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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>InrreasinK cloudiness tonight and not as cold. Mostly cloudy tomorrow with chance of showers.</p>
        <p>89fh Year NO. 58</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 9, 1971</p>
        <p>12 Pages Today</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 2  Schools Bear Brunt Page 6  Legislative Report Page 7 And Still Champion</p>
        <p>Price 10 Cents</p>
        <p>Hanoi Campaign Set Back</p>
        <p>South Viets Buying Time</p>
        <p>By GEORGE ESPER</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>SAIGON (AP)  The South ^etnamese thrust into Laos has already set Hanois war in Vietnam and Cambodia back five months, according to the latest official assessment of the U.S. Command. And by the time the campaign is over, the command thinks, it could buy more than a years time for the Vietnamization program.</p>
        <p>Each day the South Vietnamese stall the North Vietnamese in Laos, they gain five days time in South Vietnam, a high-ranking U.S. military official said today.</p>
        <p>Every day they remain in Laos, it is advantageous to the Vietnamization process. It gives the Vietnamese time to build up their training. Time is on the side of the Vietnamese.</p>
        <p>Sporadic fighting continued in the month-old drive across the Ho Chi Minh trail. Saigons forces are now stretched along 26 miles of east-west Highway S from the Vietnamese border to the hills around the transshipment point of Sepone.</p>
        <p>The U.S. Command reckons that a days full load of war materials and other supplies moved down the Ho Chi Minh trail enables North Vietnamese and Viet Cong troops in the field to operate for 10 days.</p>
        <p>By knocking off half that load, said the U.S. official, the North Vietnamese troops south of Highway 9 are only getting half a load or five days supplies.</p>
        <p>The South Vietnamese have been in Laos 30 days. By the U.S. Commands reckoning, therefore, Hanoi has been set</p>
        <p>EVACUATING BELONGINGS . . . Two of the seven East Carolina University students occupying the three apartments in the Pitt Street-</p>
        <p>dwelling damaged by fire yesterday carry their belongings from the house as firemen battle the smoky fire. (FLeflector Photo by Stuart Savage)</p>
        <p>Senator Avers Now Runs</p>
        <p>Source Of The Smoke { Big Data</p>
        <p>Bank</p>
        <p>A little-seen blaze, generating clouds of smoke, damaged a wood-frame apartment house on Pitt Street at the Third Street intersection yesterday afternoon.</p>
        <p>Firemen, who responded |o a call to the house at 4 p. m., said the fire was confined to the attic and to the kitchen area of one of the three apartments in the building.</p>
        <p>Officers said winds from the West blew the thick smoke down over the front of the building and hampered firefighters in their efforts to</p>
        <p>combat the blaze from the Pitt Street side of the dwelling. A steep hill at the rear of the home and along the Third Street side prevented firemen from using those approaches to the burning home.</p>
        <p>The addresses of the apartments affected by the f ire include 212,214, and 216 Pitt Street.</p>
        <p>Officers listed the cause of the fire as a faulty chimney.</p>
        <p>In addition to the fire damage to the attic and the kitchen in 216, water and smoke damage resulted to other rooms in the three apartments.</p>
        <p>Local Group Recognized As Shore Drive Bidders</p>
        <p>By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Redevelopment Commissioners Monday night recognized as qualified bidders a group of local investors who propose to build an office complex on Second Street if they are successful in their bid for the land.</p>
        <p>Louis Clark, local realtor, told commissioners that he was representing Max R. Joyner, Dr. Ira M. Hardy II, Herbert W. Wheless and Collice C. Moore in their effort to qualify to bid on the parcel of land bounded by Evans, First, Washington and Second Streets.</p>
        <p>Clark, who produced proposed elevations and organization of grounds prints of the office building, said that the group of investors planned to utilize the entire block for the complex and necessary parking if successful in bidding on the property, identified as parcel 12.</p>
        <p>The office building would be constructed in four stages, Clark noted, with the first two stages involving some 9,950 square feet of space. The other two stages would be constructed as soon as tenants were engaged.</p>
        <p>The realtor pointed out that it was hoped construction would begin within three months as tenants for the first stage-of the building needed offices as sOlmi as possible.</p>
        <p>prove the plans as submitted subject to staff review and submission of proper documents by the developers and pending a successful bid offering.</p>
        <p>It was pointed out that commission action Monday night was by no means final and authority to procede with plans for the complex rested with the submission of a bid when the property is advertised.</p>
        <p>Real estate officer Kirby Boyd reported that no bids were received for parcels two (bounded by First, F*itt, Greene Streets and the river) and five</p>
        <p>(southwest corner of Pitt aqd.....</p>
        <p>First Streets) following recent advertising for bids.</p>
        <p>Boyd said that Theodore Smith, land acquisition specialist from HUr&amp;gt;, visited the commission on*Feb. 24 and 25 to discuss Newtown land acquisition prices with local staff members.</p>
        <p>Commissioners voted to turn over to their attorney for condemnation proceedings a parcel of land located on Cotanche Street that lies in the path of the proposed loop roadf and owned by Joseph C. Williams.</p>
        <p>It was reported that the commission had attempted to buy the property previously but an agreement had never been reached.  "</p>
        <p>A reduction in -Site  s  ^arc</p>
        <p>of ' an engineering services</p>
        <p>city, their staff engineers will handle some of the engineering work themselves in lieu of the city paying the higher share for services rendered by CP&amp;amp;AA.</p>
        <p>Executive director Col A E Dubber formerly submitted advance notice of his retirement last night, noting that he planned to leave the commission by Nov. 1. Dubber tendered his resignation as executive director of the Housing Authority several weeks ago but had not formerly announced his intentions to retire from the Redevelopment Commission.</p>
        <p>Flying To Quiet Political Revolt</p>
        <p>DACCA, East Pakistan (AP)  President Agha Mohammed Yahya Khan is flying to East Pakistan on Wednesday in an attempt to quiet a political leaders revolt that threatens the country with civil war.</p>
        <p>Broadcasts by the Pakistan and Dacca radios today did not say how long he will remain in the angry province</p>
        <p>Police</p>
        <p>Witness</p>
        <p>Wadding</p>
        <p>By STUARTSAVAGE Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>It was a surprise to police.</p>
        <p>Officers took three persons into custody last night for soliciting without a permit. They had allegedly been selling leather goods and the city code provides that salesmen just have a license.</p>
        <p>Marilyn Rosenblum, 22, of 1112 Cotanche St., Frederick Neal Kimmerling, 19, of 1110 Cotanche St. and William Dudley Cup, 22, of Greensboro, were taken to the office of Magistrate Stanley David to have warrants charging them with having no . valid salesmans license, issued.</p>
        <p>It was then that Kimmerling and Miss Rosenblum produced a marriage license and announced that they wanted to be married.</p>
        <p>Officers quoted Kimmerling as saying he and Miss Rosenblum had been unable to find the time to locate a' magistrate to perform the wedding ceremony since the license was issued February 16.</p>
        <p>So with a group of six or seven police officers as witnesses  including the arresting officers  Miss kosenblum and Kimmerling became man and wife.</p>
        <p>The newlyweds and Culp were released under $25 bond each for appearance in District Court.</p>
        <p>back 150 days, or five months. From all indications, the SoLith Vietnamese plan to stay in Laos until about May 1, or for 53 days more. This would mean another nine months gained for Viet-namization, according to the commands assessment.</p>
        <p>This means more time to do a job of taining the Vietnamese, said the source. The Laotian drive will give the Vietnamese forces a better idea of how they can handle things. It will give them more experience, more confidence, make them more battle hardened so they can better handle the job.</p>
        <p>On the Vietnamese side of the northern front, North Vietnamese troops ambushed a U.S. truck convoy on Highway 9 seven miles west of Cam Lo and 23 miles from the Laotian border. One American was killed, 21 were wounded and two trucks were knocked out, the U.S. Command said. Enemy casualties were not known.</p>
        <p>Although no ground advance in Laos was announced, the allied commands reported more massive destruction of North Vietnamese stockpiles and truck convoys in Sepone, and South Vietnamese headquarters said</p>
        <p>nine important branches of the Ho Chi Minh trail supply network had been cut.</p>
        <p>The South Vietnamese said their troops on Sunday observed 5(X) secondary explosions set off by U.S. B52 strikes about a mile northeast of Sepone.</p>
        <p>Later, the communique said, then South Vietnamese unit searched the strike area and found the bodies Of 25 enemy, and reported about 500 tons of enemy munitions were destroyed.</p>
        <p> Raps Proposal j</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The president of the North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation says a proposal to freeze tobacco price supports for five years is a slap in the face for every flue-cured grower.</p>
        <p>B. C. Mangum said Monday the proposal fails to recognize the fact that the tobacco growers costs of production are constantly ncreasing.</p>
        <p>A proposal recently considered by the U.S. Deprtment of Agricultures newly appointed Flue-Cured Tobacco Advisory Committee would freeze tobacco price supports for 1972, 1973 and 1974 at the 1971 crop level. A formula would be developed to permit some upward adjustment in 1975 and in later years.</p>
        <p>The current price support formula for tobacco was enacted in 1960.</p>
        <p>Rose High Has 2 Morehead Scholars</p>
        <p>By WALTER R. MEARS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Charging the governments computerized information files horde the raw materials of tyranny, Sen. Charles McC. Mathias said today the FBI has quietly taken over development of a nationwide criminal-data-exchange system.</p>
        <p>The Maryland Republican said Chngress should set standards to protect individual pri-vancy from the governments information-gathering apparatus.</p>
        <p>Recent events add up to a quantum jump toward a national criminal-justice data bank a leap taken without full public knowledge or specific congressional authorization, Mathias said in testimony prepared for a Senate hearing on government surveillance and the right to privancy.</p>
        <p>It will probably be touted as a great advance for law enforcement, Mathias said. It may also be feared as a tremendous threat to individual rights.</p>
        <p>The Mathias complaint involves Project SEARCH, a 10-state demonstration system for electronic analysis and retrieval of criminal histories.</p>
        <p>Mathias said the project, financed with aid from the Law Enforcement Assistance Administration, had developed a code of ethics to protect individual privacy, exclude irrelevant and unverified information, and permit an individual to learn contends of his file.</p>
        <p>Mathias said the FBI was critical of an early draft of those safeguards.</p>
        <p>Last Dec. 9, he said, the assistance agency approved a new $1.5-million grant to continue the prjct.</p>
        <p>Rose High School has two new Morehead Scholarship winners. Harry A. Alien, III, and Stephen C. Worsley, both seniors of Rose High, were today announced recipients of the coveted Morehead Scholarship which is awarded annually in a statewide competition.</p>
        <p>W. W. Speight, chairman of the Pitt County committee which selects two candidates at the local stage, commented after being told the two had been declared recipients at the final competitions in Chapel Hill  We are delighted that both our nominees have been successful in obtaining the scholarship. Our committee had great confidence in these boys, and the results has justified our selection.</p>
        <p>Speight noted the scholarship includes tuition, board, room, lodging, hooks and annual allowance of $450 for incidentals.</p>
        <p>Alltti, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Alexander Allen, Jr., and Worsley, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Worsley, were selected on November 12 as nominees by the Pitt County nominating committeeSpeight,  Louis</p>
        <p>MOREHE AD SCHOLARSHIP WINNERS... Harry Alexander Allen, III, (left) and Stephen Cole Worsley, are both seniors at Rose High School.</p>
        <p>Gaylord, Jr., and l|oward Hodges, Jr.  \</p>
        <p>The two seniors remained in the competition by being selected at the district selections held in Williamston on January 21, and stayed in the top category at the state level.</p>
        <p>Allen, a star athlete in track and a member of the National Honor Society, has stated a preference for studying medicine. Worsley, an active Boy Scout and an outstanding swimmer, is also planning to major in medical studies.</p>
        <p>Board Awaiting County Decision On Recreation</p>
        <p>By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>Without taking official action members of the Greenville Recreation Commission last night expressed agreement that continued use of recreation facilities by non-Greenville residents would have to be seriously questioned unless the county provides some type of financial support for the Greenville facilities.</p>
        <p>Recreation Department Director Boyd Lee last night, presented a report on the meeting he had with the Coiinty Commissioners on March 1. Commissioners Sidney Carraway and Johnnie Edwards, who is also a City Councilman, had attended the county meeting with Lee.</p>
        <p>All I did was to present facts to the county commisioners on city recreation, Lee said. They accepted the facts without comments. Lee said he understands the commisioners would have comments at a later date.</p>
        <p>Lee reported facts given to the county commisioners included an explanation that records of recreation activities showed that last year, of total attendance recorded, at least 12.9 per cent of registfed participants were county residents coming into</p>
        <p>Greenville to use the facilities.</p>
        <p>Other information given the county commissioners included a statement that 13 North Carolina 'cities are now receiving help from counties in which they are located; and that 18 cities not receiving county assistance are considering restrictions on county resident use of their facilities.</p>
        <p>Lees report to the county enumerated three alternatives as possible points of consideration for the county. These are:</p>
        <p>1. County participation  a lump sum each year or a sum based on a percentage-cost per capita evaluation;</p>
        <p>2. Non-resident user fee where each non-resident family using the facilities is charged a set fee for the family or a set fee per individual; and</p>
        <p>3. A totally restricted program-one in which non-Greenville residents would be restricted from using the city facilities.</p>
        <p>Figures show that in 1970, based on the budget and the number of registered participants for all events, the Greenville recreation cost per capita amounts to $6.30.</p>
        <p>Based on this per capita cost, and the estimated 12.9 percent of county participation in ac</p>
        <p>tivities, Lee said it is his feeling that a reasonable county contribution to the Greenville facilities would be about $23,000.</p>
        <p>We have investigated every possibility and feel that county participation would be the fairest and most practical for all involved, he concluded.</p>
        <p>Carraway commented it is his opinion such a contribution from the county would be far less expensive to them than an attempt on their j&amp;gt;art to construct and operate their own facilities at this time.</p>
        <p>Lees estimate of a minimum programfor example, four gyms in the county open only from 4:00 to 10:00 p.m., without specialized programs, would cost the county in the neighborhood of $100,000 annually.</p>
        <p>Edwards commented that the Greenville programs were filled up now, and that with funds being critical, it would be dificult to justify a substanti^ increase over the citys current $179,000 budget for the Recreation Department.</p>
        <p>The budget just cant keep going up each year, Edwards said. With county particiaption we can hold our own or even increase the present program without substantially increasing the budget.</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 6)</p>
        <p>War Protestors Prepare Own 'Peace Treaty'</p>
        <p>Plans provide for 81 parkink contract the commission has ^aces or&amp;gt; one for every 30^ with City Planning and Ar-squarefeet of gross space, Clark chitectural As^^iates of Chapel</p>
        <p>Hill was als^F. approved by commissioners. .</p>
        <p>The contract, calling for a city share of $34,564 for architectural and engineering services will not be executed as such but will require a share of $18,360 on the part of the city.</p>
        <p>According to a letter from the</p>
        <p>added, and the structure and grounds wduld be well beywid the minimum requirements of ten per cent greenery.</p>
        <p>Clark said that his clients would like to purchase the entire block,, comprising some 75,000 "square feet.</p>
        <p>Commissioners voted to ap-</p>
        <p>  I  .  .  ^</p>
        <p>I By ANN BLACKMAN ^  ^  Press.Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A band of antiwar protesters is busily pushing a campaign to get a Peoples Peace Treaty on municipal election ballots across the country in a new a^ippt to. end the Vietnam war.</p>
        <p>The governments have been so unresponsive that the people have to take the initiative themselves, said Frank Greer, 24-year-old campaign coordinator for the treatys sponsor, the National Student Association. We want this to be &amp;amp; grass roots thing.</p>
        <p>The treaty calls for immediate withdrawal of</p>
        <p>all American troops from Vietnam, an im-, .mediate and total cease fire, plus negotiations to-obtain the release of all American prisoners and guarantee the safety of all withdrawing troops.</p>
        <p>Limited by an uncertain budget and only seven full-time workers, all based in New York and Washington, the treaty coordinators are contacting college campuses across the country to set up a network of volunteers.</p>
        <p>Then we want the students to take the treaty into their local communities, Greer said. We hope to gather enough names in each area that the treaty can be put on local balbts for a referendum.~  N,</p>
        <p>The National Student Association drive drew a</p>
        <p>challenge last week from Young Americans for Freedom, a, conservative, student organization, wiich announced that it will organize its own referenda on campuses and in communities. YAF National Chairman Ron Docksai predicted that most students would reject the treaty if given a chance to vote on it.</p>
        <p>Greer, a 1970 graduate of the University of Maryland, said the idea, for a peoples peace treaty originated at an NSA meeting last August when it was decided that antiwar forces needed a new focal point for generating public support for the peace movement.</p>
        <p>Fifteen studentsnine student body presidents and six college editorswere chosen to negotiate</p>
        <p>- I</p>
        <p>with students from North and outh Vietnam student unions,  .  ;</p>
        <p>In December, the students went to Vietnam" Greer said only one, Doug Hostetter, a 26-year-old student at the New School for Social Research in New York, was granted a .visa by South Vietnam. Hostetter, a Mennonite pacifist from Harrisburg, Pa., had served two years as an English teacher in Tam Ky, a South Viet-namese provincial capital.</p>
        <p>He spent 10 days in Saigon conferring with members of the South Vietnamese Student Union, which had published in their student newspaper a document similar to the treaty demands for total withdrawal of American Forces.</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0002" />
        <p>2Hie Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.Tuesday. March 9. 1971Scott Told Sch^^is Bear Brunt Of Social Turmoil</p>
        <p>CONSCIENTIOUS OBJECTION BARRED </p>
        <p>Guy Gillette. 26. gestures as he talks with newsmen after the Supreme Court upheld his conviction on charges of failing to report for induction. Gillette, a self-described humanist,</p>
        <p>Wright Replica Biplane Flown</p>
        <p>had maintained he wotalel  naiCion</p>
        <p>or fight in a United IVations i&amp;gt;^aiC4e-lc.|&amp;gt;iniS ffort. but had conscientious ot&amp;gt;je^9is 9o  Indoctiina</p>
        <p>War. &amp;lt;AP Wirephoto&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>HATTERAS, N. C. (AP)  Winds of 25 to 30 miles an hour blew Monday, just as they were blowing in 1903 on the same North Carolina Outer Banks.</p>
        <p>And, just as in 1903, a rick-ety4ooking biplane soared into the air.</p>
        <p>The only difference was that in 1903 the Wright Brothers, Orville and 1^1 bur, were making mans first powered flight.</p>
        <p>Orville Wright flew 120 feet and was in the air 12 seconds on Dec. 17, 1903, at Kill Devil Hills. Jack Lanby of Bellflower, Calif., flew 486 feet and stayed aloft about four minutes at Hat-teras, 50 miles south in the nearly exact replica of the Wrights plane.</p>
        <p>The occasion was the flming of a documentary for National Eklucational T^evision on the Wright brothers. A crew of 25 has been on the Banks twice now, trying to recreate scenes such as the Dayton, CMiio, pioneers saw 67 years ago. Lanby, used a 50-horsepower Honda motorcycle engine in his steel aircraft, considerably more power than the Wrights had. The replica is painted to look like the wooden original and is believed to be the only existing flying replica of that frst successful powered plane.</p>
