picture when Roberts re-enlisted and was assigned in 1960 to duty aboard the U.S. Sixth Fleet carrier Independence. He went ashore in Juan-les-Pins on leave and won a competition against 27 other vocalists.</p>
        <p>Fowlkes remembered. When he retired from the Navy in 1962, he persuaded Roberts to go 50-50 with him on anything they could earn in Europe. Roberts agreed with a handshake that remains the only contract between the two men.</p>
        <p>1:U TimNf Tips t:30 World Toms</p>
        <p>3:M Splondorod 3:M Guiding Light</p>
        <p>7:30 To Romo 10.00 Impossible 4;30 ^ 5,,^</p>
        <p>4:00 Showcase .'OO News 0:30 Amateur Hour</p>
        <p>7:00 Lassie</p>
        <p>11:00 News 11: IS /Movie MONDAY 0:30 Carotins l:1S Sewihg l:2S Meditations 1:30 News f:00 Kangaroo</p>
        <p>5:00 Laramie 5:S5 Paul Harvey 0:00 News 0:10 Sports 0:25 Weather 0:30 News 7:00 Truth Or</p>
        <p>10:00 Lucy Show 7:30  Gunsmoke</p>
        <p>10:30 Hillbillies  0:30  Here's Lucy</p>
        <p>11:00 Andy  t:00  AAayberry</p>
        <p>Griffith  9:30  Doris Day</p>
        <p>11:30 Love of Life 10:00 Carol 12:00 Noon News Burnett 12:15 Farm News 11:00 Final 12:25 Weather  Report</p>
        <p>12:30 Search 11:30 Merv 1:00 The Heart Griffin</p>
        <p>WNBE  Ch. 12</p>
        <p>9:30LaLanne 7:00 Lewis Fam. i0:00 Gourmet 8.00 Faith  ,0:30 For Women</p>
        <p>!   .P*"'  10:50  Kays</p>
        <p>:00 Big Picture Corner</p>
        <p>11:00 Bewitched 11:30 That 10:M Spiderman (jiri</p>
        <p>11:00 Bullwinkle 11:30 Discovery 12:00 Insight 12:30 Profile 1:00 Directions</p>
        <p>1:30 Issue Answers 2:00 Movie 3:30 Auto Racing 5:00 Houston Golf</p>
        <p>7:00 Giants 8:00 F.B.I. 9:00 Movie 11:00 News 11:15 /Movie MONDAY 7:00 Contact 8:00 Romper Room</p>
        <p>8:30 Sesame</p>
        <p>12:00 Everything 12:30 World Apart 1:00 My Children &amp;amp; 1:30 Make Deal 2:00 Newlywed 2:30 Dating 3:00 Hospital 3:30 One Life 4:00 Shadows 4:30 Voyage 5:30 Flintstones 6:00 Batman 6:30 Fr.</p>
        <p>Reynolds 7:00 News 7:30 Thief 8:30 /Movie 10:30 Now 11:00 News St. 11:30 /Movie</p>
        <p>WITN  Ch. 7</p>
        <p>SUNDAY</p>
        <p>7:30 Travel Tim</p>
        <p>7:25 Alex Dreier 7:30 Today 9:00 David Frost</p>
        <p>8:00 Blue Ridge 10:00 It Takes</p>
        <p>8:30 Revival 9:00 Herald 9:30 Cathedral 10:30 Decisions 11:00 Living Word</p>
        <p>11:30 Cartoons 12:00 Matinee</p>
        <p>Two 10:25 News 10:30 Concentration 11:00 Sale 11:30 Hollywood 12:00 Jeopardy 12:30 Who. What</p>
        <p>CHARLES (ROCKY) ROBERTS was born in Alabama, but on records sounds as though he was born in Florence, Italy. (UPI Telephoto)</p>
        <p>Burl Ives Now Prefers Solitude In Santa Fe</p>
        <p>3:30 Big Picture 12:55 News 4:00 Whole  1:00  Divorce</p>
        <p>Lifetime Adds Two To Group</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Tony Williams, ex-drummer with Miles Davis, now head of the Tony Williams Lifetime, has added an electronic bass sound Jack Bruce, former member of Cream.</p>
        <p>Also in the group is Larry Young, organist, and John McLaughlin, electric guitarist.</p>
        <p>By VERNON SCOTT</p>
        <p>UPI Hollywood Correspondent</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (UPI) - Burl Ives, the portly lawyer in The Bold Ones, rambles around the country living in a Hollywood apartment, a Manhattan apartment and an adobe house near Santa Fe, N.M.</p>
        <p>Theres very little Ives hasnt done as a performer; won an Oscar (The Big Country), cut 67 record albums, appeared in 23 movies and uncounted television shows along with 13 Broadway shows.</p>
        <p>Now, he says, is a time for reflection.</p>
        <p>He prefers to do his reflecting alone and preferably in Santa Fe.</p>
        <p>His wife, Helen, manages his career from New York and lives there almost the year around. They maintain communication by daily telephone call whenever Ives is away from New York City, which is as often as he can manage. He spends a total of three or four weeks a year there.</p>
        <p>Helen loves New York and I hate it." he explains.</p>
        <p>Hes not crazy about Hollywood either, but this is where the work is.</p>
        <p>His quarters in Southern California amount to a two-bedroon, apartment, one of which i.,as been converted into</p>
        <p>an office. The place also includes a music room for recording and a library.</p>
        <p>He cooks simple meals for himself and dines out often.</p>
        <p>Ives manages to work in the NBC series only 48 days a year. His workday generally begins at 7 a.m. He quits at 6 p.m. as specified in his contract.</p>
        <p>I should have known better than play a lawyer, he says. Even in scenes where I have no dialogue I have to sit there because Ive been established in the scene.</p>
        <p>When hes not recording, writing or acting, Ives, a native of Illinois, sneaks off to Santa Fe to poke around among the pottery and bones of a long-dead Indian civilization.</p>
        <p>It is also his favorite spot for riding a new motorcycle.</p>
        <p>Gun Collector</p>
        <p>One of Ives hobbies is collecting pistols, rifles and shotguns of assorted sizes and shapes.</p>
        <p>Ives doesnt believe in hunting, identifying himself as a tin can shooter. He walks out into the desert, lines up old bottles and cans and fires away for an hour at a time.</p>
        <p>Neither does he like to wear a necktie. Open sports shirts.</p>
        <p>World 5:00 Opposition 5:30 We Live 6:00 Frank /McGee 6:30 College Bowl</p>
        <p>7:00 Wild Kingdom</p>
        <p>7:30 Walt Disney 8:30 Bill Cosby 9:00 Bonanza 10:00 Bold Ones 11:00 Oral Roberts 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>6:00 Aspect 6:30 Father Knows 7:00 Today</p>
        <p>Court 1:30 Linkletter 2:00 Our Lives 2:30 The Doctors 3:00 Another World 3:30 Bright Promise 4:00 Somerset 4:30 Funny Page 5:00 Munsters 5:30 Hazel 6:00 News 6:30 Hunt Brink</p>
        <p>7:00 Real McCoys</p>
        <p>7:30 My World 8:00 Laugh - In 9:00 Movies 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>ELLA IN EUROPE LOS ANGELES (AP) - Ella Fitzgeralds European tour in 1970 takes in 29 cities, 11 of them with Miss Fitzgerald appearing with the Count Basie Band.</p>
        <p>DIRECTOR</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD (UPD-Robert (To Kill a Mockingbird) Mulligan will direct Summer of 42 for Warner Bros.</p>
        <p>loose slacks and sandals suit him fine. He was given a Squash blossom warrior necklace by the Navajo Indians and, when he attends a party, wears the necklace in place of a tie.</p>
        <p>The actor-singer finds himself jetting to Nashville, Term., regularly to record country and western music, much of it folk songs.</p>
        <p>He learned folk music as a child in Hunt City Township, Jasper County, Illinois, from his grandmother whose ancesto-ry is traced to 17th century America.</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK THEATRE</p>
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        <p>"A stinging, zinging, swinging sock-it-to-themi loozey. Will leave you helpless with laughter!</p>
        <p>-Westinghouse Radio| "Outrageous wit, courageous creativity, guts and intelligence. Teils it like its never been told before.  -Judith  Crist, N. B. C.</p>
        <p>Down Madison Ave.</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>SHOWS AT 1:52-3:15-5:10-7:05.9</p>
        <p>TODAY</p>
        <p>RATED(X) NOONE UNDER 18</p>
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        <p>bUWUAT-IVlONOAT-TUBSPAY_</p>
        <p>A FRANKOVICH PROOUCTKW</p>
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        <p>QoiDleHmn</p>
        <p>Playhouse Plans 'Lion In Winter' Starting May 13</p>
        <p>TICE DRIVE-IW THEATRE</p>
        <p>SUNDAY-MONDAY-TUESDAY</p>
        <p>TRIPLE AWARD WINNER!</p>
        <p>Jack Nicholson-Best Supporting Actor!</p>
        <p>-New York Film Critics</p>
        <p>-National Society of Film Critics  ]</p>
        <p>Dennis HopperSpecial Award!</p>
        <p>National Society of Film Cnhcs</p>
        <p>PUTNEY SWOPE</p>
        <p>The Truth and Soul Movie</p>
        <p>^TER FDNtM DENNIS HOPPER-nicmolson</p>
        <p>pIetER,FONDA  OENMS ^ER WILLIAM BeST</p>
        <p>DENNIS HOPPER  HOPPER FNOA HAVWATO SChNGOBR COLOR</p>
        <p>TER^ southern B-------------------- ---</p>
        <p>By JAMES SLAUGHTER (GeBcral Mauger  East Carolina Playhenae)</p>
        <p>The Lkxi in Winter," the gracefully witty ciHnedy about King Henry II of England, winds up the season at the East (Carolina Playhouse May 13-16 in McGinnis Auditorium.</p>
        <p>The play, written by James Goldman, is an impudently imagined projection of uproariously' funny and melocramatic incidents that, according to the history books, might have occurred at a Christmas - time gathering of a feuding royal family.</p>
        <p>Af this holiday celebration in the year 1183, attended by the Kings of England and France, Henrys wily ()ueen  Eleanor of Aquitaine  his three quarrelsome sons, and his lovely young mistress, the plots and wild amusements are inventions of the playwright. But theyre not out of line with the history books. In a program note irfaywright Goldman admits that the people of the play, their characters and passions, while consistent with the facts we have, are fictions."</p>
        <p>But fun - fictions, since these combative royal persons speak and act in their mediaeval costumes very much like clever, well - educated people of our time.</p>
        <p>Claude Woolman, who recently appeared in the</p>
        <p>Playhouse production of Macbeth," will be seen as the lusty King Henry; Rosalind Roulston, a faculty member in the Drama Department at E.D.U,, as his devious ()ueen Eleanor; and Lindsay Bowen, Gregory Smith and Mark Ramsey as their contending sons, two of whom became Richard the Lion-Hearted and the King John of Magna Carta fame.</p>
        <p>Nancy New will appear* as the French princess Henry is loathe to give up as his mistress, and Ben Cherry as the King of France who has come to meddle in the affairs of the others.</p>
        <p>Tickets for The Lion in Winter, which is being directed by Robert Chase and designed by John Sneden, become available at the McGinnis Auditorium box office beginning Thursday, May 7.</p>
        <p>Add New Faces To Small Faces</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Small Faces, once a teen-rave group in England, had a personnel shake-up and went underground for awhile. Now, in America, Small Faces tours and sells records as Small Faces. However, in England, to prevent anyone thinking the new group is the old group, its called Faces.</p>
        <p>STARTS</p>
        <p>TODAY!</p>
        <p>SUN. SHOWS AT 2-3:30-5-7:30 X-RATED</p>
        <p>FOR ADULTS ONLY)</p>
        <p>TEE WICKED DIE SLOW</p>
        <p>Violence and sex in the raw west!</p>
        <p>MASH ISWHATTHENEW FREEDOM OFTHE SCREEN IS AU</p>
        <p>ABOIT!</p>
        <p>Richard Schickel,</p>
        <p>I Life</p>
        <p>A cockeyed masterpiece see it twice."</p>
        <p>|Joseph Morgenstern.</p>
        <p>Newsweek</p>
        <p>is the best American war comedy since sound came ini</p>
        <p>Pauline Kael.</p>
        <p> M*A*S*H begins where other anti-war films end!</p>
        <p>Time Magazine I Color by 0E LUXEB PANAVISK3N*</p>
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        <p>DONALD SUTHERLAND ELLIOTT GOULD TOM SKERRITT</p>
        <p>NOW PLAYING</p>
        <p>Late Show-Sat.,^ May 9th</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0021" />
        <p>TIieDiUy Reflector. GrecBTille, N. C</p>
        <p>Book News</p>
        <p>From Shappord Momoriol Library</p>
        <p>Mays, in*-</p>
        <p>May Concert Set For Greenville</p>
        <p>Community Chorus</p>
        <p>The Greenville Community Chorus has announced the date of May 11 for their spring concert, the second one of the year.</p>
        <p>In formulating plans for the coming year at a recent meeting, H. T. Patterson was chosen president of the chorus; Qiarles Dickens vice - president, Mrs. Ann Byrd, secretary -treasurer, and Mrs. Norman Wilkerson, publicity director.</p>
        <p>Dr. Paul Aliapoulios, of the East Carolina University School of Music faculty, continues as director of the chorus.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wilkerson revealed that this years concert is to be held in the gymnasium of E. B. Aycock Jr. High School, at 8:00</p>
        <p>The Big Question Will Nixon Play</p>
        <p>Beethoven Music?</p>
        <p>By DELOS SMITH</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPD-Here it is only 248 days until Beethovens 200th birthday and musical circles are beginning to despair.</p>
        <p>In their view the world would be much worse off if he hadnt been born. So it follows, like day follows night, that everyone should rejoice because he was.</p>
        <p>Particularly on such a big round-number anniversary. Yet no one has come up with a sure fire and overwhelming idea for selling this view to the public at large.</p>
        <p>But not for lack of cogitating. A number of ideas has been rejected as not likely to succeed. One that still is being tossed around is to persuade President Nixon to be a Beethoven salesman.</p>
        <p>Its authors want no credit for it at this stage. Being musicians, theyre skittish, afraid it might misfire.</p>
        <p>On its surface it is a plausible idea. Beethoven composed the greatest piano music in the literature and the President is</p>
        <p>known to be a piano player, even if not a concert one.</p>
        <p>But that isnt too impw-tant. Some of Beethovens piano music is handed to adult beginners, to keep them interested, including the first movement of his celebrated piano sonata, the Moonlight.</p>
        <p>Now visualize the eve of Beethovens birthday, which is Dec. 16, in the White House say the authors of this idea, with the bright lights blazing and the television cameras purring.</p>
        <p>The President is at the keyboard, Mrs. Nixon and the Nixon girls are gathered around. He is meditating the mighty musical truths of muscis great genius and by way of illustration ripples Moonlight.</p>
        <p>A wealthy music patron with political c(mnections has promised to put out feelers to find out (1) if the President is enough of a Beethoven lovc|r to join in making a big deafo? his birthday and (2) if he has enough ccmfidence in his own {laying to do it this way.</p>
        <p>Top Ten</p>
        <p>Best-selling records of the week based on The Cash Box Magazines nationwide survey</p>
        <p>Time, Davis Vehicle, Ides of March</p>
        <p>Spirit in the Sky, Green-baum ABC, Jackson 5 American Woman, Guess Who</p>
        <p>Let It Be, Beatles Instant Karma, Lennon Somethings Burning, Rogers &amp;amp; First Edition Cdme and Get It, Badfinger Love Or Let Me Be Lwiely, Friends of Distinction</p>
        <p>Back the Hands of</p>
        <p>NY. aiv OPERA SEASON  NEW YORK (AP) - The New Yoit City Opera has announced that its fall season will open Sept. 9, with Boitos Mefisty-fele, starring Norman Treigle.</p>
        <p>Two new productions done during the season will be Donizettis Roberto Devereux, with Beverly Sills as Elizabeth, and Czech cixnposer Leos Jana-cdcs The Amkropoulos Affair, \idiidi will be having its New Yorii stage premiere, b</p>
        <p>State Museum Active In Art Loans</p>
        <p>^BARBARA BOONE Tfy these stimulating, suspenseful. and mystifying novels for relaxation and pleasure.</p>
        <p>THE FEUK FACTOR, a novel of extraordinary tension and suspense, dramatizes head-on some of the most basic and alarming questions of todays world. It asks; How trustworthy are scientific discoveries that have a crucial bearing on our daily Uves? What about the FeUx Factor, discovered by a team of psychologisU, which calls forth hidden reserves, and dianges ones personality? Is it vaUd or merely a psychological trick? George Random, a widowed magazine editor, discovers through tests that he has a very high FieUx Factor.</p>
        <p>In this almost unbearably tense novel, Richard StiUer has succeeded in bringing key areas of behavior in modem society into the sharpest focus.</p>
        <p>In WATTING FOR WILLA, the auux* of the best - selling The Vines of Yarrabee nows turns to an enthraUing contemporary story of romance and suspense. Set in Stockholm, it features the most elisive and tantalizing title character since Laura and Rebecca - an alluring, haunngly, beautiful English girl, WiUa, mmeshed in the tangles of international intrigue. Romance, terror, and a succession of shocking surprises awaits the reader. The work of a master storyteller, WADING FOR WILLA bristles with the kind of for^txxiing suspense Dorothy Edens many readers have come to expect frwn her.</p>
        <p>THE UNFINISHED CLUE by Georgette Heyer is a mystifying story of the murder of Sir Arthur BiUington - Smith. It goes into about the many suspects, especiaUy his sons financee, a Mexican dancer - each with a different story. How Inspector Harding resolved the jiuzzle makes a story that fairly sparkles as the Chicago Tribune wrote when this witty mystery was originally published in the late 1930s, 'Diis novel is suspensefiil and shocking for the growing horde of old and new Gewgette Heyer fans.</p>
        <p>James Ullmans AND NOT TO YIELD is a sweeping story of Eric Venn, a man haunted by other times and other faces. Death and disaster have too often followed him up the belaying lines. He seeks to silence the voices of the dead with alcohol and drugs and the comforts of a womans body. But he can never erase the dream. Dero Zor is there - waiting fw him.</p>
        <p>In FIONA by Catherine Gaskins, the author of Tlie Edge of Glass, a young girl, Fiona McIntyre came to the island of San Cristobal as a governess to her cousin. TTiere is the great house of Landfall, the strange encounters, the twisted passions of the white masters and the venomous hatred of their black slaves flowed together in turbulent undercurrents.</p>
        <p>Fiona was haunted by premonitions of the future, puzzled by phantoms from the past. At last as hurricane winds ravaged the island and forbidden voodoo drugs echoed violent {n*omises through the jungle, the vile secrets of Landfall were laid bare. But even the truth could not save Fiona, or the man she loved, from the powers of darkness that closed in around them.....</p>
        <p>HENRY CLAY... dated 1858 is the work (rf Thomas Ball, noted 19th century artist, now on loan to the Metropolian Museum of Art in New York.</p>
        <p>p.m. on May 11.</p>
        <p>'Two major selections to be presented on the program are; Ode To The Virginian Voyage by Randall Thompson; and selections from Harry Schmidts score for the stage show Fantasticks.</p>
        <p>The Greenville Community Chorus is composed primarily of singers from Greenville, with a few students from the School of Music at ECU forming part of the group. Persons interested in the possibility of joining the chorus are asked to contact Mrs. Wilkerson, Mrs. Byrd Patterson or Dickens.</p>
        <p>The May 11 concert is to be a free performance, and the public is invited.</p>
        <p>Art Notes</p>
        <p>Lester Ballance and Cordell Hopper, seniors at East Carolina University School of Art, exhibited jointly last week at the Baptist Student Center. Ballance, of Elizabeth City showed photographs, layouts and illustrations. Hopper, of Greenville, displayed drawings and models of interiors. Both were showing as part of their requirements for a BFA degree, Ballance in commercial art; and Hopper, in interior design.</p>
        <p>A spokesman for the Rocky Mount Outdoor Art Show announces that Benjamin F. Williams, General Curator of</p>
        <p>May JO Date Set For Rocky Mount Outdoor Art Show</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNT-May 2 is the first day artists can submit entries for to the 13th Annual Rocky Mount Outdoor Art Show, to be held this year on May 10 from 1:00 to 5:00 p.m. Location of the annual spring event is the Rocky Mount Arts and Crafts Center. Work in all media will be accepted. Prizes will be  best in show, $100; with $25 each for best in painting, sculpture, print, drawing, watercolor, ceramic, pastel painting and best of</p>
        <p>crafts. Other prizes will be</p>
        <p>awarded in amounts of $5 and $10.</p>
        <p>Entry rules stipulate that all works must be original and not previously exhibited in a Rocky Mount Outdoor Art Show. Work for sale is to be clearly marked and prices. A total of five entries is permitted each artist. Entries will be accepted on May 2 from 10:00a.m. to5:00 p.m. and at the same hours May 4 through May 8.</p>
        <p>ECU Music Calendar</p>
        <p>Five recitals are slated for a busy first week in May at East Carolina Universitys School of Music Recital Hall. All events are at 8:15 p.m. and are free and open to the public:</p>
        <p>Monday  Joint senior recital  Diane Auten, voice, with works by Marcello, Mozart, Wolf, Gibbs, Berlioz and Finzi; and Billie Adamee Perry, voice, singing selections from Scarlatti, Gasparini, Falconieri, Faure, Hovhaness, Duke and Purcell.</p>
        <p>Wednesday  Graduate</p>
        <p>recital  Amalie C. Tucker, flute, playing works by Vivaldi, Prokofieff, Debussy, and Ibert.</p>
        <p>Thursday  Junior recital  Robert Blalock, French horn, with selections from Josquin, Mozart and Strauss.</p>
        <p>-Friday - SAI Guest Artist recital  Franklyn Noll, mez-zosoprano. Works by Hindemith, Aubert, Honegger, Ravel, Martin, Satie, Messiaen, Berg, Mahler, Ives, Carter, Copland and Rorem.</p>
        <p>Names Sought By N.C. Museum</p>
        <p>A mailing list of artists in North Carolina is being prepared for the 33rd Annual N. C. Artists Exhibition by the North Carolina Musuem of Art in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>General Curator Ben F. Williams has asked that all artists interested in receiving the 1970 brochure, as well as artists on previous lists who have had a change of address in the past year, to notify him at N.C. Museum of Art, 107 E. Morgan Street, Raleigh, 27601.</p>
        <p>EAT OUT</p>
        <p>TONIGHT</p>
        <p>AT THE</p>
        <p>CANDLEWICK</p>
        <p>INN</p>
        <p>SEAFOOD BUFFET</p>
        <p>2.75</p>
        <p>5:30 TIL 9:00</p>
        <p>By JERRY RAYNOR Reflectar Staff Writcr</p>
        <p>Art at the North Carolina Museum of Art, has been selected to judge entries in the show on May 10.</p>
        <p>Donald B. Goodall, director of the University Art Museum, University of Texas in Austin, will lecture at the N.C. Museum of Art in Raleigh on Tuesday at 8:00 p.m. Goodall is lecturing in conjunction with the opening of the Gaston Lachaise exhibition of sculpture and drawings on the fourth floor of the museum.</p>
        <p>The Annual Student Show at ECU will open May 4 and continue until May 30. Works will be in all media, including sculpture and crafts.</p>
        <p>North Cardinai Museum of Art in Raleigh, is an institutioa to whidi North Carolinians can justly point with pride. It is a museum for the people, supported by the people.</p>
        <p>But its more than a local art museum. As the years pass, and the collection of master works, both old and new, grows, the N.C. sute Museum has joined the ranks museums to which other museums turn to borrow representative works to incorporate into major Uematk and retrospective exhiMtions.</p>
        <p>As an example of the service performed by the N.C. Museum in this respect, four works owned by the museum were loaned in Aiail. A bronze statue &amp;lt;rf Henry Clay, by 19th century sculptor Thomas Ball, is now on loan to the Metropolitan Museum Art in New York for a major exhibition, 19th Century America, which c^ned A(il 16 and will continue until tember 7. The realistic bronze, is, according to John K. Howat, an associate curator of the Metropolitan, of such quality and importance in the history of 19th century American art that the exhibition would benefit immensely by its inclusitm.</p>
        <p>The bronze statue was given to the N.C. Museum by Dr. and Mrs. Robert Lee Humber Greenville.</p>
        <p>Two of the museums paintings are on loan in South Carolina. Hobson Pittmans Studio in Charleston and Thomas Hudsons Mrs. Cooper and Her Children will be exhibited in Art in South Carolina, 1670 - 1970, a show arranged by the South Carolina Tricentennial Commission being held from April 1 through December 30. Hudson was an 18th century portraitist. His painting was purchased from original state purchase funds. The Pittman painting is a gift of the Sam Clark family from Tarboro. Pittman is a contemporary American painter.</p>
        <p>The Musicale, Barber Shop, Trenton Falls, New York, a painting by the 19th century Americdn, artist 'Diomas Hicks, was place on loan for the month</p>
        <p>FAMILY PORTRAIT ... of Mrs. Cooper and her children, by the I8th century English artist Thomas Hudson</p>
        <p>is being shown in Charleston, S. C. until the end of the vear.</p>
        <p>of April to the University of by works on loan from other Maryland Art Gallery for an museums which are included in exhibition entitled American special exhibitions staged by the Pupils of Thomas Co. Couture. Raleigh museum.</p>
        <p>On the other side of the coin One reason the North Carolina various exhibitions of the Museum of Art has been able to Raleigh museum are expanded successfully fill its vital role to</p>
        <p>the people of the state is the large number of contributions of works of art from interested citizens. The collections are continually being enlarged and enriched by donors who want to share with others a painting, sculpture, or object  which quite often have been items long cherished in a family.</p>
        <p>Best</p>
        <p>Sellers</p>
        <p>Wo-</p>
        <p>Fiction</p>
        <p>The French Lieutenants manJohn Fowles Love StwyErich Segal .Travels With My Aunt-Graham Greene Mr. Sammlers Planet-Saul Bellow</p>
        <p>The GodfatherMario Puzo The Gang That Couldnt Shoot Straight-^immy Breslin A Beggar in JerusalemElie Wiesel</p>
        <p>One Hundred Years of Solitude Gabriel Garcia Marquez The House on the Strand Daphne du Maurier The InheritorsHarold Robbins Nonfiction Everything You Have Always Wanted to Know About Sex David Reuben</p>
        <p>Mary Queen of ScotsAntonia FYaser</p>
        <p>The Selling of the President 1968Joe McGinnis Up the OrganizationRobert Townsend</p>
        <p>Love and IMliRollo May American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language William Morris, editor-in-chief The Graham Kerr Cookbook-Galloping Gourmet The Peter PrincipleLaurence J. Peter and Raymond Hull Ruffles and FlourishesLiz Carpenter</p>
        <p>Wellington-Elizabeth L(Migford</p>
        <p>CALLING ALL CAMERA FANS</p>
        <p>By ROSS BRYANT</p>
        <p>PICTURE HER ON MOTHER'S DAY</p>
        <p>Family aUmmt are ftnaraily full of picture of tilt baby and tbt growing family at aach stag# of lift, and that's all to tha good. But thtra aro occasions that rtmind us to focus on the adults in the family.</p>
        <p>Mother's Day is such a time. We forget how many good reasons to photograph AAom there are. For one thing, everyone in the family wants pictures of her, so you can hardly take too many. For another, she's too often neglected in the picture parade.</p>
        <p>And that's a mistake for the very good reason that mothers make marvelous photo sub|ects. Show her with her children and grand children as "props," or in the home she has created. With Dad, to reveal another side of her . . . and all by herself. If you can capture on film what she means to you, and to us, you'll have a priie winning picture for any album.</p>
        <p>FORMAL POSE . .. popular in the 19th century was used by portrait painter Charles Bird King for this portrait of Mrs. Joseph G^s, Jr. (daughter-in-law of the editor and publisher of the old Raleigh Register). The painting, a gift of the late Mrs. Mary Wilson Walker, a former Raleigh resident, was painted in the 1840s. The artist. King, was the principal painter of Washington, D. C. from 1860. He is best known for Vanity of an Artists Dream, now owned by the Fogg Museum of Art at Harvard University.</p>
        <p>For AAothor's Opy and very special occasion, bo surt you have plenty of film on hand. See us for the right film for your needs . . . end for expert developing and photo finishing, too.</p>
        <p>lOSS CAMERA SHOP</p>
        <p>50 EVANS STREET GREENVILLE, N. C.</p>
        <p>Going On Tour</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Leon-tyne Price wont be singing at the Metropolitan Opera next season.</p>
        <p>Instead, shell sing in II Tro-vatore in October at Covent Garden and make her debut at the Hamburg Opera in November in Aida. She will make a four-month United States concert and recital tour, beginning next January. She also will make several recordings.</p>
        <p>When she fixes her hair fusl the way you iiiie it,</p>
        <p>that's love, A</p>
        <p>*' &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>R</p>
        <p>YOUR FRIENDLY</p>
        <p>NEIGHBORHOOD PHARMACIST</p>
        <p>We still believe a pharmacy should be a friendly place where people are sympathetic when someone in your family is not welL We offer a personal service based on old-fashioned values.</p>
        <p>We invite yon to come in and cet acquainted with our pharmacy and the people who are here to serve you. We think yon wUl be pleasantly inrpriaed. We make every effort to have aH your pharmacy needs readily available and yon^will always be treated more as a personal friend rather than Jnst another customer. Your better health coneema us.</p>
        <p>YOU OR YOUR DOCTOR CAN PHONE US when yon need a deUvcry. We will deliver promptly without extra charye. A treat many people rely on na for their health needs. We welcome requests fer delivery service and charye SCCOUBta.  0</p>
        <p>BIGGS DRUG STORE</p>
        <p>Open Sunday 2 P.M. -tP.M. Man., Thru Sat. 8 A.M. To If P.M. Fharmaciiia On Duty At AU Times PYescr^ttau Pickup A DeUvery</p>
        <p>When you give her a diamond</p>
        <p>Oi</p>
        <p>thats</p>
        <p>Priced from $249 to $499</p>
        <p>Othtr Ptrftct Lovt diamond %io EVANS  GRECNVILCE, N. C. ring prictd from $125 to $2900 JOE JOHNSON, MGR.. RHQNE 7S-Jll*</p>
        <p>Goldsboro, Rocky Mount, Kinston, Wilson, Tor oro. Eliiobetti City</p>
        <p>SATISFACTION GUARANTEED OR YOUR MONEY BACK!</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0022" />
        <p>-IWIMy RiAect. GrtmvfSkt, N. C.Sttday, May 3, lf7f</p>
        <p>Exciting Pian For Large Home</p>
        <p>m 5/vw</p>
        <p>BEDROOM</p>
        <p>fLnt MH.IM</p>
        <p>vmnmr ti</p>
        <p>rmvr moom</p>
        <p>KOnt (CIH.HN</p>
        <p>mi</p>
        <p>STUDY MLCONT</p>
        <p>SBL</p>
        <p>- H  I</p>
        <p>? TAMaORTM 5/5/TO</p>
        <p>nu-Mi</p>
        <p>oofr</p>
        <p>BEDROOM</p>
        <p>a-rot-r S 8</p>
        <p> u</p>
        <p>Mwa cdUM   </p>
        <p>-rr</p>
        <p>hwiT I ami</p>
        <p>XCOW FLOOR</p>
        <p>. ___________Ji-e'</p>
        <p>By GERBY BISHOP Hie Tunworth it a laiRe two&amp;gt; story home that is cooservative on ttie outside and modem on the I inside.</p>
        <p>Designed by the Associated Architects, this traditional model's outstanding feature if an exciting floor plan.</p>
        <p>This is Immediately apparent upon entering the large foyer, which has stairs leading to the second floor. Dimensions oi approximately 13 feet by 8 feet make this an impressive entrance in keeping with the Tamworths other characteristics.</p>
        <p>The foyer initiates a circular traffic pattern for the main living area. One can proceed straight ahead to the living room, or to the dining room or the left.</p>
        <p>Altogether, there are four bedrooms, two and a half baths, a living room, dining room, kitchen and breakfast room, laundry, study area, double garage, foyer and full basement. Fireplace And Balcooy The living room is ap* proximatdy 16 feet .^quare, has a log-burning fireplace and a sloping ceiling. A charming touch is added by the balcony which overlooks the room.</p>
        <p>Adjacent to the living room is the kitchen-breakfast room which matches the living rooms dimensions. A decorative railing divides the two rooms. The , kitchen has several step-saving qualities, such as the island</p>
        <p> the TAMSORTM 5/*/70</p>
        <p>SPACIOUS AND LIVABLEThe Tam- balcony, formal dining room, large foyer, kit-worth, designed by the Associated Architects, chen - breakfast room with an island cooking has four bedrooRs, two and a half baths, a living area, laundry, double garage, second - floor with a sloping ceiling and overlooking study area and fnU basement.</p>
        <p>Hero's How To Do It</p>
        <p>By ANDY LANG AP Newsfeatures</p>
        <p>Q.I know there are certain recommended procedures for the order in which parts of doors and windows are painted. Is there any set way for painting cabinets? I have to do a number t them soon and I might as well do them the right way.</p>
        <p>A.Very few persons like to go to the trouble, but the door and all hardware should first be removed from a cabinet before painting is started. Assuming that you have taken all the necessary preparatwy steps of smoothing and cleaning the cabinet, the initial brush strokes should be at the top of the interior. Woric downward until the inside of the cabinet is completed.</p>
        <p>The exterior sides should be done next, followed by the exterior fronts. When the cabinet has been completely painted, tackle the door. It shmild preferably be placed on a sawhorse. Paint the edges of the door first, then the panel portion. Do not rehang the door and replace the hardware until everything is completely dry.</p>
        <p>1B IBB COUPON TO OBlllB BLDBPRIN1B  1 let eaoibte wmfcteg UaspckMi wMb hmter l*i.. HI</p>
        <p>TOE TAMWORTH" n AddMmal art rt bluepiMi (M art)</p>
        <p>n Naw Balartei Caalart MMMa paperM baak  BvaiMiaalpa) ..</p>
        <p>(Baoha art mailed rt baak ralea, ilrst-dam maOtag la daalrcd.)</p>
        <p>NAia ....................................................</p>
        <p>ADDRESS ................................................</p>
        <p>CUT ..... mn........bp........</p>
        <p>Seal check ar amuey arder (NOT CURRENCY) lat The Aaaaciated Nawtpapera</p>
        <p>Un Biaadway, New Yavfc. N. Y. IMN Oepi QRD</p>
        <p>them. Could you tell me what the mixture is?</p>
        <p>A.Yes, but with some reluctance, since todays commercial bleaches are likely to produce more uniform results. Make three separate solutions. Dissolve three ounces of oxalic acid crystals in one quart t water, three ounces of sodium hypo-sulphate in one quart t water and one ounce of borax in still a third quart of water.</p>
        <p>Apply the oxalic acid solution with a stiff brush. When this is partly dry, put on the hypo solution. The borax mixture is used only when the bleach is thor-ou^ly dry and is intended to remove all traces of acid from the wood. Wait 24 hours before starting your finishing procedures.</p>
        <p>More Likely To Turn To LSD</p>
        <p>TORONTO (UPI)-Studente who smoke marijuana are 62 times more likely to try LSD than students who dont use the drug, according to a survey conducted in high schools in Halifax, Montreal and Toronto.</p>
        <p>The survey was prepared over a two-year period by the Addiction Research Foundation here. It also showed that 6.9 per cent of all high school students recorded smoked marijuana.</p>
        <p>There were 2,446 Americans killed in the Spanish-American War.</p>
        <p>Q.^I have to do some wood finishing soon and expect to be bleaching some of the wood. My neighbor, an elderly man, says he used to use a home-made bleach and that he got very good results with it, but he cant remember the exact ingredients. But he does recall that sodium hyposulphate was one of</p>
        <p>(For all phases of wood finishing, get Andy Langs booklet, Wood Finishing in the Home, available by sending 25 cents and a long,stamped self-addressed envelope to Know-How, P.O. Box 477, Huntington, N.Y. 11743.)</p>
        <p>The average annual salary for public school teachers in C^alifornia is $10,155.</p>
        <p>MICE?</p>
        <p>SILVERFISH?</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>IVEY COWARD CO. INC.</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>COWAR-DEX MAN</p>
        <p>Tel. 752-5175</p>
        <p>LEDO FARMS</p>
        <p>QUALITY AND PRICE MAKE THE DIFFERENCE</p>
        <p>SPECIAL: Roses -25 Varieties ......  ...$1.10 ei.</p>
        <p>Rhododendrons ......   ...$3.25  Up</p>
        <p>Wt still have a nice selection of Azaleas, Aucubas, Boxwoods, both the American and the English, and Hollias, all kinds. Wa alsa havt anything that you will need for borders and badding giants .. . Atyssum, Agarntum Patunias, Salvia, Snapdragons, Marigolds, Gomniums, Colevs, and many Othars.</p>