        <p>Tbe major difference between the flights was that Orville Wright flew freely and Lanby was tied to the ground. The</p>
        <p>Group Sponsors 'Singspiration'</p>
        <p>AYDEN  The Youth Fellowship Auxiliary of the Ay^n Free Will Baptist Church is sponsoring a singspiration scheduled for Sunday, March 14, at 7:30 p. m. ..........</p>
        <p>An offering will be taken during the service, which will be applied toward the present building program at the denominations summer camp, Cragmont.</p>
        <p>Some of the areas participating singers include: 'The Melody Makers and the Hardee Sisters of the Black Jack FWB Church; Wayne Vincent of the Winterville FWB Church; and a singing group from the Bethany FWB Church.</p>
        <p>The public is invited to attned the service.</p>
        <p>filmmakers said Federal Administration safety rules demanded the tether.</p>
        <p>However, Lanby did take off and fly without assistance.</p>
        <p>Miss Pat Peden of the South Carolina Eklucational Television Network in Columbia, a production assistant, said the replica plane has now flown nine times and will be used a few more days before Lanby takes it back to California.,</p>
        <p>She said the pilot was paid $10,000 under a grant from National Educational Television to build and operate the craft for the six weeks of Aiming.</p>
        <p>The end product will be a 90-minute program on NETT in late May. Miss Peden said the production is being directed by New York documentary filmmaker Dr. Arthur Barron, who wrote the original script.</p>
        <p>Cold And Clear In Most States</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A cold clear weather pattern settled over most of the nation today with snows sweeping off the eastern shores of the Great Lakes and record flreezes in the Deep South.</p>
        <p>Pulaski, N.Y., reported 10 inches of fresh snow and Youngstown, Ohio, had a 3-inch fall. Another storm in the Texas Panhandle spread snow across the Great Plains but the precipitation was expected to turn to thundershowers as the storm moves east.</p>
        <p>Record lows for the date was set at Columbia, S.C., 24 Savannah. Ga., 28 Jacksonville, Fla., 28 Tampa, FTa., 37 and West Palm Beach, Fla., 39.</p>
        <p>CREATORS OF REASONABLE DRUG PRICES</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>ALL .</p>
        <p>'.no</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>phone</p>
        <p>CUSTOMERS ^ of</p>
        <p>ECKERDS</p>
        <p>BE CHARGEI</p>
        <p>WILL</p>
        <p>ISAME LOV ON____</p>
        <p>' Madras,</p>
        <p>'PRICE</p>
        <p>PRESCRIPTIONS</p>
        <p>aVc'SuKn</p>
        <p>CLUBS, ORGANIZATIONS^ OR INDIVIDUALS; BUT  &amp;lt;1  '</p>
        <p>EVERY DAY LOW TRICED TO EVERYONE!</p>
        <p>Elected To Student Post</p>
        <p>Ciiarles ISdf. Vincent, a second year law stndent rom dreen-ville. Has l&amp;gt;een elected vice president of tHe Graduate and Professional Student I^ederation of the University of North Carolina at GHai&amp;gt;el Hill.</p>
        <p>THe GF^SF* is a newly formed student government for the 5,846 graduate and professional stixlents at UNC- Vincent was elected as tHe JLaw Soliool</p>
        <p>NO FUZZ FOR FUZZ</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE (UPI)  </p>
        <p>Goatees and beards are out, but neatly trimmed mustaches and sideburns are still permissible for Baltimore policemen.</p>
        <p>The latest grooming standards issued by the police stipulate, however, that sideburns must not go further than the lowest point that the ear is * connected to the head and they should not be flaired at the base.</p>
        <p>In no case, can hair anywhere ^ on the head exceed six inches in length:</p>
        <p>C*H AFtUES VINOENT</p>
        <p>representative to the Senate of the GF*SF* t&amp;gt;efore being elected vice president- As vice president. He is chairman of the committee on student life and coordinates the infirmiry, orientation, and consumer affairs subcommittees. He also serves as second year class representative to the Hoard of Gk&amp;gt;vernors of the Student Bar Association at the I-^w^ School.</p>
        <p>THe son of IVIr. and IVIrs. George DeHocHe Vincent of lOOO Elast Tenth Street, He is married to the former IVTiss Sandra Dough of Aurora . A 1964 graduate of Hose High School, he graduated writh a degree in history from UNC-CH and taught one year before entering Law School .</p>
        <p>NIGHT THY</p>
        <p>ALBANY, N- U. (AH)</p>
        <p>Gov.</p>
        <p>Nelson Floclcefeller of Ncnv York says that if Hresident Nixon steps aside in 1972 he may seek the Ftepublican presidential nomination bimself.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Top chool officials in North Carolina have told Gov. Bob Scott that society is undergoing the throes of rather drastic change, and the schools are bearing the brunt of the turmoil.</p>
        <p>The comment came in a meeting between Scott and school leaders called by the governor to discuss the racial unrest in North Carolinas schools. The meeting was held at the Executive Mansion Sunday night.  **</p>
        <p>Jerry Paschal, Goldsboro school superintendent and president of the North Carolina Association of Eklucators, called the meeting just a bull session.</p>
        <p>He wanted something of a situation report, input from us on how we viewed the situation, Paschal said.</p>
        <p>The governors office said the meeting was called by the governor to review the current situation and to seek means of averting further unrest. The office said no police recom men -dations were made at the meeting.</p>
        <p>Also at the gathering were Dr. Oaig Phillips, state superintendent of public instruction, and his staff; A.C. Dawson, executive secretary of the N. C. Association of Eklucators; and E. B. Palmer, NCAE associate executive secretary.</p>
        <p>The meeting came one day after students, teachers and civil rights leaders from across the state delivered a seating indictment of desegregation in North (Carolina before the state advisory committee to the U.S. CSvil Rights (krmmissicMi.</p>
        <p>Phillips said he related to Scott some of the testimony his department gave at the Civil Rights (kimmission hearings.</p>
        <p>He said he noted the fact that we are making a great deal of progress in the sichools across the state and said his department is working to pinpoint the remaining problems.</p>
        <p>He said the discussion did not turn to any new legislation since the offlcials present felt the basic legal structure is sound. Phillips said the talk centa-ed on broad solutions such as working to provide a structure for dialogue* between students and getting stu-</p>
        <p>Warden's Leave Unconnected To Rrison Disorder</p>
        <p>TALLAHASSEE, Fla. (AP)  Raiford State Prison Warden Donald L. Hassfurder Monday was granted an indefinite leave of absence with a long-injured knee strained during recent {X'ison disturbances, officials reported.</p>
        <p>Hassfurders leave was com-pletely unconnected with charges made following the - prison troubles at the 3,500-convict facility that inmates were denied civil rights and beaten without resisting in February, said spokesman Rex Newman for the State Department of Health and Rehabilitative Services.</p>
        <p>During his leave, L. E. Dug-gar, superintendent of the Lake Butler Prison Reception and Medical Ctenter, will take command of the nearby Raiford facility, Newman said.</p>
        <p>David Bachman said Hassfurder, who underwent surgery eight weeks ago for the knee IM*oblem, was on the knee a lot more than he should have been during the prison troubles.</p>
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        <p>dents involved in working on school problems.</p>
        <p>Dawsmi said, The point was made that the legal question of integration has been settled.</p>
        <p>The major task now is to get the general public to accept the fact that it is here.</p>
        <p>He said the participants agreed that society is under</p>
        <p>going a drastic change and that the schools are feeling the major impact.</p>
        <p>Paschal said the states educators have been concerned</p>
        <p>about the unrest for some time and be attributed low mwale among many teachers to the feeling they have been the only ones worried about it.</p>
        <p>Turkish Police Claim They're Closing In On Kidnaper Group</p>
        <p>By NICK LUDING'TOIN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>ANKARA, Turkey &amp;lt;AF*)  </p>
        <p>Turkish police said today they are closing in on the leftiist kidnapers of four U.S. airnnen who were freed Monday bight after five days in captivity.</p>
        <p>No ransom was paid to the terrorists of the so-called Turkish Peoples Liberation Army despite their threat to shoot the</p>
        <p>^Atnericans if $400,000 was not handed over by last Saturday morning. Both the U.S. and Turkish governments refused to bargain.</p>
        <p>Interior Minister Haldun Mentesoglu said a police dragnet was on the kidnapers trail. Hundreds of uniformed and plainclothes police were seed combing a high-rent residential district near the capitals Embassy Row.</p>
        <p>Patrol Assigns Vetercwn To Pitt</p>
        <p>Highway Patrolman Gfonn L. Swanson has been assigned to Pitt Cbunty to replace *TVooper F. L. Owens who was promoted to sergeant and transferred to Jacksonville in January, according to 'Troop A Ck&amp;gt;mmander, Capt. R. F. Williamson.</p>
        <p>Ptl. Swanson, a native of Cleveland in Rowan Ck&amp;gt;unty near Salisbury, attended Cleveland schools and worked for a laundry there before entering the U. S. Army. Followring his discharge from servcie in 1857, he operated a service station before joining the Highway Patrol in July, 1959.</p>
        <p>'The 12-year Highway F*atrol veteran has spent his entire career with the law enforcement agency staticmed at Rich Square in Northampton Ck&amp;gt;unty. He is married to the former Mary Conner from Rich Square and</p>
        <p>Hidden Cameras Snap A Bandit</p>
        <p>ATLANTA, Ga. (AP) - Hid</p>
        <p>den cameras captured a full facial view of a bank rohber who rij^d off his mask as he ran out of the bank building.</p>
        <p>Tlie FBI had the picture in its possession shortly after two men wearing ski masks Monday disarmed a guard at the National Bank of Georgia tn-anch here, grabbed the money from a tellers station and rushed outside.</p>
        <p>A hidden surveiUance camera was grinding away near the buildings exit as one of the men jerked off his mask, revealing a full view of his face to the camera.</p>
        <p>they have one child, two-year-old David Andrew Swanson.</p>
        <p>'The patrolman is currently staying in the barracks at 'Troop A Headquarters in Greenville. He and his family will move to Ayden when their new home under consturction on Terrace Drive is completed.</p>
        <p>Trooper Swanson is a member of the First Baptist &amp;lt;3iurch in Rich Square where his wife has served as organist.</p>
        <p>PRIVATE ISLE PAGO TACtO, American Samoa (UPI)One of the seven islands of American Samoa in the South Pacific is Swains Island, which is privately owned by descendants of New England whaling Captain EHi Jennings.</p>
        <p>Although Swains and its 50 residents is historically part of the Tokelau Island group, this eight-mile-wide ^land is considered part of Anierican Samoa because of Jennings U.S. citizenship.</p>
        <p>GLENN L. SWANSON</p>
        <p>Urges Help For Black Colleges</p>
        <p>NEVi^ ORLEANS (AP)  Cqrus R. Vance, former U.S. negotiator at the Paris peace talks, challenged the South Monday to aid black colleges and universities.</p>
        <p>The new political awakenings in the South niust be matched by a new sense of awareness and responsibility in the area of higher education, especially black higher education, Vance told a meeting of the United Negro d^ll^e Fund.</p>
        <p>Vance, a former deputy defense secretary, said the time has come for Southern communities to recognize that the black schools are positive assets to them and that they must invest in their future.</p>
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        <p>Turkish officials said the kidnapers telephoned acquaintances several times Monday trying to get the captives off their hands. Late in the evening they suddenly gathered up their belongings ah? left the Americans in the apartment where they had been held. After waiting a bit to make sure they were not out there, S.Sgt. Jimmie J. Sexton of San Angelo, Tex., said, the four airmen walked out and caught a taxi to their billet.</p>
        <p>They were questioned immediately by American officials and 'Turkish police.</p>
        <p>Held captive with Sexton were Airmen l.C. Richard Ca-raszi of Stamford, Conn., Larry J. Heavner of Denver, O&amp;gt;lo., and James M. Gholson of Alexandria, Va.</p>
        <p>rhe airmen, looking well and composed, said they were treated well by the kidnapers. But when you are looking down the barrel of a machine gun,' anyone would be scared,</p>
        <p>Caraszi said.</p>
        <p>The kidnapers said they seizcKl the Americans because they wanted to liberate Turkey, Caraszi said. But the men turned aside other questions about their abductors with no comment.</p>
        <p>Sharing Liked By Ex-Governor</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP)  Former Arkansas Gov. Winth-rop Rockefeller has said here revenue-sharing can help end wHat he termed the constant bypass of state ability.</p>
        <p>Addressing a Vanderbilt University audience. Rockefeller said he supported revenue-sharing when he was governor and added: * There are lots of legislators to make laws, but only 50 to take care of state administration.</p>
        <p>Rockefeller, a Republican, was defeated last fall by Dale Bumpers.</p>
        <p>Rotarians Told Of Need To Safeguard State AAorshlands</p>
        <p>Tom Kane, an ocean law consultant to Attny. Gen. Robert Morgan, substituted for the attorney general is speaking to the Rotary Club last night.</p>
        <p>Morgan, who had been scheduled to speak, sent word that he was unable to attend because of conferences on the ECU medical school matter and business before the Legislature last night. Morgan is chairman of the ECU board of trustees which is meeting this afternoon to determine the next step in the medical school issue.</p>
        <p>Kane discussed the importance of protecting marshlands of Coastal North Carolina.</p>
        <p>We would be foolish to permit destruction of marshlands that we know are valuable until we know just how valuable they are, he declared.</p>
        <p>Mans thinking has got to change so he is developing with nature rather than against it. Kane said that since fish leave North Carolinas inland waters and are caught in other areas there is enough interstate character to the problem so the federal government would not have any trouble taking over control if it really wants to. He said this would be the least desirable approach to the pHToblem.</p>
        <p>North Carolinians can do it themselves, he said. We are going in the right direction.</p>
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        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Taesday. March t. l7l3</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>-Abb</p>
        <p>By Abi^</p>
        <p>te 1f71 kr CMcm* Tr!</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: This is i*</p>
        <p>MODEL HATRED ... at left is model agency head, Eileen Eord and model Carolyn Kenmore is pictured</p>
        <p>right.</p>
        <p>Tt Seems yi</p>
        <p>Lot Of For</p>
        <p>ww</p>
        <p>"^omen Models</p>
        <p>il  Buren</p>
        <p>mm^ao. Y. M*ws %vm., Iik:.]</p>
        <p>to FOR DEMOCFt&amp;gt;V&amp;lt; who wanted to know why  -^Piromeii in her office &amp;lt;roajaM&amp;lt;li3*t</p>
        <p>vote about whether or not to  pants suits:</p>
        <p>Perhaps the boss knows  interpretation  some -ir:n%en</p>
        <p>would put on pants.</p>
        <p>Here in New York City, ifenmale teachers were permitted to wear pants suites. Snce that time, every Ic^arad of pants imaginable has been ^varoir'jni by women teacher's oC nil ages, shapes and sizes, and sorrrae of the rear views hn-v^ "fca^en horrendous! Ive seen slcin-t.i^im^ jeans, ill-fitting Icnif: bell bottoms, ski-type str^:ilii  pants, lounging pkja.nrans,</p>
        <p>hip-huggers, and a few neat, -^^11-tailored pants suits. C'Viery few.]</p>
        <p>Let the ladies inflict pantos  on the world 0UTS_3E:  of</p>
        <p>business hours. They are, for-  most part, hideous. I=*l.sse</p>
        <p>omit my name. I am a wonrasan teacher in the Bronac.</p>
        <p>MR. AND MRS. SERMONS</p>
        <p>Couple Honored On Silver jLnniversary</p>
        <p>ANTiT Arsnrs</p>
        <p>By CATHARIINE BBLEWSTER NEW YORK (WNS)  When Eileen Eord, who heads what is 'obably the worlds most</p>
        <p>famous model agency, appeared on the Dick Cavett show, she was prepared only for a routine appearance to publicize her new book, Secrets of the IVIodels World (Trident Rress). Instead, she quite unintentionally sparked a remarkable display of hatred for models and modeling by two of the other guests that evening.</p>
        <p>Cavett had recruited an allwoman panel, consisting of model Carolyn Kenmore, whose own book, IVlannequin, is now in paperback under the Bantam Book label, Gwen Davis, author of a novel. The Rretenders, Charlotte Curtis, womens editor of The New York Times, and Dr. Joyce Brothers, syndicated psychologist.</p>
        <p>It was IVIiss Davis and Nliss Curtis who broke things wide open with a revelation of quite unsuspected hatred for models and naodeling. Nliss Davis led the attack telling Mrs. Eord that the functicMi of her model agency was similar to pimping. When Miss Curtis ai!^&amp;gt;eared, and was asked by Mr. Cavett about her attitude, as an editor, toward models, whe replied instantly, I hate them.</p>
        <p>The two ladies at once recognized each other as kindred spirits, and while the embarrassed Cavett promptly removed himself, in a mental sense, from control of his show, they proceeded to an all-out on Mrs. Eord as astonishing as their opening remarks.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Eord showed remarkable toughness and refinement in taking the barrage which ranged from Nliss Davis all-too-evident hangups about being plumper than models to Miss Curtis teeth-clenched Womens Lib notion that models are wickedly participating in a male plot to sell unwanted goods to women.</p>
        <p>How About Times?</p>
        <p>Mrs. Eord did her best on that one:  Why does th&amp;lt;^ New York</p>
        <p>Times use models if you disapprove of them? she asked.</p>
        <p>Miss Curtis apparently didnt understand- The Times has to report the news, even if its about criminals.</p>
        <p>That was another nasty one.</p>
        <p>but it hardly answered the question. When The New York Times photographs models at fashion openings, thats reporting the news (although we fail to see the criminality there). But when every Sunday a feature appears in the Sunday magazine of The Times, with two pages of fashions, the hiring of models is The Times own choice. After all, they could show the clothes on hangers, couldnt they?</p>
        <p>The hostility displayed by MiSs Davis and Miss Curtis wasnt the only surprise on the show. Most of their overkill language was applauded by the audience. Either it was a stacked house or the enmity against models is much more widely felt than realized.</p>
        <p>During the time when Mrs. Eord was struggling, unaided by Cavett, with two unreasonable remies, Carolyn Kenmore sat by , largely silent, although, as a model, the hatred was directed as much at her as at Mrs. Ford.</p>
        <p>Sleazy</p>
        <p>The reason wasnt hard to find, and Carolyn confirmed my guess in an interview a few days later. Mrs. Ford jumped me, so why should I back her up?</p>
        <p>Nlrs. Ford had indeed been most annoyed with C^arolyn, who was the first to appear on the show. Dick Cavett had brought up an incident Carolyn relates in her book, Mannequin, about one of those sleazy characters always to be found on the fringes of the modeling field, whose supposed jobs turn out to involve sex. Carolyn and Mr. Cavett talked lightly about the incident, and then she went on to discuss the busy schedule of a models life and the contents"^f the tote models carry everywhere.</p>
        <p>When Eileen Ford came out, she was quite angry with Carolyn for having put the fringe character in her book. Apparently, Mrs. Ford had gotten the impression that Man-riequin was full of such sensationalism, as she called it, and she refused to b^placated in any way by Carolyns further explanations.</p>
        <p>That, of course, made it rather unfortunate when Mrs. Ford later found herself locked in combat with the .two model haters. Carolyn Kenmore simply</p>
        <p>shut up and sat there looking sweet. However, Carolyn was perfectly willing a few days later to give her very articulate opinions.</p>
        <p>Male Models</p>
        <p>Theres no exploitation in modeling. You work hard and you get well paid. Why didnt they bring up male models? There are plenty of men in the business.</p>
        <p>Over a table at Sardis, Eileen Ford later said the same thing. The Ford Agency has a male side, run by my husband, Jerry. After that TV show, the men we handle were all furious.</p>
        <p>(Carolyn: Miss Davis was so hung up on being overweight, it was pathetic. She couldnt keep off the idea that were all halfstarved!</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ford:  Miss Davis</p>
        <p>wanted to believe that self-indulgence is the normal way to live. Models, in fact, are much healthier than the average woman. Its a disciplined life, but it pays off in life-long habits. I wrote Secrets of the Models World to explain all that. Girls want to model, but know nothing about it.</p>
        <p>Carolyn: I didnt mind the attacks, because they just sounded ignorant. Dr. Brothers was the only one who made sense. She was quite right when she said models share an adventurous kind of personality. Dr. Joyce Brothers had appeared last on the Cavett show, and after the overkill nonsense from Miss Davis and Miss Curtis, she was the voice of sweet reason itself. Her personality, which is so deeply certain and calm that you feel like lying down at once on the nearest couch and telling her everything, fell like cool water on the over-heated atmosphere.</p>
        <p>No one even dared to say a word, and she sweetly ignored all that had gone on before she appeared.</p>
        <p>Protective</p>
        <p>Carolyn: She seemed to know what it was all about. I dont know why Eileen Ford jumped on me for that incident in my book. Maybe she was bugged by the impromtu nature of the show. But she should know these things happen. Shes got the most protective agency in the business.</p>
        <p>She does, indeed. Its more important to be known as a Ford girl  than by your own name. Mrs Ford has been known to make life very tough for fringe characters who try fast ones with her models. But evidently Eileen Ford hates to have such incidents in a field she loves publicized.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ford: I knew before the show that something was wrong, when Miss Davis and Miss Curtis stuck together and wouldnt talk with me. I dont understand hatred of models. If they dislike the fact that goods are sold, then stop salesmen, showrooms, all methods of transferring goods. But the model is such a small piece of it all! As for models wickedly selling clothes, why, if Miss Curtis wants to wear a loin cloth, let her. But other womtMi want clothes and want to see what they look like on somebody.</p>
        <p>Despite the audience hostility in the studio, Mrs. Ford has since received a deluge of mail from viewers who were shocked at the language used to attack her.</p>
        <p>The hatred of a Gwen Davis or a Charlotte Curtis, said Carolyn, says more about the haters than about models. That kind of irrationality always does.</p>
        <p>DEAR ANTI: Interp One young woman, when m beach where a sign was two-piece swim suits. expls swim suit. Shorts and n cap</p>
        <p>is all important. M as: for swimming topless Women tlant hers WAS a t,^ atch.</p>
        <p>It, a</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: What cl speaking French [or any</p>
        <p>3roji think of mature &amp;amp;T foreign language for* trftat</p>
        <p>matter] in front of people wlito dont understand a word?</p>
        <p>My future in-laws speak  in  front of me, kno''</p>
        <p>cannot speak a word of it. Tlmo&amp;gt;r speak English very wreH .. there is no reason for them t;o sp&amp;gt;eak Erench.</p>
        <p>This has been going on ^oa- k.wo years. Please dora*^ fell me to leam French hecatxs^ I laad all I could do to pnss Spanish in hi^ school.</p>
        <p>Am I making a big deal oaat of nothing? Or are tfao3r just plain rude?  NO  PAR  LAY"</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Ray (Pete) Sermons of Greenville celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary on Saturday evening.</p>
        <p>They were entertained at a dinner party at the Candlewick Inn given by their daughters and son-in-law. Miss Joy Sermons, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Healy, Miss Shelley Sepmons, Miss Debra Sermons and Miss Pat Sermons.</p>
        <p>The honoree wore a navy and white dress and was presented a corsage of white orchids tied with silver ribbon.</p>
        <p>The dinner table was centered with a two-tiered Wedding cake with candles encircled with silver bells placed on the table.</p>
        <p>DEAR NO PAR LAY VOO = They are rude for  But.</p>
        <p>you could also be making an kS.|g deal out off nothlxa^g. dont have to "par lay voo jimass-t. pretend to coinps'eneX^</p>
        <p>Approximately 25 family members and friends present for the event.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: The story being able to attend public with her parents may not ka is true.</p>
        <p>We had reason to inv learned Jhat a student may</p>
        <p>k&amp;gt;out the 16-year-ol&amp;lt;i 1 because she was nca:</p>
        <p>KKande any sense to you,</p>
        <p>1. not U.'vring k&amp;gt;ut. it</p>
        <p>The couple are celebrating their anniversary today.</p>
        <p>id rlnool</p>
        <p>cate diat very situation at:tend a Detroit public unless he is living with his fanaJU;^ or a legal guardian.</p>
        <p>It seems to me that if a student finds living condibioms at home intolerable, but is ablc^  k.o live with family fi*ierac3a,  lie</p>
        <p>should be permitted to attend  sc^l^ool as long as he mulcts  bis</p>
        <p>grades and attends school roggm.nl a rly.</p>
        <p>We hear so much alx&amp;gt;mn.b ~**dr&amp;lt;^ outs. I tbinNc  an</p>
        <p>investigation would show tbat:  many are locked out.**</p>
        <p>MICHIGAN REAJE&amp;gt;:</p>
        <p>E ngagemen t A.nnounced</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Bunch of Greenville announce the engagement of their daughter, Martha Ellen, to Linwood Jerry 1 Lawson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Lawson of Greenville. The wedding will take place April 9.</p>
        <p>Suburban Beauty Hints</p>
        <p>from Clara Garris</p>
        <p>Unusual Questions Answered</p>
        <p>What is the average rate of growth of hair? Under normal conditions/ the average rate is one - half inch per month. This means that if your hair grew unabated for twenty years it would grow to ten feet in length!</p>
        <p>However, your hair does not normally live that long, and thus is not likely to grow to such length, even if you so desired.</p>
        <p>How long, then, would hair actually grow over a period of twenty years? The answer may surprise you. Since the average life of a hair is from two to five years, the longest it would possibly grow would be two and one - half feet.</p>
        <p>Want to know more answers to unusual questions? Watch for future columns.</p>
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        <p>4The Diiiy ReHector. Greenville. N.C.Tneedny. Mnrch . lt7i</p>
        <p>Probation Data Shows Change</p>
        <p>The sharp increase in the number of persons coming under the supervision of the states Probation Commission during the past year is further evidence that North Carolina is changing its methods of dealing with those convicted in its courts.</p>
        <p>During 1970, the number of people under supervision of the State Probation Commission more than doubled. According to Probation Director W. H. Gibson, there were 11,466 persons placed under supervision of the agency in 1970 alone, bringing to 22,158 the number of persons now</p>
        <p>Interested In</p>
        <p>Higher Office</p>
        <p>Bv BRYAN IIAISIJP</p>
        <p>RALEIGH - Can a Jew be elected to statewide office in North Carolina?</p>
        <p>Why not. if he's an officer of his hometown YMCA, a successful businessman who made it big with a better Christmas tree ornament A Tar Heel Baptist leader asked that first question, then answered it himself with the observation that voters today probably would decide on the basis of factors other than religious faith or prejudice.</p>
        <p>The second question describes the man he had in mind. State Senator Marshall A. Rauch of Gaston County, the most likely prospect to test the proposition.</p>
        <p>Rauch listened to the incident with a smile, and</p>
        <p>BRYAN</p>
        <p>HAISLIP</p>
        <p>responded with a wisecrack. In my district, no Jew has ever run and been defeated, he said.</p>
        <p>That the question was asked outside the Gaston-Cleveland district Rauch represents illustrates the attention his career has attracted.</p>
        <p>Goals At The Top</p>
        <p>Higher political office does interest him. Life is a matter of striving for the maximum, he said, in business, politics, or elsewhere.</p>
        <p>My natural inclination is to search out my own potential, he said.</p>
        <p>His elective service began with three terms on the Gastonia City Council. He is now in his third consecutive legislative term. Whats next  a try for lieutenant governor in 72, U. S. Senate in 74, other possibilities  is a future decision.</p>
        <p>Rauch stays loose on his plans, but hes fixed firmly for those of a friend. Hes committed to Hargrove (Skipper) Bowles, Jr., of Greensboro fellow Senator and a business partner (in a Colorado hog-raising venture), for the Democratic nomination for governor next year.</p>
        <p>Skipper has the business leadership and experience our state needs, said Rauch. He will make an excellent governor.</p>
        <p>Rauch is virtually the only legislator to publicly stake himself out for a candidate at this early stage. Others are playing it coy towards prospective contenders &amp;gt; Bowles. Lieutenant-Governor H. P. (Pat) Taylor, Jr., Attorney General Robert Morgan, and anyone else who might pop on the scene.</p>
        <p>His forthright endorsement for the man he wants to win is</p>
        <p>typical of Rauch's unorthodox approach He Adopted North Carolina Hes a Yankee who settled South, and became an enthusiastic civic booster the equal of any of the natives.</p>
        <p>Hes a social moderate with a record of leadership in human relations, and a fiscal conservative who believes in watching the balance sheet.</p>
        <p>Hes a businessman, schooled in competition and educated on hard knocks; an immigrants grandson who knows the American dream as reality.</p>
        <p>Assets to the Rauch style are dark good looks (an inheritance from Hungarian ancestors) and an outgoing nature. Hes a favorite with the girls who serve as Senate pages, and an easy mingler oi any scene.</p>
        <p>Rauch came to North Carolina from his native New York to attend Duke University in the early 40s. He fell for a coed, Jeanne Girard of Bessemer City. They married and set up housekeeping in her hometown which he made his.</p>
        <p>The newcomer quickly involved himself in community work, the Boys Qub, Big Brother, and civic activity centered on youth and recreation. That dovetailed with political interests and eventually led his to run successfully for the City Council.</p>
        <p>YMCA President Next Among a host of organizations and good causes, he supported the YMCA and now serves as its vice president; hes due to become president next June.</p>
        <p>The Cbristmas ornament business (x-iginated when a mail order executive asked Rauch, whose company produced knitting yarns, twine and similar novelties, if he could duplicate an imported ball wound with crude rayon yarn.</p>
        <p>(?an we do it? Rauch asked his superintendent. Somebody did it. We can do it, he replied.</p>
        <p>It took some doing, but they did. Satin sheen ornaments were patented. The first year production was nearly 2^ million; last year, the figure reached 70 million.</p>
        <p>Business success freed his for public service, Rauch agreed. Its a route more businessmen should take, at all levels, in the interest of better government, he said.</p>
        <p>Economic growth can finance government services without raising taxes, Rauch said. Its a point of pride that he didnt vote for any of the 1969 levies, including the local option sales tax ruled unconstitutional to the consternation of the current session.</p>
        <p>I didnt know it was unconstitutional, but I knew it was wrong, he said.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209Cotanche Street. Greenville. N. C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday llirough Friday Afternoon and Sund^ Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Pubiishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance Home Deiivery By Carrier Motor Route Monthly 12.25</p>
        <p>By Mail. One Year .Six Months TTiree Months</p>
        <p>127.00</p>
        <p>13.50</p>
        <p>6.75</p>
        <p>(Prices include sales tax where applicable)</p>
        <p>MEMBEROF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled 40 use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of publ'c'atioiis of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request Member Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>Not Much More Until After 1972 Election</p>
        <p>Continuing rises in the governments wholesale price index is a good indication that inflation still is not fully under control, even after a somewhat austere period.</p>
        <p>The government reported last week that February saw the biggest rise in wholesale prices in 17 years. For a two month period it was the sharpest rise in 20 years. The big increase was blamed largely on rising cost of farm products and processed foods.</p>
        <p>Spokesmen were cautious about looking at the big increases as being over-significant; however we can be sure that the rise will soon be reflected in higher costs for food prices.</p>
        <p>Things are being done to the economy now to create better times, but there still is a question as to whether inflation has been brought under control. We can be sure, however, that little more will be done in this direction until next years election is out of the way.  \</p>
        <p>Mills Wouldn't Abandon Plans</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON  Despite frenetic backstage efforts by the Administration to persuade Rep. Wilbur D. Mills of Arkansas not to eviscerate President Nixons new American revolution, the threat has by no means disappeared, as sope prematurely relieved Administration officals like to think.</p>
        <p>The new woo-Wilbur operation, highlighted by a long overdue chat between the President and Mills, has definitely diminished tension. But Mills has not abandoned plans to have the Federal government take over a substantial portion of state welfare costs if ^and this is the crux of the matterthe runaway welfare program is made fraud-proof with a ceiling on its scandalous growth. Even if that can be achieved, Mills would still phase out over several years the Federal takeover of state costs of welfare spending for families with children, probably leaving some share with the state. TTiis exactly comports with Mills intentions reported by us nearly three weeks ago.</p>
        <p>Thus, the momentous decision to come from Mills on welfare was not made, as the Adnriinistration hopes, over bacon and eggs with the President last Friday. Rather , it is being hammered out in d|iy-long sessions behind cloed doors of Mills House Ways and Means Committee. By next week, it may be clear whether Mills can reform the welfare program sufficiently to justify a far more substantial Federal takeover than the White House wants.</p>
        <p>The answer to that question will determine not only whether welfare reform-including the Nixon family-assistance plan^will have a</p>
        <p>more distinctly Democratic label. Most important, it will determine whether any money at all is left in the budget for Mr. Nixons proposed revenue-sharing.</p>
        <p>When MUls in late January started hinting at a Federal takeover of welfare in place of revenue-sharing, the White House responded with a hard sell. Policy chief John Ehrlichman briefed Congressmen on how most states would receive more money under revenue-sharing. Administration lobbyists advised Congressmen they would be fools to deflect the vociferous wdfare lobby from state capitals to Washington.</p>
        <p>It didnt work. All sorts of Democrats were seizing upon Millss vaguely-worded, vaguly-attributed hints on Federalizing welfare costs as the most viable alternative to revenue-sharing. Although the White House expected massive Southern opposition, thei opposite was occurring.</p>
        <p>Moreover, with a long welfare fight in prospebt, pressure was growing to disconnect the immensely popular Social Security increase from the welfare bill and pass it immediatelya prospect gloomily reported to the President by Elliot Richardson, Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare. Without the Social Security sweetener, Mr. Nixons welfare reform would be endangered.</p>
        <p>Somewhat tardily, the Administration realized a non-aggression pact with Mills was essential. George Shultz, the powerful Budget chief, visited him on Feb. 24. He helped arrange the Feb. 26 White Hous^|{reakfast attended by the President, Mills, Shultz, Ehrlichman, Richardson, and Secretary of Labor James Hodgson. Incredibly enough, this was the</p>
        <p>(Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>IF WE DONT GET BUSY...</p>
        <p>supervised by the Commission.</p>
        <p>The director also asserted the state is realiiing a savings of some $150,000 per day by having these people on probation rather than in prison. The cost of supervising a person on probation, he said, is about 35 cents per day compared with the states cost of $7.55 per day for keeping a person in prison.</p>
        <p>North Carolina, in recent years, has made many reforms in its penal program. Although much still needs to be done, the changes which have been made are significant. Not the least of these is the sharp increase in those under supervision of the Probation Commission. If this aspect of the program is to be successfully administered, it is essential that the Probation Commission be allocated sufficient funds to take card of the increased load being placed upon it.</p>
        <p>MONEY</p>
        <p>It is amazing to contemplate the measure of success which some people seem to be able to obtain. There are more rich people in the world today than ever before and only a fewof these inherited their wealth. Most of them have made great fortunes by pursuing some little possibility into an area that was wonderful to contemplate and even more wonderful to have a share in participation. Henry, Ford, Thomas A. Edison, Andrew Carnegie  these men and their careers established new achievements. They ended up with more power than the most powerful rulers of antiquity had or evert dreamed of having. And now a new group has arisen which count their fortune not</p>
        <p>millions but in billions. Itis hard to say at this early stage</p>
        <p>of the game whether these present fortunes and the power that lies back of them will give us a better world or a worse and more complicated world.</p>
        <p>We should try to get ourselves to the place where we neither worship money or call it ail the bad names we can lay our tongues to. We may some day have fortunes that will sway earthly life and make it better. Also, there is the possibility that accumulations of wealth may some day corrupt and debase our planet to an incalculable drgree.</p>
        <p>Honesty, unselfishness, commitment to. human betterment may go a long way to establishing heaven on earth  or precisely the oi^site if we let riches and power do their worst instead of their best.  .</p>
        <p>By Earl L. Douglass</p>
        <p>Learn</p>
        <p>It All By Mail</p>
        <p>By HAL BOYLE NEW YORK (AP)-Things a columnist might never know if he didn't open his mail: Sewing aside from telephoning their boy friendsis the chief hobby of U.S. tei-age girls. It also has become a $3-billion-a-year industry. Some 45 nillion femmesand an unknown number of mennow sew at home about 600 million garments annually, two out of every five worn by women and children.</p>
        <p>Odd claims to fame: The people who sell Volkswagens say that 180 babies have been born in their small beetleshaped autos since they started collecting such statistics in 1964. In most cases the cars were racing the stork to the hospital.</p>
        <p>One of Americas most wasteful habits is to throw away its solid wastes. They amount to seven pounds a person daily, and experts estimate that 50 to 60 per</p>
        <p>By JAMES KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>What Inherent Powers?</p>
        <p>You would expect that great questions of constitutional law would come leaping greatly onto the public stage, with a drum^t)ll of contentious statements and a clamor of legal arms. Usually they do. But out in Michigan, a towering question of fundamental law is maturing so quietly that few observers have remarked it.</p>
        <p>The issue goes to what</p>
        <p>might be termed the inherent powers of a President. Do any such powers exist? If so, what are their outer limits? How can they be restrained?</p>
        <p>Alan Barth of the Washington Post, one of the most respected constitutional scholars in our town, recently gave full - length treatment to the Michigan case. In his view, the Nixon administration, through At-</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say Friend, Not Foe</p>
        <p>(Jacksonville Daily News)</p>
        <p>I Am a Human Being, Please Do Not Fold, Spindle or Mutilate Me, was one of the first slogans of the campus revolution.</p>
        <p>An Eastern bank recently advertised that we do not computerize our customers.</p>
        <p>A standard excuse for a billing error is, We have switched over to a computer and dont know where anything is.</p>
        <p>Computer error was the widely quoted explanation by a government official for the near collision of two aircraft.</p>
        <p>An article in Fortune magazine blamed the bankruptcy of the Pm Central Railroad on the inability of the Pennsy computers to talk to those of the New York Central.</p>
        <p>Its things like this that make computer professionals want to climb the wall. One of them is Walter M. Carlson, president of the Association for Computer Machinery and a technical consultant to IBM.</p>
        <p>Ten years ago, computer reliability was a problem, he writes in The Office magazine. But today, computer hardware is breatKtakingly reliable. A review of so-called computer errors reveals a keypunch transposition, a defect in the original systems analysis or a programing bug  all people errors.</p>
        <p>What then accounts for the blame-the-computer syndrome?</p>
        <p>For one thing, Carlson believes, it is a symptom of everyones growing sense of isolation and frustration in a world of depersonalized systems. (I Am a Human Being, etc.)</p>
        <p>Also, experienced office managers often resent young computer people coming in and taking over, talking a strange new language of input, output, feeds and speeds. There is a subconscious'and sometimes conscious desire to get even with the computer. Careless mistaks are made in data recording.</p>
        <p>Carlson is convinced the anticomputer reaction is only temporary. It has to be.</p>
        <p>"Without computers, he says, we will never be able to monitor the air and water pollution that surrounds the globe. Without computers, we will never be able to build successful models of our economic system so that we can design ways of minimizing the effects of economic fluctuations. In short, without (KHnput^s, we will never be able to regain control over the incredibly com[dex high technology that rolls over our lives.</p>