        <p>Opan Monday thru Saturday8 am  S pin Sunday I pm to 5 pm</p>
        <p>Hwy. 125 Hamilton, N.C.</p>
        <p>kidi Mto up . triaagulkr work psttem with the built-in appiisnoes and cabinets.</p>
        <p>Sliding ^ass doors connect with a patio which could be brou^t irto play for outdoor dining in season.</p>
        <p>Next to the kitchen is a laundry room with space for a washer, dryer, broom closet and pantry. The laundry adjoins the garage.</p>
        <p>The dining room which adjoins the kitchen is ideally suited for formal furnishings. It is approximately 13 feet by 11 feet. Spacious Master Bedroom</p>
        <p>The master bedroom has a compartmented bath with dressing room and walk-in closet. Its sweepii^ dimensions, 12 feet by 20 feet, would permit a sitting area.</p>
        <p>The othm* first-floor bedroom has adequate dimensions, twin closets and is across the hall from the powder room wMch has a vanity and is adjacent to the master bath. This bedroom would be ideal for a nursery or guest room.</p>
        <p>The second floor has two large bedrooms. Each has sliding ^ass doors opening onto an outside balcony with wrought iron railings.</p>
        <p>Also, (HI this floOT is a full bath, walk-in storage closet and study balcony overtooking the living room.</p>
        <p>The Tamworths outside dimensicms are approximately 72 feet by 43 feet and there are 2,215 square feet of living area.</p>
        <p>No Better Time Restoration Job Old House Than</p>
        <p>For A I On An</p>
        <p>Today</p>
        <p>By VIVIAN BROWN</p>
        <p>TBere is no better time than the present to restore old houses in any town. Every day is vital, and if people aren't watchful, their architectiral heritage may be swept away, observes Desmond Guinness of Odbridge, Kldare, Irdand. He is president of the Irish Georgian Society, a groig) dedicated to restoring k^lands fine old houses. It or ganind in 1958.</p>
        <p>h addition to acquiring title to an old bousewhidi may not be easyarchitectural  research</p>
        <p>must be done, artisans may need training, there must be fund raising, and a book written perhaps to pnxnote interest in the project, he points out. It takes time.</p>
        <p>Ihe most important thing in getting the idea off the ground is to organize a group of dynamic people vriw are interested in thieir nrighborhood, be advises.</p>
        <p>An eight-block square of fine (dd Georgian bouses (1780-1790) in the Nfountjoy section of Dublin is a prime examfde of what can happen when preservation jdans are postponed, he says.</p>
        <p>We suddenly become aware that a devdoper was buying the houses,one by one, with the idea of demolishing them. These were some of the finest exam pies of Georgian architecture in freland. Fortunatdy, we managed to buy 22 houses from the</p>
        <p>By ANDY LANG</p>
        <p>Whats new on the market?</p>
        <p>The ProductA compact radial arm saw designed specifically for the home workshop and capable of performing all the basic and fancy cuts associated with the heavier and more expensive saws used in commercial shops.</p>
        <p>The Manufacturer's Gaim That the unit has a two-horsepower universal motor, an 8 blade that makes a 2%th inch deep cut, a device that eliminates kickback action and a safety guard extension for greater protection ... that the saw iscomidetely accurate, with every movement fully ad justable for the life of the saw .. that it has positive stops for most frequentcuts... that it has a key-operated safety switch on the frwit of the radial arm which is</p>
        <p>always in the same place regardless of the position of the saw ... that there is a special clutch to prewnt motor burnout ... and that a sturdy 22-by-32-inch work table provides plenty of room to maneuver.</p>
        <p>The ProductA hand powered tool for cutting a broad variety of materials, flat and formed, in both straight lines and arcs without external energy or heat.</p>
        <p>The Manufacturers Gaim TTiat the cutting action of this tool involves a square-edged blade positioned in an adjustaUe slot that separates its twin anvils ... that, by not utilizing the typical single-shear or scissor action, the tool cuts cleanly and without chipping or edge</p>
        <p>distortion ... that it requires only a normal gripping pressure to create an emjrfiatic concentration of force on the material being cut... and that, when used properly, the cutter is practically indestructible and the blades will not require either sharpening or replacement. </p>
        <p>(The radial arm saw is manu factured by Black &amp;amp; Decker, Towson, Md. 212(H; the cutting tool by BernzOmatic Corp., 740 Driving Park Ave., Rochester, N.Y. 14604.</p>
        <p>(You can get Andy Langs helpful booklet, Paint Your House Inside and Out, by sending 25 cents and a long, stamped, self-addressed envelope to Know-How, P.O. Box 477, Huntington, N.Y. 11743.)</p>
        <p>devek^, but we had to pay the fdlow quite a bit more than the 500-or-so pounds ($1,200) that he had paid for the houses.</p>
        <p>Houses may be deteriorating even thou^ people are living in thn, Guinness points out.</p>
        <p>One house in this Dublin group was lived in and used for business by a farrier, who kept his horses and Uacksmith shop in a stable at the rear of the house.</p>
        <p>The society does lend small amounts to poor people who need help in keeixng roofs and other areas of their homes in repair, he says, and this discourages a certain amount of deteriorating.</p>
        <p>Hie important thing in a restoration program is to train artisans. bi IrelancUmany artistic minded workers love the challenge, and newer techniques must be mastered, such as using the new fiberous plaster cor nices that are much lighter than the old-fashioned plaster work, but produce the same results, says Guinness.</p>
        <p>Seminars will instruct paint restorers and volunteers will be asked to assist with brass work. Some of the brass uprights of the balustrades of the old houses are signed.</p>
        <p>The society has set up a schol arship (about $1,500) in Arneri cawhere they have more than 2,000 membersto send a young American to Ireland to do re search in arts and architecture In addition, they may have stu dent volunteers this summer.</p>
        <p>They are restoring some of the houses, but they hope to sell others to be restored by interested owners. Restoration is less costly in Ireland than in the United States, he points out. A house may be restored with central heat, new plumbing and wiring, at $24,000 to $35,000 including the cost of the house.</p>
        <p>The facades of the houses are handmade Ixick, and there are entranceways of Ionic columns with heads of Medusa. Fanlights over doorways are lead outlined</p>
        <p>Some of the houses wertrT designed by a New Orleans ar^ itect, James Gallier, sayi') Guinness. But the plaster work h and interior arts were achieved^ largdy by a man named Michast:; Stapleton, a wdHmown I8lbr*! century craftsman.    *</p>
        <p>Guinness raises funds for res* toration by conducting tours^' through homes of private ownerc. in Ireland, In America, hir^ conducts lectures to inspire* tourism and as a money-raisin9&amp;lt;K venture for the many restor'! tion projects they are engage^., in, he says. Overflow crowcfe*: greeted his recent lectures at tho* Metropolitan Museum of Art. ^tu A book Irish Houses and** Castles written by GuinnesS and William Ryan will be pub- lished soon. It traces the deveh^ opment of Irish architectural &amp;gt;i from the embattled castle in thft,; Gothic period to the great homes of the classical period.</p>
        <p>Another money-raiser will be- -* the inclusion of a list of prem publication subscribers in tha,., book. This was a custom used iiL.; the 18th century, he says, vriiefr** authors needed money to pub'* lish.  iuii</p>
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        <p>2 piece Globe Parlor living room group. 86 loose pillow back sofa and chair. Regular $640.95</p>
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        <p>9tall backtraditional wing back chairs. 85 Foam rubber cushion, skirted, coil spring base. Regular 5129.95</p>
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        <p>One 4 piece soNd oak Globe Parlor bedroom suite. Double dresser,' chest on chest, night stand, double or queen size headboard and mirror. Regular 11255.95</p>
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        <p>Traditional club chairs, 8 way hand tied coil spring base, foam cushion, skirted. Solid and print fabrics. Regular $119.95</p>
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        <p>(Me 84 Globe Parlor French Provln-del 50 ft. distressed finish, exposed wood trim, foam rubber cushions. Regular $510.95</p>
        <p>CASH</p>
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        <p>12 tufted back 3 position base reclining chairs. Tapestry and vinyl upholstered. Regular $69.95</p>
        <p>CASH</p>
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        <p>^Each</p>
        <p>apiece Globe Parlor French Provincial living room group. 86 sofa and 1 high back chair. Dacron wrapped cushions. Regular $999.95</p>
        <p>CASH</p>
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        <p>2 piece living roorn groups. Sofa or sofa bed and matching club chair. Naugahyde upholstered. Regular X $149.95</p>
        <p>CASH</p>
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        <p>2 piece Globe Parlor living room suito. traditional styling. Loom cushion sofa and lounga chair. Foam ruhbtr cushions. Rogulnr $659.95</p>
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        <p>4 piece bedroom suites. Walnut, maple or cherry finish. Triple dresser, mirror, panel or book case bed &amp;amp; chest of drawers. Regular $149.95</p>
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        <p>sofa and loungt chair. Looso pillow back stylo. Rogular $640.9S</p>
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        <p>::: 3 piece table ensemble. 2 end tables and one cocktail table. Walnut finish. A Regular 549.95</p>
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        <p>Reese Furniture Company</p>
        <p>509 West 14th St.</p>
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        <pb facs="00090970_0023" />
        <p>TMDally nenectar, Oreiville,H. ^ *iataj. Mays,Buropean Countries Competing in Ciean-Up Effort</p>
        <p>By ROBOIT MV8EL UPISaavEB</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI)-NcteB*t coturno to TVaftlgar Square the memortoJ to AAniral LonI Hontto NdMo. victor of</p>
        <p>TraCaigM^Uglit ry- Whan markable about that fact it that DO one Uvtof had ever aeen it 4a its true color until the cobnut was cleaiiad to a cttapaigD agaiast the grime degoaitod on London by decades of smoke and smog.</p>
        <p>Now that Britain has smoke-les tones* as part of iu general attack on aU forms of pollution, the beauty of its old buildings is being revealed again to a new generation. Paris and other European ci^iitols also have been brushing away from their old bmldings and great monuments the dirt that seems inseparaUe from modem life.</p>
        <p>The buildings are only the most obvious targets (rf a movement which cuts across ideologies from Moscow to London. The nations of Europe, from Communist to capitalist, are for once united in a single cause-to combat pollution. They all want water that fish can live in, air that human lungs can breathe without peril, fields diere trees and plants grow fresh and green and do not die under a layer of sulphur.</p>
        <p>Retactoat Partners This common goal does not mean that all nations are working together; as usual they are operating more in competition than concert. Yet, the magazine European Commuiu-ty&amp;gt;" organ of the Comniui Market nations, underlined in an* article how much they depend on each other if the world is to be kept fit to live in.</p>
        <p>Chemicals tipped into the river Main in Germany can kill fii|h in the Rhine in Holland, the report noted. Waste from textile facUuies in northern Prance makes the waters (tf Bklgian rivers unusuable for human consumption ... our vdtole economic system is one vast pollution machine.</p>
        <p>But until the Common Market cO^tries or NATO (which has a .committee whose purposes cover pdlution) or the Council of-Europe manage to coordin-ai the various programs, the nations of the continent are mbstly proceeding mi their own in dealing with a problem that in many places is nearly out of hfnd.</p>
        <p> Jeint Efforts Urged The hopeful sign of the 70s is that all have finally recognized 4at there is too much indestructible waste, that pesti-cjdes and fertilizers can poison soil needed for growing food and contaminate rivers, that teuton monoxide in the atmos-fptere threatens disastrous tinges of climate, that hot water from industrial plants &amp;lt;jn alter the ecology of (^stlines, lakes and rivers.</p>
        <p>At its closing session in rbruary the European Conservation (Conference in Strasbourg n^ed a European ministerial nfe^ng for such things as ^ecticides, vehicle and air-Svaft exhaust fumes and, in l^ect, move the continent a bit iljsso* to a guarahte of pure watM* and environment as inhuman right.</p>
        <p>luii the meantime there is ^fogress in most nations. iThey laughed when we Social p^smocrats campaigned five Vters ago on a platform for a Uue sky over the Ruhr, Willy I6andt, chancellm' West Hnrmany, said recently, then MWed with satisfaction: But M one is laughing now. Hie German public suddenly fell Stto line when many of the ^ergreen trees that once pjivered the Ruhr died and ttere was a sharp increase in Inman respiratory disease.</p>
        <p>It Germans Used Laws The parliament in' Bonn, j^sitive to the change in the smblic mood, acted quickly. It ftossed laws granting rapid Sl^ortization on air pollution jjmtrol equipment. Smne fiims, ible to meet the standards.</p>
        <p>^)ut down, others moved out of</p>
        <p>areas. Loan gua-intees for the purchase of</p>
        <p>lltoring equipment helped most</p>
        <p>flItorii _ , _</p>
        <p>Jfrms meet the challenge.</p>
        <p>11 Most of the dirty brown f jinoke that once hung over ||ie iron works of the Ruhr is {tene. Oust from cement plants been cut to almost noCfaing )ind soot ftrom stonework plants Ih down by 7S per cent. But the (jiorine emission from steel is still high and sulphur the chemical that the trees has not yet (jton lowered.</p>
        <p>Jjln one respect the fi^ net pellutian in the Ruhr, meet highly industrialiaed densely populated area to nany. started as far back IfM. Htot year, alter tfaree ef tak and the typhus</p>
        <p>P*demfc of im, the rosideats decided they would have to dean up the opea eewer called the Emacher river or move out The Emacher now delivers dean water into the Rhtoe. Ihe PMaflel Rulw river aloe was improved and its recreational value assured. Dortmund, one of the Ruhrs leading cities, dooeered to cutting down noise, using techniques later copied by San Pranciaco.</p>
        <p>West Germany has joined several other environmental studies organised by NATO and this year it formed a joint committee with Holland to study air and water collection. This is particularly imporUnt for the Dutch as they.r^draw much of their (frinking water</p>
        <p>from the Rhtoe after it fkwa through Germany. Japan is so impressed with German pro-pees in cembatttog air pollution it has sent commiasioos to Germany to study its methods.</p>
        <p>Paris Faces Samg</p>
        <p>France scrubbed its beautiful public buildings clean a few years ago, well aware that they would be covered with grime again unless the causes were attackeddomestic fires, forms of central beating, airtomobile exhaust and smoke drifting in from outlying factories.</p>
        <p>The Council of Europe produced a report this ^r saying that Paris now has a permanent canopy of smog, more than a mile hi^ and 12 miles across, which has cut</p>
        <p>sunl^ S per cent stoce IttO. This finally prodded the French into a full-scale antipollution program which President Georges Pompidou entrusted to his minister of agriculture, Jacques Duhamel.</p>
        <p>There are nearly two million vehicles registered in the city of Paris akme and Duhamel said he felt an antipollution device or substitute for the intoiuil combustion engine would be found-he said it was a fundamental of modem development that the need produces a solution. Paris itself has made repeated unsuccessful attempts to ban cars from certain areas of the city.</p>
        <p>USSR Dirt Perils Fish</p>
        <p>In Moscow theres a new</p>
        <p>sayingdfrtv flows the Don.</p>
        <p>The great river, and the Kuban River to the south, have turned the Sea of Aaov into a sewer. Every day they empty 15.7 million cubic yards of industrial pollutants into the rich fishing grounds of the Aaov. Once the ancestral home of the coasacks of Mikhail Sholokhovs novel, And Quiet Flows the Don, the river now flows through a heavily industrialized area centered on Rostov.</p>
        <p>The Kuban, which flows into the southeastern corner of the Sea of Aaov, carries industrial waste from the Krasnodar area and also feeds a vast network of irrigation canals in one of the richest agricultural areas of</p>
        <p>the USSR. The result, according to the newspaper Komsomol-skaya Ifravda, has been a gigantic loss of fish.</p>
        <p>The Soviet Union has strict atoipoUutioo laws but as to the West, these are not strictly enforced.</p>
        <p>Every indication is, however, that the Soviets are as worried as other peoples about poHutk and the need to fight it Sweiea Storied Early</p>
        <p>Sweden, by contrast with most European countries, got an early start in fighting mans pollution of his world and has comprehensive legislation dealing with environmental protection.</p>
        <p>As early as 1956 Sweden forbade ships to discharge oil in</p>
        <p>Swedish waters. In im a royal ordinance placed limits on the sulphur content of oil used for fiiel, a measure that has done much to dear the air of Stockholm and other dttee. Also in iMt the Swedes required special antifume exhausts on trucks, and as of this year the poisons and pesticides board is enforcing a ruling that limits the lead content of gasoline for cars to about 0.7 grams per quart.</p>
        <p>By its Nature Conservation Act of 1964, the Swedish government holds that the natural environment is a national asset that must be protected and that nature conservation is the responsibility of both the state and the</p>
        <p>municipalities. Strict laws gofveni the dispoaal of garbage into rivers and coastal waters, and the sale and use of pesticidos.</p>
        <p>Industry is held to account for excessive pdhttk of air or water. In ifM the country had ten factories with purification plants; today the number to 1JS6. The government encourages the building of purificatioo plants with subsidies to help defray their cost.</p>
        <p>X MKSS BOSTON (UPI)-It has been demonstrated that 25 per cent of any deer herd can be shot in the Fall without decreasing the annual size of the herd, according to the Massachusetts Audubon Society.</p>
        <p>IF better this mek!</p>
        <p>nt Off on i6oL6-iiaciB or pepsi-coia</p>
        <p>Six-packs dthe taste that beats the others cold. lDretumahlebottles.&amp;gt;u only pay for vdiafs</p>
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        <p>*'  '  *  if</p>
        <p>(  .  'V'    '  '  -  .  </p>
        <p> .... ^</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0024" />
        <p>-The DaDy Reflector, GreenrUle. N. C.Sunday, May 3, ll7d</p>
        <p>Week's Stock Markets</p>
        <p>New York Stock Exchange</p>
        <p>YORK :AP)  Y*rli Stock</p>
        <p>F. -aw traOino tn wMk (MtoctM</p>
        <p>t-ui'.'</p>
        <p> A </p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>(has 1 High Law</p>
        <p>Last Chg.</p>
        <p>AhWLab I 10</p>
        <p>572</p>
        <p>70'.</p>
        <p>66&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>. 3</p>
        <p>ACF ind ? 40</p>
        <p>107</p>
        <p>46 '4</p>
        <p>47'}</p>
        <p>434</p>
        <p>7'.</p>
        <p>Ad V'Mis 70</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <p>11^</p>
        <p>10-}</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>.,</p>
        <p>Address 1 40</p>
        <p>527</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>34 .</p>
        <p>J.</p>
        <p>Admiral</p>
        <p>326</p>
        <p>9' r</p>
        <p>1 .</p>
        <p>8' 7</p>
        <p>AMnaLif 1 40</p>
        <p>1409</p>
        <p>41 ;</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>Al' Red 40e</p>
        <p>361</p>
        <p>17u</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>17,</p>
        <p>AlrwlAlu 1 20</p>
        <p>X|445</p>
        <p>24 .</p>
        <p>71</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>1'.</p>
        <p>Atleq Cp 70a</p>
        <p>413</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>l'4</p>
        <p>AMegLud 7 0</p>
        <p>147</p>
        <p>35 .</p>
        <p>33.</p>
        <p>33't</p>
        <p>I ;</p>
        <p>Alleg Pw 1 32</p>
        <p>350</p>
        <p>20-</p>
        <p>19' :</p>
        <p>I9&amp;lt;4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Afl'PdCh 1 70</p>
        <p>1104</p>
        <p>21 .</p>
        <p>19 .</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>Sr</p>
        <p>AltedSr 1 40</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>?5'.</p>
        <p>74'</p>
        <p>74'4</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Allis Chaim</p>
        <p>175</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>71',</p>
        <p>27 4</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Alcoa 1 *0</p>
        <p>301</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>63 -</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>AMBAC 50</p>
        <p>115</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>)14</p>
        <p>17.</p>
        <p>Am Hrss 07e</p>
        <p>777</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>7? .</p>
        <p>77'.</p>
        <p>Am Airlin 10</p>
        <p>1059</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>77-4</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>ABrands 7 10</p>
        <p>508</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>3/ ,</p>
        <p>34 V</p>
        <p>AmBotSi ' 70</p>
        <p>68?</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>A/ri Can 7 70</p>
        <p>598</p>
        <p>40'-</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>40 V</p>
        <p>ACrySua 1 40</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>77 /</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>71 ,</p>
        <p>AmC'ran 1 75</p>
        <p>1343</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>76 /</p>
        <p>76'.</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>AmFIPw 1 4</p>
        <p>1550</p>
        <p>78 .</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>27' .</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>An- Eniia la</p>
        <p>315</p>
        <p>32''</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>3?'</p>
        <p> ..</p>
        <p>A Homo 1 50</p>
        <p>866</p>
        <p>61 </p>
        <p>57 .</p>
        <p>59 .</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Am Hosp 74</p>
        <p>1471</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>37 4</p>
        <p>AMn'Clx 1 40</p>
        <p>819</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>3?'.</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Am Motors</p>
        <p>1473</p>
        <p>8.,</p>
        <p>8 .</p>
        <p>8'-.</p>
        <p>ANalOns 7 10</p>
        <p>310</p>
        <p>35'</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>. 1</p>
        <p>Am Plioto 1?</p>
        <p>751</p>
        <p>9-</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>A Smft 1 90</p>
        <p>7799</p>
        <p>30 ,</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>78''</p>
        <p>A/n Sid 1</p>
        <p>606</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>37</p>
        <p>374</p>
        <p>A IkT w' W'</p>
        <p>1673?</p>
        <p>10'.</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>9'</p>
        <p>1'-</p>
        <p>Am TAT 7 60</p>
        <p>5962</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>47.,</p>
        <p>]</p>
        <p>AMI Int 90</p>
        <p>533</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>19'..</p>
        <p>AMK Cp 30</p>
        <p>1840</p>
        <p>70</p>
        <p>16''</p>
        <p>17'.</p>
        <p>?'/.</p>
        <p>AMP Int 5</p>
        <p>x64l</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>46 ..</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>' 1 -</p>
        <p>Ampt' Corp</p>
        <p>1364</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>71 .</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>! 1</p>
        <p>An.ltond 1 90</p>
        <p>1321</p>
        <p>77,</p>
        <p>25'.</p>
        <p>26'-</p>
        <p>' 4</p>
        <p>Anrh Mot It 1</p>
        <p>376</p>
        <p>31'</p>
        <p>79'.</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>An/-orpNSv 1</p>
        <p>96</p>
        <p>16'.,</p>
        <p>15'4</p>
        <p>16'.</p>
        <p>' /</p>
        <p>Ar/ hOan 1 60</p>
        <p>67</p>
        <p>56</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>53 &amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>?'}</p>
        <p>Arir.rost 1 60</p>
        <p>614</p>
        <p>75 :</p>
        <p>73-</p>
        <p>73'/</p>
        <p>P-</p>
        <p>Armour 1 60</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>44'v</p>
        <p>41'.</p>
        <p>41'.</p>
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        <p>32'}</p>
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        <p>7</p>
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        <p>35</p>
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        <p>Unlroyal .70  442</p>
        <p>UnitAirc 1.SP 1118 Unit Cp .80*  316</p>
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        <p>33</p>
        <p>131</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>13' - **</p>
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        <p>2%- %</p>
        <p>Ark Best .30</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>15*8</p>
        <p>I**</p>
        <p>14*8 - *8</p>
        <p>ArkLGas 1.70</p>
        <p>185</p>
        <p>27*</p>
        <p>38**</p>
        <p>38", - *fe</p>
        <p>Atamera OH</p>
        <p>3318</p>
        <p>12'/.</p>
        <p>9*h</p>
        <p>11  ",</p>
        <p>AtlasCorp wt</p>
        <p>404</p>
        <p>3',</p>
        <p>1*8</p>
        <p>1% - %</p>
        <p>Barnes Eng</p>
        <p>85</p>
        <p>10&amp;lt;/4</p>
        <p> 9**</p>
        <p>10'/4 + 1,</p>
        <p>Brescan Lt I*</p>
        <p>444</p>
        <p>13'</p>
        <p>12'/4</p>
        <p>127 - '</p>
        <p>Campbl Chib</p>
        <p>,794</p>
        <p>11,</p>
        <p>101</p>
        <p>11% - '</p>
        <p>Cdn Javelin</p>
        <p>)803</p>
        <p>13'.,</p>
        <p>11*8</p>
        <p>12*8 + **</p>
        <p>Cinerama</p>
        <p>1050</p>
        <p>S*,</p>
        <p>4H</p>
        <p>4*8 - **</p>
        <p>Creole P 3.80</p>
        <p>149</p>
        <p>27'</p>
        <p>28'</p>
        <p>28'/4- - *8</p>
        <p>Data Cont</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>8'</p>
        <p>4*8</p>
        <p>5" - '/*</p>
        <p>Olllard .30*</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>10*8</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>10% - **</p>
        <p>Olxilyn Corp</p>
        <p>488</p>
        <p>12**</p>
        <p>11%</p>
        <p>12 - **</p>
        <p>Oynalectm</p>
        <p>517</p>
        <p>81</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>8'/* 4- %</p>
        <p>EoultyCp .30t</p>
        <p>479</p>
        <p>3",</p>
        <p>3**</p>
        <p>3**.....</p>
        <p>RECEIVES AWAItO Ernest H. Holt, prssidait of BoR Okbmobile  Dotsun of Greenville, announced that their aerviee manafer, John Ver-nelaoo. has received the Datsun.eertifled service oehievemcot award. Vemelson recently completed a DatauB factory aorvke course at the Secaucua, N J. icliool.</p>
        <p>ATTEND ARF MEETING Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. White of j^eeovUle wiD be in Washington, D.C. on Blonday and Tuesday, representing the North Carolina Merchants Association at die 3Sth annual meeting of the American Retail Federatkm.</p>
        <p>The Fedoation is composed of SO state retail assodatkna, 20 naticmal trade organizations, and multi  unit rms throughout the nation. Roses Stores official, John T. Church of Henderson, is vice president of ARF.</p>
        <p>LEADING AGENT Harold C. Bullard of Greenville was New York life bi* surance Companys leading agent in North Carolina dung March, according to William C. Barker, general manager of the companys Raleigh general office.</p>
        <p>Bullard is a graduate of Loimr - Rhyne College and East Carolina University and is a monber of the Greenville Life Underwriters Association. He has been a New York life representative here since January (rf this year.</p>
        <p>CONTEST WINNERS Mr. and Mrs. James dark of Bethel have been notified that they are one of the winners in the Ihimias and Howard Companys Bahama Contest and will receive a trip to Paradise Island in the Bahamas May 16 through May 21. dark is store manager at Mannings Red and White Grocery Store in Bethel.</p>
        <p>NEW MEMBERS Two resilient flooring installation medianics fnmi Ck^en-ville, Fountain McLawhair and L. H. Whitehurst, have been installed as members of a new professional organization known as the Armstrong Installation Institute.</p>
        <p>The local men, both with Whitdiurst Floors here, are among several hundred flooring mechanics throughotd the country who successfully completed a series of advanced qualification tests required for membership in the Institute.</p>
        <p>Copyrighted by The Associated Press 1970</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>5;838;560</p>
        <p>49,030,920</p>
        <p>72,666,410</p>
        <p>73,071,821</p>
        <p>884,106,160</p>
        <p>940,685,703</p>
        <p>972,224,932</p>
        <p>WEEKLY N Y. STOCK TTMs! for week Week ago Year ago Two years ago Jan 1 to date</p>
        <p>1969 to date . ,</p>
        <p>1968 to date</p>
        <p>Unless otherwise noted, rates of divi ends in the foregoing fable are annual disbursements based on the last quarterly or semi annual declaration. Special or extra dividends or payments not desig nated as regular are identified in the following footnotes.</p>
        <p>aAlso extra or extras, bAnnual rate plus stock dividend, cLiquidating divi dend, dDeclared or paid in 1969 plus stock dividend, eDeclared or paid so far this year, tPaid in stock during 1969, estimated cash value on ex divi dend or ex distribution date gPaid last year, hDeclared or paid after stock dividend or split up. kDeclared or paid this year, an ac{umulative issue with dividends in arrears, nNew issue, p Paid this year, dividend omitted, deferred or no action taken at last dividend meet ing. rDeclared or paid in 1970 plus stock dividend tPaid in stock during</p>
        <p>1970 estimated cash value on ex dividend or ex distribution date.</p>
        <p>7Sales in full.</p>
        <p>cldCalled, xEx dividend, yEx divi dend and sales in full, x disEx distribo tion. xrEx rights, xwWithout war rants. ww-With warrants, wdWhen dis tributed. wiWhen issued, nd-Next day delivery</p>
        <p>vjIn bankruptcy or receivership or being reorganized under the Bankruptcy Act, or securities assumed by such com panies. tnForeign issue subject to in ferest equalization tax.</p>
        <p>PROMOTIONS ANNOUNCED</p>
        <p>North Carolina National Bank senior vice presidents, Luther H. Hodges Jr. and Hugh L. McCdl Jr., have been promoted to executive vice president and assigned expanded responsibilities, according to board chaiman Addison H. Reese.</p>
        <p>Hodges will be in charge of NCNBs 94 offices in 28 North Carolina communities and McColl will be responsible for all United States and international banking (^)erations, including national accounts, correspondent banking and international banking.</p>
        <p>In addition, Reese announced that executive vice president James D. White will be placed in charge of a new trust groiq), with responsibility for personal and corporate trust administration, trust portfolio management and other trust services</p>
        <p>NEW-CAR PREVIEW The management of Phelps Chevrolet, Inc. of Greenville have returned from Williamsburg, Va., where they received first details on a new small car to be introduced late this summer.</p>
        <p>Attending were Wavely D. Phelps, owner; Bill Haddock, sales manager; Billy Norman, parts manager; and Bill Riggans, service manager.</p>
        <p>TRIP'TO SPAIN</p>
        <p>Winterville residents, Mr. and Mrs. Powell ^i^t, are among 153 top members of the Financial Service Corporations 40-state sales organization and their wives who are vacationing on the Danish Riviera after being awarded trips for outstanding sales and service.</p>
        <p>While in Spain, the FSC members will stay at Malaga, on the Mediterranean Sea, and in Costa del Sol. They will also visit Tangier, Morocco, and Gibraltar.</p>
        <p>OPEN NEW BRANCHES First National Bank of Eastern North Carolina has opened branch offices at Richlands and Swansboro, following approvals by the U.S. Comptroller of the Currency in Washingt(n.</p>
        <p>J. Hugh Rich, president, said both branches will be s^ed temporarily by mobile walk - in facilities. Gkound breaking ceremonies for modem structures to serve both communities will be held in the near future, he said.</p>
        <p>Applications to locate in both Richlands and Swansboro were filed with Washington authorities last fall. First National operates a branch in Farmville.</p>
        <p>PETER S. HOWSAM</p>
        <p>Fed Resrces</p>
        <p>809</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>3*8</p>
        <p>4%</p>
        <p>-t-</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>Fetmont Oil</p>
        <p>142</p>
        <p>9**</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>9**</p>
        <p>-t-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;/8</p>
        <p>Frontier Air</p>
        <p>153</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>-1-</p>
        <p>V*</p>
        <p>Gen Plywood</p>
        <p>328</p>
        <p>4%</p>
        <p>4%</p>
        <p>4**</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>Giant V*l .40</p>
        <p>344</p>
        <p>7*8</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>7*8</p>
        <p>-t-</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Gt Basn Pet</p>
        <p>365</p>
        <p>3**</p>
        <p>S'</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Husky OH .15</p>
        <p>X119</p>
        <p>10**</p>
        <p>9%</p>
        <p>10'A</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Hyicon Mfg</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>5'</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>4*8</p>
        <p>*8</p>
        <p>Hydrometl</p>
        <p>191</p>
        <p>7**</p>
        <p>8 .</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Imp OH .50a</p>
        <p>203</p>
        <p>17H</p>
        <p>m*</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>ITI Corp</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>3**</p>
        <p>2'</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>Kaiser in 3St</p>
        <p>530</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>m*</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>*8</p>
        <p>Lee Ent .30*</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>18</p>
        <p>13**</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>IV*</p>
        <p>McCrory wf</p>
        <p>87</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>S'</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>AUch Sug .10</p>
        <p>X70</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>4'</p>
        <p>4**</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>MidwFlnl .32</p>
        <p>38</p>
        <p>i2'/4</p>
        <p>11*</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Molybd 1.9N 311 Newldria</p>
        <p>NewPark Mn^9T'</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>2**</p>
        <p>5*8</p>
        <p>31H</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>4"</p>
        <p>33'</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>5*h</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>388 UH m 39H 485 12,</p>