        <p>Computers extend the mind of man, giving it near - infinite leverage. They might be the ultimate tool . . . fulfilling the ix-omise of mans encounter with machines to finally improve, not the standard of living, but the quality of life.</p>
        <p>lorney General Mitchell, has come forward with a proposition which, for sheer audacity in the assertion of executive power,may well be unsurpassed by anything since the late Oliver Oom-well installed himself as Protector of England in 1653. To Mr. Barth, the implications of Mitchells position are altogether staggering.</p>
        <p>What are we talking about? Out in Michigan, three White Panthers have been charged with bombing the Ann Arbor offices of the Central Intelligence Agency. It appears that in gathering evidence against them, the Department of Justice, at the direction of the 'President, engaged in acts of electronic surveillance  wiretapping or its equivalent  without first obtaining a warranty from a judge.</p>
        <p>When defense attorneys raised the point, U.S. District Judge Damon J. Keith ruled flatly that the Attorney Cieneral has no authority for such surveillance without prior court approval. The Department of Justice has aji^aled his ruling to the Sixth U.S. Circuit. This is Mitchells argument on appeal:</p>
        <p>The President, acting through the Attorney General, may constitutionally authorize the use of electronic surveillance in cases where he has determined that, in order to preserve the national security, the use of such surveillance is reasonable. 'The proposition, just as Barth says, is staggering. And the defensive answer given by Mitchells office, through Deputy Attorney General Richard Kleindienst, is a poor refutation. Kleindienst says that Presidents Roosevelt, Truman and Johnson authorized the same actions in other years. This response cannot clothe the asserted power with rectitude; it merely strips the action of novelty.</p>
        <p>(Continued On Page 5)</p>
        <p>cent of this material is cellulose which could be chemically converted into human or animal food.</p>
        <p>(Juotable notables: If you have a dollar and I have a dollar and we exchange dollars, we each have a dollar; but, if you have a thought and I have a thought and we exchange thoughts, we each have two thoughts.Elmer G. Leter-man, master salesman, a Train before you fire: Each year more than l.ooo people die from injuries in firearms accidents outside the home. Sixteen states now make it mandatory for youngsters to take a trainings (Continued on page S)</p>
        <p>40 Years</p>
        <p>Ago Today</p>
        <p>By GWYN GOGHILL March 9,1931 'Ihree false alarms were sent in from widely separated sections of the city between 11 oclock and one oclock last night. Firemen responded to each of the alarms but all they found were the opened alarm boxes and no signs of fire.</p>
        <p>Members of the Board of Aldermen have received assurance from the Telephone Corgpany that they will cooperate with the city in its effort to preserve the life of the trees throughout Greenville.</p>
        <p>The movement to beautify Greenville evidentally has found a vulnerable spot in the armour of county officials judging by certain improvements in progress on the court house square this morning. A large force of convicts wielded picks quickly and skillfully for several hours this morning and when they had finished, the court house square had been broken up and was ready to receive a new planting of grass,</p>
        <p>Tight Money Plan Didn't Work</p>
        <p>By ELMER ROESSNER</p>
        <p>aviU</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>revtfr</p>
        <p>The Nixon Administration has confessed that the use of monetary controls to fight inflation was a boo-boo. This confession was implicit when the Federal Reserve Board, sui^osedly independent but actually under die influence the Administration, ^rsed its high rediscount rate fter three years and lowerra ~ jt |asi -November from 6 to 5 per cent. ITie rediscount rate is the rate at which the Fed lends money to banks.</p>
        <p>It was confessed again as the Bureau %f Labor Statistics announced the consumer price index in January rose by one tenth of one per cent, the smallest rise in four years.</p>
        <p>George P. Shultz, director of the Office of Management and the Budget, said the decline in interest rates was a factor.</p>
        <p>He also said that the downtrend in interest rates was something that is going</p>
        <p>to help us as we move through the months ahead; we expect the impact to continue. Whos On First?</p>
        <p>The price index for the first time was; announced in terms of the new base: 1967 equals</p>
        <p>ELMER</p>
        <p>ROESSNER</p>
        <p>lOO.yihis means that January prices were co^npared to 1%7 prices.  *  V   ^</p>
        <p>The index was 119.2, which means prices in January paid by typical consumers were 19.2 per pent higher than in 1%7.</p>
        <p>The change was mandated on all government agencies by Shultzs bureau.</p>
        <p>It was announced that it was custo;t?ary to update the base every 10 years, which is not exactly accurate. The previous hase</p>
        <p>were prices in the years 1957-59, and the base before that was 1939.</p>
        <p>'The changing of the base does not change the measurement of month-to-inonth or year-to-year changes, but it does kid the public in that it tends to veil the great decline in the value of the dollar.</p>
        <p>Our Fiat Money</p>
        <p>On the new Shultz base, the dollar had the purchasing power of 83.9 cents in 1967. The dollar shrank 16.1 cents in three years.</p>
        <p>On the 1957 base, it was worth 72.2 cents, a decline in real worth of 27.8 cents. And on the 1937-39 base, it was worth less than 35 cents.</p>
        <p>In short, inflation has taken almost two - thirds of the purchasing power of the dollar since 1939.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, while the Administration has almost pulled its arm out of joint patting itself on the back for the mild increase in inflation in January, it is also acting to</p>
        <p>push up food prices.</p>
        <p>Agriculture Secretary Clifford Hardin told Congress housewives should be prepared to pay higher prices for food because farm income had declined. And he declared that the government was concerned about the low price of pork and that the government was going to do the maximum purchasing it can to overcome this downtrend </p>
        <p>This leaves two questions unanswered:</p>
        <p>Is the government trying to inflate or^deflate prices?</p>
        <p>Who in the palace guard conned Richard Nixon into believing that tight money would cure inflation'</p>
        <p>First National (lly Slights German. Japanese and Irdu 'The 1970 annual report of First National City Bank contains articles in throe languages. English. FYciuh and Spanish, by senior officers. It is believed to bt' the first trilingual bank report \</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0005" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenv|lle, N.C.Tcaday, March I. It7141SST Ban Legislation Put Before Five Legislatures</p>
        <p>I By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Proposals have been irt-</p>
        <p>troduced In five state legislatures to ban the supersonic transport, either through outright prohibition of the SST or by setting limits for aircraft</p>
        <p>noise.</p>
        <p>Bills aimed at trying to ban the plane are in committee in Maine, Massachusetts, New York, Michigan and Illinois, and an Iowa state representative says he plans to submit</p>
        <p>Egypt Hopeful U.S. Can Get</p>
        <p>Land Returned</p>
        <p>TOPS IN FARMING  President Nixon Is</p>
        <p>visited at the White House Monday by the Farm Family of the Year, the Gerritt Boerema clan from Hyde County. N.C. From left are Gerritt Boerema:  daughter Barbara, 11; Mrs.</p>
        <p>Boerema; Nixon; Rep. Walter B. Jones, D-N.C.; Renea Boerema, 9; Agriculture Secretary Clifford Hardin; Dennis, 14, and Eddy, 18. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Because of labor shortages, Russia is encouraging pensioners to come out of retirement.</p>
        <p>Kilpatrick . .</p>
        <p>Find No Eviction</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4)</p>
        <p>The reasoning behind the Nixon - Mitchell position is that the first responsibility of the state is to preserve itself. It is not necessary that such a responsibility should be explicitly set forth in the Constitution; it is implicit in the nature of government itself. As chief of state, the President thUs has inherent power, in the name of national security, to do whatever he thinks necessary to preserve the state from being overthrown.</p>
        <p>But the difficulty with this proposition is that our Constitution does not work that way. The founding fathers had rebelled against the abuse of kingly powers ; they wanted no monarchy here. As one of the checks against domestic despotism, they wrote into the Fourth Amendment the very protection that Judge Keith has invoked against the President himself  a requirement that warrants be issued, on probable cause, before a place is searched.</p>
        <p>With deference to John Mitchell, a decent man and a fine Attorney General, it has to be said that the position he asserts in the Michigan case is fundamentally wrong. If a President has power to suspend one constitutional protection, in the name of national security, he has power to suspend all others by the same fiat  free speech, free press, trial by jury, due process of law.</p>
        <p>No, sir. The powers of a President are vast, but not that vast. If Mr. Nixon finds it necessary to the national security to tap a phone, or to bug a room, it is not too much to demand that his Attorney General first set forth his case for probably cause  and tell it to a, judge. ^</p>
        <p>Evans, Novak</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4)</p>
        <p>first serious contact between Mills and the President since a long telephone conversation in December.</p>
        <p>The Administrations patch to Mills boiled down to this; forget revenue-sharing for now and lets make a deal on welfare; were now for eliminating food stamps and providing work for the poor, using the government as employer of last resort. And please, please, dont separate the Social Security sween-tener.</p>
        <p>Mills, typically courteous, was agreeable to all this. He proposed that the Federal government pick up the total state cost^$1 billion-plus this yearof adult welfare categories (blind, disabled, old). Moreover, he reiterated support of Nixon family-assistance payments. Since none of this amounted to an actual substitute for revenue-sharing, some Administration officials left the breakfast walking on air. They assumed the Mills {oblem had been solved.</p>
        <p>They made much the same error as Gov. Warren Heames of Missouri, who visited Mills Feb. 24. Heames later reported to the press Mills had said he did not favor Federal assuption of state costs of aid to families with dependent children. But in fact. Mills had only said he did not favor such a move without real reform. At the White Hous breakfast. Mills was not even pressed on this point.</p>
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        <p>207 EVANS ST. GREENVILLE, N.C. PHONE 752-37M</p>
        <p>One In Raid'</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM, N.C. (AP)  Sheriffs deputies, acting under a court order, cleared out an apartment reportedly being used as headquarters by the Black Panther</p>
        <p>Party.</p>
        <p>About 29 heavily armed deputies carrying out the eviction order found no one in the building, but removed the sparse furnishings.</p>
        <p>Lillie Jones, in whose name the apartment was rented, was ordered off the premises last week following an eviction hearing. Under North Carolina law, a landlord need not give a reason when evicting a tenant.</p>
        <p>Miss Jones has denied that thd* militant Panthers were headquartered in the apartment.</p>
        <p>Police say two other Panther headquarters have been emptied under eviction orders in recent months. A fourth was besieged in January by police, who arrested two occupants on theft charges, and another office reportedly burned down last year.</p>
        <p>Boyle ...</p>
        <p>(Continued From Page 4) course in firearms safety before they can be given a hunting license.</p>
        <p>Music that celebrities like: Tommy Short, popular supper club singer and pianist, says that Jacqueline Onassis usually asks for I Like the Likes of You and Ive Got Five Dollars, Lauren Bacall perfers George Gerehwin tunes, and the Duke of Windsor goes for Bye Bye Birdie. Worth remembering: Most girls find that the one ability they admire most in a man is availability.</p>
        <p>It was Josh Billings who observed, Life consists not in holding good cards but in playing those you do hold well.</p>
        <p>By ELIAS ANTAR Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>CAIRO (AP)  The Egyptian government still hopes the United States will get Israel to withdraw from the territories occupied in the 1967 war, officials in Cairo say.</p>
        <p>They say President Anwar Sadat let the Suez Canal ceasefire expire to keep his options open in case diplomacy fails, but a resumption of shooting in the near future is not being considered.</p>
        <p>We are still hoping the United States will get Israel to undertake a commitment to withdraw from occupied territory, said an official at the Foreign Ministry. For the time being we are waiting.</p>
        <p>A1 Ahram, Cairos semiofficial newspaper, revealed today that Sadat and President Nixon have been exchanging message. The paper gave no details of what was said between the two, but it said the latest message was sent from Sadat to Nixon last Friday, two days before the Egyptian announced his government was no longer bound by the cease-fire the United States had sponsored.</p>
        <p>Sadat in his broadcast announcement also revealed he paid a secret visit to Moscow early last week and said he obtained the Soviet governments complete support for his refusal to continue the cease-fire.</p>
        <p>Egyptian officials said the Soviets are giving full support to Egypts diplomatic campaign to move the Israelis back. But they said Sadats words implied full Soviet support if hostilities resume.</p>
        <p>Egyptian officials feel that Cairo has made a number of significant concessions during the past month. They consider its chief^ conciliatory move a commitment to sign a peace agreement with the Jewii^ state if Israel will leave the occupied Arab land.</p>
        <p>Now the question has been narrowed down to one of territory, said an official. It is a question of whether or not they intend to get out of our land.</p>
        <p>The Israelis are mistaken if they think we will make further confessions. Withdrawal from our territory is our bedrock de</p>
        <p>mand, and on this we will not budge.</p>
        <p>He said the United States knows this Egyptian position and was told in advance what Sadat would say on Sunday.</p>
        <p>such legislation.</p>
        <p>Proponents of a ban from all six states were told in Washington Monday that the^ efforts may be the only way to keep the controversial plane from flying.</p>
        <p>Sen. William Proxmire, D-Wis., an opponent of the SST, told the group that more vigorous administration support, well-financed industry lobbying and the reported backing of AFL-CIO President George Meany may shift the congressional balance of power to proponents of the plane.</p>
        <p>Ck)ngressional opponents of the SST seek to cut off further funds for development of the plane. The most common approach by state legidators opposing the plane is to propose noise limits.</p>
        <p>Typical is a bill introduced in New York State by Democratic Assemblyman Andrew Stein of Manhattan. It would set a maximum noise level of 108 pndb-perceived noise in decibels-i-which is the level created by subsonic planes.</p>
        <p>Stein claims the indicated landing noise level of the SST would be 124 pndb.</p>
        <p>An alternative approach to the problem is taken in six bills now before the Massachusetts L^islature. Most would ban the jet from Logan International Airport in East Boston, the only commercial airport in the state capable of handling the SST.</p>
        <p>Others would ban the plane from any airport in the state. State Sen. James R.</p>
        <p>State's Revenue</p>
        <p>Will Oppose</p>
        <p>Rate Boost Collections Dip</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The attorney generals office will fight the attempt of the Southern Bell Telephone &amp;amp; Telegraph Co. to raise telephone rates in North Carolina $23.1 million a year.</p>
        <p>Deputy Atty. Gen. Jean Ben-oy said Monday, Its a general principal of this office that we believe the public is best protected when theres a fairly contested public hearing on every phase of a state-regulated monopolys operation.</p>
        <p>The Utilities Commission has given Benoy and Atty. Gen. Robert Morgan permission to represent the public in the hearings, which are scheduled for late May.</p>
        <p>Southern Bell asked the commission last November for permission to increase rates to its 600,000 residential and 150,000 business subscribers. Monthly bills and some in-state long distance calls would cost more, and a number of charges would be lowered.</p>
        <p>Benoy said the state has hired Dr. Charles Olson of the University of Maryland as an expert witness, and has retained a Washington, D.C., firm of utilities specialists.</p>
        <p>Duke Post For</p>
        <p>Raleigh</p>
        <p>Newsman</p>
        <p>EARLY COMIC DIES HOLLYWOOD (AP)  Harold Lloyd, 77, one of the great comics of silent films and the early talkies, died Monday of cancer.</p>
        <p>Boy with a</p>
        <p>BRIGHT</p>
        <p>in Business</p>
        <p> IF BOYHOOD business enterprise is any indication of a successful adult career, theres a top-flight future in store for your hustling young newspaper carrier. Already h is acquiring and showing so many of the qualities which make for leadership and good citizenship.</p>
        <p>As a young fellow in business for himself, your carrier is making spare time pay four-way dividends. Hes earning a steady income, saving money, learning business methods, and serving the community at the same time.</p>
        <p>The business lead e r of the ^ future * is ihi* carrier-hoij ^ o f todaij.</p>
        <p>ALL OF which, added to his regular scheoiingf is nmking him *a "popular -and responsible youhg businessman today  and giving him a head start toward success in whatever life work he may undertake tomorrow! Does YOUR son have a newspaper route ?</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>209 Cotanche Street/ Greenville/ N.C.</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  North Carolinas General Fund collections dipped .79 per cent in February, but Revenue Commissioner I. L. Clayton said the decline is nothing significant.</p>
        <p>Im convinced were holding our own, Qayton said Monday as he released Februarys revenue report.</p>
        <p>TTie General Fund collections amounted to $90.9 million, compared to $91.6 million last February.</p>
        <p>For the first eight months of the current fiscal year, net CJeneral Fund collections were</p>
        <p>Innocent Plea</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP)  Duke University has announced that Jack Childs, chief political reporter for the Raleigh News and Observer, will become associate news director at Duke.</p>
        <p>William L. Green Jr., director of public information at Duke, announced (Dhilds appointment Monday. Childs will replace Russell Chly.</p>
        <p>The 34-year-old Childs is an Ashevill native and a graduate of the University of North Carolina. He attended high school in Wilson.</p>
        <p>Before coming to Ralei^, he worked several years for the Danville, Va., Register.</p>
        <p>..LOS ANGELES (AP)  Sgt. Maj. William D. Wooldridge and four other Army men pleaded innocent Monday to charges of conspiring to defraud noncommissioned officers clubs in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>..The other defendants are M. Sgt. William Higdon, Sgt. I.e. William Bagby. and two retired noncommissioned officers, Narvaez Hatcher and Theodore Bass.</p>
        <p>.. They are accused of conspiring between 1965 and 1969 to defraud the government through bribes and kickbacks, falsifying records and overpaying for supplies. ..U.S. Dist. Court Judge Warren Ferguson set Aug. 2 for a hearing on pretrial motions.</p>
        <p>.. Wooldridge was once the Armys highest ranking enlisted man.</p>
        <p>up 8.99 per cent, from $543.4 million in the first eight months of the l%9-70 fiscal year to $592.2 so far this fiscal year.</p>
        <p>Net Highway fund collections for February amounted to $47.7 million, compared with $45.4 million in February, 1970, an increase of 5.13 per cent. For the first eight months of the fiscal year. Highway Fund collections were $217.9 million, up 7.15 per cent over the $203.3 million collected during a similar period in 1969-70.</p>
        <p>Gasoline tax receipts amounted to $14.3 million compared with $14.2 million in the same month in 1970, an increase of almost 1 per cent. For the first eight months of the year, gasoline tax collections were $151.5 million, up 7 per cent from the $141.5 million collected during the first part of 1969-70.</p>
        <p>Hie cigarette tax brought in $1.19 million in February, compared to $1.16 million in the same month last year. The soft drink tax revenues were down from $1.35 million in February last year to $1.29 million this year.</p>
        <p>McIntyre, D-Quincy, majmlty whip, says the SST would cater to the jet set rather than the needs of the average American.</p>
        <p>Eklward J. King, executive director of the Massachusetts Port Authority, which runs Logan, says development of the plane would improve the economy and provide 4,300 new jobs for the region.</p>
        <p>A third approach is that taken in a measure introduced in Maine by Rep. Robert Lee Whitson, D-Portland. His bill would prohibit SSTs from flying over the state.</p>
        <p>Violators would be fined not less than $500 nor more than $1,000 for the first offense and not less than $2,000 nor more than $5,000 for any subsequent offense.</p>
        <p>In Illinois, the House Enfiron-ment Cmnmittee has recommended passage of a noise limiting bill sponsored by Chicago Democratic Rep. Robert Mann but has not yet sent the bill to the floor.</p>
        <p>Iowa State Rep. Arthur Small, D-Iowa City, says he plans to introduce two bills: one to limit aircraft noise and another to ban any plane from causing a sonic boom over Iowa.</p>
        <p>Suggests State Schools Seek Full-Time Role</p>
        <p>The sales tax collections were also down slightly in February, from $19.4 million a year ago to $19.3 million last month.</p>
        <p>ASHEVILLE (AP) - North Carolinas top school official says the state should begin developing model programs for operating its public schools on a year-round basis.</p>
        <p>State School Superintendent Craign Phillips told a meeting of the Citizens for Better Schools in Asheville Monday night that one of the ways to improve the learning process in the schools is by better use of the investment in school buildings, teachers, materials and programs.</p>
        <p>He said that operating the schools 12 months of the year would provide for this kind of impwoved investment.</p>
        <p>He noted that the General Assembly has been asked for funds to develop model programs in year-round school op-ation.</p>
        <p>RUMORS GROW WASHINGTON (AP)  A big party at the White House is shaping up for next Tuesday amid rumors that it will be the occasion for announcing Tricia Nixons engagement to Edward Cox, a Harvard law student.</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THING YOUNEEDTO KNOW ABOUT REAL-ESTATE IS</p>
        <p>752-6140 (Our Phont Numbar)</p>
        <p>Make your own fresh filter cigarettes for less than</p>
        <p>20apack</p>
        <p>No ready-made filter cigarette tastes as fresh as one you make yourself ... with the Laredo Filter Blend Kit.</p>
        <p>The whole kit, including the simple, easy-to-use cigarette-making machine (guaranteed 2 years), costs less than $2.</p>
        <p>Once you have the machine, refills, complete with filters, paper tubes, carry-around packs and vacuum-fresh tobacco to make five more packs, cost less than $1. Thats less than 20c a pack!</p>
        <p>  Laredofor filter cigarettes that</p>
        <p>taste better, cost less.</p>
        <p>LaRGDO</p>
        <p>FILTeR BLeiMD</p>
        <p>IF YC)U WANT SOMETHING DQNE RIGHT, DO IT YOURSELF.</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0006" />
        <p>-Ttie Elally Reflector. GreeoviJle. IM.CT.</p>
        <p>round 600 Bilis, Resolutions Offered</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NCDA)  North Carolina egg markets steady</p>
        <p>Supplies adequate Demand, fair Prices paid producers and handlers for consumer grade eggs in cartons delivered nearby outlets;</p>
        <p>Grade A large whites: 42-42*^ Medium, whites: 37*2-38*iz Small, whites: 33-34</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NCDA)  North Carolina hog markets today are mostly 50 cents per hundred weight lower.</p>
        <p>Tops of 16.75 to 17.25 at Rocky Mount; 16.75 to 17.00 at Wiison; 16.00 to 16.50 at Siler City and Denton; 15.75 to 16.25 at Bethel; 15.25 to 16^25 at Xar-boro. 17.00 at Salisbury; 16.50 at Greensboro and Mount Olive.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  (NCDA)  The North Carolina hen market today found supplies of light type short of a good demand at some points.</p>
        <p>Heavy types were ample for current need. Heavies, at far, 12 to 13 cents per pound; f.o.b. plants too few reporting to quote prices. Light type ' at farm hens were going for 4.5 cents per pound.</p>
        <p>OarolintA United CI-MryslesK* r&amp;gt;v*F*on t Cien Elee Cien NVoCors R.CA</p>
        <p>FI. Jf. Fteynol Sperry</p>
        <p>Standm^d Oil &amp;lt; ISId &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Xexas C]iulC</p>
        <p>Ky. F&amp;gt;ied</p>
        <p>US Steel</p>
        <p>Union CZTstr-Uide</p>
        <p>Vir Elee</p>
        <p>Wool we*-1. Ft</p>
        <p>deff-F&amp;gt;ilet</p>
        <p>Wacho vi jm.</p>
        <p>Wactiov^ia I^ealty OVEFt ttme: OOOISTT Combined Xns . Pi-ankJin l^fe Hardees NC^NB</p>
        <p>F*iedmont AJkwr Integon Elckerds Uittle IVCmnC:</p>
        <p>Conner ^flomes Xri Soiat.Fi</p>
        <p>Recr</p>
        <p>iCTonCftn</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>2X*^</p>
        <p>1 lOV, 2' 33 64*-ae 33^</p>
        <p>20-^</p>
        <p>31^-*</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>51</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>61</p>
        <p>-jr.</p>
        <p>ued r</p>
        <p>4X-. . - -183-.*-1</p>
        <p>33 V.*-33^-4</p>
        <p>11-11 V-2 33-34 6V4-6=V;*</p>
        <p>3-3^</p>
        <p>26*V4*-2X=%^</p>
        <p>1 &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Xhe stoc% market edged upward today in moderately active trading</p>
        <p>The Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was off up 0.68 to 899.30 at 11:30 a.m., an hour after the opening of trading, but advances led declines by 7 to 4 among issues traded on the Big Board.</p>
        <p>Volume during the first hour of activity totaled 4.67 million shares, compared with 5.42 million shares traded during the corresponding period Monday.</p>
        <p>Among the large blocks traded on the Big Board were 50,000 shares of Associated E&amp;gt;ry CJoods at 50V4, up /4, and 50,000 shares of Wickes Corp. at 36, down</p>
        <p>Prices among the most-active Big Board issues included:</p>
        <p>UAL Inc., off Mz at 30%; Kresge, down 1V4 at 70%; Telex, up Vi at 19V*; Arlen Realty, ahead 3/4 to 17%; Kentucky Fi^ied Chicken, up 20%; and Bunker-Ramo, up %</p>
        <p>1434.</p>
        <p>at</p>
        <p>Following are selected 11a. m. stock market quotations furnished by Interstate Securities Chrp.</p>
        <p>AT &amp;amp; T  49%</p>
        <p>Am Tob  48%</p>
        <p>Burroughs  112 %</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>AAeetIng</p>
        <p>Place</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 7:30 p.m.Greenville TOPS Club meets upstairs at Elm Street gym ,5 7:30 p.m.The Patient Circle of The Kings Daughters and Sons meets at the home of Mrs. T. L. Hanna ford. Assisting hostesses are Miss Mary Forbes and Miss Mary Wells 8:00 p.m.Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous meets at A A Bldg. on Parmville Hwy Telephone 752-2961 8:00 p.m.Withla Council. Degree of Pocahontas meets _ at Rotary Bldg.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.Sierra Club, Dr. Charles Huestis, guest speaker, ECU Biology Building Auditorium.</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY 10:30 a.m.  Xhe Brookgreen Garden Club meets at the home of Mrs. A.</p>
        <p>C. Ruffin on Longmeadow Road.</p>
        <p>1:00 p .m.Worship service in Pitt Memorial Hospital</p>
        <p>chapel</p>
        <p>1:45 p.m.Wednesday Afternoon Duplicate Bridge Club weekly game at Planters Bank 6:30 p.m.Kiwanis Club meets</p>
        <p>7:00  p.m.Jay-C-Ettes</p>
        <p>meet at Fiddlers III 8:00 p.m .Greenville White Shrine meets at Masonic Temple 8:00 p.m.-^Pitt County Al-Anun Group meets at AA Bldg., Farmville Hwy.</p>
        <p>. Telephone 756-3222 or 756-0567 ' 8:00 p.m.Matrons Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Gertrude Latham, Moye Drive.</p>
        <p>ODD FELLOWS</p>
        <p>The Anderson Lodge No. 11972 of the (jLIO of Odd Fellows will meet tonight at 7; 30 at the Masonic H|all on W. EifthStreet. Lonnie. Anderson, N. G.</p>
        <p>S. E. Hemby,' P. S.</p>
        <p>Commission m&amp;amp;xnWot^wrs it  tJtieiz- opirmmcMr*  oo****ty</p>
        <p>needs to seriously consider t.t*e possibliFy o i&amp;gt;srtdlcmps* tCMn t&amp;gt;eFoire the city l&amp;gt;uicl^et is  up  i**</p>
        <p>July.</p>
        <p> We i-Beed to Icno-w tFieir intentions ft&amp;gt;eFore tl"*e araoxt: budget is draw**  up FFmms</p>
        <p>Edwards st.st.ed.</p>
        <p>TTwo &amp;lt;ree nville bers of s merried m^r**s ^roup of basRetbsll  p&amp;gt;ln y e*~s, Inst  ni^lit</p>
        <p>sought  irmf  or r*-*a* t .O**  on</p>
        <p>arrangements for tlTie-ir ^roup to use the sym st SootFm CS^reen-ville on Sundny-</p>
        <p>F*erry Bslcer a*r*dl VYilliszn Ward e&amp;gt;cp&amp;gt;l.Eiined tIrmmt tl*e group, all worldng men, l-*.s*c5l no otFaer time avnilsble to t^Fco part in a recreation group Aoti-v-ity exce on Sunday sfterraoorms.</p>
        <p>Comm iss ioner s spent considera l&amp;gt;le time considering many fsetoxrs ir*-%ro].-v-ed in tF*e request, including s*.*p&amp;gt;er-v'ision, the fact an appro'v.a 1 -would set a precedence on openao.g a facility on Sunday, and tJF*^ matter of</p>
        <p>fees bid* u**d.c? *~ current</p>
        <p>policy is ^SO p&amp;gt;er rm-se- for non scheduled hours.</p>
        <p>Commissioner- O *~ _ Herbert Hadleys motion tFmt the mens request be tabled rrr* til the next meeting, with a deer is ion relative to use of facilities orm Su**day to be made at that tir*r*e, -was ap&amp;gt;-proved unanimously.</p>
        <p>Lee pointed out that the direction in some omties is for recreaticMT* facilities to he op&amp;gt;ened on Sunday, hut that C^reenvilles limited  staff  a.r*d  funds</p>
        <p>precluded serious corrsideration of such a de-%r elopment in Greenville at this tim.e.</p>
        <p>A letter from LteyTr*elds IVIay to Lee revealed that E24B*st Carolina University Fourrda tioar* agrees to the use of the EICTLJ t^asehall field by the city on nights the field will not he in use hy tho u.niversity.</p>
        <p>A restriction 'wa.s stipulated, which -was that no soft ha 11 activities *vould be p^rrmitted on the field, fteynolds rmoted in the letter that Or. L.#oo Jenlcins, president of E3CXJ, h.a.d agreed to this use.^qf the  field.</p>
        <p>Comm iss ioner s  expressed</p>
        <p>their  appreci a ti or*  of this</p>
        <p>development, and a.slred Lee to follow up -w-ith a reqiuost that the ECU Athletic  CZToxnmittee</p>
        <p>provide a formal agareement on this matter.</p>
        <p>The p&amp;gt;ossibility of establishing trails in the city for use of motorcycles and rraotor bilces was the subject of lengthy discussion.</p>
        <p>Commissioner TPorr* Eoreman, reported he had beer* requested by interested perso**s to bring the matter to the atter*tion of the commission, stated the need for such trails is becorr*ing acute _</p>
        <p>No action -was ta.lc.en on the subject, but co x*r* m issioner s asked Lee to cor*fact Stanley Hathaway to analce preliminary approaches for the possibility of bis par ticipa tior* in some program a t a fmrture date. Commission *r*er*r*hers also expressed the hope tlrat parents of hoys -with  **r*ctcwr^3B;ed  two</p>
        <p>wheeled vehicles -w^ill atte**d the next recreation rr*eci ting, when the suhject -will he loc^ced into more fully.</p>
        <p>An agreement -w.a s approved for the continued use of ball field facilities by  the  A.merican</p>
        <p>Legion under  the  same  conditions applicable  year.</p>
        <p>3ohn Holt, spcrihesrrxan for tbe Legion, explained the~ legicM*s pwrogram could not he continued without the ass*st*B*r*ce of the Recreation IZ&amp;gt;epar*tr*r*^nt-</p>
        <p>A ne-w federal pr~ogram, A Legacy of fiarles wats explained by Lee. Under the r*e?-%v program, small as ivell as la*rge cities will be assisted in s n. ving and developir*g^ open ax^eas and park;</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Dickens</p>
        <p>* L.ADELPHIA, Pa.  Mr. or  * Charlie Davis Dickens d h^onday morning in the . Landis Hospital here llovi^r*g a brief illness, f^uaraeral services will be arad *-cted Friday at 8 p.m. at uneral Home. 1525-27 St XI&amp;gt;auphin Street here, -ia* 1 'Mrill be Saturday morning to oclock.</p>
        <p>X-Se -%w^as the son of the late ac sk **d Bettie Slade Dickens PsaXlrland. Surviving him are s '%ai.r*fe, Mrs. Bessie Davis ; a sister, Mrs. Bettie Mitchell; and a grand-</p>
        <p>Gladson</p>
        <p>'\jVilliam R. Gladson, 64, It his home, 512 E. Gum hdonday m&amp;lt;Mrning at 11 k. - Euneral services will be ted at 3:30 Wednesday r*oon at the Wilkerson 1 Chapel by the Rev. B. B. K&amp;gt;^stor of Calvary Baptist crhi _ Burial will be in od Memorial Park. ZS-ladson, a native of Pitt , was a retired employee North Carolina State Ey Department.</p>
        <p>I'ving are his wife, Mrs. Mlae Gladson; two Xmters, Mrs. Edward of Nashua, N.H., and JTohn D. Bell of near island; two step-Mrs. Doris Smith of *r*r*outh, and Mrs. Norwood as of Hubert; two Mrs. Speight Wadford . Elmo Edwards, both of *lle; a brother, Woodrow</p>
        <p>Gladson of Greenville; 14 grandchildren; and four great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>walker</p>
        <p>Mrs. Maggie Smith Walker, 87, died Monday morning in Wilmington. Graveside services will be held at 2:00 Wednesday afternoon at Greenwood Cemetery in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Walker, a native of Pitt County, had made her home in Wilmington for a number of years. Her husband, Lonnie A. Walker, died in 1930. She was a member of the Bell Arthur Methodist Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are a brother, Rufus Smith of Rocky Mount; a half iMrother, Glenn Walker Smith of LaGrange; and three half sisters, Mrs. H. C. Norville of Ahoskie, Mrs. James Biggs and Mrs. Carter Glass, both of Raleigh.</p>
        <p>Visitation will be from 7-9 Tuesday night at the Wilkerson Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Porter</p>
        <p>LENOIR  Retired Army Col Charles W. Porter, 66, columnist and former civil defense coordinator in western and central North Carolina died of a heart attack Monday.</p>
        <p>Porter, a 1926 graduate of Duke University, was a member of the first Blue Devil football team. He later taught high school and served as an athletic coach in Greenville and Lenoir.</p>
        <p>In recent years, Porter wrote for the Lenoir News-Topic.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements have not been completed.</p>
        <p>By H. HORTON ROUNTREE Representative</p>
        <p>This week begins the eighth week of the current session of the (General AssemUy. To date, there have been around 600 bills and resolutions introduced, the number running higher than in 1969. Through the seventh week of the session 47 laws have been ratified, 22 public acts and 25 local 8cts. The public legislation enacted so far consists mostly of minor corrective laws.</p>
        <p>The one major piece of legislation that was passed last week by both Houses (subject only to certain amendments voted on by the House and yet to be adopted by the Senate) is the one-cent local option sales tax.</p>
        <p>The Senate-passed bill provided two methods for im</p>
        <p>posing the tax: (1) by a vote of the people and (2) by a resolution of the Board of County Commissions* without a vote of the peo^e. The second provision was included to allow the commissioners of those counties where the tax had already been voted and had been in affect to levy the tax without another referendum. This, of course, allows the commissioners of all 100 coiulties to impose the tax without a vote. The House of Representatives adopted an amendment which would prevent a board of commissioners from adopting the tax once it had been voted down by the people.</p>
        <p>Other important matters affecting our country, as well as the rest of the state, are</p>
        <p>Explosions Hit Federal BIdgs.</p>
        <p>ball Machines w *Art Object'</p>
        <p>H* *r*l&amp;gt;4BM.</p>
        <p>CHARLES W. BELL N, Italy (UPDGianni ed to feed coins into xnachines and tme day mded he was an artist a form of kinetic art.</p>
        <p>is paying honor to the machine itself as a work sponsoring one of the  Xl&amp;gt;eat shows of the year </p>
        <p>T'Xaose machines are crea-FA&amp;gt;*-*2at oX true modem art, Sassi  acji.. * * And anyone playing them course, exercising a c moment of creation. cZisplay and sale in a gallery are the huge lt&amp;gt;Ack panels of U.S.-made JLM nnachines, those much-Ad monsters of metal, nnd glass which wink :1m Ak in 70,(X)0 bars and mm* Italy.</p>
        <p>Postwar Art? E^lmppers are what Ita-11 them, but whether considers pinball irr-ampies postwar art tJxing else.</p>
        <p>sniffed at the garish nels hanging on gallery trnut there were oohs and Ta-om art patrons who arcd approval at earlier Ccaturing warped was t:crs and love songs by computers, a 32-year-old medical 1. dropout, spent two x*ansacking warehouses jfmmnkyards for old pinball</p>
        <p>agk to normal</p>
        <p>-01&amp;gt;iI&amp;gt;ON (AP)  Mail, and telephone links 4:  ^^^^ **  Britain and other</p>
        <p>were reported back to il today after a 47-day F  cm a* -w i de postal work-era leAt -</p>
        <p>la</p>
        <p>sk:'</p>
        <p>Xhe commission is d^^a*^ the program, and plans 1ol.l.o'w^ up on benefits which 1.1  available  for  the first</p>
        <p>lma*r*A amnder the new concept.</p>
        <p>commissioner Dr. Ralph 1^^ .*sked about development "c Drive, City Manager Hagerty revealed that t-e progressing for land-</p>
        <p>_   of  the  area. Hagerty</p>
        <p>d sl**njibbery for the project mrnrnld l&amp;gt;c ^coming s(x&amp;gt;n. Steele ssAd a desire that the Aa^tion Commission be of its responsibility in f oaramulation and carrying &amp;lt;*amk; cm T (mlans for the landscaping erf" tJFmms Aity area.</p>
        <p>machines.</p>
        <p>I bought 1,000 of them, he said.</p>
        <p>Among the 60 he put on show were such old familiar favorites as Hawaiian Beauty, Slick Chick, Ministrel Man and State Fair. There is Caper-sville, a 1965 model on sale for 30,000 lire ($48), and Flying High, a 1966 job going for the same price.</p>
        <p>The feature is Ice Show, one of the first machines imported from the United States in 1950 when the postwar [Hnball rage crossed the Atlantic along with baseball and MarUyn Monroe. It has a price tag reading 100,000 lire ($160).</p>
        <p>Fad Tribute</p>
        <p>In a way, the show is actually a tribute to a fad which is now dying out. Sassi wanted to display the complete machines and allow art patrons to play them, using body English and flippers to bounce the balls off bcnus bumpers and throu^ special gates and over scoring buttons. But Italian law bars it.</p>
        <p>The machines weve got are ill^al because they give free games, said Sassi. Under the law, they are considered games &amp;lt;rf chance.</p>
        <p>That was one thing that allowed Sassi to get the machines fairly cheaply plus the fact the machines registered scores in thousands instead of millions^ Modem players like big scores even if bar and club owners are not allowed to reward them for their high scoring efforts.</p>
        <p>The pinball industry itself is  having less success in Italy than it once enjoyed, but still rates as a fairly profitable business which officials esU- , mat is &amp;gt;yorth $28.8 million a i year.</p>
        <p>Ninety per cent of the machines used in Italy are imported from the United States and they are the ones bar owners say get most action. The machines cost an.average $3,200 and last, experts estimate, about two years before changing fashions make them obsolete.</p>
        <p>ST. LOUIS (AP) - Three explosions rocked two federal buildings in St. Louis Monday night, causing extensive damage to one. No one was seridusly injured.</p>
        <p>Fourteen policemen and firemen were examined at hospitals for concussion and ear damage and were released.</p>
        <p>The first blast shattered glass doors at the entrance and a few windows in a one-story federal records center.</p>
        <p>About three hours later, an explosion occurred at a two-sto-ry brick building being used as a temporary home of ROTC facilities for St. Louis and Washington universities.</p>
        <p>Police Lt. Phil Pizzo said police and firemen had just finished inspecting minor damage caused by the explosion of the second floor area. Extensive damage was reported.</p>
        <p>The two explosions in the ROTC facility, midway bebi|feen the campuses of the two schools it served were about 20 minutes</p>
        <p>apart.</p>
        <p>The FBI Ux)k over the investigation.</p>
        <p>Air Force and Army ROTC buildings were damaged or destroyed by fires during disturb-an&amp;lt;s at Washington University about a year ago. ROTC offices and classrooms for St. Louis and Washington have since moved into the off-campus building.</p>
        <p>INDIAN STUDIED NEW YORK (UPI)-Once ignored, the American Indian is now a proper subject of study, according to Dr. Lloyd Melis, professor of special educatim? at Carthage Ck)llege in Kenosha, Wis.</p>
        <p>And, as is the case with many other minority groups, the more we know about the Indian, the more we can understand his basic needs which must be met to king him into the mainstream of contemporary life, Melis said.</p>
        <p>congressional redistrictlng. and legislative redistrictlng. The big problem facing congressional redistrictlng is the pressure being brought to bear on members of the General Assembly by citizis of Orange and Durham Ck&amp;gt;untiea to protect 'Congrssman Nick Galiflanakls. The redistrictlng bill passed by the Senate changes only ten counties, including Orange. This plan affects only around 285,000 people. One computer |dan  a product of the University of North Carolina  keeps Orange County in the Fourth Congressional District, but it changes 27 other counties, and shifts 1,500,000 people.</p>
        <p>As for legislative redistrictlng, according to a sub-committees recommendation, Pitt and Greene Clounties wdll make up a two-member House District. The average representation per member of Uie N.C. House of Representatives is 42,350 people. Pitt County has a population of 73,900, too few for a two-member district and too many for one. The combined populati(*i of Pitt and Greene Counties is around 88,000, slightly over the 84,700 i(feal two-member district.</p>
        <p>A large number of legislat(Mrs in both the House and Senate have received letters about the Arts Building at East Carolina University. It has been well publicized, and in most instances the reaction has been favorable.</p>
        <p>The iMToposed medical school for Elast Carolina University is still a hot issue, and at present action of the Board of Trustees of the university on March 9 is awaited with interest.</p>
        <p>Last week there was a public hearing on the mixed drink bill (better known as liquor-by-the-drink). The bill was considered by the Alcoholic Beverage (Control C!ommittee of the House, but action was deferred for a week by members of the committee.</p>
        <p>It is apparent that the l^slature has shifted into hi^ gear now, and many issues of major importance have started</p>