        <p>IS 7**</p>
        <p>Copyrl9hfd by Th* Aasoclatad Prtss 1970 WIIKLY AMORiCAN STOCK MLiS</p>
        <p>Ttt for w*tk Wotk 800 YMT 800</p>
        <p>J8n 1 10 dot* 1989 to dot*</p>
        <p>20JS.4Q8</p>
        <p>15477490</p>
        <p>38J084W</p>
        <p>29S.88M89</p>
        <p>4M,3S418</p>
        <p>Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>WIIR4.V tNVnriMO COMFipiOt</p>
        <p>new voitx (ari - WMkty mmtitio CiwiQilM oiviNB ttw MfA. law and la* Md ario** lar m* w**k NB Nw n* cfiana* tram W arYi*M w**kt la* bW aric*. AH aaatatlanb. twaaOad by M* Natianat Aaaaciation a&amp;gt; S*ctirifi*t Oaai-*ra. Inc.. r*fl*et fhcm a lci i*cwrl tKt obidd HOY* bd*n **id.</p>
        <p>Caait Fund Orawfh Fund</p>
        <p>Fundw Iffv* Aa*Mo Fund A*MC Fd Tru*( Astran Fund Am HwoMan:</p>
        <p>7.18</p>
        <p>*43</p>
        <p>7.11</p>
        <p>7.M</p>
        <p>A94</p>
        <p>1.17</p>
        <p>4S</p>
        <p>I.M</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Lew</p>
        <p>Last Net</p>
        <p>Fund A</p>
        <p>498</p>
        <p>449</p>
        <p>1.0</p>
        <p>1J8</p>
        <p>10  .04</p>
        <p>Fund B</p>
        <p>49S</p>
        <p>848</p>
        <p>Admiralty Funds:</p>
        <p>Stock Fund</p>
        <p>SS5</p>
        <p>547</p>
        <p>Growdt</p>
        <p>84</p>
        <p>8.31</p>
        <p>8.39 - 25</p>
        <p>Science Cp</p>
        <p>422</p>
        <p>4.15</p>
        <p>Ificeme</p>
        <p>IM</p>
        <p>341</p>
        <p>3 82 - M</p>
        <p>BabMn Dev</p>
        <p>141</p>
        <p>7.91</p>
        <p>Insurance</p>
        <p>A99</p>
        <p>8.74</p>
        <p>8 74 - .3</p>
        <p>Beacon inv</p>
        <p>11*1</p>
        <p>11.19</p>
        <p>Adviaars Fund</p>
        <p>4.89</p>
        <p>4.53</p>
        <p>4.58  .30</p>
        <p>Barger Kant Sp*</p>
        <p>8.19</p>
        <p>888</p>
        <p>ANilieted Fund</p>
        <p>8.4i</p>
        <p>843</p>
        <p>8.48 - .12</p>
        <p>Blair Fund</p>
        <p>7.24</p>
        <p>885</p>
        <p>Atutur* Fund</p>
        <p>8.4i</p>
        <p>8 15</p>
        <p>8 34 - .19</p>
        <p>Bondstock Carp</p>
        <p>5.58</p>
        <p>5.35</p>
        <p>All Amer Fund</p>
        <p>.8*</p>
        <p>.83</p>
        <p>.85 - .81</p>
        <p>Bastan Com St</p>
        <p>874</p>
        <p>8.84</p>
        <p>Allstate Stk Fd</p>
        <p>9.23</p>
        <p>918</p>
        <p>9 22 - .0</p>
        <p>Bost Found Fd</p>
        <p>9.84</p>
        <p>954</p>
        <p>Alpha Fund</p>
        <p>9.48</p>
        <p>9.33</p>
        <p>9.48 - 23</p>
        <p>Boston Fund</p>
        <p>7.28</p>
        <p>7 18</p>
        <p>AMCAP Fund</p>
        <p>S.22</p>
        <p>5.15</p>
        <p>5 15 - .14</p>
        <p>Broad St inv</p>
        <p>11 88</p>
        <p>11.80</p>
        <p>Am ButJn Shrs</p>
        <p>2.93</p>
        <p>2.90</p>
        <p>2.90 - .08</p>
        <p>Bullock Calvin</p>
        <p>Am Divers Inv</p>
        <p>902</p>
        <p>890</p>
        <p>8 99 - .15</p>
        <p>Bullack Fund</p>
        <p>13 25</p>
        <p>1308</p>
        <p>Anter Exprees:</p>
        <p>Canadian Fnd</p>
        <p>17.88</p>
        <p>17.38</p>
        <p>Capital</p>
        <p>752</p>
        <p>7.27</p>
        <p>7.34 - .23</p>
        <p>Dividend Shrs</p>
        <p>3.35</p>
        <p>3.70</p>
        <p>Income</p>
        <p>8.73</p>
        <p>8.21</p>
        <p>8.21 - .25</p>
        <p>Nation WidcS</p>
        <p>933</p>
        <p>9.28</p>
        <p>Investment</p>
        <p>7 92</p>
        <p>784</p>
        <p>7.86 - .17</p>
        <p>NY Venture</p>
        <p>U 10</p>
        <p>1185</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>7.78</p>
        <p>7.52</p>
        <p>747 - .21</p>
        <p>BusnessMan Fd</p>
        <p>8.94</p>
        <p>8.88</p>
        <p>Stock</p>
        <p>7.87</p>
        <p>7.57</p>
        <p>7.81 - .22</p>
        <p>C G Fund</p>
        <p>7.79</p>
        <p>785</p>
        <p>Am Growth Fd</p>
        <p>5.18</p>
        <p>5 11</p>
        <p>5.17 - .10</p>
        <p>Capamerica</p>
        <p>7 IS</p>
        <p>7.13</p>
        <p>Am Investors</p>
        <p>530</p>
        <p>501</p>
        <p>5.12 - .11</p>
        <p>Capit invest Gth</p>
        <p>304</p>
        <p>2 94</p>
        <p>Am AAutual Fd</p>
        <p>7.71</p>
        <p>7.*3</p>
        <p>7 87 - IS</p>
        <p>Cap Life in Sh</p>
        <p>584</p>
        <p>575</p>
        <p>Am Natl Grth</p>
        <p>247</p>
        <p>2.43</p>
        <p>2 42 - .11</p>
        <p>Century Shr Tr</p>
        <p>1004</p>
        <p>982</p>
        <p>Am Pec</p>
        <p>853</p>
        <p>8.78</p>
        <p>4 39 - .29</p>
        <p>Chenn'mg Funds</p>
        <p>N.Y. Upt And Downs</p>
        <p>uas AMD DOWNS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK(Aa-Th* foUowing list tltoiM the stock! ml h*v* gon* up Iti* most and down tn* most bas*d on percent ot change *n th* New York Stock Exchango regardless of volum*.</p>
        <p>Net and percentage changes arc the difference between last week's closing</p>
        <p>ATTENDS SHOWING W.D. Kirk, International industrial equipment dealer in -Greenville, has returned from Louisville, Ky., where he at--tended a first - showing of new International Harvester crawler tractors, PAY loggers, fork lifts and a special compact loader.</p>
        <p>Kirk and some 800 International dealers and salesmen visited the Louisville fairgrounds on April 14 and 15 to see the new product introductions.</p>
        <p>price snd this week's closing UPS</p>
        <p>price.</p>
        <p>Nam*</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pel.</p>
        <p>1 Branif Airw</p>
        <p>O'.</p>
        <p>+ 1%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>32.1</p>
        <p>2 ComI Sol pf</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>+ 3'.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>33 0</p>
        <p>3 Elect Assoc</p>
        <p>8H</p>
        <p>+ 1</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>178</p>
        <p>4 Ethyl Corp</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>+ 2.</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>17.3</p>
        <p>5 Scien Resrc</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>+ ",</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>17.1</p>
        <p>8 High volt</p>
        <p>10,</p>
        <p>+ 1'</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>18.9</p>
        <p>7 Cabot Corp</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>+ 4</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>138</p>
        <p>1 Ametek</p>
        <p>14.</p>
        <p>+ 1%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.5</p>
        <p>9 ChrisC cvpf</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>+ 2</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>13.3</p>
        <p>10 Technicon</p>
        <p>40%</p>
        <p>t 4%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>13.2</p>
        <p>11 Giant PCem</p>
        <p>9K.</p>
        <p>+ 1',</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>13.0</p>
        <p>12 Todd Shipyd</p>
        <p>25%</p>
        <p>+ 2".</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.6</p>
        <p>13 Veeder Ind</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>+ 5</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>13.8</p>
        <p>14 Sanders</p>
        <p>13%</p>
        <p>+ I'l</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>12.2</p>
        <p>15 Telex Corp</p>
        <p>99'J</p>
        <p>+ 10'.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>11.5</p>
        <p>18 Gan Cigar</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>+ 3',</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>11.4</p>
        <p>17 Chris Craft</p>
        <p>7*1</p>
        <p>+ %</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>11.1</p>
        <p>11 Heli Coil</p>
        <p>15'.</p>
        <p>+ 1'j</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>10.9</p>
        <p>19 Norris Ind</p>
        <p>18'}</p>
        <p>+ 1%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>10.9</p>
        <p>20 Gould Inc</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>+ 2%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>10.8</p>
        <p>21 Ham Watch</p>
        <p>9',</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>108</p>
        <p>27 Chris C prpt</p>
        <p>10'J</p>
        <p>+ 1</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>10.5</p>
        <p>23 McGreg DA</p>
        <p>5'.</p>
        <p>+ '</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>10.5</p>
        <p>24 Alaska Int</p>
        <p>17,</p>
        <p>+ 1%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>10.3</p>
        <p>75 ComI Solv</p>
        <p>24 + 7'. DOWNS</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>10.3</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>1 Skil Corp</p>
        <p>22',</p>
        <p>11'.</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>33.0</p>
        <p>7 GAC Cp pf</p>
        <p>22'}</p>
        <p>- 8.</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>28.0</p>
        <p>3 Reading 1 pf</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>- 3</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>4 Am Invest</p>
        <p>10'.</p>
        <p>- 3'}</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>246</p>
        <p>5 Redman Ind</p>
        <p>15*.</p>
        <p>- 4',</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>21 3</p>
        <p>8 Relian pt B</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>- 9</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.9</p>
        <p>7 Cox Bdcst</p>
        <p>15'.</p>
        <p>- 3'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.4</p>
        <p>8 Ward Foods</p>
        <p>10'.</p>
        <p>- 2'}</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.8</p>
        <p>9 Fiitrol</p>
        <p>75%</p>
        <p>- 5&amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>11.5</p>
        <p>10 Raybestos</p>
        <p>341,</p>
        <p>- 7',</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>17.7</p>
        <p>11 Philips Ind</p>
        <p>9,</p>
        <p>- 7</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>17.6</p>
        <p>12 Data Proces</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>- 2'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>170</p>
        <p>13 Jones Lau</p>
        <p>13'.</p>
        <p>- 2'/.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>16.5</p>
        <p>14 Morse Shoe</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>- 4',</p>
        <p>Otl</p>
        <p>16.4</p>
        <p>IS Amtel</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>- 1'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>16.3</p>
        <p>18 Kings D Str</p>
        <p>14'.</p>
        <p>- 2',</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>16.3</p>
        <p>17 GordJwly A</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>- 2',</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>16.1</p>
        <p>18 Talley Ind</p>
        <p>13',</p>
        <p>- 2'}</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>15.7</p>
        <p>19 Donnelley</p>
        <p>18'/.</p>
        <p>- 3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>15.6</p>
        <p>20 MGM</p>
        <p>70&amp;gt;,</p>
        <p>- 3%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>15.3</p>
        <p>21 Switt Co</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p> 4'</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>15.3</p>
        <p>72 Memorex</p>
        <p>79'J</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>15.0</p>
        <p>23 Pac Sw Airl</p>
        <p>18'}</p>
        <p>- 3'/.</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>14.9</p>
        <p>24 Reading Co</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>- 1%</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>14.9</p>
        <p>75 BeatF 2.70pt</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>-13</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>14.S</p>
        <p>Balance Common Sfk Growth Income Spociel Chase Gr Bos Capitel Fund Frontier Sharthold Special Chemical Fund Colonial:</p>
        <p>Equity Fund GrthAEn Income Ventures Columbia Grth Commerct Fd Com StBd Mge</p>
        <p>4.81 1 *4</p>
        <p>59?</p>
        <p>8.23</p>
        <p>348</p>
        <p>9*2</p>
        <p>501 9 IS 4 44</p>
        <p>10.77 I 13 4 25</p>
        <p>7.IB -</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>9J -</p>
        <p>.23</p>
        <p>i.n-</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>2 88 -</p>
        <p>.81</p>
        <p>8.98-</p>
        <p>.08"</p>
        <p>1.1T -</p>
        <p>418-</p>
        <p>4.1-</p>
        <p>.18</p>
        <p>8.8 -</p>
        <p>.88 .</p>
        <p>5.53 -</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>4.22 -</p>
        <p>.88</p>
        <p>T 82 -</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>11.81 -</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p> n -</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>819 -</p>
        <p>.34</p>
        <p>5.3$ -</p>
        <p>.21</p>
        <p>8 72 -</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>9 83 -</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>7.18 -</p>
        <p>10'</p>
        <p>11 M -</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>12 18 -</p>
        <p>17 85 -</p>
        <p>21,</p>
        <p>3 24 -</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>9. -</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>13.83 -</p>
        <p>.49</p>
        <p>8.94 -</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>7 77 -</p>
        <p>.1$-</p>
        <p>7.13 -</p>
        <p>.12-</p>
        <p>3.01 -</p>
        <p>08</p>
        <p>5 85 -</p>
        <p>.21'</p>
        <p>9.94 -</p>
        <p>.4^</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>10 28 -</p>
        <p>IS*</p>
        <p>1 45 -</p>
        <p>4 58 -</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>8 78 -</p>
        <p>08^</p>
        <p>1 15 -</p>
        <p>5 17 -</p>
        <p>.11*</p>
        <p> 03 -</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>88 77</p>
        <p>2.09</p>
        <p>9 31 -</p>
        <p>IV</p>
        <p>7 21 -</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>15 79 -</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>3 48 -</p>
        <p>.11"</p>
        <p>9 81 -</p>
        <p>.18*</p>
        <p>4 98 -</p>
        <p>1J</p>
        <p>Amex Ups And Downs</p>
        <p>UPS AND DOWNS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK(AP)-The following list shows the stocks that have gone up the most and down the most based on percent of change on the American Stock Exchange regardless of volume.</p>
        <p>Net and percentage changes are the difference betimen last week's closing price and this week's closing price.</p>
        <p>ON TOUR FOR AGENTS Mrs. Doming Jenkins of MacDom Travel Agency left Friday for a one - week tour to Alaska, hosted by Eastern and Alaska Airlines. The tour was arranged for travel agents from the eastern sector of the United States.</p>
        <p>First night of the trip was spent in Seattle, Wash., with flights scheduled to Fairbanks, Kotzebue, vdiich is 50 miles north of the Artie Circle. All travel agents received a certificate for crossing the Artie Orele.</p>
        <p>Other stops will be made in Nome and Andiorage vidiere agents will visit hotels to become familiar with facilities and various advantages of the Alaskan quarters.</p>
        <p>APPOINTED TO NEW POS Peter S. Howsam has been appointed to the newly created position of vice president-marketing, effective May 1, according to an announcement by Fred A. Coe Jr., president of Burroughs Wellcimie and Co., Inc. Howsam will be responsible for all sales, advertising, and marketing activities for the conipany.</p>
        <p>In addition, Therodore E. Haigler Jr. has been appointed assistant comptroUo, effective June 1, Coe announced.</p>
        <p>Burroughs Wellcome manufactures over 80 ixMdicinal products, including analgesics, antihistamines, antihypertensives, and other drugs. It is now relocating its manufacturing facilities in Greenville.</p>
        <p>OrmarW IrW 64 3*b RIC Mil irM 839  7'A</p>
        <p>Saxen InOwkt 3873 68**</p>
        <p>Scurry Ram 418 18*4 StaRiam Inst Syntax .40b Tectmlco .40b wn Nuclear</p>
        <p>UPS</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>1 Bran Air wt</p>
        <p>7%</p>
        <p>j-</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>35.6</p>
        <p>2 AIM Cos</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>33.3</p>
        <p>3 BranAirw A</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>1",</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>27.3</p>
        <p>4 Baruch Fost</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>26.1</p>
        <p>5 Compu Dyn</p>
        <p>4,</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>",</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>8 Varo Inc</p>
        <p>7'</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>1'</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>7 Whiftakr wt</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>21.7</p>
        <p>8 Applied Oat</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>21.1</p>
        <p>9 Zion Foods</p>
        <p>4'/j</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>20.0</p>
        <p>10 Conductrn</p>
        <p>10',</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>19.2</p>
        <p>11 Peab Gallon</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>3',</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>18.8</p>
        <p>12 NO Cdn Oils</p>
        <p>8',</p>
        <p>+ 15-18 Up</p>
        <p>18.1</p>
        <p>13 Wlam Mart</p>
        <p>17',.</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>2%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>17.9</p>
        <p>14 Gt Am Ind</p>
        <p>2'</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>17.6</p>
        <p>IS Bowmar In</p>
        <p>5,</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>16.2</p>
        <p>16 Old Town</p>
        <p>6,</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>",</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>15.9</p>
        <p>17 Fed Resrces</p>
        <p>4",</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.7</p>
        <p>18 Statham Ins</p>
        <p>16',</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>2',</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.4</p>
        <p>19 Am BkSfrat</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>",</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.3</p>
        <p>20 Comput App</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.3</p>
        <p>21 Hydmefal</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>",</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.3</p>
        <p>22 Summit Org</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>}</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>14.3</p>
        <p>23 Auto BIdg</p>
        <p>8',</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>14.0</p>
        <p>24 Un Natl Inv</p>
        <p>5,</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.9</p>
        <p>25 Savin B Mch</p>
        <p>32',</p>
        <p>+</p>
        <p>3",</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>13.7</p>
        <p>DOWNS</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pet..</p>
        <p>1 Stylon CpS</p>
        <p>10',</p>
        <p>5'</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>34 7</p>
        <p>2 Kilemb Cop</p>
        <p>4'.</p>
        <p>2',</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>30 9</p>
        <p>3 LTV Ling</p>
        <p>2,</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>296</p>
        <p>4 Bro Dart In</p>
        <p>7'.</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>29.3</p>
        <p>5 Science Mgt</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>8".</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>29.0</p>
        <p>8 AAo Kan T ct</p>
        <p>4%</p>
        <p>1'</p>
        <p>OH</p>
        <p>24,0</p>
        <p>7 Rath Pack</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>23.6</p>
        <p>8 Milo Elect</p>
        <p>3',.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>23.5</p>
        <p>9 LTVLing wt</p>
        <p>1'4</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>23.1</p>
        <p>10 Binney 8, S</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.8</p>
        <p>11 Daniel ind</p>
        <p>9%</p>
        <p>2'j</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.8</p>
        <p>12 Gluckin Wm</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>_</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.0</p>
        <p>13 Polarad El</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>'4</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.0</p>
        <p>14 Rex Noreco</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>20.0</p>
        <p>IS Ketchum</p>
        <p>13'.</p>
        <p>3'4</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.8</p>
        <p>16 Soundesgn</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>1%</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.7</p>
        <p>17 Speed OP</p>
        <p>7',</p>
        <p>1'4</p>
        <p>OH</p>
        <p>19.7</p>
        <p>18 Levin Town</p>
        <p>S',</p>
        <p>1'/4</p>
        <p>OH</p>
        <p>19.6</p>
        <p>19 Concrd Fab</p>
        <p>81.4</p>
        <p>I'J</p>
        <p>Oft</p>
        <p>19.4</p>
        <p>20 Ling TV wt</p>
        <p>3%</p>
        <p>",</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.4</p>
        <p>21 Sanitas Svc</p>
        <p>10%,</p>
        <p>2'</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.4</p>
        <p>22''Saxon Ind</p>
        <p>52%</p>
        <p>-12'</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.2</p>
        <p>23 Kleer Vu In</p>
        <p>4'4</p>
        <p>1',</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>19.1</p>
        <p>24 Auto Rad</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>1"*</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>18.5</p>
        <p>25 Price CapifI</p>
        <p>8&amp;lt;/4</p>
        <p>1",</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>18.5</p>
        <p>Comw Tr ABB</p>
        <p>t 25</p>
        <p>1 21</p>
        <p>1.22</p>
        <p>.03 \</p>
        <p>Comw Tr CBD</p>
        <p>1 51</p>
        <p>123</p>
        <p>1.47</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Competitive As</p>
        <p>10 22</p>
        <p>9.78</p>
        <p>10.15</p>
        <p>.12</p>
        <p>Competitive Cp</p>
        <p>6.09</p>
        <p>59*</p>
        <p>6.05</p>
        <p>.17</p>
        <p>Composite BBS</p>
        <p>8.07</p>
        <p>8.02</p>
        <p>8.02</p>
        <p>.15 </p>
        <p>Composite Fd</p>
        <p>8 40</p>
        <p>830</p>
        <p>8M</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>.18 '</p>
        <p>Comstock Fund</p>
        <p>3.96</p>
        <p>3,90</p>
        <p>3.95</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>Concord Fund</p>
        <p>10 67</p>
        <p>1040</p>
        <p>10.65</p>
        <p>3$</p>
        <p>Consol idat Inv</p>
        <p>10.25</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>1000</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>t|</p>
        <p>Consum Invest</p>
        <p>3 36</p>
        <p>3.30</p>
        <p>3.36</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>Conti Mut Inv</p>
        <p>7.36</p>
        <p>7 03</p>
        <p>7.09</p>
        <p>,55;</p>
        <p>Contrail Gth Fd</p>
        <p>7 23</p>
        <p>7.06</p>
        <p>7 22</p>
        <p>'ii</p>
        <p>Corp Leaders</p>
        <p>13 75</p>
        <p>1335</p>
        <p>13.60</p>
        <p>.1^</p>
        <p>Country Cap In</p>
        <p>10 54</p>
        <p>10.43</p>
        <p>10 49</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>CrwnWst DivFd</p>
        <p>5 51</p>
        <p>544</p>
        <p>546</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>CrwnWst DalFd</p>
        <p>6.97</p>
        <p>6.85</p>
        <p>6.92</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>deVegh Mut Fd Delaware Group</p>
        <p>55 48</p>
        <p>54 94</p>
        <p>5494</p>
        <p>-1.08 ( 1</p>
        <p>Decatur Inc</p>
        <p>10.51</p>
        <p>10 28</p>
        <p>10.35</p>
        <p>.26 1</p>
        <p>Delaware Fd</p>
        <p>11 04</p>
        <p>10 U</p>
        <p>11 02</p>
        <p>.19</p>
        <p>Delta Tr Fd</p>
        <p>667</p>
        <p>653</p>
        <p>6.61</p>
        <p>.17 1</p>
        <p>Downtown Fund</p>
        <p>4.14</p>
        <p>3 94</p>
        <p>4.03</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>.14 1</p>
        <p>Drexel Equity</p>
        <p>12 38</p>
        <p>12.16</p>
        <p>12.34</p>
        <p>29 1</p>
        <p>Dreyfus Fund</p>
        <p>10.44</p>
        <p>10 29</p>
        <p>10.29</p>
        <p>29 '</p>
        <p>Dreyfus Lev Fd EatonBHoward:</p>
        <p>11 17</p>
        <p>1093</p>
        <p>11 05</p>
        <p>12 '</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Balance Fund</p>
        <p>9.04</p>
        <p>8.93</p>
        <p>902</p>
        <p>--</p>
        <p>'3!</p>
        <p>Growth Fund</p>
        <p>10 75</p>
        <p>10,53</p>
        <p>10.62</p>
        <p>Income Fund</p>
        <p>554</p>
        <p>550</p>
        <p>551</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>Special Fund</p>
        <p>7 68</p>
        <p>7 52</p>
        <p>7 61</p>
        <p>.18 ,</p>
        <p>Stock Fund</p>
        <p>12,02</p>
        <p>11 79</p>
        <p>11 94</p>
        <p>23 ,</p>
        <p>Ebersfadt Fund</p>
        <p>11.53</p>
        <p>11.33</p>
        <p>11 41</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>Egret Growth</p>
        <p>10.91</p>
        <p>10 75</p>
        <p>1084</p>
        <p>Emerging Sec</p>
        <p>5.47</p>
        <p>5.x</p>
        <p>5.43</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>Energy Fund</p>
        <p>11.36</p>
        <p>11 10</p>
        <p>11.31</p>
        <p>11 1</p>
        <p>Enterprise Fd</p>
        <p>607</p>
        <p>594</p>
        <p>601</p>
        <p>21 :</p>
        <p>Equity Fund</p>
        <p>7 90</p>
        <p>7 77</p>
        <p>7.90</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Equity Growth</p>
        <p>1573</p>
        <p>15.52</p>
        <p>15.72</p>
        <p>24 1</p>
        <p>Essex Fund</p>
        <p>13.24</p>
        <p>13.09</p>
        <p>1309</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>Everest ind</p>
        <p>11 55</p>
        <p>11 a</p>
        <p>11,54</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>Fairfield Fund</p>
        <p>8.80</p>
        <p>853</p>
        <p>8.72</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>Farm Bur Mut</p>
        <p>9.05</p>
        <p>884</p>
        <p>892</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>.X</p>
        <p>Federaf Gr Fd</p>
        <p>11.53</p>
        <p>11 42</p>
        <p>11.52</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>Fidelity Capital</p>
        <p>10 20</p>
        <p>1001</p>
        <p>10 13</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Fidelity Fund</p>
        <p>1381</p>
        <p>13.56</p>
        <p>13 70</p>
        <p>.X</p>
        <p>Fid Trend Fd Financial Prog</p>
        <p>20 23</p>
        <p>19.74</p>
        <p>X 13</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>Dynamics Fd</p>
        <p>4 65</p>
        <p>4 51</p>
        <p>4 51</p>
        <p>Indust Fund</p>
        <p>355</p>
        <p>3M</p>
        <p>3.53</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>Income Fund</p>
        <p>551</p>
        <p>5.44</p>
        <p>5.51</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>Venture Fund</p>
        <p>5.41</p>
        <p>5.25</p>
        <p>S.X</p>
        <p>Fst Fd Virginia</p>
        <p>9.18 TW</p>
        <p>7s</p>
        <p>Fst Inv Discovy</p>
        <p>6 65</p>
        <p>6.43</p>
        <p>6.63</p>
        <p>06</p>
        <p>Fst Inv FdGrth</p>
        <p>7.17</p>
        <p>494</p>
        <p>7.03</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>Fst Inv Stk Fd</p>
        <p>7.45</p>
        <p>7.31</p>
        <p>742</p>
        <p>.14</p>
        <p>First Multifund</p>
        <p>7 96</p>
        <p>7 88</p>
        <p>7.95</p>
        <p>.09</p>
        <p>First Nat Fund</p>
        <p>6.31</p>
        <p>6.19</p>
        <p>6 25</p>
        <p>.19</p>
        <p>First Sierra Fd</p>
        <p>37 75</p>
        <p>37,04</p>
        <p>37M</p>
        <p> 1</p>
        <p>Fletcher Capit</p>
        <p>5,73</p>
        <p>5.47</p>
        <p>5.71</p>
        <p>(T</p>
        <p>Fletcher Fund</p>
        <p>5.21</p>
        <p>5 16</p>
        <p>5.21</p>
        <p>.02</p>
        <p>Florida Growth</p>
        <p>5.34</p>
        <p>5.M</p>
        <p>5.28</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>Found Growth</p>
        <p>4.46</p>
        <p>4.34</p>
        <p>439</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>Founders Mut</p>
        <p>7,36</p>
        <p>7 16</p>
        <p>7.31</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>Foursquare Fd Franklin Group</p>
        <p>8.49</p>
        <p>8.33</p>
        <p>8.47</p>
        <p>.08</p>
        <p>DNTC</p>
        <p>7.62</p>
        <p>7.42</p>
        <p>7.52</p>
        <p>X</p>
        <p>Growth</p>
        <p>5.70</p>
        <p>5.57</p>
        <p>5.70</p>
        <p>.03</p>
        <p>Utilities</p>
        <p>6.03</p>
        <p>5.93</p>
        <p>5.93</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>Income Stk</p>
        <p>2 01</p>
        <p>1 96</p>
        <p>1.94</p>
        <p>06</p>
        <p>Freedom Fund</p>
        <p>6.92</p>
        <p>6.87</p>
        <p>6.91</p>
        <p>-OB,</p>
        <p>Fd ForMut Dep</p>
        <p>8 92</p>
        <p>874</p>
        <p>8.90</p>
        <p>QB*</p>
        <p>Fund of Amer</p>
        <p>7.80</p>
        <p>7.69</p>
        <p>7.77</p>
        <p>.1</p>
        <p>Gen Securities</p>
        <p>9.05</p>
        <p>8.89</p>
        <p>9.00</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Gibraltar Fund Group Sec:</p>
        <p>9.27</p>
        <p>8.35</p>
        <p>8 35</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>Apex Fund</p>
        <p>6.74</p>
        <p>6.54</p>
        <p>6.70</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>Balanced Fnd</p>
        <p>8 24</p>
        <p>8 18</p>
        <p>8.23</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>Common Stk</p>
        <p>11 42</p>
        <p>11.27</p>
        <p>11.36</p>
        <p>.21</p>
        <p>Growth Fd Am</p>
        <p>629</p>
        <p>6.15</p>
        <p>6.24</p>
        <p>.18</p>
        <p>Growth Indus</p>
        <p>18.16</p>
        <p>17.77</p>
        <p>18.05</p>
        <p>.29</p>
        <p>Gryphon Fund</p>
        <p>12,39</p>
        <p>12 25</p>
        <p>12.x</p>
        <p>Guardian Mut Hamilton:</p>
        <p>21,78</p>
        <p>21.40</p>
        <p>21.54</p>
        <p>Fd HFl</p>
        <p>3 84</p>
        <p>3 78</p>
        <p>384</p>
        <p>Growth Fond,</p>
        <p>6.50</p>
        <p>4.23</p>
        <p>645</p>
        <p>.9</p>
        <p>Harx)ver Fund</p>
        <p>1 07</p>
        <p>1.03</p>
        <p>1.04</p>
        <p>.0%</p>
        <p>Harbor Fond</p>
        <p>7.74</p>
        <p>7 65</p>
        <p>7.72</p>
        <p>Hartwell JM</p>
        <p>9.43</p>
        <p>9.18</p>
        <p>937</p>
        <p>IB</p>
        <p>HBC Leverage</p>
        <p>8 49</p>
        <p>8.33</p>
        <p>8 49</p>
        <p>.10</p>
        <p>Hedberg (Sordn</p>
        <p>6B8</p>
        <p>6 74</p>
        <p>6.81</p>
        <p>.20</p>
        <p>Hedge Fund</p>
        <p>9.47</p>
        <p>9 34</p>
        <p>9.42</p>
        <p>IX</p>
        <p>Heritage Fund</p>
        <p>2.03</p>
        <p>1 97</p>
        <p>2.03</p>
        <p>.06</p>
        <p>Hor Mann Fd</p>
        <p>13.61</p>
        <p>13.33</p>
        <p>13.52</p>
        <p>.16</p>
        <p>(Continued On Page 25)</p>
        <p>What The Stock Market Did</p>
        <p>Two</p>
        <p>This Prev. Year years week week ego age</p>
        <p>Advances .........439  199  1138  986</p>
        <p>Declines .........1189  1446  457  569</p>
        <p>Unchanged ........131  120  127  114</p>
        <p>Total issuzs .......1759  1765  1722  1669</p>
        <p>New yearly highs ... 6  27  210  438</p>
        <p>New yearly lows . . . 938  693  186  64</p>
        <p>Weekly Trad*  Issues</p>
        <p>N.Y. stocks ..........................1759</p>
        <p>N.Y. Bdnds .......................... 748</p>
        <p>American Stocks ....................1168</p>
        <p>American Bonds ..................... 128</p>
        <p>WeCK IN STOCKS AND BONDS Following gives the range of Oow-jonei closing averages for the week.</p>
        <p>STOCK AVtRAOU^-</p>
        <p>First High Low tlSt NtT Lf1 735.15 737.39 724.33 733.63 -13.66 157.94 157.94 155.39 156.53 - 5.29 109.34 109.34 108.29 106.29 - 1.76 243.10 243.14 239.84 241.84 - 5.36 ONOAViRAfU^</p>
        <p>40 Bonds 68.72 68.78  68.68  '81.74  4  U.U5</p>
        <p>53.25  S2.S8  S3.2S  +  0.23</p>
        <p>68.13  67.66  67.68  -  0.30</p>
        <p>71.66  78.20  71.66  +  0.36</p>
        <p>75.65  75.38  75.38  -  0.09</p>
        <p>52.70  53.1*  52.22  -  0.63</p>
        <p>tndust Trnsp Utils 65 Stks</p>
        <p>1st RRs 53.06 2nd RRs 67.97 Utils 78.22 Indust 7S.6S Inc Ralls 52.70</p>
        <p>Let us put Interstate initiative" to work for you.</p>
        <p>INTERSTATE</p>
        <p>SECURITIES</p>
        <p>CORPORATION</p>
        <p>F.itahliihtd if)ns</p>
        <p>MEMBtaS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANCC AMCmCAN STOCK EXCHANQC</p>
        <p>Suita 101 315 Evan* Straat Graanvilla, North Carolina (919) 712-3152</p>
        <p>I Olivetti  Underwood</p>
        <p>I Adding Machines &amp;amp; I Calculators</p>
        <p>Sm tiM cm pitta lint tf Ollvttti -UnOarwotd tdclino machintt and cakMlatora. Fricas siart as low at</p>
        <p>CO-tClF</p>
        <p>amurn</p>
        <p>See Us Today!</p>
        <p>*2C EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>ttimcr/tJJ</p>
        <p>fOWNTOWN RtlNVILLtl</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0025" />
        <p>Mutual Funds</p>
        <p>(OoBtiiHpd From Page M)</p>
        <p>IImWHWIW M (CM  M</p>
        <p>lit ervani</p>
        <p>ISI mcww tmf&amp;amp;ct fmt m^trm CapM Nnpril tr*</p>
        <p>mem* M iiiBmSwn</p>
        <p>MSiiBtry IHmd INTECOM GrNi Mvl Co Am MivMt GM Ft hwMt lnc M cf</p>
        <p>Hivt Tr Sm InvMlor* Group IDS NowOtm Mutuil Inc ProsrtMlv# Stock Stiocliv*</p>
        <p>4.47 t.71 4 14 4.S .t7</p>
        <p>  14 A.I1 Ml</p>
        <p>  IS 11.S4</p>
        <p>4.14</p>
        <p>I.</p>
        <p>II.11</p>
        <p>.70</p>
        <p>4.U JS 4.04 4JI  1</p>
        <p>  17 .M 4.34 4.14 M.14 347</p>
        <p>  01 11.03  43 4.37</p>
        <p>M.14 W.41</p>
        <p>4 34 -  444- .15 4.11 - .07 4.03  .11 4.07 - .30</p>
        <p> 17 - 31 4.30-  4.34 - .10 4.14 - .37 11.01 - .17 4.13 + .17</p>
        <p> 30 - .11 11 15 - .31</p>
        <p> 44 - 30 4.70 - Ot 4 0 V</p>
        <p>70.10 - .01</p>
        <p>3.73  3.5*  3.47  -  .</p>
        <p> *4   75  l ia  -  .14</p>
        <p>3 44  3.41  3.57  -  .13</p>
        <p>14.43  15.17  14.14  -  .4</p>
        <p> 11  1.71  l.Tl  -  .02</p>
        <p>Vor4kl Pov "V04* Boworoi lUol Fund inc VV F*d JOw Honcocfc Mhnt mu Fd K*yono Fund* Apollo Fund inv#*t M 01 MM GM 0 3 OlK M 0 4 Mco Fd K 1 Grih Fd K 2 Hi Gr Cm 51 Inco Stk S 3 Growth $.3 LoFr Cm S-4 Folarit Knickrtock Fund Knickrbck Grlh tmngtn Grwth Lninotn Rtrch Ltborty Fund Lift Glti Stk Lift Ins Inv Lincoln Not Ling Fund Loomis Soylts: Conodisn</p>
        <p>U3* 447 A7I 10 34</p>
        <p>4.25</p>
        <p>4.30</p>
        <p>14J3</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>441</p>
        <p>1741</p>
        <p>444</p>
        <p>444</p>
        <p>1*45 *4 '</p>
        <p>4.71</p>
        <p>173</p>
        <p>745</p>
        <p>M.44</p>
        <p>10.11</p>
        <p> 54 7.30</p>
        <p>4.34 1444 1.01 4.44 3.*0</p>
        <p>3.34 4.33 7.11 7.55</p>
        <p>13.77</p>
        <p>5.15</p>
        <p>4.17</p>
        <p>4.4*</p>
        <p> 75 3.37</p>
        <p>7.74</p>
        <p>1131</p>
        <p>1*05</p>
        <p>  44 7.12</p>