        <p>along the road to enactment. The next few weeks should see action on much major leglalation.</p>
        <p>Blast, Fire Aboard Ship</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP)  Flames touched off by a mysterious explosion ravaged the 113,370-ton tanker Ocean Bridge off the west coast of ^in today.</p>
        <p>The last we heard, said a spokesman for the owner, the Ocean Bridge was still on fire and she was down by the stern.</p>
        <p>The tank^ was reported empty so apparently there was no threat of major pollution.</p>
        <p>The explosion occurred in the pump room of the Ocean Bridge as the big ship was standing by to aid another stricken tanker, the 38,903-ton British Cknet. The D&amp;gt;met, which had called for help after a leak flooded her engine room, picked up 49 of the 50 crewmen of the Ocean Bridge.</p>
        <p>Missing was the ships captain, H.W. Pile.</p>
        <p>The French aircraft carrier Gemenceau flew doctors by helicopter to the (}omet, and the helicopters took four injured men to Brest.</p>
        <p>Die Ocean Bridges owner said she was a dual-purpose tanker that carried oil or ore. She had discharged a cargo at Rotterdam and was en route to Sierra Leone to take on a cargo of ore.</p>
        <p>TTie British Comet radioed that her batteries were failing, but she was in no danger and her 35 crewmen were safe.</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THING YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT REAL-ESTATE IS 752-6140 (Our Phone Number)</p>
        <p>FEUD VICTIM BELFAST (AP)  A young man was shot and critically wounded today near the Catholic Ballymurphy district in Belfast, apparently the fourth victim in two days of the feud within the Irish Republican Army.</p>
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        <p>COME IN AND REGISTER-GET YOUR FREE BAHERIES, ALSO A DOOR PRIZE FOR YOU AND ANY PERSON THAT COMES WITH YOU.</p>
        <p>For our Open House, we will have factory trained experts to give you a FREE Hearinp Test to see if you have a hearing loss, as we are in search of those who would like to hear better. We want to help you enjoy life more and be able to hear the preacher when you go to church; in fact, even hear a whisper.</p>
        <p>We will be looking for you.</p>
        <p>Sincerely yours,</p>
        <p>SMITH'S HEARING AID SERVICE</p>
        <p>Faye Smith, General Managed</p>
        <p>Gla^s Venters, Secretary</p>
        <p>Maxie Ellisor, Manager Repair Depai^ment</p>
        <p>-  -  .  ,  .  HubeiT  Smith^  OwiieL  "  </p>
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        <p>DISTRIBUTER OF THE WORLD'S FINEST HEARING AIDS.</p>
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        <pb facs="00091236_0007" />
        <p>Sports the daily reflector Classified</p>
        <p>TUESDAY AFTERNOON, MARCH 9, 1971Frazier Wins On Unanimous Decision</p>
        <p>On The Canvas</p>
        <p>Muhammed Ali lies grimacing on the canvas after being knocked down by heavyweight champion Joe Frazier in the 15th round. Ali got up at the count of four, but had to take the referee's</p>
        <p>mandatory count off eight. Frazier won the bout and the undisputed championship in a unanimous decision. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>'Who's The Champ' Asks Frazier After Winning</p>
        <p>By HAL BOCK Associated Press Sports Writer NEW YORK (AP)  His face puffy and misshapen from a shower of punches thrown by Muhammad Ali, Joe Frazier nevertheless ruled today as undisputed heavyweight champion of the world. And he didnt exactly hide the fact.</p>
        <p>Whos the champ ... Whos the champ, stormed Frazier, who looked more like the loser than the winner after scoring a unanimous 15-round decision over Ali Monday night.</p>
        <p>I felt like the champion right along, said Frazier, whose victory was punctuated by a booming left hook that decked Ali in the 15th round and left the ex-champs jaw painfully swollen. </p>
        <p>I fought everybody they put in front of me and I whipped</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>them all, said Frazier, that includes CHay.</p>
        <p>Frazier seemed to delight in calling Ali by his former name, (Hay. In fact he repeated it three times at one point, each time saying Clay louder, as if for emphasis.</p>
        <p>You think he was clowning? asked Frazier. I dcmt. ni tell you, those shots add up. They slowed him down. He couldnt get off those ropes.</p>
        <p>Let me go straighten my face up, Frazier said, excusing himself from a post-fight press conference, I aint this ugly.</p>
        <p>Frazier paid Ali a compliment, acknowledging that the ex-champ had taken some of his hardest shots. That man takes some punch, said Frazier. I hit him some shots, and he took the best of them.</p>
        <p>FVazier*s most devastating punch was the 15th-round left hook that dropped Ali on his back.</p>
        <p>I reached back for that one, said Frazier. That one came from the country.</p>
        <p>Frazier said he thought that Ali had underestimated him.</p>
        <p>He thought I was slow and he thought I was flatfooted, the champion said. I think I surprised him. I think he found out different.</p>
        <p>N. Pitt Wins</p>
        <p>In First Round</p>
        <p>EDENTON  North Pitt High School rolled along last night, gaining the district tournament semifinals at Edenton High School. The Big Orange Machine of the girls socked Williamston, 53-38, to gain the next round of the tournament.</p>
        <p>The game was close throughout the first half of play, with neither team able to gain much of an advantage. By the end of the first period, it was deadlocked, 9-9. Then, in the second period. North Pitt managed to inch ahead outhitting the Tigerettes, 14-12, for a 23-21 lead.</p>
        <p>But it was the third period that did the job. North Pitt dumped in 14 more points during the period, but their defense did its job, holding Williamston to just three points. That left the Pant-HERS in a 37-24 lead as the final period got underway.</p>
        <p>Williamston managed to get wound up again, scoring 14 points, but North Pitt kept pace with them,eventually scoring 16 points to take the win.</p>
        <p>Susan James led the Big Orange Machine, dumping in 20 points, while Minnie Hollis was just behind with 19.</p>
        <p>, For Williamston, Claudia Hardison h;pd 13 and Joanie Roberson had 10.</p>
        <p>Tonight, Manteo^ and Northampton meet in the first game, while Robersonville and Paniego tangle at approximately 8:30 p.m. The winnefs of these two games meet Wet^nesday at 8:30. North Pitt will meet</p>
        <p>Chocowinity, winner over Cape Hatteras, Wednesday at 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Girls Game North Pitt    Edwards  6, James 20,</p>
        <p>Sharpe 2, Purvis 4,  Hollis  19, Pollard 2,</p>
        <p>Pollard, Jenkins.</p>
        <p>Williamston  Hardison 13, Roberson 10, Warren 4, White?, Brown 1, Davenport 3, S. Roberson.</p>
        <p>North Pift  9  14 14 la53</p>
        <p>Williamston  9  12  3 1438</p>
        <p>Scores</p>
        <p>Mondays College Basketball By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Midwest Colorado 77, Iowa St. 73 Kansas 71, Missouri 69, overtime</p>
        <p>Oklahoma 80, Oklahoma St.</p>
        <p>74</p>
        <p>Beloit 78, Lawrence 69</p>
        <p>Tournaments NAIA Playoffs FIRST Found</p>
        <p>Earlham, Ind. 105, Lewis &amp;amp; (Hark, Ore. 83</p>
        <p>Elizabeth City St. 90, W. New England 76</p>
        <p>Indiana, Pa. 81, E. New Mexico 72  '</p>
        <p>Glassboro, N.J. 71, E. Central Okla. 60</p>
        <p>Stephen F. Austin 91, UNC-Asheville 73</p>
        <p>By WILL GRIMSLEY AP Special Correspondent NEW YORK (AP)  Joe Frazier, the ^Black Marciano, is the undisputed heavyweight boxing champion but Muhammad Alihis runaway tongue silenced by a bettered jawis still on his feet, and hungry promoters already are (banning a bigger and more grandiose repeat.</p>
        <p>(Hiartwell Enterprises, Inc., which served as architect of Monday night's $20 million to $30 million spectacular, owns the return match contracts of both fighters. The probable site is the Los Angeles Forum and the time early next year.</p>
        <p>I dont think he wants a rematchnot right away, anyway, said Frazier, winner by decision in a brawling 15-rounder at Madison Square Garden in boxings richest and most ballyhooed extravaganza.</p>
        <p>He didnt ask Ali, the loudmouthed idol of millions who went to the canvas under a thunderclap Frazier left hook in the 15th round but regained his feet and himg on to avmd the</p>
        <p>stigma of a knockout.</p>
        <p>Immediately after the fight, the previously unbeaten and unmarked Ali, his right jaw swollen like a balloon, was rushed to a hospital where Xrays showed he was suffering not from a fracture but from a blood clot and a massive bruise.</p>
        <p>Ironically, Ali for once in his lifetime could j not talk and he sent his long-time trainer. Drew Bundini Brown, to the interview room to face the writers whom he had constantly chided.</p>
        <p>The 20,455 wild, scraming fans, who paid $1,352,961 to watch the fight of unbeaten heavyweights and the 300 million others who reportedly watched it on television around the world must have their doubts that Ali can ever rise again.</p>
        <p>The arrogant, garrulous grandson of a runaway Kentucky slave proved his heart and staying power in a gripping struggle but raised doubts that his once nimble legs could any more float like a butterfly, a tactic for which he became universally famous.</p>
        <p>Ali, showing only flashes of his</p>
        <p>old brilliance, tired visibly in the course of the bout and there were times it seemed his rubbery legs, of not his hard brown body, might wilt under Fraziers incessant pounding.</p>
        <p>A tremendous, dramatic fight that will be remembered as long as men pull on pillowed gloves, the highly promoted contest had its disappointing aspects on both sides.</p>
        <p>The superman image of Ali, born Cassius (Hay, was shattered, undoubtedly bringing grief to his millions of admirers all around the world. They had thought he was unbeatable.</p>
        <p>As for Frazier, a grim, 27-year-old onetime slaughterhouse butcher, he failed to prove to be the killer in the tradition of Jack Dempsey, Joe Louis and Rocky Marciano, the latter the late slugger who retired unbeaten arid whose bore-in style is duplicated by Frazier.</p>
        <p>Several times Frazier appeared to have Ali set up for the knockoutin the 11th round particularly and again in the 15thonly to let his quarry get</p>
        <p>Frazier Walks Away</p>
        <p>Referee Arthur Mercante, left, guides Joe Frazier to a neutral corner following his 15th round knockdown Muhammed Ali. It was the only time in</p>
        <p>the fight that either fighter was down. It was the final humiliation for Ali, who lost a unanimous decision. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Referee ' Art Mercante frequently warned both fighters to stop their constant chatter in the early rounds.</p>
        <p>Oh it was a lot of ghetto talk, said Frazier. He was saying he was gonna kill me and that. I just said, Ill do the same to you.</p>
        <p>There was no post-bout confrontation between the filters simply because Ali never showed up for it. He went directly to Flower Fifth Avenue Hospital for X rays of his jaw.</p>
        <p>Yancey Durham, Fraziers manager, said he couldnt tell how badly AJi was hurt.</p>
        <p>I aint no doctor and neither is Joe, said Durham. If he can still talk, his jaw aint broken .  </p>
        <p>Xn^ays confirmed that Alis jaw was not- Xractured hut that he had su^^^d a blood clot and massive bruises from Fraziers punch.</p>
        <p> He said he would crawl across the ring on his hands and knees if I beat him, said Frazier. Well, I didnt make him do that, but I want him to apologize for all the things he Called me. He mumbled something to me after the fight but I dont know what it was he said.</p>
        <p>Frazier said his future plans were unsettled. There had been talk that he would retire following the Ali fight.</p>
        <p>We havent talked over the future yet, he said. Give me a chance. I just finished this fight. I gotta get away and talk it over with Yank (Durham). Man, I gotta live a little. Ive been working for 10 long years.</p>
        <p>Asked about a possible erematch, hazier grinnedr</p>
        <p>I dont think he wants a rematch, the unbeaten champion said, not right now anyway.</p>
        <p>All's</p>
        <p>Post'</p>
        <p>Handler Does Fight Talking</p>
        <p>Bh HERSCHEL NISSENSON Associated Press Shorts Writer NEW YORK (AP)  His once-pretty jaw was painfully swolli and his latest prediction was __ knocked for a speechless loop by Joe Frazier Monday night, but it was hard to tell which caused Muhammad Ali more discomfort.</p>
        <p>. It was, to say the least, a bad night for the previously unbeaten former heavyweight champion. His forecast that Frazier falls in six went by the boards, he took a smashing left hook on the right side of his jaw late in the 11th round that buckled his knees and he wound up flat on his back early in the 15th round from another crunching hook to the same spot.</p>
        <p>na be three years no more. The cars been in the garage for three years but all the bumps and clinks are out now.</p>
        <p>He referred to Alis lengthy absence from the ring jyhile his appeal of a five-year jail sentence for refusing induction into the armed forces was argued in the courts.</p>
        <p>The first thing I asked him was, We aint through, are we? Brown told reporters. He said, Get em ready; were gonna set tracks.</p>
        <p>Finally, he lost the decision in a fight he had predicted would be rivaled as a spectacle only by the first moonwalk and then he had to rush off to a hospital for X rays,  leaving dozens of newsmen to settle for a few words from Drew Bundini Brown, one of his handlers.</p>
        <p>Although Alis jaw didnt take on its lopsided look until he was floored 25 seconds into the 15th round. Brown said the injury occurred sometime between the ninth and 11th rounds. The first sign that Ali was hurt came late in the 11th, when Frazier belted him into the ropes and staggered him.</p>
        <p>He was on queer street, Brown said. He took three or four good blows and if I ever prayed, I really prayed then. Ali was his cocky, confident self during the early rounds.</p>
        <p>The X rays proved negative and Ali, his jaw shutfor a change with a massive bruise but not broken, returned to his hotel, took some medication and went to bed, his dreams of a quick return to boxings pinnacle after a thre-year layoff ruinf.</p>
        <p>But Ali, even in absentia, wasnt through predicting.</p>
        <p>Well be back, promised Brown. 'Three years aint gon-</p>
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        <p>away.</p>
        <p>Is Frazier really a Dark Destroyer, or just a Black Buzz-Saw?</p>
        <p>I hit him with my best shots, and he took them, Frazier said afterward. That man takes some punch.</p>
        <p>Frazier, never floored, had bruises over both his eyes and on his right cheek. He bled at the nose. He looked more butchered than Ali, despite Alis enlarged cheek, and even apologized for his hamburger countenance.</p>
        <p>Let me go clean up my face, he told newsmen. Im</p>
        <p>Two N.C. Teams Left</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY (AP) - Two of the three North Carolina teams are still in the running for the NAIA championship after Mondays first round of the marathon basketball tournament.</p>
        <p>But  UNC-Asheville was</p>
        <p>spilled by fourth-seeded Stephen F.  Austin, Tex., 91-73, in</p>
        <p>Mondays first round.</p>
        <p>Earlier, 12th-seeded Elizabeth City State beat Western New England, Mass., 90-76.</p>
        <p>In todays second day of first-round  play, seventh-ranked</p>
        <p>North Carolina A and T plays Drury,Mo., tonight. 'The The Aggies  have a 22-7 record,</p>
        <p>while the Missouri team is 18-8.</p>
        <p>Elizabeth City was paced by Leonard Carmichaels 23 points as all five of its starters scored in double figures. With Western New England leading 61-60 midway in the second half,, the Vikings began to control the play and broke the game open. It was their 22nd win in 30 games.</p>
        <p>George Jerman led the games scorers with 26 points for the losers, while teammate Fred Smith scored 23.</p>
        <p>The Asheville club led by one at halftime over the Texas squad, but the winners got 54 points in the second half to the North  Carolinians  39. Jim</p>
        <p>McElhaney and Rod Healy had 20 points apiece for Asheville, while Pete Harris of Stephen Austin was high in the game with 28. Asheville ended its season with a 20-10 record.</p>
        <p>Second-round games will be played Wednesday, and the championship will be decided Saturday night.</p>
        <p>not this ugly.</p>
        <p>The rugged Frazier, fighting from a crouch and always moving forward, disdained Alis greater height6 feet, 3 inches to 5-imand a 6*2-inch longer reach.</p>
        <p>Frazier stole some of Alis thunder. In the fifth round, he laughed at Ali through bloody teeth. He dropped his arms to his side, dared Ali to hit him and taunted his foe as he laced out with lunging lefts.</p>
        <p>Fraziers principal weapon was his lightning-like left hook, almost too fast to see and damaging enough to snap Alis proud head back ^so hard it looked as it might break at the neck.</p>
        <p>Ali, always the clown, teased Frazier frequently when he was backed against the ropes. He pawed at Frazier with his gloves, like a child fondling a toy.</p>
        <p>Frazier rested the display and asked afterward, what he thought of Alis antics, barked crisply:</p>
        <p>Clowning? He wasnt clowning. He was too tired to move.</p>
        <p>Ali, wearing red velvet trunks and tassled white-andred shoes, frequently shook off Fraziers hardest jolts and waved consolation to his body of admirers.</p>
        <p>Many observers at rightside had Ali ahead or at least even but the decision was unanimous. Judge Artie Aidala had it 9-6, judge Bill Recht had it 8-6-1 and referee Art Mercante had it 11-4, all favoring Frazier.</p>
        <p>The Associated Press scorecard had it 9-5-1 for Frazier.</p>
        <p>Ali held his own in the early rounds. The middle roundsthe eighth through the 13thwere all Frazier. After being shaken in the 11th and falling to one knee on a slip, Ali appeared definitely beaten.</p>
        <p>His legs wobbled. His eyes were glazed. His once sharp punches were flabby and ineffective.</p>
        <p>But he came back to win the 14th, while the crowd yelled.</p>
        <p>In the first 20 seconds of the final round Frazier cut loose a murderous hookI brought from the country, he said and Ali hit the deck on his back like a concrete block. He was up at four, took the mandatory eight count and then hung on only nerve keeping him erect.</p>
        <p>Then it was over. Fraziers hand was raised.</p>
        <p>And Bundini cried.</p>
        <p>DAYTON, Ohio (AP)  Austin Carr of Notre Dame has been named to play for the East in the East-West College All-Star basketball game April 3 at the University of Dayton.</p>
        <p>Don McGloho</p>
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        <p>taunting the shorter Frazier by keeping him at arms length with first his left hand and then his right in the champions face.</p>
        <p>Alis camp had no quarrel with the unanimous decision.</p>
        <p>I always called Joe Frazier a turkey, Brown said,^but hes not a turkey. Hes no ordinary champion. Hes a real champ. When we come back were gonna have to take the title from a champion.</p>
        <p>In the final analysis, of course, there will always be the nagging question: Could Ali have beaten Frazier Monday night if he hadnt been inactive for three years? Brown would like to think so.</p>
        <p>But he added:</p>
        <p>Ali never acted like he won.. I think he was satisfied just not being knocked out. But we aint through yet.</p>
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        <pb facs="00091236_0008" />
        <p>ftThe Dally Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Tuesday. March ft, l71</p>
        <p>Davis, Roche Lead All-ACC</p>
        <p>RALEIGH</p>
        <p>(AP)  Charlie Davis of Wake Forest and John Roche of South Carolina won spots on the All-Atfantic Coast Conference basketball team for the third straight year, it was announced today.</p>
        <p>Tbe Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Association also chose Dennis Wuycik of North Carolina, Randy Denton of Duke and Tom Owens of South Carolina for the first team.</p>
        <p>Owens, a senior forward from the Bronx. N.Y., was on the team last season. Denton, a senior center from Raleigh, was on the second team in two previous seasons.</p>
        <p>Davis, a senior from New York City, was the unanimous choice of the 121 voters. Roche, also a senior from New York City, missed on only two ballots.</p>
        <p>Davis is the leading scorer in the conference, followed in order by Roche, Denton and Wuycik. Denton leads in rebounding, closely followed by Owens. Wuycik has the best field goal percentage in the nation.</p>
        <p>The five won their positions without serious challenge. Wuycik missed the first team on only four ballots and Denton on nine. Owens had a big lead over Barry Parhill, a Virginia sophomore who had the highest</p>
        <p>vote total on the second team.</p>
        <p>Joining Parkhill on the second team were George Karl of North Carolina. Bill Gerry of Virginia, Ed Leftwich of N.C. State, and Jim OBrien of Maryland,</p>
        <p>Although they were not required to vote by position, the votes came up with two forwards. a center and two guards on the first team. Denton and Owens each at 6-10 and Wuycik at 6-5 complete a rugged front line. The backcourt combination of Davis an Roche provides two excH&amp;amp;llent ball handlers and the leading scorers in the ACC.</p>
        <p>Here are the teams, with individual point totals. Two points were given for a first-team vote, one for second:</p>
        <p>First Team Charlie Davis, Wake Forest, 242</p>
        <p>John Roche, South Carolina, 240</p>
        <p>Dennis Wuycik. North Carolina, 238 Randy Denton. Duke, 233 Tom Owens, South Carolina, 176</p>
        <p>Second Team Barry Parkhill, Virginia, 125 George Karl, North Carolina, 120</p>