        <p>4.17 15.W 43 4.35 3.n</p>
        <p>3.17 4.15 7.M 7.37</p>
        <p>13.53</p>
        <p>5.07</p>
        <p>470</p>
        <p>4.50</p>
        <p>  50 3.34</p>
        <p>7.7*</p>
        <p>11.41 t*</p>
        <p>  44</p>
        <p>7 12 4.1* 15*7 43</p>
        <p>4.41 344 3.21 4.15 7.44</p>
        <p>7.41 1377</p>
        <p>5.10</p>
        <p>4.13</p>
        <p>4.43</p>
        <p>  71 3.34</p>
        <p>a Cop-tol 42 MuNml</p>
        <p>41 44BVIOMC Trust It weowtten Fd</p>
        <p>42 Mots Fund</p>
        <p>15 /Moss m Grit jMots Mv Trust mvtst</p>
        <p>- .13</p>
        <p> .11</p>
        <p>- a</p>
        <p>- 12</p>
        <p>- .31</p>
        <p> .1*</p>
        <p> .17</p>
        <p> .12</p>
        <p>- .a</p>
        <p>- .17</p>
        <p>- .31</p>
        <p>- .37</p>
        <p>- 42</p>
        <p>- .15</p>
        <p>- .13</p>
        <p>- a</p>
        <p>- .07</p>
        <p>- .17</p>
        <p>a 52 32.M M.** - .*3</p>
        <p>Msridion Fund MM Amor Moody 'S Cp Moody'S Fd M.I.F. Fund M.I.F. Growtti Mut Otnoho Gt Muf OmoNo Inc Mutuol Shorts Mutuol Trust NEA Mutuol Nott indust Not! Investors Not Stcur Str: Bolonctd Bend Dividend Growth Preferred Income</p>
        <p>*12 12 47 7*1 54* *41</p>
        <p>aj*</p>
        <p>13.</p>
        <p>341</p>
        <p>10.01</p>
        <p>1145</p>
        <p>545</p>
        <p>11.</p>
        <p>ii.n</p>
        <p>7.54</p>
        <p>4.a</p>
        <p>4.</p>
        <p>*43</p>
        <p>13.</p>
        <p>1*4</p>
        <p>*07</p>
        <p>.^</p>
        <p>475</p>
        <p> *3  *. 13.34 13.43</p>
        <p>7 07  7 4*</p>
        <p>4*7  545</p>
        <p>*40  *44</p>
        <p>ail  HM</p>
        <p>12*3 13.U 3.41  3 75</p>
        <p>*14 a. 11 43 11.42 444  4 *4</p>
        <p>11.07 11.M 11.72 11.74 7 44  7.</p>
        <p>4.9  447</p>
        <p>4.3*  4.31</p>
        <p> *  l.W 1340 13.</p>
        <p>1*1  LW</p>
        <p> 4  *.</p>
        <p> 34  1.37</p>
        <p>4 9*  4.72 </p>
        <p>NtfOrlh Fund</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>43</p>
        <p>Mew wora Fd</p>
        <p>.a</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>.3*</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>.3*</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>.05</p>
        <p>*57</p>
        <p>5.07</p>
        <p>3.13</p>
        <p>7.M</p>
        <p>4.34</p>
        <p>477</p>
        <p>* 47  *  54</p>
        <p>5.M  5.M</p>
        <p>3.7*  3.11</p>
        <p>7.54  7.43</p>
        <p>4.07  4.10</p>
        <p>4.72  4.73</p>
        <p>Ite TiE BEST NE\M5 CXDMMENTATOR O -THE AIR- HE'S ALWA&amp;gt;f GOTSOMETMlHG OF iMTERESr TO TELL A LIBTENlMG vyORLD -</p>
        <p>Bur H0ME,HE1s GOTABSOLUTEL' HOTMINO to TELL Hie WIFE-</p>
        <p>1DP^V A RAHERy TRUCH AKD A FI6H TRUCH collided -R69LT- A STREET FULL OF BAGELS AHD LOX Ol THE HATlOHAL SCEHE. A DRAFT DODGER SWITCHED HS ClTlrEHSHlP TO CANADA -flDN QUESriONlHG.HESAlD HED RATHER SVytTCH THAN nOHTf-NOWRDRTHE NEWS IN SPORTS -</p>
        <p>Omtgo Fund ao Fund ai Fund One WiUiom Sf O-NtUi Fund OppMihtim Fd Oppinhsm AIM OverCountr Sac Poet Fund Foul Revtrt Penn Squort Ptm Mutuot PhMa Fund Pilgrim Fund Pilot Fund Pint Strtet Pioneer Enttrp Pkmter Fund Ftormtd Invest Price Funds: Growth Fund New Era New Horizon Pro Fund Provident Fund Puritan Fund Putnom Funds: Equit George Growth Income Invest Vista voyage Rep Tech Revere Fund Rinfret Fund Rosenthal Salem Fund Schuster Scudder Funds; inti Inv Special Balanced Common Stk . Security Funds: Equity Invest Ultra Selected Amer Selected Spec Shamrock Fund Sherman Dean Side Fund Sigma Funds: Capital Invest Trust Sh Smith Barney</p>
        <p>Steadman Funds Amer Ind</p>
        <p>747  *.4</p>
        <p>7*4  7  a</p>
        <p>1744 17 a 11.3!7 1115 I3t4 124B *J* *4* 14.71 1444 445 S.W 5.  5.74</p>
        <p>1347 1341 45 OJi 13. a I3J4 1141 11.55 4.a  445</p>
        <p>i.a 142</p>
        <p>a. a.B7 7.42  7.a</p>
        <p>4.  414</p>
        <p>7.15  7.</p>
        <p>443  441</p>
        <p>12.4* 13.34 741  743</p>
        <p>4. '^.34 *0*  *74</p>
        <p>5.a  5.71</p>
        <p>a.a io.a *. *0*</p>
        <p>4-74* -</p>
        <p>17 .4* -1142 -1215 -*4* t-14.44 </p>
        <p>4B5  1241 ---</p>
        <p>13.tt  11.9*-4 -4* -</p>
        <p>a.07 -7.34  414 -7.13 -4.a -12.a -7.45 -4 -*17 -$.74 -W.34 -*. -</p>
        <p>a mm Fdt</p>
        <p>Cap Op Slack Sup tmr GrPi Sitp htv Swmt Syncro Growth TMR Apprac</p>
        <p>21.9*  21.00  21.33  -</p>
        <p> 71  ISl   71  -</p>
        <p>20.a .34 .a-</p>
        <p> 3*  4  1.3*  -</p>
        <p>4.13  4.0*  4.11  </p>
        <p>*02  1*5  *01  </p>
        <p>12.M  12.57  12.73  -</p>
        <p>2*.M  M.*0  2* 05  -</p>
        <p>13.54  13.34  13.44  -</p>
        <p> *  *.74  1 11  -</p>
        <p>3.71  3.47  2.75</p>
        <p>6.19  4.  4.14  -</p>
        <p>4.11  5.17  4.05  +</p>
        <p> 54  a.42  t.S4  </p>
        <p>12.54 12. 12.52 </p>
        <p> 33  * 05   -</p>
        <p>15.04 14.21 14*9 </p>
        <p> 74  43  472  </p>
        <p>Tachnicai Fund Technology Temp Gth Can Tower MR tramamer Cap Travelers EqFd TudarHedge Fd 3Blh Cen Gr In 2Bth Cent me Unit Mutual Unifund Union Capital Urtltad Fuhds; Accumwlativ incoma Science Vanguard Unit Fd Can Value Line Fd Value Line Income SpecI Sit Vance San Spci Vanderbilt Vanguard Fund Variad indust Viking Growth Wail St Invest Wash Mut Inv Wellingtn Group Explorer Fnd Ivest Fond Morgan Fund Technivest Fd Trustees Eq Wellington Fd Windsor Fund Western Indust Whitehall Fund Wincap Fund Winfield Grthln Wisconsin Fund Worth Fund</p>
        <p>14J</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>11.43 4*4 431 7J3</p>
        <p>13.43 7*4 4.M 4</p>
        <p>34.9*</p>
        <p>4.9*</p>
        <p>*Sf</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>13.93</p>
        <p>3.7</p>
        <p>344</p>
        <p>  91</p>
        <p>  17 7*1</p>
        <p>74B</p>
        <p>1143 SJl 41S 343 11J3 3.74 4J5 4 33.44 4J1 44*  13 1347 3.47 3.S 4 43 f *</p>
        <p>14 I - M 1M - 21 119* - .24 4*5 - 12</p>
        <p> If - 14 347 - .92</p>
        <p>12.1I - .31 7.$ - . 447 - .1* 4 - .11 .44 -1.23 4.53 - OS 44 - 49</p>
        <p> 13 - . I3.13  . 3.7$  BS 3.3 - M</p>
        <p> 45 - . 414 - .12 7 *7 </p>
        <p>Tlie Daily Reflectar, isrecavUle. N. cv-MMy, Miy I. li4i</p>
        <p>Report</p>
        <p>On Session</p>
        <p>Oassified</p>
        <p>.13</p>
        <p>403</p>
        <p>1145</p>
        <p>4.41</p>
        <p>7.14  03</p>
        <p>404</p>
        <p>11 45 4 4*5 7.3</p>
        <p>4*7 - .0* ll.y - 31 440 - .10</p>
        <p>7.14 - .0*</p>
        <p>7.14 - .21</p>
        <p>5*1</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4&amp;gt;4</p>
        <p>4.14</p>
        <p>51*</p>
        <p>3.54</p>
        <p>4.34</p>
        <p>573</p>
        <p>1005</p>
        <p>11.3*</p>
        <p>5.75</p>
        <p>4.31 4.71 5*4 477 340</p>
        <p>4.31 5.44 *7*</p>
        <p>10.43</p>
        <p>S.S4  .1*</p>
        <p>34  .15</p>
        <p>4.13 - .13 405  .2*</p>
        <p>5.13 - .30 3.55 - .13 4.34 - 07 5.70 - .07 * 00 - 27</p>
        <p>10 75 - . 70</p>
        <p>1*4*</p>
        <p>13*4</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>4**</p>
        <p> *l</p>
        <p>1030</p>
        <p>S.54</p>
        <p>S. 11 11. 5.27 4.01 607 2 33</p>
        <p>1*23</p>
        <p>I3.4&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>  24 4*0</p>
        <p>  44 10 17</p>
        <p>S 504 11.45 500 3.71 5.** 2 1*</p>
        <p>1* 34 - 36 12 *2 - 1* 431 - .17 4*3 - .12</p>
        <p> 3 - .! 10.25  .17</p>
        <p> 3 - .32 5.12 - .10</p>
        <p>11.44 - .17 5 37 - 13 4 01 + 04 01 - 13 2. - 04</p>
        <p>Over The Counter Ups And Downs</p>
        <p>UPS AND DOWNS</p>
        <p>NEW YOHK(AP)-The following list shows the stocks that have gone up the most and down the most based on percent of change on the Over The Counter Industrial Stocks regardless ot volume.</p>
        <p>Net and percentage changes are the difference between last week's closing bid price and this week's closing bid</p>
        <p>DougUs GaldweU wUl report on his ittending the nnupl meeting of the National Assodatioii for literacy Advance in Kentucky to his fdlow members of the literacy Council of Pitt County Tuesday night at 7:30 at the First Presbyterian Church.</p>
        <p>An added attraction will be a display of teacher aids prepared by the tirtors for use in their work with non-readers. These include booklets, posters, flashcards, and other teaching devices.</p>
        <p>All tutors are asked to attend and an invitation is extoided to other persons interested in helfxng in any way with lit^acy work. This volunteer work of helping adult non-readers learn to read and write is a so^ice rendered to and performed by individuals across racial and denominational lines.</p>
        <p>Anyone knowing a perstxi who would like to learn to read should contact the Salvation Army or the First Presbyterian Church or call 756-1076.</p>
        <p>I.A.NGTOWN PLACERVILLE. Calif. (UPI) PlacerviBe was so noted for its lynchings in the early days that prior to 1854 the town was officially called Hangtown.</p>
        <p>BOATS A IQUlfMlNT</p>
        <p>M.A90NIC NOTICE Greenville Lodge No. 284 A. F. A A. M. will have a stated communication Monday May 4 at 7:30 P. M.</p>
        <p>Supper at 6:30 P.</p>
        <p>M. All master masons are cordially invited.</p>
        <p>R. R. Ross, Master Edward D. Austin, Secty</p>
        <p>174 GRADY WHITB HAT-teras cabin cndaar with M horsepower Evinnida motor. Also CoK trailer. Can be aetn by callii^ 825-4M1, B^beL</p>
        <p>DAY NURSERY</p>
        <p>WALDROP ACRES DAY CARE Center and Kindergarten. Stnte .iccnaed k approved program. Ages 2-6. Old Tnr Rd. 7SA9888.</p>
        <p>WILL CARE FOR CHILDREN in my home. Agee 2 years up. Near college. 752-4570.</p>
        <p>DOGS A PETS</p>
        <p>AUCTION SALE</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY AUC tion Sale. Tuesday. May 5 at 10 a.m. 100 tractors. 300 im-plements. Wayne Implement. Inc.. South on Hwy. 117. Goldsboro. N.C.</p>
        <p>YOUNG MALE TRI-COLOR guinea pig. Tub, food, everything. Wonderful pet Call 756-0964 10 a.m. - 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>8 WEEK OLD BLACK poodle, shots. Call 756-2721.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>POODLE PUPPIES FOR sale, full bred, no papers, female $60. male $75. Call 756-5265.</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>07</p>
        <p>SO</p>
        <p>UPS</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>1 (^tel</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>+ 3/.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>600</p>
        <p>2 Prog Ana</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>+ 3.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>33.3</p>
        <p>09</p>
        <p>06</p>
        <p>3 Crutch R</p>
        <p>5H</p>
        <p>-1- I'l</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>250</p>
        <p>4 Formig</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>-t- 1</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>5 Jam Wat</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>-f 1</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>6 G HIth S</p>
        <p>13'i</p>
        <p>+ 2'3</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>227</p>
        <p>7 Prog Pro</p>
        <p>8&amp;lt;/4</p>
        <p>-1- l'/3</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>22.2</p>
        <p>8 Farring</p>
        <p>4'b</p>
        <p>+ 3,</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>21 9</p>
        <p>9 Intrthm</p>
        <p>8'/!</p>
        <p>+ 1'2</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>21.4</p>
        <p>10 Prec Inst</p>
        <p>14'3</p>
        <p>+ 2*3</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>20.8</p>
        <p>11 Pac Auto</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>+ 1</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>20.0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>12 Data Gen</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>+ 4</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>19.0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>13 Rus Stov</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>19.0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>14 Int BaEc</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>+ 13.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>18.9</p>
        <p>15 East Sh</p>
        <p>83.</p>
        <p>+ 13*</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>18.6</p>
        <p>16 A El Lab</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>+ 3.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>17.6</p>
        <p>17 Fst Sur</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>+ 3/.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>17.6</p>
        <p>18 ShapI Ind</p>
        <p>153/.</p>
        <p>-t- 2'.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>16.7</p>
        <p>19 Econ Lab</p>
        <p>233.</p>
        <p>+ 3'.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>15.9</p>
        <p>20 Bonza )nt</p>
        <p>23.</p>
        <p>+ 3*</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>15.8</p>
        <p>21 Newp Ch</p>
        <p>5'3</p>
        <p>+ 3.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>15.8</p>
        <p>22 UnC Hos</p>
        <p>2'a</p>
        <p>-i- 3*</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>15.0</p>
        <p>23 Centex</p>
        <p>18&amp;gt;3</p>
        <p>+ 2'.</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.8</p>
        <p>24 Anixter</p>
        <p>8'3</p>
        <p>f 1</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.3</p>
        <p>25 info Mch</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>+ 4</p>
        <p>Up</p>
        <p>13.3</p>
        <p>DDWNS</p>
        <p>Name</p>
        <p>Last</p>
        <p>Net</p>
        <p>Pet</p>
        <p>1 Four Sea</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p> 43.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>48.7</p>
        <p>2 Mast Con</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>- 4'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>42.9</p>
        <p>3 Radint In</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p> 63.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>40.3</p>
        <p>4 Jaffee</p>
        <p>2'.</p>
        <p>- 1'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>35.7</p>
        <p>5 El Data</p>
        <p>65</p>
        <p>-35</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>35 0</p>
        <p>6 Godwy C</p>
        <p>3'.</p>
        <p>- 1'3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>31.6</p>
        <p>7 Med Inv</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>- 13/4</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>30.4</p>
        <p>8 Unitec</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>- 13/.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>30 4</p>
        <p>9 Tally Cp</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>- 4'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>29.0</p>
        <p>10 Bevis Ind</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>- 1'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>27.3</p>
        <p>11 Kroy Ind</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>- 1'/,</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>27.3</p>
        <p>12 Mar Sec</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>- 4'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>27.3</p>
        <p>13 Sossin Sy</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p> 3.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>27.3</p>
        <p>14 Robert j</p>
        <p>83/.</p>
        <p> 3'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>27.1</p>
        <p>15 Adley Cp</p>
        <p>3'J</p>
        <p> 1'.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>26.3</p>
        <p>16 NA Resc</p>
        <p>13/.</p>
        <p>- H</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>26.3</p>
        <p>17 CTC Com</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p> 1</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>18 EagIC wt</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>- 2</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>19 Energ Re</p>
        <p>2'/.</p>
        <p> 3/.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>20 Prog Sci</p>
        <p>7'/3</p>
        <p>- 2'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>25.0</p>
        <p>21 Travldg</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>- 5' 2</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>24.4</p>
        <p>22 Log Etrn</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>- 4'/3</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>24.3</p>
        <p>23 Uni Capit</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>- 5</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>238</p>
        <p>24 Wien CA</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>- 1'/.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>238</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>25 El C Sys</p>
        <p>2'3</p>
        <p> 3.</p>
        <p>Off</p>
        <p>23.1</p>
        <p>Caswell Center Open House</p>
        <p>BUICK   1964 LeSabre,</p>
        <p>station wagon, loaded and air conditioning, one owner. Weekend ^&amp;gt;ecial, $795, Brown -Wood Pontiac, Inc. 752-7111.</p>
        <p>FEMALE COLLIE PUPPIES, 7 weeks old, $15. 7406947.</p>
        <p>COLLIE PUPS FOR SALE. $10 &amp;amp; $20. Call 746-6947.</p>
        <p>KINSTON  Caswell Centers annual Open House program will be held Wednesday.</p>
        <p>All buildings will be open to visitors and a program of music, stunts, and tumbling will be {N-esented by the Academic and Trainable School student at 2 p.m. in the recreation building.</p>
        <p>The Caswell Center Boy Scout Troop 227 will sponsor a fried chicken dinner from 1 to 6 p.m. FTates will sell for $1.25 apiece.</p>
        <p>CHEVELLK1967 Malibu convertible, power brakes, automatic transmission, radio and heater. Black with black interior White wall tires. Call 752-.3884 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>AKC AFGHAN HOUND PUP-pies, champion stock, $225 up.</p>
        <p>Phone 383-4030, Durham.</p>
        <p>OLD ENGLISH SHEEPDOG puppies, "Shaggy Dog". AKC Champion line. High potential litter 756-0861.</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE-1968 Nomad stationwagon, air conditioned, V-8, automatic transmission, power steering, Pinner-White Chevrolet, Ay den, 746-3141.</p>
        <p>Mills</p>
        <p>TROPICAL FISH</p>
        <p>City School Lunch Menu</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE-1968, SS. 396, automatic transmission, power steering, bucket seats with console, red stripe tires, 18,200 actual miles, gold with black vinyl roof, factory warranty remaining. Folger Buick - Opel Inc., 758-1123.</p>
        <p>Dollar Loaders</p>
        <p>Weekly Stox Dollar Leaders</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-The following is a list of this week's most activz stocks based on the dollar volume The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded.</p>
        <p>Name ToKSIOOO) Shares(hds) Last</p>
        <p>IBM</p>
        <p>Telex Corp Polaroid Burroughs Memorex Xerox Cp Am Tel Tel Alcan Alum Gen AAotors Fairch Cam duPont Avon Prod East Kodak Texaco Gen Elec</p>
        <p>$113,078</p>
        <p>$73,117</p>
        <p>$51,271</p>
        <p>$41,235</p>
        <p>$39,903</p>
        <p>$33,247</p>
        <p>$28,543</p>
        <p>$19,212</p>
        <p>$18,796</p>
        <p>$18,718</p>
        <p>$16,553</p>
        <p>$15,402</p>
        <p>$15,374</p>
        <p>$14,768</p>
        <p>$14,249</p>
        <p>3793</p>
        <p>7841</p>
        <p>6196</p>
        <p>3231</p>
        <p>4580</p>
        <p>3958</p>
        <p>5962</p>
        <p>8445</p>
        <p>2739</p>
        <p>3284</p>
        <p>1510</p>
        <p>1026</p>
        <p>2117</p>
        <p>5820</p>
        <p>2007</p>
        <p>2963,4</p>
        <p>99Vs</p>
        <p>77</p>
        <p>129</p>
        <p>79Vj</p>
        <p>85'j</p>
        <p>47?-a</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>69^8</p>
        <p>53'-4</p>
        <p>109</p>
        <p>150</p>
        <p>73</p>
        <p>25'?</p>
        <p>711S</p>
        <p>Lunchroom menus for the coming week, announced by the supervisor of city school cafeterias, are as follow:</p>
        <p>Mondayspaghetti with meat sauce, string beans, pickle chips, biscuit, fruit cup, milk;</p>
        <p>Tuesdayorange juice, baked beans with franks, steamed cabbage, sliced beets, homemade roll, Jello with topping, milk;</p>
        <p>Wednesdayorange juice, stewed beef with potatoes, onions and carrots, mixed greens, relish, corn bread, sweet potato pie, milk;</p>
        <p>Thursdaymacaroni  and</p>
        <p>cheese, him biscuit, congealed vegetable salad, stewed corn and tomatoes, biscuit, chilled peaches, milk;</p>
        <p>Fridayvegetable beef soup and crackers, half pimiento cheese sandwich and half peanut butter and raisin sandwich, fruit salad on lettuce, cake square, milk.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET1966 Caprice station wagon, full power in eluding air condition, 1 local owner, white with simulated woodgrain side panels. Very nice. Priced for quick sale. Brown-Wood, Inc., 752-7111.</p>
        <p>2603 Tryon Dr.</p>
        <p>Cokmiai HtigMi</p>
        <p>Comt SttOurSptcialt Ftmalt CanariasI3.f9 Hamilirs-$.4faa. andwthavaa</p>
        <p>variatyoffisli, supplits, and plants Shop hours: Mon.-Frl.4-tp.m.</p>
        <p>Sat.2-8 p.m. Sun.3-8 p.m.</p>
        <p>GERMAN SHEPHERD PUP-pies, Kenland Trailer Park,</p>
        <p>Hwy. 43.</p>
        <p>CHEVY62 Impala 2 door hardtop, one of the cleanest. Has to be seen &amp;amp; driven to ap-iweciate. Harris Used Cars. We buy clean used cars. Call 756-5470.</p>
        <p>FEMALE PUG. 12 WEEKS, registered, $50. Call 756-1462.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Femalt HalpWanttd</p>
        <p>EL CAMINO1970, 9,000 actual miles, V-8, automatic transmission, power steering, white wall tires, full wheel covers, vinyl top. Pinner-White Chevrolet, Ayden, 746-3141.</p>
        <p>WANTED: EXPERIENCED hairdresser. Good percentage with incentive. Pleasant working environment. Call 756-2753.</p>
        <p>FALCON-1964 Wagon, small V-8, automatic, excellent condition. $495. Harris Used Cars. Open till 9 p.m. Call 756-5470.</p>
        <p>NEED MANAGER FOR DOWN-town beauty shop, 752-3167.</p>
        <p>FORD1969 Stationwagon LTD, radio, heater, automatic, power steering, factory air condition, green with dark green interior, factory warranty left. $3495. Phelps Chevrolet, Inc., 756-2150.</p>
        <p>DESIRE MIDDLE AGED OR older lady to share h&amp;lt;mie to attend children while mother attends college and works. Apply Student Box 1967, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Weekly Amex Dollar Leaden</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)-The following is a list of this week's most active stocks based on the dollar volume.</p>
        <p>The total is based on the median price of the stock traded multiplied by the shares traded.</p>
        <p>Name Tot($lOOO) Shares(hds) Last</p>
        <p>Winterville Lunch Menu</p>
        <p>MERCEDES-1959 Benz, body and motor in excellent condition. Call 752-7243.</p>
        <p>Digital Eq</p>
        <p>$23,307</p>
        <p>2722</p>
        <p>85</p>
        <p>Saxon Ind</p>
        <p>$22,118</p>
        <p>3872</p>
        <p>SP'4</p>
        <p>Milgo Elect</p>
        <p>$17,393</p>
        <p>6050</p>
        <p>3038</p>
        <p>Equity Fnd</p>
        <p>$9,570</p>
        <p>3125</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>Auto Data P</p>
        <p>$5,875</p>
        <p>1836</p>
        <p>32'4</p>
        <p>Teleprom p</p>
        <p>$5,827</p>
        <p>925</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>Four Seasns .</p>
        <p>$4,298</p>
        <p>1354</p>
        <p>323.4</p>
        <p>Reserch Ctl</p>
        <p>$3,835</p>
        <p>1092</p>
        <p>36'8</p>
        <p>Potter Instr</p>
        <p>$3,589</p>
        <p>1113</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>Deltona Cp</p>
        <p>$3,221</p>
        <p>898</p>
        <p>37'e</p>
        <p>Graup Averages</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The following list gives the weekly average net change for the common stocks traded in each group:</p>
        <p>Aerospace, Aircraft ............... ~</p>
        <p>Air Transport ..................  1</p>
        <p>Auto, Truck .................  7-8</p>
        <p>Auto Parts &amp;amp; Accessories ..........  3/4</p>
        <p>Banks, Savings &amp;amp; Loan  ha</p>
        <p>Beverage (Soft Drinks) ...........  34</p>
        <p>Brewing, Distilling ............ . </p>
        <p>Building  ...............</p>
        <p>Chemicals  .................  3/4</p>
        <p>Communication ................ gnch</p>
        <p>Conglomerates, Diversified ........  3/s</p>
        <p>Containers, Packaging...........</p>
        <p>Drugs, Medical Supplies ........... + I4</p>
        <p>Electronics, Electric Products  3,</p>
        <p>Finance  ................. 1</p>
        <p>Foods, Commodities ............... I'b</p>
        <p>Food AAarkets &amp;amp; Vendors ..........  3</p>
        <p>Gold, Silver ................ </p>
        <p>Hotels, Motels, Tourism ...........  H</p>
        <p>House Furnishings .................  3,4</p>
        <p>Insurance   11,4</p>
        <p>Investment Companies............  3</p>
        <p>Machine Tools &amp;amp; Accessories  1</p>
        <p>Aachinery  ................  1/4</p>
        <p>AAetal Fabricating .................  H</p>
        <p>Mining (non metallic) ............. + 1%</p>
        <p>AAotor Transport 81 Leasing ........  1/4</p>
        <p>Non ferrous Metals ................ </p>
        <p>Office Equipment &amp;amp; Services ......  V4</p>
        <p>Paper, Pulp ..................  3</p>
        <p>Petroleum  .................. </p>
        <p>Photo Products 8, Services ..... ISk</p>
        <p>Precision instruments. Watches .   '-s</p>
        <p>Printing, Publishing ............... -/-iVj</p>
        <p>Railroads, Rail Equipment  ........ ^1</p>
        <p>Real Estate  ..............  r/</p>
        <p>Recreation, Leisure ................  &amp;gt;/j</p>
        <p>Restaurants .................. + Vj</p>
        <p>Retail Trade ................... 1</p>
        <p>Rubber, Tires ..................  3^</p>
        <p>Shipping, Shipbuilding .............  3*</p>
        <p>Shoes, Leather Products . ......... 1</p>
        <p>Soaps, Cosmetics, Toiletries ....... </p>
        <p>Steel, Iron  ..................  h</p>
        <p>Textiles, Apparel .................  Vj</p>
        <p>Tobacco  ..... ..... + V</p>
        <p>Utilities (Electric) ................ </p>
        <p>Utilities (Gas) ..................  3*</p>
        <p>Luchroom menu for the coming week at Winterville High School has been announced as follow:</p>
        <p>Mondaycorned beef, tomato and rice, grapefruit sections, hot rolls, milk;</p>
        <p>Tuesdaymeat loaf, steamed cabbage, sliced beets, orange juice, corn bread, milk;</p>
        <p>Wednesday  hamburger steak, mashed potatoes, buttered mixed vegetables, orange juice, hot rolls, milk;</p>
        <p>Thursdaychicken salad, buttered broccoli, mixed fruit, chocolate pudding, sliced bread and crackers, milk;</p>
        <p>Fridayfish sticks, dry beans, cole slaw, french fries, corn bread, milk.</p>
        <p>MERCURYWould you like to own the cleanest 1%2 Mercury sedan in Pitt County? Its waiting at Holt Oldsmobile  Datsun.</p>
        <p>MA1DSNYT0$12SWK BEST LIVE-IN JOBS NOW! Need 100 maids this week. Best homes. Permanent k summa* jobs. Free room, board. Bring friends. Fare sent, rush refs. Free Gift. Write Dept. 10 MISS DIXIE AGENCY 300 W. 40 St. N.Y.C. 1M18</p>
        <p>MGA-1960. 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Call 758-0247 after</p>
        <p>MUSTANG1969 Take Up payments. See at 1105 Chestnut after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC-1967 Bonneville, 4 door, hardtop, full power &amp;amp; air. Must sell, $1650 or b^t offer. Call 752-7049 9 a.m. to 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>SECRETARY WANTED TO work for chief executive of large organization. Seeking someone who is alert and poised, between 22 and 35 years of age. Must be highly skilled in shorthand and typing with a minimum 4 years training or experience. Salary commensurate with ability. Secretarial staff now employed aware of vacancy. Write Executive Secretary, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville. Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>RAMBLER1968, Rebel SST, 2 dr., hardtop, V-8, automatic transmission, vinyl top, green with green interior. $150 below clean wholesale. $1688. Phelps Chevrolet, 7?6 2150.</p>
        <p>BOOKKEEPER - SALARY open, nice boss, plush office, good background experience, knowledge of double entry and payroll. Call Geneva Yadav, Allied Personnel, 756-3147.</p>
        <p>Unsolicited items Are Gifts</p>
        <p>TEMPEST1963 Convertible, new top, V-8, automatic, clean. $295. Call 758-4335.</p>
        <p>AAaie HtlpWantid</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN1964  Con</p>
        <p>vertible, robbin egg blue, neat, reasonable. Call 752-5608.</p>
        <p>AUSTIN, Tex. (UPI)-Unsoli-cited goods sent through the^ mail are regarded as gifts in Texas.</p>
        <p>The state legislature in 1969 voted to allow consumers to keep such items without any obligation to pay the sender unless the goods were received as the result of a bona fide mistake.</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sate</p>
        <p>Come Grow with ua at FairchUdHUler Our industrial products division is expanding again and needs immediately</p>
        <p>MACHINIST MECHANICAL ASSEMBLERS</p>
        <p>1969 HONDA 350 SS, EXCEL-lent condition, 1200 actual miles 1100 Charles St. Apt. E.</p>
        <p>Co. paid benefits Automatic pay increases cilitie</p>
        <p>1967 Suzuki X-6. 250 CC. Completely rebuilt. Call 756-5713 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Modem facilities and equipment</p>
        <p>1%9 HONDA 65, LIKE NEW, $140. Call Roy Siealy, Jr. 752-5085 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Apply now at:</p>
        <p>Fairchild Hiller Corp.</p>
        <p>1501 FairchUd Rd. Winston-Salem, Inc. 27105</p>
        <p>Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>Block Island, off the coast of Rhode Island, measures miles by four miles.</p>
        <p>six</p>
        <p>HONDA</p>
        <p>758-2550.</p>
        <p>SUPER 90, $150.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>Juliet jones</p>
        <p>WHO ARE you, OWDi CANTRCU.? I MEAN, WHO ARE YOU</p>
        <p>i&amp;amp;M??</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your Indopendent</p>
        <p>Carrier* If You Are Unable T Reach Him Call The Dally Reflector, 752-6166 Between ' 6:00 And 6:30 P.M* Weelcdoys And 6 'Til 9 A*M* On Sundays*</p>
        <p>GOOD OPPORTUNITY FORD, 1970 F-500, 2700 MILES, 16 dump, single action, $4,400. Call 756-2586.</p>
        <p>FOOD SERVICE MANAGER, $8,000 plus. Do you have experience in Food and Bar, able to manage reetaurant? Call Carolyn Meeka,. Allied Per-aonnel, 798-3147, 1:30-5:00 Mon.Fri. or by appointmeDt.</p>
        <p>BOATS&amp;amp;EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>1969 DELUXE MODEL MC-Kee Craft, positive steering and back to back seats. $795. Call 756-0610 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>$130 WEEK PLUS OVER-time. Refrigerator and air conditkming aervke man. Good benefits. Call Cheiyl Sheeiian, Allied Personnel. 79S3147.</p>
        <p>14/4 ECHO CRAFT BOAT, 40 horsepower Mercury motor, trailer, complete, $495. Call 752-6734. 2706 Edwards St.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYED MAN. REPAIR typewriters part-time. Training furnished. Local interview. Applicationaex|)lains. yrita Boat 217, Arnold, Pa.  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>20 COBIA BOAT, FIBER-glass, with 100 horsepower Evinnide,motor. Call days, 825-3961, nights. 825-7381 or 825-7451.</p>
        <p>MANAGERS FOR fO&amp;lt;^^ stores, married prefrrad, good opportunity conqpw bmiinta, profit aharing. Placer Per-aonnd, 7514087.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>mi</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0026" />
        <p>^   y -    mmm^ |I|IH|J/ Of i#IV</p>
        <p>Daily Reflector Oassified Ads Work For You</p>
        <p>PMMlVABftiT  EMPLOYMENT  EMPLOYMENT  FOR SALE  cnocAic  &amp;gt;  . </p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>MAltNlRWaiiti</p>
        <p>Malt HtlpWanttd</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Male-Female Help</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>INSURANCE TRAINEE wanted Good salary, excellent fringe benefits. Send qtliricatk)DS to P.O. Box 174S Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATE WANTED PART full time. Investment required. CaU 75M970.</p>
        <p>WANTED-BRICK MASON For construction of West Craven High School. Located 5 miles south of Van-ceboro on Streets Ferry Rd. in Chips. N.C. Wagoner Construction Company. Apply on site.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONING ME-chanic wanted to install, repair and maintain equipment for University. Minimum 3 years training or work experience required. 5 day work week with 3 weeks vacation. Salary comensoratewith qualifications. Apply at Personnel Office, Administration Building, East Carolina University. An Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>W^TER AND WAITRESS trainees, work as bus boys or bread A butter girls and earn as you learn. Good wages, tips, uniforms furnished, ro(n &amp;amp; board available. Age 18 or over; work to November. Write or call Personnel Dept.. The Homestead, Hot Springs. Va. Phone 839-2680.</p>
        <p>HOLMES TRCJICAL FISH</p>
        <p>570 Cotanche St.</p>
        <p>CONSOLE STEREO, GOOD condition. Call 752-6620</p>
        <p>Special 10 gat. set up $9.80</p>
        <p>Open 7 days a week</p>
        <p>OUR BIG SALE ON USED and antique furniture is still underway. Dont miss out on this special sale. Stop by nov. and save' Thompsons Discount Furniture. 802 Clark .St.. 758-.3187</p>
        <p>LIVE .AT FI.M VIEW i il KT .Mobile home- and .p.in - fr .H-nt 7.')8-.M&amp;gt;44  l;;ii</p>
        <p>2 &amp;amp; 3 BEDKM AIK C.NDI-tioned mobile horn* g^iod location Call 752-&amp;amp;:i6.</p>
        <p>N',.nJoHairs{yling ha&amp;gt;now iif)ened a KKDICI.NG SALON m E imh  758-4414</p>
        <p>12 X 42' THAILEK. SIIADV lots, 3 miles north of Greenville. Call Dump. 7^^ i;7.</p>
        <p>AIR 'ONDITIONERS AND T V antensia&amp;gt; in-italled. Call 752-</p>
        <p>4833.</p>
        <p>for better buys -</p>
        <p>real estate</p>
        <p>CALL OR SEE</p>
        <p>E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>L-S your Pfcptfty Witfi Ut</p>
        <p>313 Cotanche Pi.  3*11 Night PL 2 440*</p>
        <p>JOURNE'mAN PRINTERS -Journal and Sentinel Newspapers in Winston - Salem, N.C., have openings for jow-neyman floorman. Night shift. Good pay. Good company benefits. Write or call collect Journal and Sentinel Personnel Director, P.O. Box 2509or phone 1-919-725-2311, ext. 245.</p>
        <p>IMMEDIATE OPENING FOR truck driver and delivery man. (K)d pay and fringe benefits, (onlact Sunnyside Eggs. 1008 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>COLLEGE STUDENT OR graduate many youths face jobless summers This was a New York Times headline on April 20. Will you be working this summer or earning $140-$200 week. With our company. Plus earn yourself a college scholarship. Were seeking management qualified men. Write to College Students, Box 425 Greenville, N.C. Please include name, address and phone number.</p>
        <p>CAFETERIA MANAGER FOR industrial cafeteria in Greenville. Must have 3 years experience in food preparation and management. Work Monday thru Friday. Good pay and benefits. Apply Greenville Employment Security Commission, May 7, 1970.</p>
        <p>Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>WANTED Someone with good credit to take over payments on 1968 Singer Touch and Sew in walnut cabinet makes buttonholes and designs. All without attachments. Payments are $11 a month or pay balance of $88. For free home demonstration, call 758-4445. General Appliance Sides &amp;amp; Service.</p>
        <p>9 MONTH OLD UPRIGHT Royal vacuum cleaner for sale Call 758-4582 or see at 118 No. Jarvis</p>
        <p>1962  8' TWO ihDHOirvI</p>
        <p>house trailer. Pnce, $135 '. ('all 758-3593 or 756-2191,</p>
        <p>M' i.M R ? R l. \TU; NEARLY l. -ER'. "M; Tl IIN.s TO ( I. - ila \,i. I ) hi lp^hem lind  I M, r |./i; i lui k now'</p>
        <p>Near Brook Vallay  3 btdroom*</p>
        <p>t2LN&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>GUITAR AND AMPLIFIER for sale Also someone to assume small monthly payments on Spanish stereo, ('all 756-3180 Ask for Carolvn,</p>
        <p>50' TWO BEDROOM. AIR conditioned, automatic wa.sher. 1112 Forbes St. Call 758-1.547.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>No SOOierryOak -lbdroom&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>No. t3 Cherry Oaks  3Mdroomt US;</p>
        <p> B. Red Oak4 bdrm. U3,5M</p>
        <p>(.FT MORE</p>
        <p>OVERSEAS JOBS EUR ope. South America. Australia. Etc. 2JHXI openings, (on-sfruction. Office. Engineers. Sales, etc  $700  to S.3.(I00</p>
        <p>month. K.xpenses paid. Free information, write  Overseas</p>
        <p>Jobs. International Airport. Bo.x .536-A. Miami. Fla.</p>
        <p>WANTED:  EXPERIENCED</p>
        <p>auto body man. Call 758-1271 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>SELL RADIO ADVERTISING to local accounts. Wide coverage station, progressive company. You have a future with us. Salary, incentive plan, expanses. Write Radio Sales, P.O. Box 1967 giving complete resume.</p>
        <p>DunMlI</p>
        <p>Employment</p>
        <p>ALLIED PERSONNEL Tipton Annex 264 By Pass, FEE PAID</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>( ole I 111! .S4is|M-llsitin I OIII lr;n\i I I iliiig ( aliim t</p>
        <p>(! ii \ , Tail, (.1 (Mh. in. Ift'p. .12ill. high 11 in. wide.</p>
        <p>K g. PriiT S72.IHI</p>
        <p>RESTAURANT EQUIPMENT. Ice machines, ice-cream and milk shake machines. Discount prices. Call Eastern Coffee &amp;amp; Equipment Co., 756-4437 after 4 pm.</p>
        <p>1959 NASSAU 28 TRAILER, good condition, air lon-ditit.nia:' Call 746-6643.</p>
        <p>WITH</p>
        <p>12 WIDE . 2 BEDI tiO.M trailer for sale or rent, ( ad 7.52 3653.</p>
        <p>11 N Red. Oak3 bdrm. S32,SN 15 Acre Wooded Tract I7 an acre</p>
        <p>Thomas Rtalty Co.</p>
        <p>CALL 7S-S1</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Salo</p>
        <p>POOL TABLE 4' X 8 FISHER 20 cents slot. Call 746 4255.</p>
        <p>SPRING CLE/V!ANCt</p>
        <p>Salt* PrK'(</p>
        <p>$49.50</p>
        <p>289 V-8 ENlilNE. 3 SPEED transmission and parts for 1966 Mastang body. Call 758 1362.</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>( 1) 302 Crown Point Road</p>
        <p>Lot 130' X 150', 3 bedroom, 2 both, sunken living room, diiiinq room, kitchen, 2 car qaraqe, well landscaped, loan . .umpfion.</p>
        <p>PROPERTY FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale 618 Clark Street</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>Civil Engineer to $16,000</p>
        <p>SHEET ROCK HANGERS AND finishers. Experience preferred but not necessary if willing to Icam. Call 756-0053 alter 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Exceltent company, many benefits, relocation not necessary. 3 years experience preferred. FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>Chemical Engineer to $16,000</p>
        <p>511.000-13,200, Numerical Control Engineer</p>
        <p>$10,000-19,000, Microwave Comm. Systems Engineer 510,200-12,100, Vendor Quality Control Engineer</p>
        <p>510.000-14,000, Digital Circuit Engineer</p>
        <p>522.000-25,000, Principal Engineer</p>
        <p>515.000-22,000, Senior Marketing Engineer</p>
        <p>512,500, Industrial Engineer</p>
        <p>513.000-19,000, Senior Digital Circuit Design Engineer</p>
        <p>$10,200-12,000, Labor Standards Engineering</p>
        <p>51 1,000-15,500, Transmitters Engineer</p>
        <p>I \n Ol I II I;E(}1 IPMIM 211 E . 1th ,S1.  712-2171</p>
        <p>THE H(M)VER ( LEANER FOR the homes that care. You will like Hoover (onvertihle &amp;gt; deaners in i. Smith Eltvinc ('o.. 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>To make room tor new rn r. chandise, we are sel'o g cvt-, i new mobile humes at JlS'i .:i&amp;gt; e invoice. There are 2 and 3 bedrooms in this group.</p>
        <p>VENDING</p>
        <p>IS BIG BUSINESS</p>
        <p>Excellent company with great fringe benefits. Management potential? FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>Mechanical Engineer to $15,000</p>
        <p>We have enjoyed 20 years of unparallelled integrity dealing with our customers. Our company is expanding again and requires distributors to service routes of vending machines.</p>
        <p>Must be willing to relocate for the above, Call Allied Personnel 756-3147, 8:30-5:00 Mon.-Frl. or by appointments.</p>
        <p>.MILL OUTLET-CLOTH Now .shipment polyester and bondi'd knits. Dacron &amp;amp; cotton remnants. 20 cents a yard Rug yard (on spools). 69 cents a [Miund; fringe, this week onlv, off-white. 15 cents yard; narrow up to 3". 19-cents yard; 3'' and up. 25 cents yard. Colonial Height.s Shopping Onter 2727 E. lOlli S( Ext. (all 758-2433.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Big Boy Mobile Horm. 264 By-Pass 756-4171</p>
        <p>( ) 1719 Forest Hill Dr.</p>
        <p>1 bcdr^ om, hvinq room, kitchen dtn 2 baths wooded lot, 11; X 170', double carport, air</p>
        <p>'.'ii'lifion.</p>
        <p>Price 535,600</p>
        <p>This a good residential lot, 50 feet X 90Vj feet.</p>
        <p>$2,000 816 Evans Street</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>L51.0(H) r.SEI) BRICKS FOR sale, very rea.sonable price ALso 2 story hou.se in good condition Purcha.scr mu.sl move house and clear lot. Call 758-2281 or 7.52 3839.</p>
        <p>X 3-C MOHH.E homk newly painted on outside. Ins new linoku.'ii lli,oi. i!(&amp;gt;,.. i</p>
        <p>water healer aisi n u . ,g,</p>
        <p>air ennditioner K e:( ,t beaeli ::d,!()0 Call 7.)ti n.,i .n  5 p.in</p>
        <p>(3) 95- F. 10th St.</p>
        <p>1 bedr e.in livinq room, dining lOom, kitfh .n, deii. screened in ide porch, P ; bat s, hot water ' 3 I i .,es, close to colloqc. Reduced to</p>
        <p>^5 2,500</p>
        <p>Lot located in one of fastest growing sections of Greenville, is 82 ft. X 159 ft.</p>
        <p>$18,500 investment Property Stokes, N. C.</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>Excellent management potential, large national company has area opening. S years experience. FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>SOONER OR LATER NEARLY everyone turns to Qassified Ads to help them find a better car. Oieck now!</p>
        <p>HOOVER VA('UUM CLEAN-ers. upright or cannistcr. Superb for cleaning all your floors, especially carpet. Home Furniture ('0,, 7.58-2879,</p>
        <p>SERVICE SERVICE. SERVICE. .SEH-viee, st'rvice, si'rvice, .service, service, service, .service, '.er vice. Von need if, we got ii Maxwell Bros, Furiiiinn', .xii) ,s. Evans, 7.52 6490.</p>
        <p>W.\NT IC .deo.M lMI I Make ih' an oi'ii r! !; m . u i.aiindromat h r ii ' ; ,i;] , Iti.h .iii( r ,)' i; n;</p>
        <p>Routes  Established!  No</p>
        <p>Selhngl No Soliciting! Just Plain, Old Fashioned Good</p>
        <p>Service!</p>
        <p>General Accountant to $11,000</p>
        <p>SALESMAN</p>
        <p>Have degree? Ambitious? This could be tor you. FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>Car is requiredl Six to ten hours per week can run a small route. Income commensurate with investment and effort. Earnings can grow to 51,000 per month with investment starting as little as 5S00 to $1,500.</p>
        <p>Pharmaceutical Sales to $9,500</p>
        <p>A $15,000 GUARANTEED FIRST YEAR INCOME PROGRAM</p>
        <p>Wholesale Factory Outlet</p>
        <p>ALL TYPES OF (JKOCEHV store equipment. Call 752-6943.</p>
        <p>hori.</p>
        <p>PRODUCTS FOR INDUSTRY AND BUSINESS</p>
        <p>Excellent company; car, expenses and great fringe benefits provided. College degree preferred. FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>Yes, we will consider part time operators who are looking for an ideal supplemental income situation, but he or she must be expansion minded. An intelligent company financing plan is afforded after initial investment.</p>
        <p>Industrial Engineer $9,000 pius</p>
        <p>It you are a proven successful salesman earning at least 512,000 net and want to increase your income by 50 percent or more in the next two years and are willing to work tor it, you are the man we want in the Greenville -Goldsboro area.</p>
        <p>offers tremendous savings on first quality ready made drapes, manufactured at our store. Even more savings on our line of factory irregulars in drapes, towels, sheets, and bedspreads.</p>
        <p>Open from 9 a.m. til 6 p.m. Mon. thru Sat,</p>
        <p>Located at intersection of Highway 58 and 258 East of</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>CAMPING TRAILER, .SLEEIS 4. Clo.set. stove, ice box .Slioo Good condition. Call 752 .3278</p>
        <p>1968 - WHEEL CAMPER folding hardtop trailer. Sleeps 7. Ice box and heater. Screen room, dinette, e.xcellent con dition. $950 firm. 756-2074.</p>
        <p>Have little experience and a lot of detire? This could be for you.</p>
        <p>A 5260 per week Draw Program.</p>
        <p>Snow Hill 747-3012 Master Charge</p>
        <p>LIVESTOCK</p>
        <p>SNACK VENh-i h-FRANCHISE Earn Up to $-0C 00 Per Month Part Tine - FuM Tm Own anU oporjft  up  ^:</p>
        <p>vending route cluie to vue and turn vour sp.vr* tmc nc .v inconiP</p>
        <p>100 per cent PROFIT  NATIONALLY ,DV(,,'Ti PRODUCTS</p>
        <p>Np experience r.ece,. ,!iv panv w;il obtain all loc.ifio- s f i ST/UT  /\/*LL ImtiPt I iivevtrn I'-  I $995.00.</p>
        <p>GROW BIG Small Iriiti.il cash m 'n ti. t-r r required, secured by e;ieir&amp;gt;i&amp;gt;u id The company wdl p. ovide financiri'; on the cxpansK.n ol your 'lusi lesv For personal appointrnmd in v.,oi area, Write or C, !l Ltdie.t f u /V' frofit Dispensi't s, 'ric.. 70 7 / v.' ' 330 F!(jvdSt D. nv.li- Va</p>
        <p>^4) 105 N. Elm St.</p>
        <p>) .' sfury b'ick veneer, 3 &amp;gt;1,. Iivina tootn, dining 'ore kitcncn. study down-.tlly futtiishud up</p>
        <p> V ,, !, .Mis, - i.l 7 rouiiis. Loan</p>
        <p>' aiinp,': -i .</p>
        <p>F''ic.o S22.0G0</p>
        <p>Store and lot for sale. One brick veneer concrete block store containing office, rest room and heated by gas blower. The store building is 40 ft. x 100ft. and the 200 ft. X 120 ft. lot has plenty of parking space.</p>
        <p>c ) ('o-r - flouses to sell. Hava cu toiTiersand need wider selo' tion.</p>
        <p>$27,500 1407 E. 4th Street</p>
        <p>.s</p>
        <p>I I \i iM \n;</p>
        <p>\N!)</p>
        <p>i\A !: .m i; \(,i;n( V</p>
        <p>Brick veneer house with 4 bedrooms and garage apartment; both are completely furnished. Very good income on property. The lot is 105 ft. wide by 129 ft. deep. Excellent buy for investment.</p>
        <p>d r - T.iI. Insurance-Appraisal</p>
        <p>otli- * 7.5;7l.l llun'ii 7.ti 117!</p>
        <p>J. L Harris &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>Your first letter should confain your phone number and sufficient references to verify. USSERY Industries, Inc. 1700 Chancellor Row, Dallas, Ttxas 75247. Attention:  Vending</p>
        <p>Division.</p>
        <p>Trainee</p>
        <p>High Commissions and high reorder business.</p>
        <p>SMALL HORSE, DARK BAY, saddle and harness trained, very gentle. Was used for beginners riding lessons. Call 752-4612.</p>
        <p>Large textile firm; train with industrial engineer. Degree not required. Great opportunity. FEE PAID by company.</p>
        <p>We are a AAA-1 Manufacturing Corporation and our successful salesmen's commissions range from $15,000 to over $30,000 per year!</p>
        <p>4',' X 8' REGUL.ATION PRO-fessional size pool table. Heavy slate beti, 4 sticks, balls &amp;amp; triangle. $175. Call 756 .5400 or 756-4305.</p>
        <p>SMALL PONY AND ('ART. $75. 758-2550.</p>
        <p>A FUTI Mir AT</p>
        <p>'.I.IT'.U W.iV OF LIFE lilt) \' lit n \oi! .t il iuinsehoUi '.(I- III) &amp;lt; ;i ,h \\:tli a Classified</p>
        <p>O'uil 7 Vl-i'Mii) iii,\\ '</p>
        <p>LOST&amp;amp; FOUND</p>
        <p>3?; Ll ui inunt S15.200 liS 'v '..'oocllawn - 510,000 II' . ' '-shiiiofun  59,600</p>
        <p>Real Estate Property Management Repairs Painting 204 W. 10th St.</p>
        <p>WE NEED 2 MEN WHO CAN qualify for management in sales and service work. Starting income dependent on qualifications. This is with a new branch office in Greenville with 46 years old national company. This is not autos or insurance. Call 752-6808 from 8;30 a.m. to 10 a.m. and from 6 p.m. to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>thinhill</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>Greenville</p>
        <p>209 E Thud Sf.</p>
        <p>758 2107</p>
        <p>CALL PERSON-TO PERSDN CDLLECTOR WRITE MILTON J. WESTERMAN V.P. National Salesmanager (312) 345-5400)</p>
        <p>Sunday 11:00 A.M. to 3:00 P.M. Weekdays 10:00 A.M. to 6:00 P.M. CHEMTRUSTINDUSTRIES CORP.</p>
        <p>Maywood, Illinois 60153</p>
        <p>2 USED MODEL 415 COX (Tampers, excellent condition, priced for immediate sale. Also 1 double horse trailer, all steel construction. Stans Sport Center, 1025 Evans St., 758-3613.</p>
        <p>LOST:  REDDISH  BROWN</p>
        <p>fox terrier, answers to Buddy. Has collar with bell. Vicinity of Eastern Pines. Reward. (aH 746-()976 before 3 p.m.</p>
        <p>3 BAY SERVICE CFfHTR</p>
        <p>Llvwj)' Realty-Realtors 752-7194</p>
        <p>758-4711</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTEDSECRETARY</p>
        <p>To work in industrial engineering department. Must have secretarial experience and be able to operate an electric typewriter and electric calculator. Must be good with figures. Accuracy required. Excellent fringe benefits. Apply Field-crest Mills, Personnel Department, 2107 Dickinson Ave., Greenville.</p>
        <p>An Equal Opportunity Employer</p>
        <p>YOUNG COLLEGE STUDENT who is going to be helping local pastor, needs summer job. Please call 752-7970.</p>
        <p>WELDER AND ACCESSO-ries. used once. Transit, 2 single beds, 1 double bed, 2 tricycles, office desk chair, dinette set, and A-B Dick duplicator. Call 746-6043.</p>
        <p>LOST; FEMALE PART COL-lie and German Shepherd. Gray with some white markings and white paws. 10 months old. 7 weeks pregnant. Vicinity Lawson Trailer Park. Cal! 7.56-1981.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>STUDENT DESIRES PART time work while at summer school. Can type. Contact Debby Harmon at 758-2381.</p>
        <p>IS THAT GAS RANGE OF yours getting old' It is worth up to $50 at Pargas on a trade for a beautiful Hardwick gas range. Phone 7.52-5254.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>LOC.ATEDON</p>
        <p>expanding</p>
        <p>264 BY-PASS</p>
        <p>earn in excess of</p>
        <p>45,000 days OR EVFNINGS CALL 758 4203</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM. 12 WIDE. Located in city, 756 ,5851.</p>
        <p>SUN OIL CO.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>PICK YOUR OWN STRAW-berries, 35 cents per quart. Frank Jolly, New Bern Hwy.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>$ SAVIN SALE $</p>
        <p>YES, SAVE YOUR MONEY NOW ON THE PURCHASE OF A QUALITY BUILT LONG LASTING DATSUN .. . AND YOUR SAVINGS ON OPERATING EXPENSE WILL CONTINUE NEXT WEEK-NEXT MONTH-NEXT YEAR AND THE NEXT . . . REMEMBER MONEY SAVED IS MONEY MADE.</p>
        <p>LET ONE OF OUR COURTEOUS SALESAAEN HELP START YOU ON YOUR MONEY SAVINGS PLAN TODAY!</p>
        <p>DATSUN</p>
        <p>'THE DATSUN DIFFERENCE IS VALUE AND ECONOMY'</p>
        <p>Two Door Sedan Four Door Sedan Four Door Station Wagon</p>
        <p>2000 Sports Roadster 1600 Sports Roadster Vj Ton Pickup Truck</p>
        <p>SOME OUTSTANDING DATSUN FEATURES</p>
        <p>Low Initial Cost 96 H.P. Overhead Cam-Engine Up To 30 Miles PerOallon On Regular Gas Three-Speed Smooth Shifting Automatic Transmission</p>
        <p>Four Speed Stick Shift Sure Stop Front Disc Brakes Attractive Styling Backed By First Class Service</p>
        <p>GtAAC or BANK FINANCING</p>
        <p>(N^obile</p>
        <p>HOLT</p>
        <p>in Heekcr Rid</p>
        <p>USED AND NEW AIR CONDI-tioners. 18,000 BrU-^-$249.95. (Contact T'ishers Appliance &amp;amp; Furniture. Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>Adler sewing machine in cabinet, excellent condition. $135. Call 756-0222 8 a.m.-5 p.m. or 756-2648 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>PIANO IN STORAGE Beautiful Spinet - Console stored locally. Local person with excellent credit can take on small payment balance. Write Joplin Piano Inc. Box 103, Panama Cty, Florida, 32401.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: OLD FURN-iture and antiques. Call 756-0333.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Two Mechanics WANTED</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN</p>
        <p>Americas No. 1 Import</p>
        <p>O to increasing business and expanded service needs, Joe Pchelos Volkswagen, Inc., has openings for two mechanics. Special training will qualify you as a VOLKSWAGEN MECHAN!^: an J you will be working in a modern, clean, fully cquipr.ed VW Service Ceqter, plus paid vacation, hosuitahz.at!on, sick leave, profit sharing, retirement plan, and many other benefits. For an appointment call:</p>
        <p>756-1135</p>
        <p>FOR IMMEDIATE S.ALE</p>
        <p>35 Foot Pacemaker: Excellent condition, Sleep? 6, hot water, electric range, electric refrigerator, shower, wall to wall carpet, 3 Kw Onan generaR r, ship to shore, depth finder, syncronizer, twin 220 P. P. Pacemaker engines, and more. $12,000.00, terms if desired. Call AC 919-752-4135 Monday M y o.^ A.M.</p>
        <p>JACK'S</p>
        <p>fir &amp;amp; Generator</p>
        <p>We Are Looking</p>
        <p>For Fun in the sun as well as Year Round Entertainment, Become a member of</p>
        <p>For</p>
        <p>Sales persons to represent our organizations in Greenville.</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER SWIM CLU</p>
        <p> Energetic, ambitious No travel</p>
        <p>*Good character, respectable</p>
        <p>The Most Convenient and Largest Private Recreation Facility in Eastern North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Pool Opens Tuesday, May 5</p>
        <p>Sales experience $ helpful/ not necessary</p>
        <p>Sales school and in field training provided</p>
        <p> Fringe benefits</p>
        <p>Apply at North Carolina Em-, ployment Securl^ Commission, 1004 So. Evans, May 8 between 10 a. m. &amp;amp; 4 i p. m. '</p>
        <p>Features:</p>
        <p> Two-acre park  ,</p>
        <p> Private Barbeque Pits  </p>
        <p> Kiddie Pool  </p>
        <p> Two Life Guards  on  duty *</p>
        <p>at all times</p>
        <p>Club House Bath House Covered Patio Sun Deck overlooking the Tar River</p>
        <p>,  ^  ^  V   Swimming, Lessons</p>
        <p>Located at the end of Elm Street overlooking the</p>
        <p>beautiful Tar River.</p>
        <p>For Membership Applications:  ,  i*</p>
        <p>Call: 752-4225  LIMITED MEMBERSHIP ,x</p>
        <p>Apt-5  APPLY EARLY </p>
        <p>NEW &amp;amp; REBUILT Starters Generators</p>
        <p>Alternators - Regulators Armatures - Batteries COMPLETE ELECTRICAL SERVICE</p>
        <p>Motor Tune-Up Carburetor Service Points - Plugs Etc.</p>
        <p>MUFFLERS - TAILPIPES - BRAKES</p>
        <p>PICK UP &amp;amp; DELIVERY</p>
        <p>- ROAD SERVICE -</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>1512 N. Green</p>
        <p>752-564B</p>
        <p>Greenvilleiaii</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0027" />
        <p>Tie Daily Renectar. Greearille, N. C.-Ruday, May 1, lfia-Z7</p>
        <p>Sell things you aron*! using with Daily Raf lector Clauifletl Ads...  Oia 17S241M to place your action - ad NOWI</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>AYDEN</p>
        <p>702 Snow Hill St. i brdroom, large living room, fover. 2 baths, kitchen and den. central heat and air, carpet and drapes, carport, outside storage, good location with trees and shrubs.</p>
        <p>124,700</p>
        <p>50.5 Colonial St.</p>
        <p>New bedroom, living room. 1*2 bath, kitchen and den, garage, central heat and air ciNiditioning.</p>
        <p>$18,500</p>
        <p>40 acresengineering com. pittesubdivision approval lots VA approved at S3S00  lot. Thomas Realty, 754.S1M.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>Chester Stox</p>
        <p>74S-6IU or 74S-330I</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>BE AHEAD OF THE CROWD! Advertise your home improvement services with Classified Ads. Dial 752-6166 now!</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 2611 CHEROKEE Dr.. 3 bedroom. 14 bath, kitchen-dining room combination. Loan assumption. Call 756-0977 from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. or after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEAUTIFULLY FURNISH-ed apartments. Carpet, central heat, air conditioning. 15 minutes from Greenville. Couples or adults. 752-3376.</p>
        <p>II New Development |</p>
        <p>One 0 A Kind</p>
        <p>Ayden Country Club</p>
        <p>3 bedroom, 2 bath, living room, dining room, kitchen, extra large den, fireplace, beam ceiling, built-ins with self cleaning oven, built-in bar in den, electric heat, air conditioning. Large patio. 2 car garage &amp;amp; workshop. Also fully carpeted. Contact: Jack R. Raines, 744-3138 day or night for appointment. Loan available.</p>
        <p>Contact:</p>
        <p>7&amp;lt;t* ^vet Siatu</p>
        <p>APARTMENT More than just a place to live. Located at the North end of Elm Street on the Tar River 1-2 bedrooms unfurnished or completely furnished if desired plus all modern conveniences.</p>
        <p>Recreational facilities include party house, pool, large river front park, and picnic area.</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>Jack R. Raines</p>
        <p>Rt. 1, Box 460 Ayden, N. C.</p>
        <p>Resident</p>
        <p>Mgr.</p>
        <p>Applian^</p>
        <p>Greenville's Newest and Most Luxurious.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOME NEAR new elementary school. 2814 Jackson Dr. Estate Realty Company. 752-5058.</p>
        <p>LOVELY 3 BEDROOM HOME on large, well landscaped lot. 210 Fairlane Rd. Estate Realty Company. 752-5058</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM FURNISHED apartment, wall to wall carpet, dish washer, garbage disposal^ hot and cold water, heat furnished, $135 per mo. Call M. E. Sutton 752-6121.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE Apartments</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM, CENTRAL AIR conditioning, den with firejdace. Ill Prince Rd. CaU 752-2391.</p>
        <p>204 N. LIBRARY ST., AIR ccmditioned, 3 bedroom, brick, living ro(Hn, dining room, kitchen, breakfast room, drapes and carpeting. $17,500. Turcotte Realty, 752-3881.</p>
        <p>2-bedroom, air condition, 4-closets, fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher, club house, swimming pool, laundry facilities.</p>
        <p>1212 Rodbanks Rd.</p>
        <p>Tel: 756-4151</p>
        <p>THINKING OF SELLING?</p>
        <p>Our stock of houses is ^tting low and we need more listings to furnish our clients with the type of homes they desire. List your property now.</p>
        <p>Estate Realty Co.</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS APTS. 1900 Charles St. An exclusive community designed to provide the ultimate in gracious living. Modem l, 2, and 3 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom Townhouses. Furnished or unfurnished. Phone 756-4800.</p>
        <p>752-5058</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM APART-ment. Desirable location, close  in, private entrance, water furnished. Reasonable rrat. Also several nice large bedrooms for girls. Call 758-1436.</p>
        <p>DUPLEX APT., WILLOW AND Stancill Drive. 2 bedrooms eadi carport. $23,500. Bill Williams, Real Estate 752-2615.</p>
        <p>STADIUM APTS. NEW, ! bedroom, furnished, excellent location, no car needed between mens dorms and coliseum. 756-4671 or 752-5700.</p>
        <p>SERVICE DIRECTORY</p>
        <p>QUICK &amp;amp; EASY REFERENCE FOR BUSINESS &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL SERVICES.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE AT YOUR FINGEBTIPS!</p>
        <p>UPHOLSTERING</p>
        <p>PLUMBING</p>
        <p>UPHOLSTERING</p>
        <p>SPECIAL Sofa Beds-$;m Seal Covers-$20 Up</p>
        <p>ureenville Custom Trim A Upholstry</p>
        <p>M years experience in this area. 37 Spruct St.  7S2-4I7I</p>
        <p>LANCASTERS PLUMBING Co., located in Aydoi, 24 hour service. We specialize in new and repair work. Office, 746-6010; Residence, 752-2791.</p>
        <p>HOME IMPROVEMENT</p>
        <p>Ayden Upholstery Shop furniture upholstered all work guaranteed 744-3700</p>
        <p>CABINETS</p>
        <p>Roofing A Siding installad by skilled mechanics.</p>
        <p>Goodfon Roofing &amp;amp; Aluminum Co. Inc.</p>
        <p>214 By-Pats</p>
        <p>758-3183 Day  754-2572 Night</p>
        <p>BUSINESS MACHINES</p>
        <p>Tetterton</p>
        <p>C'hbinet</p>
        <p>Makers</p>
        <p>Hudson Business Machines Victor Factory Service 103 Trade St. 754-3175</p>
        <p>heXtinc</p>
        <p>SOI EVANS .ST</p>
        <p>7.l-47n0</p>
        <p>Beating A Air Conditanni Residential A GommcrdaJ Twenty-fiveyaarsef</p>
        <p>AKE YOUR LIFE MOjW Confiiw^jfvi^ritidwilt</p>
        <p>fiWe with rented meney! _</p>
        <p>^ Win ifaiiw to Lenn  Free estimalMgiBfc given</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>Wantod To Buy</p>
        <p>Wanltd To Ron!</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>NICE LOT NEAR CHURCHES and school. Call 758-2220 between 3 p.m. and 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>MIDTOWNE APARTMENTS-Winterville, 1 bedroom furnished. Turcotte Realty 752-3881.</p>
        <p>HAVE ROOMS FOR 5 BOYS for summer session. Call 7S2-7384 or 400 East 8th St</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 4 ACRE</p>
        <p>behind Eastern Pines Community Building in Boyd Park Subdivision. $2700. Call 758-4740.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM UNFURNISHED apartment. Available immediately. 2406 E. 3rd. St. Estate Realty Co. Call 752-5058.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOM FURNISHED apt., Redwood Apts., 804 E. 3rd St. 752-6137 day or 756-3465 night</p>
        <p>ROOMS FOR 5 MALE students or working men. ^tow and through summer. 540 Cbtanche St. Call 752-7512 afternoons and nights.</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY PINE AND cypress standing timber and Vgs. Paying highest marked prices. Beasley Lumber Products, P. 0. Box 306, Phone no. 8244121 or 8244122, Scotland Neck.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO PAY equiQf and assume payments on 19 or 20 boat. Write givii complete details. Cathryn Joyner, Route 4, Box 290, Greenville. N.C.</p>
        <p>3 BORM. HOUSE OR FLAT by ECU professor for next school year. Prefer quality, storage, air, east side. 758-4979 after 8 pTm. or write Box 2485, Greenville.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>HARDWARE-</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>CTORM WINDOWS A nooRs Amims</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>753-Sllf</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM APARTMENT, 514 East 14th St. stove and refrigerator, furnished, $65 per month. Call 7543701 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>ROOM FOR BOY: WITH PRI-vate bath, central air and heat. Call 7540513.</p>
        <p>RESORTS</p>
        <p>Cottages For Rent</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS Lo&amp;lt;d(! Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check with us First! 752-5700.</p>
        <p>5 ROOM UNFURNISHED apartment. East 3rd and Ashe St. Available June 1. Family or mature singles. $80. 7544573.</p>
        <p>ONE 3 BEDROOM COTTAGE and 46 house trailer at Atlantic Beach. Jadcstms Cleaning and Uphdstory Service. Call 7543276 Jay or 7541505 nite.</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE 2 BEDROOM HOUSE f(M- rent. Approximately 3 miles in the counti7. Call 7541900.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM COTTAGE at Atlantic Beach. Very Nice. Book early. W.C. Gamer, 753-3124, 753-3811, FarmvUle, N.C.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM HOUSE, 702 Willow St. 7543300 or 7542818.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM FURNISHED apartment, $125. 2 bedroom unfurnished, $100. Wall to wall carpet, air conditioning, heat and water furnished. 2401 E. 3rd St.. call M. E. Sutton or C. L. Thigpen. Jr.. 752-6121.</p>
        <p>JUNE, JULY, AUGUST, 2 bedroom house near University. All furnished, reasonable. Call 752-5608.</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC BEACH COT-tage, The Sea Shell, E. Atlantic Blvd. Call Bruce Garris 524-5507, Grifton.</p>
        <p>FRESHLY PAINTED 3 BED-room htxise, $50 deposit. $100 month. Call 7542259.</p>
        <p>CLEAN COTTAGE FOR rent, Atlantic Beach, West Terminal Blvd. Lester Garris, 7445284.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Office Space for Rent</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>UPTOWN OFFICE SPACE now available. Wall to wall carpet, heat and central air condition, janitorial service. Call M. B. Massey, Jr., Agent, 752-3900 day or 752-5824 night</p>
        <p>USED RESTAURANT EQUIP-ment. Call 7544437 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTED: LARGE EXHAUST fan. Call Charles Dudley, 754 3832 or 7543852.</p>
        <p>Got your ticket to</p>
        <p>Summer 7A7 Theatre</p>
        <p>Hello, Dollyl The Pirates Of Penzance</p>
        <p>George Ml</p>
        <p>A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Forum</p>
        <p>Man Of La Mancha</p>
        <p>ALL FIVE FOR ONLY U8.00</p>
        <p>Write or phone The ECU Summer Theatre Box 2712, Greenville 758-6390</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>the man</p>
        <p>who</p>
        <p>wants</p>
        <p>everything</p>
        <p>Qexeept a high price!)</p>
        <p>OFFICE SPACE AVAILABLE Janitorial service, utilities, air conditioned wall to wall carpeting. Across street from courthouse. Contact W.G. Blount, 752-6163 days or 758-4704 nights.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>I Paid for by friends ^of the Summer Theatre^</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FIRE</p>
        <p>EXTINGUISHER</p>
        <p>Serv" It :e ScLie-s</p>
        <p>Fire Safety Co.</p>
        <p>College Court ''76</p>
        <p>East 10th Stroft Greonvillf N C.</p>
        <p>SKILLED MACHINIST CRAFTSMEN</p>
        <p>Permanent opportunity with small growing division of multi-plant corporation.</p>
        <p>Must be skilled in all phases of machine shop work and be able to work from engineers drawings with minimum supervision and assist other machine shop personnel.</p>
        <p>Only persons with proven background and steady reliable past employment record will be considered.</p>
        <p>Salary commensurate with your craftsmen qualifications. Day shift work with some overtime required. Employee benefit program and educational assistance.</p>
        <p>EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>Apply at Vermont American Corp., Bethel Hwy., County Road 1579, Greenville, N.C., or write P. 0. Box 548, Greenville, N. C. 27834.</p>
        <p>it CAN save you some</p>
        <p>money!</p>
        <p>CHEVY PtCKUP</p>
        <p>STK. No. 395</p>
        <p>In stock for immediate dolivory</p>
        <p>New 1970 Va Ton Chevrolet pick-up painted rear bumber, heavy duty rear springs.</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>2195</p>
        <p>.iil^OPEN HOUSE</p>
        <p>Red Oak Subdivision</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass</p>
        <p>11 -5 Every Day</p>
        <p>103 Allendale</p>
        <p>4 bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen -</p>
        <p>dining, living room, utility room, itr</p>
        <p>garage, central air, wall to wall carpet.</p>
        <p>$24,700</p>
        <p>211 Allendale</p>
        <p>3 bedrooms, 2Va baths, foyer, den, fireplace, playroom, sewing room, central air, intercom, central vacuum.</p>
        <p>$32,500</p>
        <p>103 Pearl</p>
        <p>3 bedroom, 2 baths. Living room, dining room, kitchen - den, garage.</p>
        <p>$23,500</p>
        <p>201 Pearl</p>
        <p>3 bedroom, iVk baths, living room, dining room, kitchen, den, utility, garage, central air.</p>
        <p>$23,500</p>
        <p>Come out and visit this beautiful tub-dlvision and dlicuis your housing needs with one of our Representatives.</p>
        <p>Thomas Realty Co</p>
        <p>Tx-sm</p>
        <p>have you some fan!!!</p>
        <p>If youre going to spend about $2000 for a new car...</p>
        <p>-ook at Nova</p>
        <p>New 1970 Chevy Nova starting at</p>
        <p>2095</p>
        <p>On the move: The Chevrolet TO*</p>
        <p>2 sizes of wagons!... selection of models I... &amp;amp; selection of colors!!!</p>
        <p>'stk. no. 376</p>
        <p>KINQ8W000 WAGON</p>
        <p>New 1970 Oievelie stationwagon power steering, 3 speed automatic transmiuian</p>
        <p>CONCCXJRS WAQON</p>
        <p>2895</p>
        <p>wagonplace!</p>
        <p>-Mdpi yeuWstkMptusM</p>
        <p>Ovtir 150 NtwCars A Trucks in Stock and on ordtr</p>
        <p>Phelps Chevrolet</p>
        <p>AAanwriai Orivt</p>
        <p>I mm iki</p>
        <p>A J</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0028" />
        <p>-Ike DQy Reflectar, GrecnviOe, N. C.Sunday, May 3. iroGeysers Could Turn Info Great Natural Resource</p>
        <p>By WILEY MALONEY THE GEYSm, Calif. (UPI) Wbea bear hunter William Bdl Elliott fired what be termed a leaden raesuge" into the head of a grizzly in the Big SulfJhur Creek Valley in 1M7 he bad DO notion he had ooine upon one of the worlds great resources.</p>
        <p>The valley was filled with douds of steam and smelled Wrongly of sulphur. Elliott called it the "gates of hell.  Today the gates of hell have gone to work.</p>
        <p>Later explorers called it "the geysers." The name is a misnomer. There are no geysers. The steam, escaping through the crust of the earth, is what geologists call fuma-roles.</p>
        <p>Shaple Process</p>
        <p>This steam now has been tamed by turning the natural underground energy into the only geothermal electric power plant in the Western Hemisphere and the only such plant in the world privately financed.</p>
        <p>The process is relatively simple to explain, but technically difficult to apply. You simply have to drill a hole deep enou^ in a volcanic *areaperhaps a mile or moreto tap the live steam. Its like drilling an oil well into an oil dome.</p>
        <p>This steam, coming up under pressure with ail its latent heat, is pped to turbines which turn generate transforming the energy into electric power.</p>
        <p>The theory was first turned into an accomplished fact by</p>
        <p>John D. Grant In 10. The geyers had become one of those "health resorts" so popular at the turn of the century. It was visited by presidents and other notables, first by stage coach, later by earl motor cars. Grant conceived the idea of using the steam to power a turbine to</p>
        <p>generate electricity to light bis resort hotel.</p>
        <p>Lights Dinaied He had some difficulties, though, said H A. "Hank" Zagar, manager of the Pacific Gas A Electric Companys Cloverdale geyers area. "When it rained, the steam in the pipes</p>
        <p>cooled, the generators slowed the lights dimmed. People sitting inside had no need to go out to know it was rainir^.</p>
        <p>"One enteitainer, who fdayed an electric organ, refused to perform on such nights. The organ gave out sour notes</p>
        <p>It became evident however.</p>
        <p>that producii^ electricity from the earths steam was more expensive in those days than using conventional fuelds such as kerosene or coal. The whole project was termed "Grants Folly.</p>
        <p>But the thermal power company setout 15 years ago</p>
        <p>The Iron Butterfly Offers 'Experience'</p>
        <p>The Iron Butterfly was in town Thursday night.</p>
        <p>For those who are not familiar with the Iron Butterfly, it is n&amp;lt;H a large metal winged monster, as the name might imply, but a musical group, composed of five musicians who create a sound, sometimes called "acid rock.</p>
        <p>One does not go to a performance (rf this kind to "hear, for you would surely become deaf. One does not go to this kind of performance to "see the musicians, for you would surely become bored. One goes to this kind of affair for the "experience.</p>
        <p>The "experience of the Iron Butterfly in Minges Coliseum on the East Carolina University campus was exhilarating for the 3,000 fans who crowded the stage and probably would have danced in the aisles, had the fire laws permitted.</p>