        <p>Bill Gerry, Virginia, 99 Ed Leftwich, N.C. State, 74 Jim OBrien, Maryland, 64</p>
        <p>Basic Baseball Is Cards* Key</p>
        <p>By DICK COUCH Associated Press Sports Writer</p>
        <p>ST. PETERSBURG, Fla. (AP)  The St. Louis Cardinals will lower their sights from the far-off fences of Busch Stadium this year and rely on basic baseball to lift them back into contention in the tough National League East.</p>
        <p>The Cardinals, who traded for Richie Allens muscle before the 1970 season, promptly unloaded the controversial slugger following another fourth place finishas the start of a second major shakeup in as many years.</p>
        <p>In 1971 the accent will be on bat contact, speed, defense and, hopefully, more pitching help for brilliant Bob Gibson. The Cardinals, in effect, are prepared to nibble their way back to the top instead of trying to get there in big bites.</p>
        <p>Last October, they dealt Allen to Los Angeles for infielder Ted Sizemore, the NLs 1%9 Rookie of the Year, and catcher Bob Stinson. Four months and six trades later, they acquired center fielder Matty Alou from Pittsburgh -in exchange for pitcher Nelson Briles and reserve outfielder Vic Davalillo.</p>
        <p>Allen accounted for 34 of St. l^uis 113 home runs last season. Sizemore and Alou hit one apiece for the Dodgers and Pi-</p>
        <p>All On The Ropes</p>
        <p>Joe Frazier basks Muhammed All up against the ropes during the early rounds of their fight last night in Madison Square Garden. Frazier took</p>
        <p>a decision over Ali in the highly-regarded fight to claim full share of the heavyweight crown. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>rates. But the two newcomers are high-average hitters who fit the new design envisioned by General Manager Bing Devine and field pilot Red Schoendienst.</p>
        <p>Gibson, at 35, was once again the premier pitcher in the league last season, posting a 23-6 record, striking out 274 batters and capturing the Cy Young Award for the second time.</p>
        <p>But left4iander Steve Carlton lost 19 of 29 decisions while young Mike Torrez and Jerry Reuss, the third and fourth starters most of the year, were 8-10 and 7-8, respectively.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Offensively the Cards will start third baseman Joe Torre, who ripped 203 hits, 21 homers, 100 RBI and had a .325 average Left fielder Lou Brock batted .304, with 202 hits, 13 homers and 51 stolen bases. Alou, .297 for the Pirates, stroked 201 hits.</p>
        <p>With Mike Shannon lost for the season because of a kidney ailment, the versatile Torre will work fulltime at third base. Sizemore, .306 for Los Angeles, likely will start at shortstop, Julian Javier, .251, at second and Joe Hague, ,.271, 14 homers, at first.</p>
        <p>Jose Cardinal, who batted .293 shifts from center field to right to make room for Alou.</p>
        <p>Ted Simmons, a 21-year-old, is the catcher.</p>
        <p>Leftwich Dropped By State On Tourney's Eve</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS North Carolina State, which won last seasons Atlantic Coast Conference basketball tournament, got a blow Monday, four days before the 1971 event, when its leading scorer was dropped from the team.</p>
        <p>(Doach Norm Sloan said junior guard Ed Leftwich second team All-ACC player, was removed from the squad for not coming to practice.</p>
        <p>Leftwich was the second Wolfpack player to be dropped just before the championship tournament. Sophomore Bill Benson quit last week, giving</p>
        <p>academic troubles as his reason.</p>
        <p>N. C. State goes against third-seeded Duke in the opening round of the eight-team event at Greensboro, N. C. Thursday. Last year the Wolfpack was ranked fourth in the tournament, which decides the ACCs champion and representative in post-season NCAA tournaments, but upset unbeaten South Carolina in double overtime for the crown.</p>
        <p>Leftwich, a Burlington, N. C., native, was the third leading scorer for State in the slowdown contest and made the second All-ACC team his so{4iomore year. Today it was announced he is</p>
        <p>Jayhawks Win AnotherOverfime</p>
        <p>Bucs Continue To Run Rampant</p>
        <p>By TOM SALADINO Associated Press ^orts Writer</p>
        <p>The 1-2 punch of Dave Cash and Richie Hebner battered the Detroit Tigers as the Pittsburgh Pirates continue to flatten all comers after four days of spring training exhibition games.</p>
        <p>Hebner slammed a pair of home runs, each after Cash had singled, openening up a 4-0 Pittsburgh lead after four innings and the Pirates coasted to their fourth straight victory of the spring Monday, 9-3 over the Tigers.</p>
        <p>The pair of homers by Hebner, who also added a single, gave Pittsburgh nine in its last three games. Starter Jim Nelson, who held the Tigers hitless over the first three innings, was the winner.</p>
        <p>In other games, Washington edged Blatimore 4-3, the New York Mets topped Philadelphia 3-1, the Chicago White Sox belted Minnesota 6-2, Houston nipped Montreal 2-1, St. Louis blasted, Kansas City 11-7, the New York Yankees held off Atlanta 2-1 Boston squeezed past Cincinnati 3-2, * the Chicago Cubs rapped Qeveland 6-3, Milwaukee nudged California 4-3, San Diego whipped Oakland 8-6, and San Francisco tripped the Tokyo Orions 7-5.</p>
        <p>Washington third baseman Jim Mason committed four errors, letting in two Baltimore ruris in the fifth inning, but came back with a 13th inning homer that enabled the Senators to edge the world cham</p>
        <p>pions.</p>
        <p>Art Shamskys two-run homer provided the edge in the New York Mets triumph while Carlos Maz sofrljed a three-run blast in the White Sox triumph.</p>
        <p>Homers were also decisive in Houstons triumph when John Mayberry snapped a 1-1 tie with a solo shot for the Astros and St. Louis got a three-run homer off the bat of Joe Hague. Lou Brock added a two-run triple in the Cards winning effort.</p>
        <p>TTie Yankees got an RBI single from Bobby Murcer and a run-scoring single by Danny Cat in the first inning to hold off Atlanta while Don Pavletich rapped an eighth-inning scari-fice fly^ giving the Red Sox the edge over the National League champion Reds.</p>
        <p>,Ken Hendersons three-run double in the sixth inning, helped San Francisco beat Tokyo. Juan Marichal pitched the first three frames for the Giants and gave up three runs, including a two-run triple by Michiyo Arito.</p>
        <p>Don Kessingers triple and Ron Santos tw-r single capped a three-run fourth inning for the Cubs and helped overcome a solo homer by the Indians Ken Harrelson.</p>
        <p>Dave Robinson and Dave Campbell each slugged home runs for San Diego while Dick Green had one for the As and Roberto Penas ninth-innig single snapped a -3 tie and gave the Brewers their victory.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Some people call it luck, but Coach Ted Owens says its pride that has pulled his Kansas basketball team through two consecutive overtime victories to remain unbeaten in the Big Eight.</p>
        <p>The fourth-ranked Jayhawks came from behind again Monday night and nipped Missouri 71-69 in an extra session at Columbia with Aubrey Nash carrying the scoring load and Dave Robisch hitting the final three free throws for the victory margin.</p>
        <p>Kansas, the league champion at 13-0, finishes against Nebraska, 8-5, at Lawrence Saturday night.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma defeated Oklahoma State 80-74 at Sillwater and Colorado, with C3iff Meely breaking the Big Eight scoring record, beat Iowa State 77-73 at Ames to close their seasons.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma and Missouri tied for second place at 9-5, and will be joined by Nebraska if the Huskers beat Kansas. Each is hoping for the bid to the National Invitational Tournament that usually goes to '"the Big Eights runnerup.</p>
        <p>Colorado, 5-8, and Oklahoma State, 2-11, finish 'Thursday night at Boulder. Iowa State is through at 2-12.</p>
        <p>Owens said he was impressed by the way the Jayhawks refused to be ruffled by the deafening screams of the 6,000 Missouri fans packed into old Brewer field house. The Tigers sensed an upset and a sure trip to the NIT, and they especially bore down on Rolsisch with tneir vocal , pressure, .....-</p>
        <p>Meely hit 27 points and shattered two league records. He raised the one-season record to 383 points and the qareer mark to 1,896. 'The old records were 377 by Salt Wesley and 1,888 by -Qyde Lovellette, both of Kansas.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma tied a' Galfa^er Hall record^ by sinking 61 per cent of its field shots. The SOo-ners broke a 39-39 tie with 12</p>
        <p>straight points and Oklahoma State couldnt recover.</p>
        <p>Scott Martin of OU and Jerry Clack of OSU each had 20 points.</p>
        <p>Henry Smith was high for Missouri with 24 points. Nash led Kansas with 16 and Robisch added 15.</p>
        <p>In New York, the National Invitation Tournament added five more teams to  its  field</p>
        <p>Hawaii, Syracuse, Georgia Tech, LaSalle and St. Johns of New York. They join St. Bona-ventur^, Dayton, Tennessee, Massaclktsetts and Providence, leaving six openings in the 16-team field.</p>
        <p>Bowling</p>
        <p>Thursday Sportsmen^</p>
        <p>W  L</p>
        <p>Pepsi-CJola  52  28</p>
        <p>Ciiallengers v  52  28</p>
        <p>Stars &amp;amp; Strikes  51  29</p>
        <p>Hastings Ford  42  38</p>
        <p>SOPlus  391^  40^</p>
        <p>39  41</p>
        <p>32V  401^</p>
        <p>Loaners Texas Gulf High game, Dennis Jarman, 224; high series, Johnny Simmons, 620.</p>
        <p>City League Nelson Realtor,  18  6</p>
        <p>Chatam Hot Dogs  17  7</p>
        <p>Ai^lied Systems  15  9</p>
        <p>,(}uik Car Wash ,  14  10</p>
        <p>Piggly Wiggly  14  10</p>
        <p>Team Two  13  11</p>
        <p>Radars  13  ,  11</p>
        <p>Commedy of Errors  10  14</p>
        <p>Scovill Engineers  10  14</p>
        <p>High game,  Ray</p>
        <p>^Paughtridge, 247; high series, Walt Whitley, 585.</p>
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        <p>UCLA Holds To First By Two Vote Margin</p>
        <p>By KEN RAPPOPORT Associated Press ^rts Writer</p>
        <p>UCLA held on today by an eyelash as the nations No. 1-ranked college basketball team.</p>
        <p>Only two points separated the top-rated Bruins, who had 608, and Marquette, with 606. Last week, UCLA topped Marquette 692-676 in the Associated Press poll.</p>
        <p>A nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters dealt UCLA 19 first-place votes and Marquette, 13, after the two top clubs swept oppmients last week.</p>
        <p>UCLA beat Washington 71-69,</p>
        <p>California 103-69 and Stanford 107-72 to bring its record to 24-1. Marquette stopped Creighton 66-61, Bowling Green 96-74 and Xavier of Ohio 70-58 to finish its regular season with a 26-0 mark.</p>
        <p>The rest of the Top Ten remained almost the same as last week. Penn moved up from fifth to fourth and Kansas dropped one place to fifth in the only change.</p>
        <p>Southern California remained a distant third with 510 points. Penn had 448 and Kansas, which got the only other first-place vote, had 410 points.</p>
        <p>Rounding out the Top Ten are</p>
        <p>Basketball Scores</p>
        <p>again on' the second allconference team.</p>
        <p>Hie 6-5 guard said Monday he would probably look to transfer to another school. He went on: I think it will be evident that if Im not part of the team for the remainder of the season I will not be welcomed back next year.</p>
        <p>He said he told Sloan last week that he needed a couple of days off to take care of some personal problems. The Raleigh campus of N. C. State is practically deserted this week for spring vacation, but Sloan called his team back Monday for practice after giving them the weekend off.</p>
        <p>Sloan, meanwhile, said Leftwich would have to change his attitude before he could play next year. He said Leftwichs and Bensons efforts to correct academic troubles have not been overwhelming.</p>
        <p>Sloan added, Ed needs to get his goals and aims straightened out. His future at State is in his hands. He certainly will have to make a turnabout from past experiences.</p>
        <p>Against Duke, which beat the Wolfpack by four points in their last meeting after State won earlier by four, Sloan will move Joe Dunning into a starting guard spot.</p>
        <p>Other starters will be Dan Wells and Rick Holdt at forward, Paul Coder at center and captain A1 Heartley at the other guard.</p>
        <p>N. C. State lost its last three ACC games and finished,with a 5-9 league record and 12-13 over-all. Its sixth-place position was its lowest in four years.</p>
        <p>The regular-season champion. North Carolina, and No. 2 South Carolina are favored in the 18th annual tournament. Hie Tar Heels take their 11-3 league record and their national ranking against last-place Oemson in the first game Thursday,.</p>
        <p>South Carolina, ranked sixth in the nation with its 10-4 ACC record, plays Maryland in the* second afternoon contest. Wake Forest and Virginia close out the (^ning day games.</p>
        <p>The winners of the North Carolina-Glemson and Wake Forest-Virginia games play in the first game of Fridays semifinals. The championship game will be Saturday night.</p>
        <p>The five officials assigned to the tournament were announced Monday: Steve Honzo, James Hernjak, CJeorge Chnley, Ralph Stout and Otis Allmond.</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS NBA</p>
        <p>Eastern Conference Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W..L...Pct..G.B. New York .49 27  .645  </p>
        <p>Philadel. .44 32  .579  5</p>
        <p>Boston ...39 36  .520</p>
        <p>Bfalo ...21  55  .276  28</p>
        <p>Central Division c-Balti. .  39 34  .534  </p>
        <p>Atlanta ...31 44  .413  9</p>
        <p>pncinnati .28 46  .378  \\^/z</p>
        <p>Cleveland .13 61  .176  26/5i</p>
        <p>Western Conference Midwest Division c-Milwa. .65  11  .855  </p>
        <p>Chicago .46  27,  .639  17,^</p>
        <p>Phoenix .44 28  .611  19</p>
        <p>Detroit ...42 31  .575  21/i</p>
        <p>Pacific Division c-Los Ang. .46 29  .613  </p>
        <p>San Fran. . 37 38  .493  9</p>
        <p>San Diego .34 42  .447  12*/S!</p>
        <p>Seattle ...33  41  .446  l2Vz</p>
        <p>Portland .23  52  .307  23</p>
        <p>cClinched division  title.</p>
        <p>Mondays Results Buffalo 114, Portland 98 Milwaukee 104, Seattle 99 Only games scheduled Tuesdays Games Phoenix at Detroit Seattle at New York Milwaukee at Chicago</p>
        <p>Baltimore at Los Angeles Buffalo at San Diego Boston vs. San Fransicso at Oakland Philadelphia at Cleveland Only games scheduled Wednesdays Games New York at Cincinnati Phoenix at Atlanta Only games scheduled</p>
        <p>No. 6 South Carolina, 323 points; No. 7 Western Kentucky 275; No. 8 Kentucky, 264; No. 9 Jacksonville, 240 and Nov. 10 Fordham, 224.</p>
        <p>Duquesne topped the second ten with 151 points, f&amp;lt;^lowed by No. 12 Ohio State, with 97, No. 13 North Carolina, 79, No. 14 Notre Dame, 45, and No. 15 Tennessee, 33.</p>
        <p>The rest of the blue ribbon group included, 16th-ranked Utah State; No. 18 Houston; and newcomers. No. 19 Duke and No. 20 Miami of Ohio.</p>
        <p>Duke and Miami rei^aced TopTwenty dropouts Indiana, and LaSalle, tied for No. 18 last week.</p>
        <p>Utah State made the biggest jump, moving up four spots from No. 20 and Houston had the longest drop, falling three places from No. 15.</p>
        <p>'The Top Twenty teams, with first place votes in parentheses, and total points on a 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-etc. basis:</p>
        <p>ABA East Division</p>
        <p>W..L.. Pct..G.B. Virginia .  47  25  .653  </p>
        <p>Kentucky  .40  33  .548  V/2</p>
        <p>New York  36  36  .500  11</p>
        <p>Pitts......32  42  .432  16</p>
        <p>Carolina ...29 43  .403 18</p>
        <p>Floridians  .30  45  .400</p>
        <p>West Division</p>
        <p>Utah .....49  21,  .700  </p>
        <p>Indiana . 48 23  .676 U/z</p>
        <p>Memphis  .37  36  .507  13/^</p>
        <p>Denver . .  .26  45  .366  23^/z</p>
        <p>Texas ...23 48  .324 26^/z</p>
        <p>Mondays Results Indiana 118, Carolina 105 Only game scheduled Tuesdays Games New York vs. Virginia at Hampton</p>
        <p>Floridians at Utah Denver vs. Texas at Dallas Only games scheduled</p>
        <p>1.</p>
        <p>UCLA (19)</p>
        <p>608</p>
        <p>2.</p>
        <p>Marquette (13)</p>
        <p>606</p>
        <p>3.</p>
        <p>Southern Cal</p>
        <p>510</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Penn</p>
        <p>448</p>
        <p>5. Kansas (1)</p>
        <p>410</p>
        <p>6.</p>
        <p>South Carolina</p>
        <p>323</p>
        <p>7.</p>
        <p>Western Ky.</p>
        <p>275</p>
        <p>8.</p>
        <p>Kentucky</p>
        <p>264</p>
        <p>9.</p>
        <p>Jacksonville</p>
        <p>240</p>
        <p>10.</p>
        <p>Fordham</p>
        <p>224</p>
        <p>11.</p>
        <p>Duquesne</p>
        <p>151</p>
        <p>12.</p>
        <p>Ohio State</p>
        <p>97</p>
        <p>13.</p>
        <p>North Carolina</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>14.</p>
        <p>Notre Dame</p>
        <p>45</p>
        <p>15.</p>
        <p>Tennessee</p>
        <p>33</p>
        <p>16.</p>
        <p>Utah State</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>17.</p>
        <p>Long Beach St.</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>18.</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>19.</p>
        <p>Duke</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>20.</p>
        <p>Miami, Ohio</p>
        <p>12</p>
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        <p>.fO Kindeigartnpf</p>
        <p>I</p>
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        <p>29 Fury</p>
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        <p>26</p>
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        <p>55"</p>
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        <p>12</p>
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        <p>1</p>
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        <p>Too bad Departed</p>
        <p>rr</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>23</p>
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        <p>YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>3 Men of letters</p>
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        <p>9. Literary bits</p>
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        <p>16. French security 18. Mouse genus 21. CottontaM</p>
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        <p>27. Korean soldier 28 F*latitude 32 Cheer 34. Twin crystal 37. Spirit 39 Genuine</p>
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        <p>43. Forty winks 44 Educational</p>
        <p>3-9  Association</p>
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        <p>Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Marriage Has Its Rulos</p>
        <p>Edith is puzzeled about the proper rules for marriage! Discuss this case in detail. Love can easily be developed (even after the wedding), so use your head more than your heart when you plan to marry. Thats a sure way to avoid the divorce courts. And it will prevent many heartaches for you innocent kiddies!</p>
        <p>By GEORGE W. CRANE Ph.D., M.D.</p>
        <p>Case P-591: Edith R., aged 18, is a college coed.</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, she began,I thought that in romance opposites were supposed to attract each other.</p>
        <p>But in your lecture today, you urged us to select mates who have much the same background, interests and even similar hobbies.</p>
        <p>So how do you explain the old adage about opposites being</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>attractive?</p>
        <p>LOVE FM_JL^ES In that old adage that op-posites attract, the central idea was that i^ysical opposites are more appealing.</p>
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        <p>7:00 Truth or 7:30 Hillbillies 8:00 Green Acres 8:30 Hee  Haw</p>
        <p>9 : 30 In  The</p>
        <p>Tarr.:! V 10:00 Topic i1 CO r-inal Riporl 11:30 Merv Griffin</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 Carolina 8:15 Lucille Rivers</p>
        <p>8:25 Meditations 8:30 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Lucy Show 10:30 Hillbillies 11:00 Family Affair</p>
        <p>11:30 Love of Life 12:00 Noon News 12:15 Farm News 12:25 Weather 12:30 Search 1:00 The Heart</p>
        <p>WITN </p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Gel Smart 7:30 Julia 8:00 Don Knotts 9:00 Movies 11:00 News 11:30 Tonight 1 ; 00 News WEDNESDAY 6:00 Aspect 6:30 Father Knows</p>
        <p>7.0 Today Show 9:00 Virg Graham 10:00 Dinah 10:30 Concentration n.00 Sale 11:30 Hollywood</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV -</p>
        <p>- Ch. 9</p>
        <p>1 ;25 Timely Tips 1:30 World Turns</p>
        <p>2:00 Splendored 2:30 Guiding Light</p>
        <p>3:00 Secret Storm</p>
        <p>3:30 Edge of Night</p>
        <p>4:00 Gomer Pyle 4:30 Flipper 5:00 Daniel Boone 5:55 Paul Harvey</p>
        <p>6:00 Early News 6:30 News 7 :00 Trulh or' 7:30 The Cat The Hat 8:00 Robert Young</p>
        <p>9:00 Medical Center</p>
        <p>10:00 Englebert Humperdinck 11:00 Final</p>
        <p>lf:30 Merv Griffin</p>
        <p>In</p>
        <p>Ch. 7</p>
        <p>12:00 Jeopardy 12:30 Who, What 12:55 NBC News 1:00 Another World</p>
        <p>^1;: 30 Memory Game</p>
        <p>2.CC Our Lives 2:30 The Doctors 3:00 Bay City 3:30 Br Promise 4:00 Star Trek 5:00 Big Valley 6:00 News 6.3C NBC News 7:00 Get Smart 2: 3C Si 11 lull 9:00 Jack Benny 10:00 Four .n One 11:00 Newt 11:30 Tonight 1:00 News</p>
        <p>- Ch. 12</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7-00 Tot.-.:  News</p>
        <p>7 :30 Mod Sguad 8:30 ABC Movie of the Week '0:00 * \ai 'us Welb,</p>
        <p>11:00 Total News 11:30 Showcase 1:00 Dick Cavett WEDNESDAY 6:30 Contact 8:00 Romper Room</p>
        <p>8:30 Sesame St 9:30 David Frost .10:30 LaLanne 11:00 Gourmet 11:30 Thar Girl 12:00 Bewitched 12:30 A World ApArt 1:00 My Children</p>
        <p>1:30 Make Deal 2:00 Newlywed 2:30 Dating 3:00 Gen  Hosp</p>
        <p>3:30 Gilligan's Island</p>
        <p>4.00 Dark Shadows</p>