        <p>The lack of acoustical insulation in Minges created a natural echo chamber for the high amplification of the music. The bleachers reverberated.</p>
        <p>In discussing the electrical output required, assistant dean of student affairs, Rudolph Alexander said, "It was far greater than anything that has ever been on this campus. Musically, the group performed for approximately one hour and twenty minutes. Except for the initial composition, which was described by the lead guitarist as reminiscent of "the old sound, the remainder of the program came for the for-thcoming album, "Metamorphesis, which, if last nights music is any in</p>
        <p>dication, is a combination of blues and soul.</p>
        <p>Mechanically speaking, music of this kind is very simple, with a basic chord structure that any elementary music student can understand. It is not complicated. Aaron Copelands music is by far more complicated.</p>
        <p>Closing theprogramthe group did "In A Gadda Da Vida, featuring an extended drum solo which was remarkable. Someone was overheard to have said the drum solo lasted 26 minutes. Probably so. The numerous switches from one rhythm to another caught the audience and totally exhausted the drummer.</p>
        <p>It was loud, it was good, it was a show.  Jane Keller</p>
        <p>to make Grants dream come true. New steri alh^ had been developed to cut down the corrosive effects of the steam from the fumaroles and better methods had been developed for drilling.</p>
        <p>Most people of the time just "tapped their heads at the oddball scheme. Evai when the first electricity was sold 10 years ago by PGAE the project was regarded more as a curiosity then practical.</p>
        <p>Good ideas dont die. PG&amp;amp;E contracted to buy the steam if it was piped to a turbine-generator-condenser system and thence over power lines as electric energy. PG&amp;amp;E set up its first two power units which went into production in 1960 with a capacity of producing an output of about 27,000 kilowatts.</p>
        <p>Currently, PG&amp;amp;E has four</p>
        <p>units in operation and is building two more which will bring the capacity up to 102,000 kilowatts, enough ekctricity to serve a city of 200,600.</p>
        <p>PG4E does not dig the wells. It only contracts to buy the steam deliv^ to its i^ants. The cos^ of drilling the wells and piping the live steam to the plants is borne by the well-diggers.</p>
        <p>The development at the geyers is being carried out jointly by the Thermal Power Co., the original successful pioneer; the Magma Power CO., and Union Oil Company, the largest of the three q)erators. Other firms are prospecting and drilling, but do not yet have customers for their steam even if they do tap a live geothermal well. PG&amp;amp;E remains the sole customer.</p>
        <p>LEDO FARMS</p>
        <p>from geysers has now been tamed into UPI staffer Wlley Maloney (foreground) watch blow-geothermal electric power plant. H. A. Zager and off from two geothermal wells. (UPI Telephoto)</p>
        <p>QUALITY AND PRICE MAKE THE DIFFERENCE</p>
        <p>SPECIAL;</p>
        <p>Hardy AZALEA LINERS......................  each</p>
        <p>Both the large and dwarf varieties. In lots of 100, $13.00... S1.7S per dozen.</p>
        <p>pansies..................................... sOcDoz.</p>
        <p>ROSES.................................... Sl.ioeach</p>
        <p>PINK DOGWOOD. 18-24"..........................$1.10each</p>
        <p>We have Petunias,  Scarlet  Sage,  Liriope,  Snapdragons,</p>
        <p>Marigold, Geraniums,  Coleus   anything  you will need in</p>
        <p>bedding plants, also Tomato Plants.</p>
        <p>Open Monday thru Saturday, 8 AM to 5 PM Hwy. 125  Sunday  -1 PM to 5 PM</p>
        <p>Hamilton, N. C.</p>
        <p>'Very Proud' Of Mrs. Mitchell</p>
        <p>TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP) -Martha Mitchells after-hours telephone complaint to a newspaper regarding the Senate turndown of G, Harrold Carswell for the U.S. Supreme Court made the judges wife "very proud of the outspoken Cabinet spouse.</p>
        <p>"I think shes very brave, Virginia Simmons Carswell said Thursday of the wife of Atty. (Jen. John N. Mitchell. "If she feels thats the right way to do it, thats up to her.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Mitchells call, to the Little Rock, Ark., Gazette, urged the newspaper to "crucify Sen. J. W. Fulbright, D-Ark., who voted against Carswell.</p>
        <p>.;.v</p>
        <p>GOREN ON BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN fo imt w n cmcm* tmimwi WEEKLY BRIDGE QUIZ Q. 1As South, vulnerable, you hold;</p>
        <p>AJ1842 C&amp;gt;K98 0AI7 4bQ7&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Your partner opens with one spade. What is your response?</p>
        <p>as</p>
        <p>Q. SBoth vulnerable, South you hold:</p>
        <p>AKJ988S3 &amp;lt;:P5 0K4 K102 The bidding has proceeded; West  North  East  South</p>
        <p>Pass  10  19  14</p>
        <p>30  39  ?</p>
        <p>What do you  bid now?</p>
        <p>Q. 2Neither vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>4A3 9K1#4 OKf2 4Ql6964 The bidding has proceeded; West North East South Pass Pass Pass 14 Pass 19 Pass ?</p>
        <p>What do you IM now?</p>
        <p>Q. 3Neither vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>4AJ9 9A83 OQ4 32 4168S The bidding has proceeded: North East South West 14 Pan 10 Pass 2NT Pau ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>Q. 4Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4Q4 9AJ5 OQJ1863 416fl The bidding has proceed; West  North  East  Sooth</p>
        <p>Pass  1 0  Oble.  Rdble. |</p>
        <p>1 9  Pass  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>Q. 8East-West vulnerable, as South you hold;</p>
        <p>4AQ4 9AQ3 OJ862 4A73 Your right hand opponent opens with one diamond. What do you bid?</p>
        <p>Q. 7 Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>44 32 9A OAKQ8 7 4AQlf7 The bidding has proceeded : West  North  East  South</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  l 9  Dble.</p>
        <p>Pass  14  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>Q. 8-As South vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>4J109884 988 OQ188 4K8 The bidding has proceeded; North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>2 4  Pass  2 NT  Pass</p>
        <p>3 0  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What  do you bid now?</p>
        <p>'0:</p>
        <p>(Look for answers MondagJ</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD PUZZLE</p>
        <p>kOm 25. Extinct bird 1. Wherewithal 26. Green tea 5. Staned lizards 28. Vital organ 11. Disfavor 13. Mutilate H.nastk buildini material</p>
        <p>16. Dull finish</p>
        <p>17. Married womans title</p>
        <p>18. Meadow 20. Foray</p>
        <p>30. Normal</p>
        <p>31. Furious</p>
        <p>32. Ships crane 34. Exists</p>
        <p>36. Fetid</p>
        <p>HQU s3Da HBfiH aaa Hama</p>
        <p>anaafaaflB Bdl anaaa aaa aaa aana</p>
        <p>nBHsanaaaa aneTiniiia uaaa</p>
        <p>21. Article</p>
        <p>22. Explosion 24. Dowry</p>
        <p>38. Legendary bird</p>
        <p>39. Hindu title  .</p>
        <p>Kitchen utensH SOLUTION oTrESTEKOAY'S NUZZLE 42. Flagrant</p>
        <p>DOWN</p>
        <p>44. Intarferometer</p>
        <p>46. Climbiivyine</p>
        <p>47. Moon goddess</p>
        <p>48. Concoction</p>
        <p>I. Punctuation mark</p>
        <p>2. Embellish</p>
        <p>3. Gentlemen</p>
        <p>4. Shack</p>
        <p>5. Pubik notice</p>
        <p>6. Masterpiece</p>
        <p>7. At a distance</p>
        <p>8. Bullfighter</p>
        <p>9. Behavior 10. Canary diet 12. Wild duck 15. Turmeric 19. Residue</p>
        <p>22. Anaconda</p>
        <p>23. Characteristic 25. latric</p>
        <p>27. Convened</p>
        <p>28. Rock salt </p>
        <p>29. Oriental lute 31. Customs I</p>
        <p>33.Pledge</p>
        <p>34. Violet ketone Ten^</p>
        <p>37. Cancel 39.Uadingla^</p>
        <p>AMEmCflB NUMBBt 1</p>
        <p>GIANT SCREEN COLOR TV</p>
        <p>MOWJirANEW</p>
        <p>FORAFMEFURIinilRECOIISOU</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Hunyjimited quantities!</p>
        <p>Only Zenith has Chromacolor!</p>
        <p>A rtvolutbnary color toitvision systom ftaturing a pofonftd color picturo tub# that outcobrs... outbri^tons... outcontrosts... and outdetoils ... ovory othor giont-scrMn color picture tubo.</p>
        <p>With all these Zenith quality features!</p>
        <p>IxcfiMivo ZonHh Color Commandor Control makes it aoiy to compenste for changing room light condlfion-by letting you odjutt controst, color Itvel and brightness, instontly, with one simple control instood of three.</p>
        <p>Ixdvaivo ZonHh AFC Control fine-tunes the color picture at the flick of a flngor.</p>
        <p>ZonHh Titan BO Handcmftod Choaaia</p>
        <p>Honderoftod for unrivoled depwidobitity ond longer TV Mo.</p>
        <p>Ixdwahro ZonHh Chronwtic Mn</p>
        <p>with the first integrated circuit ever used to produce o color TV picture.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>fkt nmUty gi im *e#w the wee fees #*</p>
        <p>ZonHh Super VMoo Rongo Tunint Syftom</p>
        <p>for suporsonsitive recoption evon in frin^ areas.</p>
        <p>ZonHh Fino-FomHuro ,</p>
        <p>Gonuint oil finished Wolnwf veneers ond select hardwood solids, wHh decorative overlays. Contemperory styled.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>Greenville TV &amp;amp; Appliance</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>921 DICKINSON AVE.</p>
        <p>AAALCOLAA C. WILLIAMS, OWN</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>mm</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0029" />
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>GREENYIU^ N.C</p>
        <p>MAY 3 , 1970</p>
        <p>WHAIS HAPPENING IN HOSIERY-</p>
        <p>The Zingy Leotard, Motif Pantyhose, Sheer Prints</p>
        <p>'.  '  "Ol</p>
        <p>ml*</p>
        <p>^  ^  fil  y</p>
        <p>"I ALGH'IN STAR  SLLF'HELP  QUIZ  REVOLUTION  IN  HEALTH</p>
        <p>Jo Anne Worley:  What Do You Know How Computers Are</p>
        <p>1 Vs Sliyest Clown About Money? Changing Medical Care</p>
        <p>REViHXTION IN HEALTH</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0030" />
        <p>.AskThem'Yourself</p>
        <p>FOR REV, JOHN GILES MILHAVEN, theologian</p>
        <p>I have heard that you predicted the Catholic Church would $oon have optional marriage for prie$t$. True?D. R., Niagara FaUsyN.Y.</p>
        <p># I have said that in three years there will be optional marriage.</p>
        <p>FOR RAYMOND BURR of Ironside"</p>
        <p>Do you have some little-known sort of nostalgic favorite among foody and do you play crihbage?Carlotta Webby Venturay Col.</p>
        <p># Any of the fine Mexican dishes suit my taste buds, and Ill drop anything Im doing to play a good game of cribbage.</p>
        <p>FOR WERNHER VON BRAVNy NASA</p>
        <p>I have heard that some meteorsy are quite large and heavy. Could they be of danger to our spacecraft?Mrs. Clarence H. McCoogy Roxboroy N.C.</p>
        <p># The spacecraft are protected against damage from small meteorites by pro</p>
        <p>tective shielding on both the outside and inside of the capsule. The odds against an Apollo spacecraft being struck by a large meteorite are about the same as those against being struck by lightning here on earth.</p>
        <p>FOR GVNILLA KNUTSON,</p>
        <p>tv's Take It Off" girl</p>
        <p>How are teen-agers generally treated in Scandinavia?Ma rcia Reedy Uticay N.Y.</p>
        <p> Our young people are given a great deal of personal freedom. They are willing to accept responsibility of their parents trust. This responsibility keeps them from abusing that freedom.</p>
        <p>FOR BOWIE KUHNy</p>
        <p>Commissioner of Baseball</p>
        <p>Who makes up the teams schedule for the season?Mrs. Marie Stovery Canlony Ohio</p>
        <p># Harry Simmons of my office, with the help of representatives of the National and American Leagues, makes up the schedule which must be presented to the leagues no later than September.</p>
        <p>FOR ROBERT FINCHy</p>
        <p>Secretary of Health, Education &amp;amp; Welfare</p>
        <p>Why has not a relief and financing plan been devised to provide thousands of elderly homeowners, now embarrassed with inflationary loss of savings, the opportunity to convert their frosen equity into income, while retaining a life tenancy?Howard A. Julie, Hasbrook Heights, N.J.</p>
        <p> This matter was studied jointly by Department of Health, Education &amp;amp; Welfare and Housing &amp;amp; Urban Development, but it has not been possible to convert the basic proposal into a workable plan. The major difficulties arise in setting a value upon deteriorated property which may have little, if any, current market value yet is important to the individual; the maintenance responsibility for the acquired property; how to set a price on property whose future value is uncertain and may thus greatly increase or decrease after a value has been set.</p>
        <p>FOR NANCY DICKERSON,</p>
        <p>NBC correspondent</p>
        <p>I read you have five children. Are these your own or adopted?  Mrs. Kenneth Brown, Hudson, N.H.</p>
        <p> When I got married, I was lucky enough to inherit three step-daughters. 1 gave birth to two boys.</p>
        <p>FOR GOV. HAROLD LeVANDER,</p>
        <p>Minnesota</p>
        <p>What is being done about the littering</p>
        <p>problem in your famous lakes country? K Mrs. Viola Jaeh, Humboldt, Sask., Canada</p>
        <p># Both public and private organizations are working to help keep Minnesota beautifulthe National Forest Service, State Conservation Department, highway-main-tenance crews, and the Clean Air-Clean Water Committee. Many private businesses distribute free litter bags for use in automobiles.</p>
        <p>Want to ask a famoas person a question? Yon can tkronah this colamn, and we'll get the answer from the prominent person yon designate. Send question, preferably on a post card, to Ask Them Yourself, Family Weekly, 641 Lexington Ave., New York, N.Y. 10022. We cannot acknowledge questions, but $S will be paid for each one nsed.</p>
        <p>Look for Survival People look at what interests them most-^and thats 'themselves, comments science writer</p>
        <p>Asimov likes to study life in its tiniest components as in model above.</p>
        <p>Isaac Asimov, whos scripted his first tv special, The Unseen World, to he seen tonight on ABC. Few people look at the world around them. But now they mst start getting interested in the unseen worldlife in a drop of water, or beneath the seaso they learn to care about our urgent problem of survival, enough to do something about it. If we dont solve the problems of increasing population and pollution, wants Asimov, there will he nothing left to solve.</p>
        <p>High Heels vs. Low Now that higher heels are back in fashion, the American Medical Association warns that the soles of womens feet may sting when they revert . to these shoes. Because the old stride is too long for the new heels the wearers balance is impaired. This long step, which constantly forces a regaining of balance, causes pressure on the balls of the feethence, the stinging. Solution: take shorter strides, walk more slowly, keep toes straight ahead, and feet closer together than when wearing flats.</p>
        <p>Little City Slickers The Farm &amp;amp; Ranch Vacation Guide has been in operation for about 20 years, listing farm</p>
        <p>City kids find pigs a strange sight.</p>
        <p>notes of youngsters reactions the first time they visit the barnyard. Some samples; (From Stephenson, Mich.): Mommy, a cow just escaped from the zoo. (From Medford, Wis.): That chicken laid an egg, and hes laughing about it. (From Middlebury, Ind.): I smell elephants. (From New York state a reply of farmer to a child worried which pigs will go to market): Only volunteers are considered.</p>
        <p>Watch and Warn With the tornado season beginning this month, theres one sure way to survive one, according to the Environmental Science Services Administration of the U.S. Department of Commerce; Be on watch, be warned, and be gone! Operation Skywam is a community tornado-preparedness program. Volunteers watch the newspapers</p>
        <p>and tv, and listen to the radio for severe storm warnings. Then they follow events to see if the storm develops into a tornado. If it does, they warn the community. The advance notice has meant the</p>
        <p>Tornado hits Tracy, Minn., 1968.</p>
        <p>difference between life and death. Fatal tornadoes occur in all 50 states. To join Skywarn, contact your local weather bureau.</p>
        <p>families who take in paying guests from the city. Many of the hosts have kept</p>
        <p>Fomify Ikddy the Newspaper Magadne</p>
        <p>Mays, 1970</p>
        <p>LEONARD S. DAVIDOW Prsridmt MORTON RANK PMiaksr W. PAGE THOMPSON AivsrtMne Dirtctor</p>
        <p>AuociaU Adv. Mgr.: DomM M. IMMt Eastern Ae. Mgr.: Rebwt E. Irvwn; New York Sates Mgr.: OwaM S. Wim; Regional Sales Mgr.: Rabwt J. ChrbtlM; Western Adv. Mgr.: RmmR L ^Wln; Ckieago Sates Mgr.: Jm Prmr, Jr.; Detroit Sates Mgr.: WMImi E. Awdvrwi, Jr.; Marketing Director: SM l^vfshy</p>
        <p>ROIERT NTZGIBBON Bditor-in-ChUf NEAL ASMRY Managing Editor MARIUS N. TONQUE Art Director MEUNIE OE PROn rood Editor</p>
        <p>AsoodmU Editors: leedye Abrwy,</p>
        <p>Mai LmMm, Mib Lambxrty, Twry Sdiaartal; Pmt J. Oppiabitwir, WmI CmM</p>
        <p>Asnstemt Art Director: Oooego Roi</p>
        <p>Newspaper Services: Promotion, Eric Oobmr; Merehondising. Canta Vifar Prodnction Director: Mwth SfMi4larYou are Invited to mail your questions or comments about any article or advertisement that appears in Family Weekly. Your letter will receive a prompt answer. Write to Service Editor, Family Wekiy, 641 Lexington Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022.*</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0031" />
        <p>^  CoopedeVllle.  Cadillac  Motor  Car  OMaten</p>
        <p>%or m,rrrf its beauty itsxonhnuity of style that so readily identifies a Cadillac.Yome long respected it for its many available comforts, convenances and advanced engineering achievements. Also, you've been impressed by Cadillacs remarkably solid repu-tahon unmatched by any other fine car for value at resale time. Well, this is the ideal time to discover what makes Cadillac for 1970 the most successful of the worlds luxury automobiles. Your authorized dealer is ready to make this your Cadlac year.</p>
        <p>Do U today.,.noi someday!</p>
        <p>STANDARD OF THE WORLD</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0032" />
        <p>FASHIONS</p>
        <p>By ROSALYN ABREVAYA</p>
        <p>A mid the controversy raging here and across the Atlantic jl\ for lengthened hems, leg watchers are charging that a conspiracy's afoot to hide the American woman's greatest asset-her gams!</p>
        <p>Whether women will succumb to the dictates of the fashion high priests remains speculative. When she has to clad those gorgeous legs, she'll experience a greater freedom of choice.</p>
        <p>Leg coverings this season come in all variations, for bold exposure under the mini or peeking from beneath the midi. You can choose sheer or opaque pantyhose in rich colorings that include pumpkin, turquoise, lilac, or canary yeilow. You can select a sleek, subtle texture in herringbone, for example, or brilliant water-color print stockings-even hose with a racing stripe that runs provocatively down the side. For those who fancy a minimum of underpinnings, there is pantyhose all grown up into a body stocking or choose a short leotard, from a nude shade to a Peter Max inspiration (as seen on our cover) to go under just about anything! Whether you're for more leg exposure or less, coordinating clothes with the proper hose still is the name of the fashion game in 1970~the mark of the well-put-together woman. ^</p>
        <p>Flippy, falling mushrooms are the motif of this Peter Max-designed, stretch opaque pantyhose to wear under the short skirt. Dress by Crazy Horse; shoes from Latinos.</p>
        <p>Cover: Leotard ortd hoe, a Peter Max design Skirt: Croiy Horse</p>
        <p>Information courtesy of the Notional Association of Hosiery AAanufocturers</p>
        <p>A palette of fresh ideas emerge here (L to r.): pantyhose in a pumpkin-colored, subtle herringbone texture; the other two, sheer mesh stockings in a delicate tracery of lovely muted pastels.</p>
        <p>Latch on to sheer stretch pantyhose with a racing stripe</p>
        <p>in shades from bone to black. Dress: Mr. Mort. Shoes: Thayer McNeil.</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0033" />
        <p>Sivannah, 6a. 31402 P.O. Box 125 423 Hwy. 80 Phone 232-4131</p>
        <p>Salisbuiy, Md. 21801 P.O. Box 1797 Hwy. 13 N., Delmar Rd, Phone PI 2-7188</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>Asheville, N.C. 28802</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 120 474 Tunnel Rd. Phone 298-5094</p>
        <p>Charlotte. N.C. 28208</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 8046 5101 Wilkinson Blvd. Phone 399-8317</p>
        <p>Elizabeth CHy, N.C. 27909 P.O. Box 672 Hughes Blvd. &amp;amp; Main St Phone 335-4252</p>
        <p>Fayetteville, N.C. 28306 P.O. Box 4153 Hwy. 301 Phone 485-6111</p>
        <p>Greensboro, N.C. 27407</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 7218 3025 Highpoint Rd. Phone 292-0261</p>
        <p>Hkfcoiy, N.C. 28601</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 546 1350 Hwy. 70 S.W. Phone 328-1811</p>
        <p>New Bern, N.C. 28560</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 2372 Kinston Hwy. West Phone 638-1105</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount N.C. 27802 P.O. Box 1414 Hwy. 301 South Phone Gl 6-9128</p>
        <p>SOUTH CAROLINA</p>
        <p>Greenville, S.C. 29607 521 S, Pleasantburg Dr. Station B Phone 232-2733</p>
        <p>N. Charleston, S.C. 29406</p>
        <p>6870 Rivers Avenue Phone 553-6710 P.O. Box 9067 Hanahan, S.a 29410</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA</p>
        <p>Danville, Va. 24540 P.O. Box 1199 2309 Riverside Dr.</p>
        <p>Phone SW 2-0121</p>
        <p>Fredericksburg, Va. 22401 P.O. Box 806 N. Washington Hwy.</p>
        <p>U.S. 1 North Phone 373-3024</p>
        <p>Richmond, Va. 23208 P.O. Box 1010 7915 W. Broad St Phone 270-6011</p>
        <p>Staunton, Va. 24401 P.O. Box 593,</p>
        <p>610 Richmond Rd.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 250 East Phone 885-2212</p>
        <p>Winchester, Va. 22601 P.O. Box 617 1834 Valley Ave.</p>
        <p>Hwy. 11, South Phone 667-8093</p>
        <p>MORTGAGE FINANCING</p>
        <p>TO QUALIFIED PROPERTY OWNERS</p>
        <p>homes or</p>
        <p>Over twenty models Built on your property</p>
        <p>Tmn BEST INVESTUEHT^^.^^^</p>
        <p>home vatuM have steadily. Now, because financing is not available, very few nw homes are being built Thmie that exist grow in value more each day. If you are paying monthly for a place to live, put your hard earned money in a permanent home and watch your dollars grow.</p>
        <p>COMPUn FACTS AMD COSTS ARE YOURS</p>
        <p>we II offer you, hw you can save money by finishing part of ttie inside vwrself, as much or as little as you want We would like for you to kn* about our construction methods, about the hirii quality, low maint^nce materials we use, the different styles, sizes and floor plans offered. We want you to have all the facts.</p>
        <p>W/ien you think of a new home... think of.. .</p>
        <p>Jim Waiter^ffM^</p>
        <p>alog of ^Bges</p>
        <p>JIM WALTER HOMES</p>
        <p>(Mail to th* rwortsl officw)</p>
        <p>I would like to hovo more information and the cost of building on my property. I understand there would be no obligation to boy and that you would give me these facts free of charge.</p>
        <p>NAME____</p>
        <p>ADDRESS__</p>
        <p>CITY_______ STATf</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Telephone (or neighbors)_</p>
        <p>if rural route please give directions.</p>
        <p>= 1</p>
        <p>= 1 I own property in^-___countyJ</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0034" />
        <p>,Vo. Rt</p>
        <p>'AHow Computers Are</p>
        <p>Control station at Kettering Hospital in Dayton relays medical data to IBM computers.</p>
        <p>Amedical-equipment company engineer, Will Young, recently visited a tiny hospital in West Virginia to check its X-ray machines. After a dinner meeting with the physician in charge, he complained of severe indigestion, but an examination showed nothing.</p>
        <p>An electrocardiograph exam (EGG) was called for, but in remote areas its often necessary to mail the result of these to large cities for a special-^ ists diagnosis. This can take a week or more. But something new had been installed in several cities in West Virgin i aa t wo-and-a-half-f oot-sq u are machine which transmitted the EGG to New York Gitys Mount Sinai Hos</p>
        <p>pital by telephone line. Here Dr. Leon Pordys computer took the call. Within minutes Will Youngs host, still sitting by his bedside, had the computer diagnosis (some say more accurate than a doctors).</p>
        <p>Will didnt leave that hospital for several weekshe had had a serious heart attack and the computers diagnosis probably saved his life. Truly, there is a vast change coming in American medicine;</p>
        <p>Quick, Doctor, the Computer may soon be heard echoing through hospital corridors. True, computers can never provide the warmth and understanding of the old-time family doctor, but they provide a level of medical care the old Doc never dreamed of. These electronic marvels already perform mass screening of vast numbers of people with 15-second electrocardiograms, take charge of the post</p>
        <p>operative care of open-heart surgery patients, diagnose eye diseases and some 263 others, including 78 mental or emotional disturbances. Computers can be depended on, for they now fix themselves: these self-repairing computers can operate perfectly without care or maintenance for well over a yearif serviced regularly, they would average about 1,000 years between repairs!</p>
        <p>Dr. Cesar J. Caceres (the planner and first chief of the instrumentation field station of the U.S. Public Health Services heart-disease control program) speaks of the computer as helping create a revolution in medicine. During the past three years at the University of Alabama Hospital in Birmingham, a computer has been in charge of approximately 400 patients following open-heart surgery: it keeps tabs on their heart rate and</p>
        <p>They wont replace the</p>
        <p>blood pressure, fluid drainage from _the chest, urinary output, and their temperature.</p>
        <p>The computer controls the monitoring and determines whether the patient needs infusions of blood or other special solutions or medications then it automatically starts the infusion and stops them when it should. Already entrusted with patients who have undergone the most complex open-heart surgery (multiple valve replacement, artery and heart repairs), it can also be applied following other forms of surgery and for serious medical conditions.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Public Health Service is so confident of the importance of medical computers that it has authorized some $10 million a year for research into their uses. At the University of Southern Galifomia, too, automatic infusion of fluids and medications, regulation of respiration, control of heating and cooling devices, even the control of heart pacemakers will be triggered by computers.</p>
        <p>At the University of Galifomia at Los Angeles Brain Research Institute one day recently, a telephone rang. The caller was Elliott Sparrow, who is subject to epileptic seizures. His doctor had had difficulty recently in keeping these under control so he turned to a product of our space effort, a device which sends medical information on astronauts back to NASA from space. About the size of a transistor radio with little wires attached to the head, the electronic device was hooked to Elliotts head as he worked in his garden. The device broadcast electrical signals from his brain to a special radio receiver, which sent them by phone to a UGLA laboratory for recording and computer analysis.</p>
        <p>All Elliott had to do was dial a special telephone number and leave the phone off its hook while he went about his gardening. The computer analysis of the information made it possible for Elliotts doctors to do a great deal more for himand for many others with this and other neurological disturbances.</p>
        <p>And all this is not limited to the United States. The medical records of a million-and-a-half Swedes are now securely registered in a computers</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May 5,1970</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0035" />
        <p>Family J/ikekfyluay s,</p>
        <p>moRevolutionizing Medical Carefamily doctor, but they are dramatically changing the course of modern medicine By Dr. ARTHUR S. FREESE</p>
        <p>memory. The information is filed in the memory bank in layers, each with more detailed informationthree levels now but this can be expanded to 60. The first level has basic identification; the second, such critical medical data as drug allergies, vaccinations, and pAst illnesses. The third layer covers hospital visits and X-ray information.</p>
        <p>Although everyone has an identification number, the persons record can still be found from his name or even just his physical description in an emergency. Only hospital staff members with a need-to-know status have keys that can turn on the display terminals which in turn are coded to the computer by locations. The X-ray department, for example, can get only X-ray information.</p>
        <p>In addition, such ultrapersonal information as psychiatric or venereal-disease treatments can only be obtained by certain physicians who must insert a special code number into the machine. The computer also keeps track of those who requested such confidential displays.</p>
        <p>But the really major vital changes introduced by the medical computers are in the area of patient diagnosis and treatment. An IBM computer is now being used to detect abnormal</p>
        <p>ities in the human brain at the Michigan Department of Mental Health's Lafayette Clinic in Detroit. The computer tracks injected radioactive substances, studies the human knee reflex and the changes in the heart and breathing rate under different emotional conditions, scores and interprets psychological tests. It will soon be running the laboratory equipment to study closely the effects of different drugs on behavior. It can even sample the electrical changes in 16' areas of the brain every five milliseconds (thousandths of a second), providing 1,600 samples every half-second.</p>
        <p>In this same area, Dr. Aaron Paley, Denvers National Jewish Hospital chief of psychiatry, has used psychological tests to predict in 24 of 27 heart-surgery patients whether the patient would survive surgery! In Paleys own words, In this kind of study the computer is indispensable ... theres no other way of finding how 50 or 60 or 70 different variables relate to each other or to the problem at hand.'</p>
        <p>Others have used computerized monitoring systems to protect vulnerable newborn infants by helping the hospital head off outbreaks of infection. Computers have made it pos</p>
        <p>Fteld-of-vision test at University of Texas Southwestern Medical School in Dal-Uis uses data fed from rewired tv set to IBM computer to detect eye diseases.</p>
        <p>A Honeywell computer accumulates data compiled by this scintiscanner at Long Island Jewish Hospital, N.Y., allowing doctors accurately to pinpoint tumors.</p>
        <p>sible to dip your fingers into two tiny cups of salt water and get your electrocardiogram read by a computer with a better than 96% accuracy and in 15 seconds. They can spot tumors by teaming a Honeywell computer with a device which spots radioactive substances in the body.</p>
        <p>A medical team at the University of Texas Southwestern Medical School, Dallas, uses a computer to carry out special eye tests (a visual field: the space you can see while looking at a fixed object). The results are better than a well-trained technician or doctor can obtain with standard manual testing.</p>
        <p>At the recent 118th annual meeting of the American Medical Association, computers demonstrated their skill at diagnosing some 263 diseases, including 78 mental and emotional disorders. Over 1,750 different symptoms of gastrointestinal, urinary, and emotional diseases were handled by the computer, providing almost instantaneously a differential diagnosis based on the various combinations fed in by the participating physicians. The system has been compared to an encyclopedia of medical knowledge which opens itself at the appropriate page. I saw one psychiatrist walk away from the machine, shaking his head in sheer amazement at the way</p>
        <p>the machine had flawlessly fielded a series of problemssome of which were phonythat he had thrown at it!</p>
        <p>The latest use of computers has been for matching available transplantation organs to patients. In Europe, a book the size of a large city telephone directory lists some 300 potential recipients for kidney transplants. Their tissue type, age, sex, address, blood type and reactions, and disease state are all fed into a computer. At least once a month, the computer prints an updated readout of the recipient list, which is then distributed to the Netherlands, Belgium, Luxemburg, Switzerland, and West Germany. Here in the United States various versions of the same system are being carried out.</p>
        <p>Dr. G. Octo BoriMtt, director of the laboratory of computer science at the Massachusetts General Hospital, after pointing out the impact of computers on commercial and industrial activities, said: Themodem hospital with its divergent functions is badly in need of its own revolution in automation.</p>
        <p>Dr. Caceres words clearly sum up the whole matter: Automation of medical and laboratory tests . . . can change the course of modem medicine.</p>
        <p>It is inevitable in the long run, it is feasible now. #</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0036" />
        <p>Jules JUrgais^ ' Not just another pretty fiice.</p>
        <p>Ours has been a great name in watchmaking for 230 years.</p>
        <p>So you know we havent been getting by on looks alone.</p>
        <p>Our Swiss artisans would rather turn in their eyepieces than turn out a jeweled movement thats anything less than the ultimate in precision.</p>
        <p>Every part is triple-checked before it goes into the case. And double-checked after its in.</p>
        <p>A Jules Jiirgensen is never rushed through an assembly line. We choose our inspectors for their toughness, not their speed.</p>
        <p>Why do we spend so much time on our watches ?</p>
        <p>So theyll spend a lot of time with you.</p>
        <p>This $1,000 handcrafted mans wristband watch is called Eduardo. One piece Continental styling incorporates a 14K gold case and 14K Florentine bancl. The sleek</p>
        <p>wide oval case contains a magnificent 17 jewel movement. Other Jules Jiirgensen watches from |80 to $10,000 at fine stores everywhere. Write for an illustrated brochure and name of your nearest authorized dealer.</p>
        <p>Jules Jiirgensen Corp. Since 1740, makers of superlative watches and chronometers. U.S. Offices: 352 Park Avenue South, New York.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0037" />
        <p>Lets Draw a Skate-Board Rider</p>
        <p>By Ann Davidow</p>
        <p>What has two feet, four wheels, and glides?Riddle Me This</p>
        <p>How can you keep someone from putting something you dont want into your hand?</p>
        <p>(See Answer Box)Jump-Rope Maze</p>
        <p>Joan, Betty, and Jane have got hold of their big sisters jump ropes. And what a mess! Can you untangle them?Out for a Joy Ride</p>
        <p>ByHansKreis</p>
        <p>Find a shovel, an axe, and a dog.</p>
        <p>You Name It&amp;lt;5 Wil M</p>
        <p>See Answer BoxANSWER BOX</p>
        <p>JtDuq uiiq p0i puB X^wiq: ;ou s.aq ojn3i 5I%S</p>
        <p>S^SIJ 0!^Ul</p>
        <p>spueq jnoX qauojo :8}qx KI 9IPP!U</p>
        <p>*z b  01180115</p>
        <p>puooas )qdg :ii oinsj^ noj|^</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <p>This boy that on a skate-board rides!</p>
        <p>Silly II</p>
        <p>If you lead a horse to water and he wont drink, what should you do?</p>
        <p>(See Answer Box)</p>
        <p>Question</p>
        <p>Without looking, what two letters of the alphabet are not used on your telephone dial?</p>
        <p>(See Answer Box)</p>
        <p>W T During May Only:  W</p>
        <p>Diiusual</p>
        <p>offer</p>
        <p>Stock up on travelers checks at special pre-vacation savings. Up to $5000 worth fora fee of just $2.00 at banks everywhere.</p>
        <p>Opportunity to save up to $48.</p>
        <p>Because we want you to discover the advantages of First National City Travelers Checks, were offering you the opportunity again this year  during the month of Mayto buy up to $5,000 worth for a fee of only $2. (Plus the face value of the checks, of course.)</p>
        <p>The normal fee for travelers checks is a penny per dollar. But now, just in time for your summer vacation, you can save up to $48 (check the chart) during this unparalleled offer. (Less than $200 worth will still cost you less than $2.) So, dont miss this May only opportunity!</p>
        <p>Amount</p>
        <p>Usual</p>
        <p>fee</p>
        <p>May</p>
        <p>fee</p>
        <p>YOU</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>$ 300</p>
        <p>$ 3.00</p>
        <p>$2.00</p>
        <p>$ 1.00</p>
        <p>500</p>
        <p>5.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>3.00</p>
        <p>1,000</p>
        <p>10.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>8.00</p>
        <p>1,500</p>
        <p>15.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>13.00</p>
        <p>2,000</p>
        <p>20.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>18.00</p>
        <p>3,000</p>
        <p>30.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>28.00</p>
        <p>4,000</p>
        <p>40.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>38.00</p>
        <p>5,000</p>
        <p>50.00</p>
        <p>2.00</p>
        <p>48.00</p>
        <p>Welcomed Everywhere.</p>
        <p>First National City Bank has been in the travelers check business for over 65 years. Our checks are known and accepted in more than a million places around the globe. You can spend them as easily in Madagascar as in Massachusetts. As easily in Copenhagen as in Cleveland. And, by the way, theyre just as convenient on a weekend outing as on a worldwide tour.</p>
        <p>Refunded Everywhere.</p>
        <p>When money is lost or stolen, its gone forever. If First National City Travelers Checks are lost or stolen, you can get your money back fast. We have over 28,000 refund points worldwide thousands more than any other travelers check. Thats why our checks are like cash. Only better.</p>
        <p>To locate our nearest refund office anywhere abroad (plus Alaska and Hawaii), just call or visit any principal hotel. They're all regularly supplied with an updated list of all First National City Travelers Check refund points in their area. To locate our nearest re</p>
        <p>fund office anywhere in the Continental U.S.A.. dial Western Union Operator 25. Or call, toll-free, to: 800-243-6000.</p>
        <p>Buy now. Travel later.</p>
        <p>Even If youre not planning a trip before May 31st, you owe It to yourself to buy First National City Travelers Checks now at these substantial savings. Many people, in fact, keep our travelers checks on hand all year long against the time when they may need cash for an emergency.</p>
        <p>Offer good only in the United States and Puerto Rico...ends May 31st. 1970. So, act now to protect your cash from loss or theft. Get your supply of First National City Travelers Checks at banks everywhere. And save!</p>
        <p>Note to all banks and savings institutions:</p>
        <p>During the month of May, were making this unusual introductory offer to your customers at no cost to you. Your customers get the savings, but you earn the commissions you would normally have received. If you dont have our checks, get In touch with First National City Travelers Checks, 399 Park Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10022. Phone collect to: (212)559-0542.</p>
        <p>NATIONAL CITY SANK N.V. MCM8EII T.O.I.C.</p>
        <p>First National Gfylrayders Checks</p>
        <p>(The Everywhere Check)</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0038" />
        <p>for festive entertaining</p>
        <p>AMAZING VALUE!</p>
        <p>13 PIECE</p>
        <p>Hostess Fondue Set</p>
        <p>$Q90</p>
        <p>ONLY</p>
        <p> Server with Alcohol Warmer</p>
        <p> Four Molded Snack Trays</p>
        <p> Four Fondue Forks</p>
        <p> Four Use-and-Use-Again Plastic Bibs... colorfully decorated</p>
        <p>CHOICE OF THREE DECORATOR COLORS Lemon Yellow Flame Orange Apple Green</p>
        <p>Fondue is the most delicious snack of all . . . and fondue is great fun for all! Serve a cleverly seasoned cheese fondue and turn your guests loose! Fondue makes any party a festive event! Creating your fondue snack with this wonderfully attractive set is amazingly simple . . . instantly, it's the center of attraction. Here's everything you need! The ceramic server holds plenty for all your hungry guests ... and there are four matching molded snack trays . . . complete with four gleam</p>
        <p>ing fondue forks and four cleverly decorated plastic aprons that you can use over and over again. The server keeps your fondue piping hot with the aid of an alcohol flame. The complete 13 piece set is just $9.99 . . . and you have your personal choice of three new decorator colors! Only a limited number of sets are available for this special offer... so send your order today. Well ship at once so you can start your own fondue entertaining right away!</p>
        <p>Examine In your own home for 10 full days on our</p>
        <p>MONEY BACK GUARANTEE you must agree that this exciting</p>
        <p>new Fondue set Is worth far more than our low Introductory price ... or return It for full and prompt refund. We think youll fall in love with your Fondue Party Set... but if you dont, send it right back!</p>
        <p>Yours to use ind enjoy even it you return the Fondue Set</p>
        <p>5150</p>
        <p>Dozens of delectable ideas for fondues , . . piquant sauces to mi* with your favorite fondue cheese to create a taste treat worthy of a master chef No other fondue book offers so many clever party treatsi Yours FREE with Fondue Sef</p>
        <p>THE WHERE HOUSE</p>
        <p>815 East Rosecrans Avenue Los Angeles. California 90059</p>
        <p>USE THIS HANDY ORDER FORM THE WHERE HOUSE, Dept. FW 68004</p>
        <p>815 E. Rosecrans Ave., Los Angeles, Calif. 90059</p>
        <p>Please rush me  complete 13 piece Fondue Party Sets. I enclose</p>
        <p> Check  Money Order for $_________($9.99 for each Fondue Set plus</p>
        <p>$1.00 per set for shipping and handling.) (If California resident add 5% sales tax.)</p>
        <p>NOTE: Check here it you want shipment C.O.D. </p>
        <p>Enclose $3.00 and pay balance upon delivery.</p>
        <p>Check Color; Q Yellow Q] Orange Q Green</p>
        <p>Name___________________________________</p>
        <p>Address. City_</p>
        <p>State</p>
        <p>-Zip.</p>
        <p>Complete Satisfaction or Return for RtfundQUIZ</p>
        <p>What Do You Know About Money?</p>
        <p>By John E. Gibson</p>
        <p>E</p>
        <p>OVE MAY make the world go J around, but what oils the wheels and lubricates the gears is money.</p>
        <p>And a happy man is one who has love in his heart and money in his pocket. But whatever your financial status, you may be interested to learn in the following true-false quiz what the experts have learned.</p>
        <p>1. Women are more likely to lose money than men are.</p>
        <p>2. Most workers would rather have an increase in pay than an extra vacation.</p>
        <p>3. The fundamental cause of most marital disputes is disagreement over money.</p>
        <p>4. A compulsive spender will be much happier if he is forced to save money.</p>
        <p>5. The tightwad who is miserly with his money is trying to punish himself.</p>
        <p>6. Husbands seldom spend as much money on clothes as their wives do.</p>
        <p>7. Carrying more money in your wallet can increase your self-confidence.</p>
        <p>ANSWERS</p>
        <p>1. True. A nationwide survey has shown that women ar twice as likely as men to lose money^to mislay it and forget where they left it.</p>
        <p>2. False. According to a University of Illinois survey of industrial workers, extra vacation time got the most votes.</p>
        <p>3. False. One leading authority observes it is generally agreed that quarrels over money are just symptoms of some other conflict such as jealousy or in-law irritations.</p>
        <p>4. False. Dr. James A. Knight, Professor of Psychiatry at Tulane University, says that regardless of how much he earns, the compulsive spender can never get as much money as he feels the need to spend. If a compulsive spender is forced to save money, he may become emotionally upset.</p>
        <p>5. True. The penny pincher. Dr. Knights studies show, is self-punitive, depriving himself of things he needs or would enjoy even when adequate money is available for those things. Everything in the misers lifeeven his own pleasureis subordinated to money. He worships money.</p>
        <p>6. False. Cornell University studies show that in moderate-income families, its often the husband who spends the most on clothes. However, with families in the higher income brackets,the situation reverses itself, with the wife spending more.</p>
        <p>7. True. Many people who feel socially insecure are made to feel much more comfortable and at ease with a large amount of money in their wallet. With many individuals, a $50 or $100 bill in their wallet makes all the difference in self-confidence they radiate and the impression they make on others. </p>
        <p>See Your Income Go Farther</p>
        <p>Readers wanting guidance on how to acquire more of the things they really want, get out of debt, provide for college expenses, trips-all without earning a penny moreare urged to send for Arthur Milton*s helpful, up-to-date book, *How to Get a Dollar's Value for a Dollar Spent." Mail only $4.95 to 5060S "DOLLAR'S VALUE," 2057 Book Bldg., 4500 N.W. 1S5 St., Miami, Fla. SS054.</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0039" />
        <p>BIG BEMS4LE!</p>
        <p>Save on elegant triple dresser bedrooms by Lenoir House</p>
        <p>*399For a limited time only!</p>
        <p>It is rare to find bedrooms of this quality and design at this remark* ably low price. Each beautiful group includes a sweeping triple dresser, mirror, spacious chest and handsome headboard. Matching night stand... $69.95. Dont miss this outstanding sale!BROWN FuAHteWest End Circle, Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0040" />
        <p>Test your talent!Mxjmaywina $^jOO scholarship in commetoial art</p>
        <p>Draw the boxer any size you want except like a tracing. Use pencil. Every qualified entrant gets a professional estimate of talent. Winner receives a complete home study course in commercial art. Students are taught, individually, by professional artists on the staff of Art Instruction Schools, one of Americas leading home study art schools. Purpose of contest is to uncover hidden talent. Entries for the contest must be received by June 30, 1970. No entries can be returned. Our students and professional artists not eligible. Contest winner will be notified. Mail your drawing today.</p>
        <p>________mail this coupon to enter contest</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;/art instruction schools</p>
        <p>studio OY-5010 500 South Fourth Street, Minneapolis, Minn. 55415Please enter my drawing in your contest.</p>
        <p>(PLEASE PRINT)</p>
        <p>Name.</p>
        <p>Occuoatlon</p>
        <p>Age</p>
        <p>Address</p>
        <p>...... Aot.</p>
        <p>Clty_</p>
        <p>State.</p>
        <p>.County_</p>
        <p>.Zip Code.</p>
        <p>Telephone Number.</p>
        <p>Accredited by the Accrediting Commission of the National Home Study Council. Approved for Veterans Training.The Patter of Feet</p>
        <p>This is a tenet of suburban lore, From which a law is drawn:</p>
        <p>The world will beat a pathway to your door As soon as you plant a lawn.</p>
        <p>Georgie Starbuck Galbraith</p>
        <p>A woman called an airlines office and asked hurriedly if the flight from Chicago had arrived. .The agent checked and informed her that the flight had just arrived.</p>
        <p>Thanks very much, the caller said. My husband is coming home on that flight, and I just wanted to know if it were time to put the biscuits in the oven.</p>
        <p>Herm Albright</p>
        <p>Nowadays there is no substitute for educationunless, of course, its learning.</p>
        <p>During a physical examination, the doctor noticed that the patients hand shook. You drink a lot, dont you? he asked.</p>
        <p>Nope replied the patient. Spill most of it.</p>
        <p>Lucille S. Harper</p>
        <p>Comedy writers meeting: com-vention.  Frank Tyger</p>
        <p>How come you always keep a bowl of goldfish on your desk? a curious caller asked an executive.</p>
        <p>Its like this, replied the businessman. Its relaxing to have something around here that doesnt complain or ask for a raise when it opens its mouth.</p>
        <p>Gertrude Olinghouse</p>
        <p>Matrimony: One state that permits a woman to work 18 hours a day.  Lucille J. GoodyearAdvice to a New Gardener</p>
        <p>A word of wisdom in advance, Which wonH cost you a penny: These twenty-four tomato plants Are twenty-two too many.</p>
        <p>Betty Billipp</p>
        <p>An optimist is a middle-aged woman who believes the cleaner is shrinking her Rothes.</p>
        <p>^  John Shotwell</p>
        <p>Mr. Forbes cannot see you, said the secretary. He has a strained back.</p>
        <p>Look, Miss, said the visitor, I didnt come to wrestle with him. I just want to talk to him.</p>
        <p>Dorothea Kent</p>
        <p>A traveling salesman arrived in a town and went to one of his chief customers.</p>
        <p>The customer said there was a telegram waiting for him. When the salesman read it, he frowned.</p>
        <p>My wife has just presented me with triplets! he announced grimly.</p>
        <p>Well, said the customer. Now you know how it feels to get more goods than you ordered.</p>
        <p>Jack KentFine Isnt Dandy</p>
        <p>Speed-reading is mastered Quite quickly, Its true.</p>
        <p>All it takes is a library Book that is due.</p>
        <p>Richard Armour</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Monday, Helen, were moving back to Activity City.</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May 3,1970</p>
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        <p>inexpeasve, ^</p>
        <p>" i :</p>
        <p>w"4&amp;gt;^  lifFCH WIUL not lfM_.,..,</p>
        <p>^OiATO Tins StASiS^</p>
        <p>f - We urge you to order tihe  . Norf^pi^t Rose kits now,</p>
        <p>I  T^i^esi^^lisIs* You</p>
        <p>y wiUkdeli^t^byftecii^ y ' jud beauty and fun it  wi</p>
        <p>tcryour home. Th^ is four only dumce to order. Be sure to ffl out coupon and mail it today. This &amp;lt;mer will not be ;: repeated this season.</p>
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        <p>I Creative Stitchery oept. 3390  )</p>
        <p>1  ................</p>
        <p>4500 N.W. 135th St., Miami. Fla.33054</p>
        <p>Fill out coupon and enclose check or money order. Florida residents pleie add 4% sales tax. Allow 4 weeks for handling and mailing. (Sorry, we are unable to handle Canadian, foreign or C.O.D. orders.) To avoid delays, please indicate zip code.</p>
        <p>Check items desired;</p>
        <p> #61,063 Single Deep Pink</p>
        <p>Rose, Right  $2.98 ea. $_</p>
        <p> ^#61,064 Single Pink Rose,</p>
        <p>Bottom................................ 2.98ea. -</p>
        <p> #61,065 Single Red Rose,</p>
        <p>Left  2.98 ea.</p>
        <p>_#61,066 Rose Spray,</p>
        <p>2.98 ea.</p>
        <p>Top</p>
        <p>_#61,067 Special, all 4 Roses (Embroidery  only)  10.98 set  _</p>
        <p>_#61,068 Oval frame  2.98 ea.  _</p>
        <p>j#61,014 Catalog of other kits...........................25 ea.  _</p>
        <p>(Add 25t post, each  kit)  Postage  _</p>
        <p>Total  enclosed  $_</p>
        <p>NAME.</p>
        <p>ADDRESS-</p>
        <p>CITY.</p>
        <p>STATE</p>
        <p>-ZIP-</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0042" />
        <p>MEN-WOMEN-COUPIES</p>
        <p>MOTEL CAREERS AVAIUBLE</p>
        <p>Would you like a new exciting career in the growing motel Industry? We can train you for a stimulating, well&amp;gt;paying position as Motel Managers, Assistant ^Managers, Clerks, Housekeepers and Hostesses. Meet famous and interesting people; travel if you want to; join in social activities; live in pleasant surroundings. Apartment usually furnished. Age no barriermaturity an asset.</p>
        <p>Keep present job while training at home in spare time followed by practical training at one of our training motels. Nationwide placement assistance. For FREE information fill out and mail couoon today! Accredited Member N.RS.C.</p>
        <p>VA APPROVED FOR VETERANS ANO INSERVICE PERSONNEL UNDER NEW Gl BILL</p>
        <p>PLEASE PRINT</p>
        <p>Name_</p>
        <p>Address_</p>
        <p>City_</p>
        <p>Phone_</p>
        <p>UNIVERSAL MOTEL SCHOOLS, Dept. F W 1901 N.W. 7 SL. Mimi, Florida 33125</p>
        <p>State.</p>
        <p>Zip.</p>
        <p>Age.</p>
        <p>4cid indigestion is through, by gum!</p>
        <p>Soothed away by Chooz chewing gum antacid. Gas, heartburn, stomach upsetduetoacid indigestion all vanish. And fast. Added attraction: Chooz gum is just plain delicious. Pass the Chooz, please. Chooz.</p>
        <p>The only chewing gum antacid.  </p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>For a womans intimate deodorant problems</p>
        <p>At lasta deodorant for you</p>
        <p>... and for your clothes too!</p>
        <p>For women only-heres the special feminine deodorant that destroys odor where you need more than an ordinary deodorant. Its famous, easy-to-use Quest Deodorant Powder!</p>
        <p>(1) Quest helps keep your body oiibr-free  even m the most intimate areas.</p>
        <p>(2) Quest destroys odor on sanitary napkins. Helm prevent odor where odor lingera longestunder bras, girdles, panty-hose.</p>
        <p>Special deodorant for a womans special needs</p>
        <p>ENDDllIllllMISCn</p>
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        <p>KRTIKS</p>
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        <p>Miracle plastic DENTURITE refits loose dentures in five minutes. This "Cushion of Comfort eases sore pms. You eat anything. Laugh, talk, even sneeze without embarrassment. No more food panicles under plates.</p>
        <p>DENTURITE lasts for months. Ends daily bother of powder, paste or cushions. Just remove when refit is needed. Tasteless. Odorless. Money back guarantee. At all drug counters.</p>
        <p>WELDER</p>
        <p>Oott work of $85.00 veldtr ret costs only</p>
        <p>mWw F&amp;gt;uw5iMr,iim,ii,t</p>
        <p>iq-Day money &amp;lt;ir back guarantee even aluminum. No expe-</p>
        <p>VVelds all metals .....    uc-</p>
        <p>rience needed. Follow simple directions. Uses</p>
        <p>appliances,</p>
        <p>etc. NOTHING ftSE TO BUY! Comes complete ^'anPS. etc.</p>
        <p>10 YEAR GUARANTEE. Send ^.00 and pay J16.95 plus small C.O.D. when delivered or send $18 95 !?' P?fP|"lsl"Pment to WEL DEX, Oept.W^iao, Box 10776, Houston, Tex. 77018.</p>
        <p>Huge savinu on tiny, ill-in-the-ear, behind the ear, eyeglass and body models.</p>
        <p>New space age models are so tiny and well concealed your closest friends may never even notice.</p>
        <p>FREE HOME TRIAL. No ___</p>
        <p>down payment. Low as $10 monthly. Money back guarantee. Order direct and save. Write today for free catalog and booklet. PRESTIGE, Dept, 0-160 . Box 1W7. Houston. Tex. 770H.</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Mmm</p>
        <p>DISCOVER/</p>
        <p>MERICA</p>
        <p>When You Oriier By Mail From Family Weoidy...</p>
        <p>Ham mm tgu km Mb 9m Mwg. Tkt bi M pM b npbMt CMPMIM. Tb kmm am mm ma cbcM 9m ran-Mbr b FMb WMkir, kmnwdmwrn gmtUm mm mm mkr, rib: Smtaa ML FMb kmut. Ml ummm 9km fmK N.Y. 10022.</p>
        <p>FAMILY WEEKLY COOKBOOK</p>
        <p>Dinner to Honor</p>
        <p>MELANIE DE PROFT Food Editor</p>
        <p>A pretty, delicate cake roll mth a creamy lemon-ginger filling is a dessert certain to please Mother on her special day. Serve slices of this delicious cake with freshly brewed tea or black coffee.</p>
        <p> Every day may be the day to honor Mother, but what a privilege to do something extra special for her very own day! With careful planning, these recipes will go together easily for the entire dinner menu. With a salad, buns, and cake prepared the previous day, just-before-serving tasks to be completed would be unmolding the salad, reheating the buns, and filling and rerolling the cake. Happy Mothers Day!</p>
        <p>Zest-o-Lemon Cake Roll</p>
        <p>1 pkg. (181/2 oz.) lemon chiffon cake mix 3 to 4 tablespoons grated lemon peel Confectioners sugar 1 can (16'/z to 18 oz.) ready-to-serve lemon pudding, chilled V4 cup cut crystallized ginger</p>
        <p>1. Line two 15xl0xl-in. jelly-roll pans with aluminuin foil, allowing it to extend about 1 in. beyond ends of pans.</p>
        <p>2. Prepare cake mix following package directions and increasing lemon peel to amount listed above. Turn an equal amount of batter into each pan; spread.</p>
        <p>3. Bake at 350F. about 20 min., or until top of cake springs back when lightly touched. Remove from oven to wire racks and allow to stand 10 min.</p>
        <p>4. Meanwhile, spread out 2 clean towels and sift confectioners sugar generously over each.</p>
        <p>5. Loosen cakes from edges of pans; invert each onto a sugar-coated towel. Remove foil and trim off any crisp edges of cake. Beginning with a short side, roll up each warm cake along with towel; set the cake rolls on wire racks to cool.</p>
        <p>6. When ready to fill cake rolls, mix the pudding and ginger together. Carefully unroll each cooled cake and spread with half of the pudding; reroll. If desired, lightly sift additional confectioners sugar over the cake rolls.</p>
        <p>7. Transfer each cake roll to an attractive serving board or plate. Garnish with whole strawberries. Slice and serve.</p>
        <p>Two filled cake rolls</p>
        <p>Almond Buns</p>
        <p>These buns, baked with an almond paste 0ing, remind us of the superb Scandinavian Semlor, ivhich are usually split, filled with almond paste and whipped cream, then replaced with their *lids and sprinkled with confectioners sugar for a delicious dessert.</p>
        <p>1 pkg. active dry yeast</p>
        <p>Vi cup warm water (105*F.-115*F.)</p>
        <p>Vt cup butter or margarine Vi teaspoon almond extract Vi teaspoon vanilla extract Vi cup sugar</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons finely chopped blanched</p>
        <p>almonds 1 egg</p>
        <p>3 toZVi cups all-purpose flour Vi teaspoon salt</p>
        <p>Vz cup heavy cream Vi cup water</p>
        <p>Vi cup (4 oz.) almond paste 1 tablespoon cream</p>
        <p>1. Sprinkle the yeast over warm water and stir until dissolved; set the dissolved yeast aside.</p>
        <p>2. Cream butter or margarine with the extracts until softened; add the sugar and almonds and beat thoroughly. Add the egg and beat until fluffy.</p>
        <p>3. Stir in a blend of 1 cup of the flour and salt, then the Vi cup cream with the water; beat vigorously until smooth. Add the yeast, continuing to beat vigorously.</p>
        <p>4. Beat in enough remaining flour to make a soft (not sticky) dough.</p>
        <p>5. Turn dough onto a floured surface, cover, and let it rest 5 to 10 min. Then knead until satiny and elastic. Form into a ball and put into a greased bowl; turn to bring greased surface to top. Cover; let rise in a warm place until the dough</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0043" />
        <p>is doubled, about 1 hr.</p>
        <p>6. Meanwhile, mix almond paste with 1 tablespoon cream and blend until paste is slightly softened. Set aside.</p>
        <p>7. Punch down dough, turn out, and divide into 18 equal portions for buns. Flatten dough. Place 1 very generous teaspoonful of the almond paste in center, bring dough up over filling, and seal in filling.</p>
        <p>8. Shape them into round, smooth buns and place, sealed side down, 2 in. apart on greased baking sheet. Cover; let rise in a warm place until light, 35 to 45 min.</p>
        <p>9. Brush tops of buns lightly with beaten egg.</p>
        <p>10. Bake at 400F. 12 to 15 min. Serve warm or cooled.</p>
        <p>18 medium-sized Almtmd Buns</p>
        <p>Note: To reheat buns, tear off squares of heavy-duty aluminum foil, wrap about 6 buns in each square, and place packets in a warm oven.Standing Rib Roast of Beef</p>
        <p>A standing rib roast of beef requires little time for preparation. To ease last-minute dinner preparations, accompany with gravy from a mix, instant-style mashed potatoes, and a variety of perfectly seasoned and sauced boil-in-a-bag vegetables.</p>
        <p>Place a roast, fat side up, on a rack in a shallow roasting pan. Roast uncovered at 300F.to 325F. allowing 23-25 minutes per pound for rare, 27-30 min. per pound for medium, and 33 to 35 min. per pound for well-done meat. Roast will be easier to carve if allowed to set 15 or 20 min. after removing from the oven. Accompany with a sauce boat of gravy.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0044" />
        <p>THIS IS A Genuine DIAMOND In Looks Only ,,,</p>
        <p>50c</p>
        <p>How A150 Year Old Turtle</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>Yours For Apx</p>
        <p>A Carat Size</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Acclainwl By Many as Tht Mott Outstanding Sl||n Beautifying Discovery In The Past 25 Years!</p>
        <p>Help Make Your Skin Look 7-15 Years Younger</p>
        <p>. . . Without expensive facials, exercise, machinery, medicated lotions or phoney looking make-up!</p>
        <p>The Turtle sometimes grows up to ISO years old. Long ago natives from the islands discovered the many wonderful uses derived from this exotic but natural creature. Today thanks to scientifically processed oil from the turtle and fortified with other beautifiers contained in Spring Again* TURTLE OIL Skin Cream Formula, it is possible to help reverse human aging appearance caused by skin dryness and restore a new look of youth, as long as you use it. The affect is almost like a fKe lift but without the pain and inconvenience. Women 35, 45, 55 or even 65 years of age may look 7-15 years younger. It penetrates and helps soften wrinkles around eyes and mouth. Flabby skin and puffiness look tighter and more firm. Skin is actually encouraged to acquire the naturaf clear smooth texture and glow of youth that is every woman's dream. So take a tip from those island beauties who always seem to look younger than their years. Order Spring Again TURTLE OIL today. On guarantee of satisfxtion or money back. Only $3.00 ppd. C.O.D.'s postage extra ($1.00 deposit). Write;</p>
        <p>Fool FriendsFool Experts</p>
        <p>Look Prosperous Without Risk</p>
        <p>Wear your fake diamond The Princess" Solitaire ring, in its Tiffany-like setting and enjoy all the thrills of wearing the real thing. Look like a million ... feel like a million ... so expertly and ingeniously does it resemble at least a $1,000 diamond ring you will be flonished how it twins with a real mined stone in brilliance ... yet it costs only a small fraction of its expensive counterpart  . . yes, a surprisingly low apx. 50c a carat size. Set in adjustable rhodium plated bond (platinum-like). Faceted 3 Carat Size that is lustrous and sparkling. No camouflage Iwttom. Crystal clear. . . only you will know it $ not real and the low, low price ^ I *  for  diamond  lovers.  Irre-</p>
        <p>s stible! Dont risk wearing your expensive diamond rings these days. Be safe. Order at least one today at our introductory price of $1.69 plus 25(* for postage and handling. $1.94 complete in attractive gift box. Rusfi</p>
        <p>iss?</p>
        <p>I Brand Central $ta., M.Y.C. 10017</p>
        <p>I Enclosed find $1.69 plus 25c post ft I hdlg. in full payment for "The Princess." Adjustable size. It is understood if I am not 100% delighted I will return within 10 days for prompt refund.</p>
        <p>The FLEETWOOD* GOMPANV, D&amp;lt;pl.AH.427 W. Randolpli St., Chicafo, III. 60E06</p>
        <p>1894 M0NT60MERY WARD CATALOG</p>
        <p>NMrMf</p>
        <p>- ? - /S4.95</p>
        <p>+50F</p>
        <p>4*.  .  *  *s  /bb.  4</p>
        <p>.  '  CnBnctnrs</p>
        <p>4a, ItMuOm ** 75Yrs.0W! Oldest Rap-608 Giant sized SVi'xir pages. ^ Weighs 3 lbs. Thousands of items Ped as sold in the 1890s by Americas first and still great mailorder house. Describedclear-ly, illustrated, priced; are furniture, farm implements, medicines, patent leather pumps, bustles, buggy whips and more. Everything the well-appointed home or farm needed. In the 1890's a tufted couch was $10.00, two Parlor Chairs $7.80, Childs Cradle $1.25, Pocket Pistol 50g. Perfect conversation piece. Ideal gift for all.</p>
        <p>Send check or M.O. No C.O.D.'s. Satis. Guar. J. W. HOLST. Inc., D.pt fwi</p>
        <p>1005 Eaif Bay St.. Eaxt Tawa. Mich. 48730</p>
        <p>Life</p>
        <p>After</p>
        <p>Death</p>
        <p>What happens to a person the next moment after the heart stops beating? In the event the deceased was not a Christian, is he now forever lost? Will we ever see our beloved dead again? The Bible answers these questions!</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I'l-iiame</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Address</p>
        <p>I I I I I I</p>
        <p>I Name Address</p>
        <p>, City  State</p>
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        <p>HH.e ANSwtRS. Oaei. r ao. amiFi eMt oato</p>
        <p>Mi* Vwtfc. N.V. 10001</p>
        <p>Please send me a froe copy of the 24-page booklet, Life After Death," without obligation.</p>
        <p>i City</p>
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        <p>City</p>
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        <p>BLOW Y0URS6LF</p>
        <p>UPto POSTER SIZE</p>
        <p>2x3S;450</p>
        <p>3x4 R $7.50</p>
        <p>116x2 Ft.$3.50</p>
        <p>Send any black and white or color photo,</p>
        <p>Polaroid print or magazine photo. A great Gift.idea ... A splendid Gag . . . ideal room decoration . . . perfect for parties. Poster rolled and mailed in sturdy tube.</p>
        <p>Your original returned undamaged. Add 50c for postage and handling for EACH item ordered. Send check, or M.O (No C 0 0 ) To: Dept. FW53</p>
        <p>PHOTO POSTER IHC. SS?," '</p>
        <p>iCOIN GRAB BAG</p>
        <p>mme</p>
        <p>NEW PROTON RINSE Safely CURLS, WAVES HAIR</p>
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        <p>Flaatwoad Co. DapI * 27 427 W.madalWi. Ckta., lit mm</p>
        <p>Less than</p>
        <p>EA.</p>
        <p>OS r q</p>
        <p>TOWELS I</p>
        <p>UNWOVEN COTTON AND RAYON</p>
        <p>That's richt! Two dozen large towels for only $1.00 (plus 10c for extra postage and handling). Think of itLARGE-SIZE unwoven Cotton and Rayon towels for less than a nickel apiece! Terrific value youve got to see to believe. We had to buy more than a hundred thousand to get this special low price. Now were passing this savings on to you. our customers. All orders on a FIRST COME. FIRST SERVED basis, so be sure and order all youll need youll sure use all youll buyand youll never get a buy like this again. Thank you, ORDER NOW! MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE.</p>
        <p>MURRAT HILL HOUSE Dept. T-679 P.O. Box 264 Farmlngdgle, L.I., N.Y. 1173S</p>
        <p>Heres Hie Way To Corb A Rapture</p>
        <p>Cmeim SMUmti Tm Fimi Oak</p>
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        <p>Kodacolor Film</p>
        <p>DEVELOPED i PRI.NTED</p>
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        <p>w &amp;gt; ISO iw. ac tk c* ta. (w. mrnl mmmm. Mta wlw .( MSO a </p>
        <p>usm m M mm! N. mm - 1 I IJ</p>
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        <p>hr a (Mmmm S Oto r&amp;gt; Cmmw) iM ^ hr HPm  rlMM.1 mImm! SwfOrr</p>
        <p>IhM 0&amp;gt;ht TMty! SMy.MOOOV Fmm</p>
        <p>I MhrraOOMM  --</p>
        <p>MATT NUMISS, DopL F.53,292 41st Av., L.I.C., N.Y. 11101</p>
        <p>TRBASuiii</p>
        <p>Find buried gold, liivcf, ooim. ucMiiics.</p>
        <p>SPbHcrfufModffa</p>
        <p>EYEGLASSES by MAIL as low as $1.95</p>
        <p>Write for I FREE Cstslog with 14</p>
        <p> mpit Lint</p>
        <p>Quality READING or BIFOCAL Glassoo| for Far and Near</p>
        <p>Limited to folks approximately 40 years orj ojder who do not have astigmatism or disease of the eye, and who have difficulty reading or seeing far. We sell in interstate commerce exclusively.  Est. 19391</p>
        <p>Thousands o1 Customers ADVANCE SPECTACLE CO., INC. FW*5 537 S. Dearborn St, Chicago, ill. 60605]</p>
        <p>KodMiFamOMr I. StndlMkadvMdioidtr.</p>
        <p>* LMtlroMparad.</p>
        <p>I* Offer expires, May 1,1971. m^mmeaaeaei~</p>
        <p>I SKRUOLAND PHOTO'</p>
        <p>I ItopL FW.LafeaGandwa.Ws. S3147 g</p>
        <p>X-  NORTHEL  Reactiva</p>
        <p>tor worin to keep septic taidt and cempotH ,1 dean. A bacteria ooo- cntrate breaks oUdb' and greao wotfct to pcewemt 4 flow, bock^B, odon. Regulsr use csn ssve !'ir coi^ pumpiiig or dig-ting. Simply arix dry powder in water, flndb down toOeL Noniwiaonotis, noo-cauatk. Money bnck gusianee of aatiriactkm. Si* sMwdM wpplr. I3.9S, or foU ycart mpptr. ooJy 17.00, pot^aid.</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>F.D.</p>
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        <p>: Boa lin, illhinespiBi, Mfeni. 1</p>
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        <p>' BOX 1083B, HOUSTON, TEX. 77011</p>
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        <p>KUnXTH ioriaa a oomtet cariiioB: heUb</p>
        <p>platM ao mndi fimMr and maggm  wt.tad talk with^mS oomforiaiid aaeanty; in many cansa nbaoat as wsll M witb Bstnrsl toath. Klnteh Imern tfao gmstsnt iiar of n dnppiiB.</p>
        <p>I't hoy Kl^^dff^%</p>
        <p>ami wiU mafl yon a BwiimisMS .RUnrCH CO., Itx 080E,Eta*B, N.Y. 14102</p>
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        <p>1** mmnm-au.</p>
        <p>Orta lariw fS.OO add SOc pwtag.</p>
        <p>U.S. Hearing Aids * * SAVE up to 67%</p>
        <p>BUY NEW AMERICAN-MADE AIDS</p>
        <p>direct from factory. Behind-the Ear, All-in-the-Ear, Eye Glass Aids. One of Americas largest selections of top quality aids. 20 days FREE HOME TRIAL. No depositNo money down. Easy payments. No interest. FREE Ear Molds. New fitting plan.POWERFUL BODY AIDS $29 2?. No salesman will call. Write: LLOYD coup Dept fws, 905 9th St., Rockford, III. 61108</p>
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        <p>Wnte for ^</p>
        <p>fflfe catalog</p>
        <p>Low as 44.95</p>
        <p>Traps without Injury squirrels, rhipmunks. ralr-hits. mink, fox, raccoons, stray anim.nls, pets etc. Sizes for every need. Also traps for fish sparrows, pigeons, turtles, quail, etc. Save ori our low factory prices. Send no money. Write sw^rets. MUSTANG MFG. CO., Dept. .N-81, Box 10880 Hoirston. Te.v. 7701s.  .  i  IVSSO.</p>
        <p>Drain Flooded Cellar Fast</p>
        <p>I  SPEpy DRAINEB dnlni cellars,</p>
        <p>pools, boats, any flooded area. Just couple this</p>
        <p>you turn</p>
        <p>^1?  '  PfiMure  makei  the</p>
        <p>dralnw work. No moving parts to Jam or wear</p>
        <p>I vtL j* *  hipping  and handling'</p>
        <p>'770 Tiaiet Souara Stetiao. M.Y.. N.Y.</p>
        <p>loox!</p>
        <p>SPANISH MAINLY Wrought iron candelabrum designed and inspired by the romantic beauty of Spanish styling goes with any setting. In matte black, its a graceful decoration. 12V2" tall. $3.98 plus 650 postage. Harriet Carter, Dept. FAW, Plymouth Meeting, Pa. 19462.</p>
        <p>DRESSY, TO BOOT! Crafted to his own specifications, the "Arnold Palmer" dress boot is in black grained glove leather or burnt chestnut leather with brass buckle. Leather lined; soles; rubber heels. In D 7-12; EE 8-11. $29.95. Chas. Chester, FW, Brockton, Mass. 02403.</p>
        <p>FREE SAMPLE Montgomery Wards new 126 color print film for Instamatic and other cartridge snapshot cameras. Reg. 990 in catalog. Send 250 postage and handling with self-addressed slip of paper to the Wardway Film Offer, P.O. Box 821, Rosemount, Minn. 55068.</p>
        <p>i9d4 U.S. COIN SET. 1964 was the last year silver coins were minted. These Brilliant Uncirculated Sets in plastic holders make fine gifts, and will increase in value. $2.95 each. Includes catalog. Robert Harris, Dept. 2A, 2373 Pruneridge, Santa Clara, Calif. 95050.</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0045" />
        <p>IN A JAM? Burglar-proof door jam keeps intruders out Just prop the fork end under the door knob and push the oor pad end toward the door. Adjusts from 26 to 38 in. Made of steel with chrome finish. Telescopes into suitcase for travel. $5.95 plus 75# post. 2 for $10.95 plus $1. J. W. Holst. FWIO, 1005 E. Bay St., East Tawas, Mich. 48730.</p>
        <p>Weekend</p>
        <p>Shopper</p>
        <p>By SUSAN PAINE</p>
        <p>GOOD AND TOUCH! "Nailette is a great nail toughener that takes only 3 days to see and fed the results. Who knows, you may even be able to pull tacks without breaking a nail! Nail trouble? Youll want to try Nailette. $3. Fleetwood, Dept. XX-40, 427 W. Randolph, Chicago, 111. 60606.</p>
        <p>LOOKING AHEAD to an airline career? Airlines want men and women for good-paying positions in ticketing, passenger service, etc. High school grads,</p>
        <p>17-38, write Weaver Airline Personnel School, Dept. FWS,</p>
        <p>3521 Broadway, Kansas City, Mo. 64111.</p>
        <p>HOW TO Booklet describes many ways to raise money, how to run your fund raising campaign and lists items available on a trial basis. Ideal for members of church, school, youth or fraternal organizations. Free booklet from Collingwood Fund Raising, Dept. 31-E, 44 Warren St., Providence, R.I. 02901.</p>
        <p>ITS EASY to entertain friends or enjoy leisure hours by playing the guitar. Learn to play a song the 1st day; any by ear or note in 7. 66-pg. system with photos, charts, chord finder, songs, guitar book. $2.98. Ed Sale, Studio FW-5, Avon by the Sea, N.J. 07717.</p>
        <p>SCRIPT PIN personalized with 3-initial monogram is lovely as a pin or use as scarf holder. 18k gold plated. About 2x2". Graceful script letters suit any fashion scene. Underline initial of last name. $5.95 plus 50# postage. The Martin Co., Dept. FW, P.O. Box 314, Roslyn, N.Y. 11576.</p>
        <p>PUTTINC OFF taking off because you like to eat? Well,</p>
        <p>Meno Peso combines vitamins, minerals and a bulk producing</p>
        <p>agent to control appetite! An ______</p>
        <p>easy way to lose weight. 17-day supply, $5; 34, $9; 51, $13; 68, $16.50. Bellido Prod., Dept FW-5, 414 Broadway, New York, N.Y. 10013.</p>
        <p>-m</p>
        <p>Decorator^s Full Color Wall Grouping</p>
        <p> Five ornate antique gold baroque frames with glass.</p>
        <p> Superb reproductions of the worlds greatest masterpieces color coordinated to enhance any decor.</p>
        <p>only</p>
        <p>et</p>
        <p>of</p>
        <p>five</p>
        <p>$2-98</p>
        <p>Any wait in your home can now be glorified by a decorators choice of famous works of Eurt^s most renowiwd 16th, 17th, 18th and 19th century masters. Flawless reproductions of each artists finest canvases have been carefully assembled, color coordinated and framed under glass. Included are the vivid oils of Leonardo da Vinci, Rembrandt, Gainsborough, Manet, Renoir, Cezanne, Vandyke, Ingres and Van Gogh. The black &amp;amp; white illustration above cannot begin to do them justice.</p>
        <p>These full color masterpieces, each exact duplicates of the originals on dis{day in museums and galleries throughout the world, have lost none of their creators technique, infinite detail, vibrant colors and subtle hues. Each is complemented by a magnificently sculptured baroque frame finished in antique gold. The four smaller pictures measure 3" x4V6", the larj^ 4V^" X 7". They can be aaranged in numerous elegant patterns to beautify your living, dining or bedroom... even a hallway or staircase.</p>
        <p>Thu Offer Cannot Be Repeated This Season Never before have groupings containing frames and prints of this quality been available at anywhere near our low price. And never previously at any price has an interior decorator been commissioned in such a consultant capacity. These pieces are imported and because of limited supply, we urge you order immediately.</p>
        <p>Money Back if Not Deli|dited Our guarantee clearly indicates the confidence we have in our products. We want you to be delighted with your purchase not merely satisfied or pleased. If you are not delighted your money will be promptly refunded  no questions asked.  _</p>
        <p>Moil Money Bock Guarantee Coupon Todoy</p>
        <p>HARRIET CARTER. Dept. FW-53 Plymouth Meeting, Po. 19462</p>
        <p>Please send me the baroque framed Decorator's Full Color Wall Groupings as indicated below:</p>
        <p> I set, $2.98 plus 50&amp;lt; postage</p>
        <p> 2 sets, $5.75 plus 85&amp;lt; postage</p>
        <p>n Each additional set, only $2.98, postpaid</p>
        <p>I enclose check cr money order for $_ond  luider-</p>
        <p>stand that my money will be promptly refunded if I om not delighted with these art treasures.</p>
        <p>Nome _ Address City_</p>
        <p>State</p>
        <p>Zip</p>
        <p>READ tiny print with ^''2-frame magnifying glasses. Look over normal viewing. Mens or womens black with silver thread; brown with gold; black or brown tortoise. Be sure to specify. $5.95 each ppd. Send your order to Joy Optical, Dept. 895, 84 Fifth Avenue, New York, N.Y. 10011.</p>
        <p>LEARN UPHOLSTERING at home with a new course that offers spare time income. A great way to add to the family funds or just enjoy a helpful hobby. Low tuition and terms. Free illustrated book explains steps. Free sample lesson included. Modern Upholstery, P.O. Box 899-CXB, Orange, Calif. 92669.</p>
        <p>Weekend Shopper items are NOT advertising. If products shovm are not available at stores, order from sources listed.</p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 1970</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0046" />
        <p>Come live where soft ocean breezes make</p>
        <p>January and July only a few degrees apart..</p>
        <p>in the new Florida of General Development.</p>
        <p>General Development Corporation</p>
        <p>Box 1308, Min',1, fujnda 33134</p>
        <p>Gentlemen</p>
        <p>.et me send you more information on the new Florida</p>
        <p>Charles H Keilstapi</p>
        <p>Chairman ol the Board and PfeS'den</p>
        <p>General Develoo'^ent Corporation</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>|e</p>
        <p>id</p>
        <p>la</p>
        <p> taia</p>
        <p>such</p>
        <p>O-AC</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0047" />
        <p>ENTERTAINMENT</p>
        <p>f'M'</p>
        <p>Jo Anne Worley Says: I Want to Be Loved!</p>
        <p>By PEER I. OPPENHEIMER</p>
        <p>Attached to Jo Anne Worleys telephone is a sign which boldly proclaimsT AM LOVED! -almost as if she were trying to convince herself. And therein lies the struggle of tvs **Laugh-In star, famous for her loud, raucous laughter, feathers and fringes, and exaggerated style of comedy.</p>
        <p>From the very beginning of Laugh-In, which made its debut in January of 1968, Jo Anne Worley has capitalized on her special brand of camp. Her now familiar offstage whoop heralds an on-camera performance in which Jo Anne mugs, hugs, sings, dances, makes google eyes, and casually tosses off throaty comic lines.</p>
        <p>In private life, however, Jo Anne is shy and introverted, particularly where men are concerned. She has a down-to-earth Midwestern attitude, a religious background that causes her much consternation over todays changing mores, and a yearning to be loved.</p>
        <p>This wanting to be loved dates back to her early school days in Lowell, Ind., when she towered head and shoulders over her classmates. 'Tt was impossible to find a boy who could get enthused about that! she exclaimed. (Today she stands  and</p>
        <p>weighs 135Td like 10 pounds less!) Yet when she did start to date, Jo Annes strict upbringing (T was brought up under the commandmentThou shalt not touch) caused her to be painfully insecure.</p>
        <p>Jo Annes childhood prepared her for hard work all right, but not necessarily theatrical work. She was one of five children who lived on a farm. She learned the</p>
        <p>meaning of taking ones responsibility seriously. As soon as Jo Anne was old enough, she had to help with the farm chores^milking cows and feeding livestock.</p>
        <p>It was not until Jo Anne began to feel something of a misfit in school because of her height that she struggled for acceptance through other means. She soon discovered that a gay, loud, and outwardly assured manner could cover up a lot of inner insecurities. Before long, Jo Anne became the star entertainer of her high school. The fact that she was not cast as a romantic type bothered her, but she kept that fact secret. Openly, she was a-laugh-a-minute. And very popular.</p>
        <p>After graduating, Jo Anne headed for Los Angeles and moved in with her sister, who was living there. Jo Anne planned to attend City College there and get a secretarial job on the side. But soon she got wind of some auditions, turned up for them, and was signed for a spot with the Billy Bamea People revue which went on tour and tnded up in New York.</p>
        <p>Finding herself out of work. Jo Aana bogan making the New York aailltoi mm and found that her old HBeater Imk knd aoi left her completely. She  *</p>
        <p>number of small night-eluk rmrnm, woiHi opened the door to aome tv-toli altowu. particularly Merv Griffins. A major kroak came when she underatudiod Carol (Planning on Broadway in Hallo, Dolly. She then went to Las Vegas to appear on the Bill Dana Show and landed a regular spot with Joey Bishops, Son of a Gun Valley Players.</p>
        <p>During this period, Jo Anne was in a good position to hear of anjrthing that was happening on tv. And by now she had developed her comic personality more than ever. So it wasnt surprising when a friend told her about auditions for Laugh-In and thought she would be perfect for it. Executive producer George Schlatter thought she was perfect, too, and hired her for the show.</p>
        <p>Jo Anne is the only one of her family never to have married. Some day she would like tovery much. And have a couple of children. She stems from a belief in marriage, a home, a life shared.</p>
        <p>Curruntly there is a man in her life, actor Roger Perry, an old friend whom she met when she first went to Los Angeles and worked at the Music Box Theatre.</p>
        <p>Time will tell whether Jo Anne has finally overcome her shyness and insecurity enough to really share her whole life and allow herself to be loved and love in return. Sighed Jo Anne, It would be lovely to get married^if it worked out. I am really a very normal human being! Otherwise Id be in a nuthouse. </p>
        <p>Family Weekly, May S, 970  19</p>
        <p>FnHb forraMof Btv*iilCoiati^</p>
        <p>Helps Rid Lungs of Eccess Mucus-</p>
        <p>Hei|K dear r passives, restore free breathn^, relieve distress...cBgliiag aad wiieeziiig.</p>
        <p>This clinic-tested preparation is called BRONKAIDk. In one tab</p>
        <p>let, Bronkaid combines an expectorant and bronchodilators to attack the two major causes of congestion and wheezing. Bronkaid Tablets quickly start acting to soften and loosen excess phlegm. This direct action helps rid your air passages of sticky, stringy phl^m. At the same time, Bronkaid helps relax tightened bronchial muscles and eases the distress that results from stagnant air trapped in the lungs.</p>
        <p>With Bronkaid Tablets, you enjoy amazing two-way help in one combinatibn tablet. Bronkaid heipsyou cough up phlegm,clear clogged air passages, restores free breathing. You cough less; 70U breathe more freely, easily.</p>
        <p>'or rapid relief of coughing and wheezing of bronchial congestion and bronchial asthma, for relief that lasts for hours, get BRONKAID TABLETS today. No prescription required. Available at your local drugstore. Drew Laboratories; Div. of Sterling Drug, Inc.. N.Y., N.Y. 10016.</p>
        <p>from bathrooms, sinks, ceramic tile floors, chrome auto bumpers, aluminum storm doors, windows &amp;amp; glass RUSTAIN PRODUCTS, Fair Lawn. N.J.</p>
        <p>Do YorFALSE TEETHDrop, Slip or Foil?</p>
        <p>Imp woRyliif whaMaar Tonr fuae tMth will earn kme si the wrong tline. Vor moie aaeuiltf Ml mora oomfart Juat mftakla fSmoiw FASIBBTH on your dental olataa. PASimH Danim adhaatwFow-dr bolds falsa tooth flnnar longer. " asttag aMlar. WOnt aour</p>
        <p>atlal to</p>
        <p>under dentaras. No gummy, toon. pasty tasto or loal. Dentures that flt</p>
        <p>are asa.......</p>
        <p>dentist</p>
        <p>haalth. See your ragulaily. Get FABnfrlH todsj at fOl drug oounten.</p>
        <p>PHOTO CREDITS</p>
        <p>Cover: Hal Okn.</p>
        <p>Page 2: Eric Lantz; Fabian Backroch; Walnut Grove (Minn.) Tribun.</p>
        <p>Pages 6 &amp;amp; 7: 1^.</p>
        <p>Page 7: Honeywell.</p>
        <p>Page 10: Grette Mankeim for DPI.</p>
        <p>Page 19: NBC.even for thousands who perspire heavily</p>
        <p>A different formula has been found to keep underarms absolutely even for thousands who perspire heavily. A formula so different it has far more anti-wetness agent than it is possible to put in any aerosol can. By anybody. After decades of common deodorants," it took a chemical invention to make this truly effective protection possible  with the same safety to clothingthe same sldn mildness as popular deodorants." Called Mitchum Anti-Perspirant, it is the product of a trustworthy 57-year-old laboratory and gurante^ by Good Housekeeping. By the tho(P&amp;lt;-'</p>
        <p>sands, women with problem (inspiration are finding the protection they needand never could find</p>
        <p>before. And fully effective as a deodorant, too, of course. If you persj)ire more than ave^eeven heaioly  get the positive protection of Mitchum Anti-Perspirant. Your choice, liquid or cream. Ninety-day supply, each $3.00. Available at your favorite drug or toiletry counter.Mitokum .ANTI-PERSPIRANT</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0048" />
        <p>Come live where soft ocean breezes make January and July only a few degrees apart, in the new Florida of General Development.</p>
        <p>Find out how delightful it is to live year-round in fresh start countrythe new Florida of CSeneral Development. It's as easy as writing your name and address and mailing the reply card today.</p>
        <p>VVarit to find out about some fantastic fishing? Or golf on championship courses? Clubs, churches, hospitals, schools, social organizations of every description? Want to know all about investing in Florida's future? Get complete information at no obligation, compliments of Florida's famous builder of "nice neighbors" communities.</p>
        <p>General Development Corporation.</p>
        <p>Port Charlotte on the Gulf Coast, Port St. Lucie and Port Malabar on the east coasteach is beautifully planned and built by one of the world's most respected land developers. Each has a warm, comfortable climate twelve months of the year.</p>
        <p>Send in the card right now, while it's fresh in your mind. Or If the card is missing, write: General Development Corporation,! 111 South Bayshore Drive, Miami, Florida 3313!.</p>
        <p>an offwinf. A copy of thaolforing is availabio upon reqinst from the subdivider. NYA-iGDf-Ss!^  P*d  upon  the  iMnta</p>
        <p>of the sale merits of such 6310-AC</p>
        <p>AO-0(l70(K)(d&amp;gt;</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0049" />
        <p>ENTERTAINMENT</p>
        <p>Jo Anne Worley Says: I Want to Be Loved!</p>
        <p>By PEER I. OPPENHEIMER</p>
        <p>Attached to Jo Anne Worley^s telephone is a sign which boldly proclaimsT AM LOVED r -almost as if she were trying to convince herself. And therein lies the struggle of tvs Laugh-In star, famous for her loud, raucous laughter, feathers and fringes, and exaggerated style of comedy.</p>
        <p>From the very beginning of Laugh-In, which made its debut in January of 1968, Jo Anne Worley has capitalized on her special brand of camp. Her now familiar offstage whoop heralds an on-camera performance in which Jo Anne mugs, hugs, sings, dances, makes google eyes, and casually tosses off throaty comic lines.</p>
        <p>In private life, however, Jo Anne is shy and introverted, particularly where men are concerned. She has a down-to-earth Midwestern attitude, a religious background that causes her much consternation over todays changing mores, and a yearning to be loved.</p>
        <p>This wanting to be loved dates back to her early school days in Lowell, Ind., when she towered head and shoulders over her classmates. Tt was impossible to find a boy who could get enthused about that! she exclaimed. (Today she stands 5'8% and weighs 135Id like 10 pounds less!) Yet when she did start to date, Jo Annes strict upbringing (I was brought up under thecommandmentThou shalt not touch) caused her to be painfully insecure.</p>
        <p>Jo Annes childhood prepared her for hard work all right, but not necessarily theatrical work. She was one of five children who lived on a farm. She learned the</p>
        <p>meaning of taking ones responsibility seriously. As soon as Jo Anne was old enough, she had to help with the farm chores^milking cows and feeding livestock.</p>
        <p>It was not until Jo Anne began to feel something of a misfit in school because of her height that she struggled for acceptance through other means. She soon discovered that a gay, loud, and outwardly assured manner could cover up a lot of inner insecurities. Before long, Jo Anne became the star entertainer of her high school. The fact that she was not cast as a romantic t3rpe bothered her, but she kept that fact secret. Openly, she was a-laugh-a-minute. And very popular.</p>
        <p>After graduating, Jo Anne headed for Los Angeles and moved in with her sister, who was living there. Jo Anne planned to attend City College there and get a secretarial job on the side. But soon she got wind of some auditions, turned up for them, and was signed for a spot with the Billy Barnes People revue which went on tour and ended up in New York.</p>
        <p>Finding herself out of work, Jo Anne began making the New York audition scene and found that her old Hoosier luck had not left her completely. She found work in a number of small night-club revues, which opened the door to some tv-talk shows, particularly Merv Griffins. A major break came when she understudied Carol Chan-ning on Broadway in Hello, Dolly. She then went to Las Vegas to appear on the Bill Dana Show and landed a regular spot with Joey Bishops, Son of a Gun Valley Players.</p>
        <p>During this period, Jo Anne was in a good position to hear of anything that was happening on tv. And by now she had developed her comic personality more than ever. So it wasnt surprising when a friend told her about auditions for Laugh-In and thought she would be perfect for it. Executive producer George Schlatter thought she was perfect, too, and hired her for the show.</p>
        <p>Jo Anne is the only one of her family never to have married. Some day she would like to^very much. And have a couple of children. She stems from a belief in marriage, a home, a life shared.</p>
        <p>CurrMitly there is a man in her life, actor Roger Perry, an old friend whom she met when she first went to Los Angeles and worked at the Music Box Theatre.</p>
        <p>Time will tell whether Jo Anne has finally overcome her sh3mess and insecurity enough to really share her whole life and allow herself to be loved and love in return. Sighed Jo Anne, It would be lovely to get married^if it worked out. I am really a very normal human being! Otherwise Id be in a nuthouse. </p>
        <p>Family Weekly^ May S, 1970  19</p>
        <p>rnMbfgrraitfofBnMcliSCoa(lioa,BnNK^</p>
        <p>Hefps Rid Lungs of Bccess Mucus-</p>
        <p>Nell clear air passives, restore frae breathng, relieve distress...cogliiag aad wheezii^.</p>
        <p>This clinic-tested preparation is called BRONKAID. In one tablet, Bronkaid combines an expectorant and bronchodilators to attack the two major causes of congestion and wheezing. Bronkaid Tablets quickly start acting to soften and loosen excess phlegm. This direct action helps rid your air passages of sticky, stringy phl^m. At the same time, Bronkaid helps relax tightened bronchial muscles and eases the distress that results from stagnant air trapped in the lungs.</p>
        <p>With Bronkaid Tablets, you enjoy amazing two-way help in one combinatibn tablet. Bronkaid helps you cough up phlegm, clear clogged air passages, restores free breathing. You cough less; you breathe more freely, easily.</p>
        <p>For rapid relief of coughing and wheezing of bronchial congestion and bronchial asthma, for relief that lasts for hours, get BRONKAID TABLETS today. No prescription required. Available at yoiir local drugstore. Drew Laboratories; Div. of Sterlingv Drug, Inc., N.Y., N.Y. 10016.</p>
        <p>from bathrooms, sinks, ceramic tile floors, chrome auto bumpers, aluminum storm doors, windows &amp;amp; glass RUSTAIN PRODUCTS, Fair Lawn, N.J.</p>
        <p>DoYoarFALSE TEETHDrop, SHp or FaH?</p>
        <p>Don't kao&amp;gt; woRytns vOwllkar yo Mae taetli wtu ame looae at the wrong time. Por moee eeoialty and more oomfort Juet antekle tamovn PASnasiH on Yonr dental oMaa. PA8TBRH Denbne ddheatvell^-der holds take teeth fmner longer.</p>
        <p>went eoor</p>
        <p>are maentlal to health. 8ee mar dentist remd^. Get FaSTlRH today at dl drag eoanteee.</p>
        <p>PHOTO CREDITS</p>
        <p>Cover: Hal Okun.</p>
        <p>Page 2: Eric Lantz; Fabian Bachroch; Walnut Grove (Minn.) Tribun.</p>
        <p>Poges 6 &amp;amp; 7: IBM.</p>
        <p>Page 7; Honeywell.</p>
        <p>Page 10: Grette Manheim for DPI.</p>
        <p>Page 19: NBC.even for thousands who perspire heaviiy</p>
        <p>A differerU formula has been found to keep underarms absolutely dry even for thousands who persinre heavily. A formula so different it has far more anti-wetness agent than it is possible to put in any aerosol can. By anybody. After decades of common deodorants, it took a chemical invention to make this truly effective protection possible  with the same safety to clothingthe same skin mildness as popular deodorants. Called Mitchum Anti-Pmpirant, it is the product of a trustworthy 57-year-old laboratory and gurante^ by Good Housekeeping. By the tholP'-^ sands, women with problem perspiration are finding the protection they needand never could find before. And fully effective as a deodorant, too, of course. If you persi)ire more than ave^eeven heavily  get the positive protection of Mitchum Anti-Perspirant. Your choice, liquid or cream. Ninety-day supply, each $3.00. Available at your favorite drug or toiletry counter.MilbJwm .ANTI-PERSPIRANT</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0050" />
        <p>Take This ^29.95 Value $^9| Portable Cassette Playeras a special introduction to the totally new Capitol Stereo Tape Clubwhen you purchase one cassette now and agree to buy as few as 12 more during the next 12 months</p>
        <p>Join Capitol Stereo Tape Club today...</p>
        <p>and swing into summer with your own Portable Cassette Plaverl</p>
        <p>Each month you receive PUYBACK, the Clubs unique magazine listing the selection in your own musical division, as well as an array of other top cassette albums from which you may choose. If you want only the regular selection of your musical division, as offered in PLAYBACK, you need do nothing-it will be shipped automatically. Or you may order any of the other cassettes offered...or take no cassette at all...just by returning the convenient selection notice by the date specified. You always choose your cassette albums from all the top labels, by all the top artists ...even from other clubs. Your cassette library will feature such great artists as Tom Jones, The Beatles, Johnny Cash, Dionne Warwick, Glen Campbell, The Lettermen, Engelbert Humperdinck, Bill Cosby, Buck Owens, Dean Martin, Petula Clark and Mantovani.</p>
        <p>As a special Introduction to the excitingly new Capitol Stereo Tape Club, you can have music wherever you are ... at the beach... in the mountains... quietly in your own backyard. And your portable cassette player is engineered to the exacting standards of The Most Honored Name In Music.</p>
        <p>Yes, Lohgines Symphonette has designed your compact, self-contained unit for outstanding playability and durability. Weighing less than three pounds, it features solid-state circuitry...fast-forward and reverse controls...high-impact protective case... and comes complete with earphone and four "D" batteries.</p>
        <p>Your Longines Symphonette Portable Cassette Player allows you to explore the wave of the future in top quality recorded music. Cassettes are easy-to-store, enclosed, high-performance tapes, measuring 4"x 216 Trouble-free, long-wearing cassettes never scratch... there is no tape to touch... no bulky cartridge to handle... simply snap cas-Mtte tapes into the top of your player. And as a member of Capitol Stereo Tape Club...The Only Club Olfering A Truly Complete Selection of Cassette Tapes... you enjoy the special advantages of a club created to give you prompt individual and courteous attention.</p>
        <p>With headquarters in the heart of the entertainment world, Capitol Stereo Tape Club was created to help you build the finest cassette- tape library possible.</p>
        <p>You may charge all your Club purchases on your Club account and, not only that, you may take advantage of exceptional money-saving offers available only to Club members. In addition, to help you build your cassette library as quickly as possible, Capitol Stereo Tape Club gives you one FREE cassette album for every two you purchase at regular Club price, once your enrollment agreement is fulfilled.</p>
        <p>J If you already own a cassette player.</p>
        <p>TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THIS MONEY-SAVING OPPORTUNITY!</p>
        <p>6 Cassettes FREE when you buy just one cassette now and as few as 12 more in the next 12 months.</p>
        <p>$41-8...your special limited introduction to the all-new Capitol Stereo Tape ClubI</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>SEND NO MONEY NOW. FILL IN AND MAIL THIS COUPON TODAY!</p>
        <p>Send to: CAPITOL Stereo Tape Club</p>
        <p>Thousand Oaks, Calif. 91360</p>
        <p> member of Capitol Stereo Tape Club Ive</p>
        <p>mail !hip5ij charw  "</p>
        <p>Check One: DPJease send my ^rtable Cassette Player and bill me only $4.95 plus small shipping and handling charge</p>
        <p>linnth.   during  the  next 12</p>
        <p>nionths at the regular Club price of just $6.98 each (occasional</p>
        <p>higher)...and I may cancel my mem-of my choice FREE for every two additional selections I accept.</p>
        <p>IMPORTANT: Please check one. The music I like best is:</p>
        <p>nIT ... Country Sound    Easy  Listening</p>
        <p>Popular Vocalist GCIassical GMovies&amp;amp; Shows GJazz</p>
        <p>I K0 ME THIS SELECTION AS MY k 1 FIRST purchase; WRITE NUMBER HEREf</p>
        <p>Mr. ij Mrs.. DMiss Address.</p>
        <p>City.</p>
        <p>State.</p>
        <p>.ZIpu</p>
        <p>MBtND</p>
        <p>usecTCurm</p>
        <p>ormiuf</p>
        <p>{TBVU)W</p>
        <p>jerry Lee Lewis</p>
        <p>rf GOIOI CRfSM OF IHE CONRy</p>
        <p>OUfMWUTf  fASn.fRKIIv</p>
        <p>APO, FPO addresses: Write for additional information. TIZB TGZ</p>
        <p>MAMATIffi)</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>IMRWillllRII</p>
        <p>isg</p>
        <p>ne99tef</p>
        <p>tmcom</p>
        <p>WARNft MOS .&amp;gt; uTsl</p>
        <p>mmmrs</p>
        <p>rh</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0051" />
        <p>nes-</p>
        <p>^ire Fmily</p>
        <p>GREENVItLEr N. C</p>
        <p>tP..</p>
        <p>TOPS in NBm  FEATURBS  SPORTS</p>
        <p>'ir..    </p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; . i \SUNDAY, MAY 3,1970</p>
        <p>j575S</p>
        <p>AT THE PUVINTI ve PUA OF UMOf.AUTHORineS DEODBlOlEr HfiirDOC. STONV, BEAMITH HER AT CERTAIN HOURS.</p>
        <p>l^tHE HOOD'S SLUG RIVSSED THROUGH^</p>
        <p>her RKHT SIDE.FORTUNATELV /WISSINC THE HERM1C_^ARTERV.</p>
        <p>I'VE GOT A IjOTOF EXPLAINING TO DO WHEN VOU GET WELL, TINKY.</p>
        <p>'tortunately for me and TESS,'</p>
        <p>THE END OF THE PIPE THAT FELL TO THE STREET WAS 2 FEET / LOWER THAN THE BASEMENX^/</p>
        <p>SEVERAL PEOPLE HAVE ASKED ABOUT THE RECOVERY OF YOUR EVES AFTER MEDICS HAD SAID YOU'D BE PER/YUkNENTLY BLIND</p>
        <p>FIRST OF ALL, OUR LOCAL EVE -SPECIALIST. OR. ARC,IS,GREAT. HE DID</p>
        <p>'"SEEMS .1 WAS TUNED IN ON .</p>
        <p>THE RIGHT WAVELE&amp;lt;tCrTH FOR (.^NATURE, BUT AS FOR PATIENCE-</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; SOMEWHERE-I GOT HELP FOR ^ THE PACnENCE-THE SAME KINO OF HELP I WANT TO GET</p>
        <p>.L.</p>
        <p>issmsMm</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0052" />
        <p>(&amp;gt;ALT STsEVS MI CKBY^eOSeRNANTOM</p>
        <p>By Lee Falk &amp;amp; Sv Barry</p>
        <p>uoni</p>
        <p>^ 9tick</p>
        <p>C|||||fe</p>
        <p>19701)y 11^ Chipigo Tribune {i0rta Heserved</p>
        <p>tili 12rO</p>
        <p>mgmmmmKsm</p>
        <p>we just want to check scm^tHr\q ononeof yoir magazines.</p>
        <p>Oh, na vD don't/ Im</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0053" />
        <p>AND to. KIEEP 50ME NSW SHOES ANO AN EVENNG . BAG TO MATCH. rK OKAY. '</p>
        <p>y</p>
        <p>Y</p>
        <p>1 HAV&amp;amp; EyeRV CH6CK V'IS THAT BAP?FROM HO. 110 H0.300 A&amp;lt;^&amp;amp;</p>
        <p>except HO. 62?:</p>
        <p>CAMCELEP CHECK</p>
        <p>SO WHAT</p>
        <p>iv: 1 vff</p>
        <p>xp sit w^cgm</p>
        <p>VA(.lS7"'</p>
        <p>TSK-TSK- WHO</p>
        <p>cur Oun hair last? ISK'TSK"</p>
        <p>XLL PO THE BEST I CAM WITH IT" rr't-L TAKE A COPLA VISITS TO SHAPE rr RIGHT"</p>
        <p>UH"R A BARBER FRIEMP OP MIME CAVE /ME A TRI/M-</p>
        <p>HE H0ULP be iM a BEST HOME IMSTEA70F A BARBCasHOP-HC SURE HAS FAILEP-USEP to have THE BEST BUILT you EVER SAW-A RECULAR MU3CLB-BEACH CUy-</p>
        <p>yo WANT to'no vour</p>
        <p>THINE?" so 0K4V, WElL LET THE BARBER POHIS.'</p>
        <p>NOT MUCH CALL</p>
        <p>Tiiii er./ /tcrcoM W STRONOMEM</p>
        <p>I OPENIMOACTS.CUESS</p>
        <p>ANP SME-IMAM THE SAPBER-</p>
        <p>pipn't know</p>
        <p>WHEN TO STOP</p>
        <p>SAM HASN'T GOT ENOUGH ROUGH FOR FOOP.LETALONE A HAIRCUT'</p>
        <p>-C i-' II V-Tifci  -&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>IT</p>
        <p>SAM SURE ISNT HIMSELF LATELV-HE PIPN'T EVEN PICK UPA MAGAZINE.'</p>
        <p>-w:</p>
        <p>'//i</p>
        <p>A&amp;gt;V</p>
        <p>tOPAV THEV MEEPER TO PROPlUCe A CERTAIN OLR CHECK  eUESS WHICH</p>
        <p>ONE .^/iw 6"</p>
        <p>JIM AUICER, TONAWANRA, AI.Y,</p>
        <p>WE CAM</p>
        <p>WE PAlP</p>
        <p>'**^Fmer6's-ime stub-</p>
        <p>CHECK N0.622-</p>
        <p>CAMT</p>
        <p>WE</p>
        <p>LF-TH'RSS #i THE wil F0TttlA!? m WAS </p>
        <p>'Y</p>
        <p>no you HAVE THAT $16 PRESS IM My SIZE''*</p>
        <p>t:</p>
        <p>MO,MAR4M6--SOBRy-/MAy I SHOW Vbil OUR ^EHER , PBES  ( PERWTMEKtT ?</p>
        <p>/JAM</p>
        <p>|C4B)T0l</p>
        <p>:;l  '</p>
        <p>J-.    V</p>
        <p>,  iltL.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0054" />
        <p>THAT OLV MAN'S CONMMCEP "ffli OWI65E ^ C0MRAPE5 HE'5 RESfNSIBl FOR P^IVEK-INO KAR50Y ANP THE YANKEE TO THEM ANP THAT WE'RE JUST SILLY.C^IILPREN WmtWlP^</p>
        <p>IP6AS. IS THIS THE ^ HEROES' WELCOME TD PEKWe &amp;gt;tX) PBOWISEPME?</p>
        <p>Tteyu. PUT us into a X i</p>
        <p>COMMUNE OR SOMETHINS. ) WITH THE PIS/ PO you WANT TO 5PENP , I YOU SAW HIS THE REST OF YOUR LIFE I BRUTALITY/ SRUBBINS IN THE PIRT?</p>
        <p>WHY PO YOU THINK THAT FUZZ WITH THE SUN IS WATCHINS US? JUST AS SOON KILL US AS NOT-ANP U TU'P HAVE A STORY ALL REAPY WHEN THE CHINESE SOT HERE.</p>
        <p>while, in the lockep prison van</p>
        <p>WE ARE FINISHEI?ONE VoKAY/NOTHING TO WAY OR THE OTHER, LEE. LOSE... I STUMBLE WHEN THEY OPEN THE 7 AGAINST A GUARP, POOR...  CAUSE  A  RUCKUS.</p>
        <p>PAl I TRY TD REACH U TU FROM BBflNP. THEN-LIKE THIS.' AROUNP HIS BOPY/ I AM VERY STRONG. WHEN 1 SQUEEZE, HE WILL</p>
        <p>^SOOP/ NOW WE MUST ACT WISELY. ONE ^ 5TUPIPITY COULPCOST TERRY LEE'S LIFE/</p>
        <p>9 if70 by UiN&amp;gt;4 Fwiura Syndicat*, Inc</p>
        <p>M HEAD WAS SOUND ASLEEP, BUT MV STOMACH WAS WIDE AU/AKE...</p>
        <p>IT'S MIDNI6HT, ANP fM STARVINS TO DEATH, AND THERE'S NO WAV FOR ME TO 6ET A LITTLE SNACK</p>
        <p>iFlUiEREASTUPID CAT, I COULD 60 out AND CATCH A MOUSE -</p>
        <p>MV ST0MACHNEED5A 5LEEP1N6 PILL ...NO, MV HEAD NEEP5A5LEEPIN6PILL AND MY STOMACH NEEPS A SNACK</p>
        <p>--</p>
        <p>NOO), HOOJ IN THE -WORLP PIP HE KNOW &amp;gt; I WAS HUN6RV ?,  '</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0055" />
        <p>Jm.'</p>
        <p>IBiniinMi</p>
        <p>  WMTTCN  AND  U..... D C..TW. ^</p>
        <p>OtirSlorg: DALE MAKtNNlE SEARCHES CAMptOT TO ND A LAD/ FAIR WORTH/ TO BE</p>
        <p>HIS^l^py-W-BO^NI.^ONE TO L0\^ FROM A 4)1ahceand inspire him to perform Mieij^ DEEDS. THEN ALETA WALKS BY.</p>
        <p>TO BE A KNIGHT IN HER SERVICE HE WOULD CONQUER THE WORLD. AS A BEGINNING THERE IS THE CHALLENGE ROUND WHERE TOURNAMENT WINNERS CAN TRY THEIR PROWESS AGAINST KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE.</p>
        <p>HE PICKS ONE OF THE MOST RENOWNED: SIR GAWAIN. GAWAIN IS NOT IN THE BEST CONDITION, HAVING SPENT THE NIGHT AT THE GAMING TABLE, AND IS ANXIOUS TO RETURN TO THE DICE.</p>
        <p>ON THE FIRST COURSE GAWAIN MISSES THE TARGET AND WOULD HAVE BEEN DISMOUNTED HAD NOT DALE'S LANCE ShjATTERED. GAWAIN'S PRIDE IS HURT AND SO IS EVERY BONE IN HIS^ODY. ON THE NEXTH CHARGE HE PLUCKS THE YOUNG UPSTART FROM HIS SADDLE.</p>
        <p>AS DALE IS HELPED FROM THE LISTS HE IS AWARE THAT THE KNIGHTS OF THE ROUND TABLE ARE NOT AS ORDINARY MEN AND HE HAS A LONG WAY TO GO BEFORE HE CAN EARN A PLACE AMONG THEM.</p>
        <p>AS HE SITS BRUISED AND DEJECTED, A YOUNG LAD WITH A FALCON ON HIS FIST AND A CHEERFUL GRIN ON HIS FACE STROLLS UP. *YOU SHOOK UP SIR GAWAIN. HE IS IN HIS PAVILION NOW GROWLING LIKE A WOUNDED BEAR."</p>
        <p>A MUTUAL LOVE OF HAWKING LEADS TO FRIENDSHIP, AND DALE IS INVITED TO DINNER.</p>
        <p>AND HE ENTERS THE HOUSE IN SOME EMBARRASSMENT, FOR HE HAS FAILED TO FIND OUT HIS HOST'S NAAE.</p>
        <p>NEXT WEEK - Thr UnaUiiinable Cadg</p>
        <p>1734</p>
        <p>^HE CONTROI. CENTER OF THE WARBUCKS SHIPBUILPING ENTERPRISE'"</p>
        <p>IT IS CURIOUS THAT OLIVER WARBUCKS HASNT CONTACTED</p>
        <p>US FOR hours!</p>
        <p>Certain enemies of the u.s. goverN'</p>
        <p>MENX EAGER FOR THE SECRETS OF THE INVISIBLE SHIP, the "NATHAH HALE HAVE SUCCEEDED, THROUGH A NERVE GAS, IN ALMOST DESTROYING OLIVER WARBUCKS AND PUNJAB"- p</p>
        <p>THE GAS ONLY PARTIALLY PARALYZED THE GIANT -AND HBAND CAPITALIST WARBUCKS HAVE EXPLORED THE WATERS FOR HOUR&amp;amp; SEARCHING</p>
        <p>forthe'grl!</p>
        <p>lu'</p>
        <p>^JT AMMIE, THROUGH A STROKE OF GOOD FORTUNE, HAS BEEN ABLE TO GAIN THE INTERIOR OF THE "MYSTERY SHIP"</p>
        <p>WHEN THAT BOMB WENT OFF JUST AS*^DADDY; PUNJAB AND US WAS CLIMBIH" INTA THE 'COPTER, SANDY'</p>
        <p>I KINOA LOST CONTROL O MY ARMS AN LEGS "xLlKE I WAS</p>
        <p>"'1 THINK "DADDY AND PUNJAB HIT THE WATER, AND WE KINDA FELL ON the deck CHANCES ARE THEY RE SWIMMIN AROUND TRYIN T FIND US "' COME MORNIN; 1 GUESS, WE GAN KIHDA SIGNAL EACH OTHER....'</p>
        <p>ITS NO USE, PUNJAB"'WED BETTER ^ HEAD FOR shore! MAYBE ANNIE FIGURED WED DO THE SAME, AND SHES ON THE BEACH RIGHT NOW. WAITING , FOR US!</p>
        <p>PARALYZED</p>
        <p>KNOW SOMETHIN, SANDY? I HATE T ADMIT IT, BUT m kfilF''! ^HIS SHIPS GOT MILES ANT^ILES Q* HALLS'" AND WE BEEN WANDERIN MOST OF EM FOR HOURS</p>
        <p>FIRST, FIND ANNIE! THEN'" FLUSH OUT THE SCUM THAT FIRED THAT NERVE</p>
        <p>GAS AND PUMPED US INTO THE</p>
        <p>I WILL SPEND THERfMAINDER.I OF THE NIGHT SEARCHING, SAHIB!</p>
        <p>WE WILL WAIT UNTIL DAYBREAK TD CONTINUE OUR OPERATION! WE HAVE FAILED. ONCE TO CAPTURE WARBUCKS. WE MUST MOT FAIL AGAIN!</p>
        <p>IM REAL BUSHED, SAHOY GNIGHT AN* SWEET</p>
        <p>dreams!fc.,.</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0056" />
        <p>BARNE/GOOGLE amd, ^NUFPV sCMSTH</p>
        <p>iy rXBO i/tSSK^iU-^</p>
        <p>by mort walker</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0057" />
        <p>()ALT feNE/"S SCAMI</p>
        <p>^How's \r'\  NO good! i'/aA</p>
        <p>(jff "O-L^k (Jl)MS^^r</p>
        <pb facs="00090970_0058" />
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