        <p>4:30 Theatc'</p>
        <p>6:25 Putting You First</p>
        <p>6:30 ABC News</p>
        <p>7.00 Total News 7:30 Eddie's</p>
        <p>Father</p>
        <p>8:00 Room 222 8:30 Smith Fam 9:00 Johnny Cash</p>
        <p>10:00 Young Lawyers</p>
        <p>11:00^Total News 11:30 Showcase 1:00 Dick Cavett</p>
        <p>ES32SB</p>
        <p>LUXURIOUS BEAUTY</p>
        <p>The last word in thrillers.Terrific.</p>
        <p>TTiis means tliat a tkoy doesnt grow as ardent about a girl who is a half-nrian.</p>
        <p>Instead, he wants a very feminine sweetheart, who at least acts timid and scared of a mouse, for that makes him feel bold, brave and a he-man.</p>
        <p>Despite the heavy modern TV advertising, men dont relish girls who smoke or swill down hard liquor or tell risque stories.</p>
        <p>Of the 50,OCX&amp;gt; men who have written to our Scientific Marriage Foundation, only ONE ever asked to be introduced to a woman who smoked or drank!</p>
        <p>Yet modern fashion designers often violate a basic law of sexual charm and thus dress women in mannish costumes.</p>
        <p>Instead, men want girls to be soft and lovely, with silky clothes, lace fringes on their slips, and fond of religion, music, babies or other difen-seless creatures, such as kittens.</p>
        <p>Many a husband has protested that he was becoming platonic with his wife. Why?</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, they confess, when I wake up at night and look at my wifes head on the pillow beside me, I feel a vague sense of revulsion!</p>
        <p>For she has a boyish haircut and thus looks like a half-man, so if I consider making love to her, it suggests a homosexual relationship.</p>
        <p>When I married, I wanted a girl who was lOO per cent feminine and not a half-man character!</p>
        <p>And you women can appreciate this viewpoint, for how many of you would grow romantic over a fellow w^ho used rouge, lipstick, eye shadow, false eyelashes and dressed in feminine lingerie?</p>
        <p>Instead, you have secretly</p>
        <p>MEADOWS ROOK</p>
        <p>ENDS TON I GMT</p>
        <p>a*iuw' fo pwsitwii</p>
        <p>itfiaGEORGE STEVENS-FRED KOHIMAR p&amp;lt;oduction</p>
        <p>GamsM Iim ^ITte^nnni</p>
        <p>  0ceo o. MOWit SIifC</p>
        <p>Sc'fnou, V FKMVI 0 OaMOv Msed OR Stef . &amp;lt; Co-0(hJ JR&amp;lt;J ConOurira I wunci</p>
        <p>l*l</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>I 1971 &amp;gt; By Tht CMcaf* TriMi|</p>
        <p>North -South vulnerable. South deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH 4k 5 4 Q 8 7 4 O Q t 8 3 4k 9 5 2 WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>4k8762  A 10 3</p>
        <p>9?632  &amp;lt;;?AKJ1</p>
        <p>O K 10  0 6 5^4</p>
        <p>AJ10 4  4kK763</p>
        <p>SOUTH 4k A K Q J 9 5</p>
        <p>O A J 7 2 4k A Q 8</p>
        <p>' The bidding:</p>
        <p>South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 4k  Pass  Pass  2 V</p>
        <p>Dble.  Pass  3 0  Pass</p>
        <p>4 4k  Pass  Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead: Deuce of</p>
        <p>Tho North was unable to keep the bidding open. South did not abandon hope for game. Holding 23 points in high cards and distribution, he doubled Easts reopening bid of two hearts. When North dutifully responded with three diamonds. South leaped directly to four spades. Since North has denied having as many as 6 points. Souths action is not warranted.</p>
        <p>He should have assumed that, if his partner had a high card or two, the latter could be counted on to proceed if game was in the offing. North might have been better advised to bid two no trump instead of three diamonds to show the heart stopper. If South carries on to three no trump, there is no way that the defense can defeat that contract.</p>
        <p>West opened the deuce of hearts against four spades. The four was played from dummy and East won the trick with the ten. East continued with the king and</p>
        <p>nourished your romantic image of your dream man ever since the early teens and it deals with a masculine creature, not a sissy half-female.</p>
        <p>So opposites attract is still quite true in the physical realm.</p>
        <p>But for insurance against divorce, it is wise to select a mate who shares your own religious and cultural outlook.</p>
        <p>Dont cross racial lines, either, for your children will then be subject to unfair prejudices, since they are regarded as hybrids by both sides of their racial ancestry.</p>
        <p>A lot of anti-establishment youth violate these basic rules of marriage and go slumming when they pick a mate, but they will usually be in the divorce courts within 5 years!</p>
        <p>So send for my 200-point Tests for Husbands and Wives, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 20 cents and use your head more than your heart if you wish a permanently happy home. (Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 20 cents to cover typing and printing costs when you send for one of his booklets.)</p>
        <p>declarer ruffed in his hand. :^uth began drawing trump; however, when East showed out on the third round, it suddenly dawned on the declarer that he and West were down to the same size in trumps. If he drew the remaining spade, the opposition might run several heart trick's when they regained the lead.</p>
        <p>South switched his attentions to the diamond suit by playing the ace and another. West was in with the king, and a heart return forced declarer to ruff once more and establish a spade trick for West. South still had to lose a heart, and his contract went on the rocks.</p>
        <p>Since the odds favor a four-two division of the out-standing spades, declarer would have been well advised to protect his trump holdii^ from the enemys assaults in hearts. A measure of caution on South's part, in fact, would have paid a handsome reward.</p>
        <p>When East leads the king of hearts at trick two, it is suggested that declarer discard, a club from his hand instead of ruffing. Observe that he has to lose the club trick eventually, so that he surrenders nothing by taking the sluff. He gains considerable timing, however, for East cannot continue hearts profitably. If he leads the ace nextj for example, it establishes Norths queen.</p>
        <p>If East is permitted to hold the second heart trick, he is temporarily unatole to press the attack. Iff a club is returned. South can finesse the queen successfully, draw trumps in four pulls and then j give West his diamond trick.</p>
        <p>! South ruffs a heart return with the nine of spades, and he has 10 tricksfive spades, three diamonds and two clubs.</p>
        <p>Empty Firehouse Invites Burglary</p>
        <p>ST. LOUIS (AP)  City firemen have found it necessary to battten down the hatches whenever they leave for an alarm. The empty firehouses are easy pickings for burglars.</p>
        <p>Fire Chief Denis Broderick said there have been 20 thefts since last summer, including some expensive color television sets, tools and clothing. Last Thanksgiving, men from one station returned to find their Thanksgiving dinner stolen.</p>
        <p>Some special security measures have been taken and the television sets are locked in angle-iron boxes, complete with burglar alarm devices.</p>
        <p>The water in 22-mile-long Lake Tahoe could cover a flat area the gize of California to a depth of more than 14 inches.</p>
        <p>Sales Tax Bit! AAost Of</p>
        <p>Tt? Daily Reflector, Greenville.</p>
        <p>ole Up In House</p>
        <p>By SAM D. BUNDY</p>
        <p>The local option sales tax bill consumed most of the time of the House sessions last week. In the consideration of Senate Bill No. 81 on Tuesday the House turned back amendment after amendment; however, on Wednesday an important amendment was adopted by a 60-57 vote. This amendment prohibits the County Board of Commissioners from levying the one cent sales tax once the people have voted it down.</p>
        <p>As the bill now stands the County Board of (Commissioners may levy the one cent sales tax without a vote of the people; hewever, if they do submit it to a vote and it is defeated, the (County Board of Commissioners must abide by the vote. The bill</p>
        <p>now retuums to tkie Senate for* concurrence on tlxis am encima nt. The abortion Dill passed  laist</p>
        <p>week in the S'lotise has l&amp;gt;ese:n temporarily delayed in  the</p>
        <p>Senate.</p>
        <p>The big social event of the week was a t&amp;gt;anc]viet at the Sir Walter Hotel ^iven hy Tarheel E 1 e c t r i c  e  m h e r s h ip</p>
        <p>Association. It was the pleasmre of Mrs. Bondy and myself to sit and dine vk7ith :Mr. and Itilr-s-Gilbert "Whitley and to  - see</p>
        <p>several people from F*itt County and CJreene C^otmty area . On</p>
        <p>Thtrrsciay I was privileged to meet E&amp;gt;oug Me Reynolds and a group of Explorer Scouts from Ayden. I went with them for a tour of the Legislative Building and Speaker Gkxiwin extended the courtesy of the galleries to them at the noon session. This weekend was the first one we had remained in Raleigh. The purpose was to attend a CCougar hasketball game and also to be on hand for the Jefferson-Jackson Day festivities and to catch up on some work and CO r respondence.</p>
        <p>N.C.Tuesday. March 9. 19719 BUSMANS HOLIDAY STANTON, Mo. (UPDMott people go to Europe to visit famous cities, museums and other widely known points of interest, and to shop.</p>
        <p>Not Bob Hudson, who on returning from his first European trip said all he wanted to see was all the caves he could crowd in on his schedule. Hudson is manager of Meramec Caverns on U.S. 66 here.</p>
        <p>MYERS</p>
        <p>THEATRE-AYDEN</p>
        <p>TOGETHERNESS SASKATOON (AP)  Brothers born 24 years apart and on different continents, but sharing a common birthdate, celebrated together at a family dinner.</p>
        <p>The dinner was held at the Saskatoon home of Mike Scher-banuik, who was born in the Ukraine. In addition to having the same birthdate Mike, 51, and Matt, 75, have the same godfather.</p>
        <p>From tHe  any  rrigHt of the week</p>
        <p>BREAIC AWAY TO THE Rib Room  3  Supert&amp;gt;  Steak</p>
        <p>Clarlc,  Most  &amp;amp; Chef</p>
        <p>will deligti'f y-oor exacting taste.</p>
        <p>Oirtif'ig every' Nigtit from 6 P.AA. DANOitMG, LIVE JNAUSIC SAT. NIGHTS</p>
        <p>y s 30- 1 : 30</p>
        <p>FABULOUS FOUR LEAAOIMS</p>
        <p>Sat., AAar. 13 Walter ff^earvxnr*er, Dulce Oxekrtcller, John Purvis, Ned Clark</p>
        <p>THE ALL NEW</p>
        <p>Rib Room at tte Lomon Treo Inn</p>
        <p>Was ti i rig tori SouttB at Ctiocowinity 946-8001</p>
        <p>''HE</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>SHE"</p>
        <p>In Color Rated XXX</p>
        <p>ALL SEATS-$3.00 ADULTS ONLY!</p>
        <p>All should be 21 or married to see this movie.</p>
        <p>Shows Start - 7 P.M.</p>
        <p>I s</p>
        <p>BASEBALL</p>
        <p>ON THE OAV, CHUCK</p>
        <p>The 0L_* PlTCTHeR'^ MOUND, EH I'LL. BBT WU'VE SPENT A LOT Of= Tl/V\E UP  ..</p>
        <p>H'OU'RE ^ AN UNUSUAL GIRL.. &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>\in</p>
        <p>^OO KIND Of LIKE MB, DON'T YOU, CHUCK?</p>
        <p>B. C.</p>
        <p>i'm f=^ Up With people</p>
        <p>TfeLX-IN6r Me what IV CO I eV&amp;amp;FSY&amp;amp;PPC TELUe ME WHAT TV DO 1</p>
        <p>HEARINO AIDS</p>
        <p>307 S. Washington St. 758-5121 C. Alan Baldwin Authorized Beltone Dealer</p>
        <p>PLAZA</p>
        <p>IVIES</p>
        <p>756-0088  PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>It started out as five love stories. </p>
        <p>It didnt end that ivay. STARTING TOMORROW!</p>
        <p>and soon to be the tajk of Granville!</p>
        <p>caos*of iu{</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>TUES.-WE</p>
        <p>IG^</p>
        <p>NOW/TUES.</p>
        <p>SHOWS; 2;25 4:32 6:46 9:00 Starts Wed.</p>
        <p>The Boys in the Band""R Starts Fri.</p>
        <p>Walt Disneys Aristocats-G</p>
        <p>ANTONIONI'S</p>
        <p>fJRIliBmLii</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>DYAN CANNON RICHARD CRENNA GENE HACKMAN CARROLL O CONNOR</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri.75c from 1:30 til 2:00 P.M Shows Tomorrow at 2-4-6-S</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0010" />
        <p>-Tli W*mUy  GrMtvUle.  N.CiTueMlay. Mfai</p>
        <p>Ex~Generai CaH&amp;amp;d To Testify In PX Scandal</p>
        <p>By</p>
        <p>LAWRKNOE L. KNUTSON Associait.d ff*ress Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  A former one-star ifeneral was called from foreed retirement today to reply to accusations that he took brit&amp;gt;es from an international slot-machine syndicate and shielded corrputors of the Post Exctiange and G1 club systems.</p>
        <p>Ex-Brig. Gen. Elarl F. Coles testimony is the latest development in an inquiry stretching back to last year by Sen. Abraham Ribicoff's permanent investigations sutxirommittee into the operations of PXs and clubs.</p>
        <p>Last year the Army removed Cole from command of the Army-Air force exchange serve in Europe. Soon after he was demoted to colonel, stripped of the Distinguished Service Medal awarded for his service as PX policy adviser in Vietnam and ordered retired.</p>
        <p>At the time, the Au-my xvovmld say only that Cole had no the standard of integrity ex:-pected of a general office** .</p>
        <p>Cole has constantly cJi^niiecl any wrongdoing and has said he will go to court to dllefer*d</p>
        <p>City Will IM&amp;lt; Handle Day t Activities H</p>
        <p>UNQUIET SUEEP LONDON &amp;lt; AP)   Greavsy</p>
        <p>the hamster found a warm place for hibernationinside a pop groups amplifier. After being trapf&amp;gt;ed for two days he was rescued from the noisy retreat by his owner, Jenny Dawson.</p>
        <p>Day care activities at the^ Social Services Centc* in Moyewood will not be handle^d t&amp;gt;y the city when the facility is opened, as indicated in a sto*-y in last Tuesdays edition.</p>
        <p>City manager Harry Ffa^^rty said this moining that thcr city would provide the buildin^^ for day care operation but had no funds to engage in the administration of day care activities.</p>
        <p>Hagerty noted that the building would be provided Tor a qualified agency to run the day care center, whether on a county, state or private level hut the city, as a whole, had no p^lans to handle the operation.</p>
        <p>A portion of the building ms to be used as a social ser'V'ics center and the other half will he utilized for the day care activities.</p>
        <p>hi mself.</p>
        <p>Before his assignment in Europe, Ck&amp;gt;le was in charge of personnel and administration and wielding over-all policy administration for F^XLs and clubs in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Fhevious witnesses told the suhcommittee Oole misused that position willTmmlly and repeatedly to protect illicit operations of ^Villiam *1. Crum and his firms' dealing with the U.S. military in Vitnam.</p>
        <p>IVIonday. the former chief legal officer at the U.S. IVIilitary Systems Oonrnmand  in Saigon</p>
        <p>said Cole played him a *low-down dirty tridc wrhen he put him up in luxury hotel quarters in Flong Kong without telling him most of the hill  was being</p>
        <p>paid by Brice and Co., a liquor distributor owned hy CTrum.</p>
        <p>Col. Ftobert Ivey said Cole played me for a patsy** in providing the quarters  and later</p>
        <p>asking for special treatment for another of Crum *s companies. Sari Electronics, which had established a near-monopoly in slot machine sales to Army clubs in Vietnam.</p>
        <p>Jack Byhee, once  a general</p>
        <p>manager of Cruna *s Vietnam enterprises, testified  CTrum told</p>
        <p>bim Cen. Cole cost him at least Si ,000 mcMnthly and that he could expect the general to re</p>
        <p>turn the favor.</p>
        <p>Bybee and other witnesses testified Cole intervened again and again to quash investigations into Crums q;&amp;gt;erations.</p>
        <p>Witnesses have said Cole interceded on behalf of at least</p>
        <p>two of Crums clients, Jim Beam whiskey and Carlings beer.</p>
        <p>Other witnesses said Cole intervened in attempts to free Crums slot machines from Vietnamese customs duty.</p>
        <p>And Bybee said Crum was successfiU in getting Cole to call off American participation in a raid on Sari Electronics offices. Shortly thereafter, he said, Crum initiated with Coles help a Vietnamese police raid</p>
        <p>on his leading slot machine competitor, a raid so successful it put the competitor out of business and left Crum in virtual command of slot machine business from the U.S. military.</p>
        <p>Capt.</p>
        <p>Trial</p>
        <p>Medina For 102</p>
        <p>Ordered Stand My Lai Murders</p>
        <p>ARRlTATlOM^ OF LIF^ -- EVER^f TIME 'tOU CALL LOHG OrS-TAMOE , FERSOH TO FERSOM, iHVARlAeu*/ VOCIR PARTV AH^WERe -</p>
        <p>Bi_rr</p>
        <p>-R3</p>
        <p>^  /^KIO</p>
        <p>lOa LIK4</p>
        <p>Kiczrr A&amp;gt;rf</p>
        <p>FT- MCPHERSON, Ga. (AP)  Capt. Ernest Medina, commander of the company which waged the My Lai assault in 1968, has been ordered to stand trial on charges of murdering 102 Vietnamese civilians. I am innocent of the charges against me, he says.</p>
        <p>A platoon leader during the attack was Lt. William L. Cal-ley Jr., who is on trial at Ft. Benning, Ga., and also is accused of slaying 102 Vietnamese civilians. 8</p>
        <p>Calley has testified that he killed on Medinas orders. Medina denies it.</p>
        <p>Three specificatiims of premeditated murder against Medina were cited in the announcement Monday that he would be court-martialed.</p>
        <p>The Army charges that he killed not less than 100 Vietnamese persons with machine guns, rifles and other weapons and that he fatally shot two other personsa male and a female.</p>
        <p>rogation of suspected enemy personnel.</p>
        <p>Calley has testified that he directed a mass execution ol unresisting Vietnamese men. women and children at an irrigation ditch east of My Lai and that Medina ordered him to do so.</p>
        <p>Medina has been ordered</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>appear as a witness at the Cal ley trial on Wednesday.</p>
        <p>However, one of his attorneys says Medina can invoke the 5th Amendment and not testifj since he has not been ordered court-martialed.</p>
        <p>Last week, Medinas attor neys charged that the Army was attempting to prevent him</p>
        <p>from testifying at Calleys trial, but he was later called at the request of the six-officer jury.</p>
        <p>Medinas lawyers had filed a petition in the U.S. Court of Military Appeals which said Medina is ready, willing and able to testify on behalf of the Army in direct refutation of Lt Calleys testimwiy.</p>
        <p>Foundation Report Hits Static Higher Education</p>
        <p>By G.C. THELEN Jr.</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - The Nixon administration has embraced a Ford Foundatitm re-' port contending students are right when they say colleges are irrelevant.</p>
        <p>An Army spokesman said the figure of 100 takes in the village inhabitants whose deaths were caused by members of Company C, whidi Medina commanded.</p>
        <p>Tbe other two alleged slayings, according to the Army, are not included in the victims Calley is charged with murder ing.</p>
        <p>Medina, 34, of Montrose. Colo., could face the death penalty, the Army said.</p>
        <p>No trial date has been set.</p>
        <p>Tbe stocky, dark-haired Medina, who is the father of three children, also faces charges of assault with a dangefous weapon.</p>
        <p>The accusation contends that on March 17 at My Khe, he shot two persons during inter-</p>
        <p>Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare Elliot L. Richardson called the repwt provocative, controversial and innovative and as significant a statement on higher education as we have seen.</p>
        <p>Recent reforms in curriculum and governing powers have left untouched a major problems of isolation, forced conformity and rigidity in higher education, the report found.</p>
        <p>outmoded programs, ignores the differing needs of students, seldom questions its educational goals, and almost never ad-vicates new and different types of institutions, the task force said.</p>
        <p>The Ford group headed by Frank Newman, associate director of university relations at Stanford University, suggested the root problem for all higher education is the university and its credential-laden faculty.</p>
        <p>The modern academic university has, like a magnet, drawn all institutions towards</p>
        <p>been obscured by the dazzling success of the best-known examples, it continued.</p>
        <p>The study recommended new institutions where students of all ages are educated, with any preference going to older ones; where practical experience and not classroom lectures is the primary teaching tool; where professional practitioners have equal faculty footing with academic Ph.D.s and where instruction is offered by television, off campus and in traditional classes.</p>
        <p>It advocates decentralization</p>
        <p>its (M'ganizational form until to- state college and university day the same teaching method, systems; formation of regional</p>
        <p>Havent some students been saying the same things about their colleges? niere is a very substantial core of validity in th^ir anger, said Richardson whose predecessor, Robert Finch, suggested the report.</p>
        <p>The system, with its massive inertia, resists fundamental change, rarely eliminates</p>
        <p>the same organization by disciplines, and the same |-ofes-sional academic training for faculty are nearly universal, the report said.</p>
        <p>The shortcomings of the academic university as a model for all other institutions have</p>
        <p>examining universities whose sole function would be to test and grant degrees; and complete overhaul of professional accreditation agencies to encourage apprenticeship as an alternative to solely academic preparation.</p>
        <p>DEEDS</p>
        <p>Want Ads bring people togotrtier . . . finder ancJ and tenant, buyer and seller. Want Ads do more</p>
        <p>costthan any other kind of advertising. Xfiat's wfiat</p>
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        <p>we call "people power!</p>
        <p>Put the power of Reflector Want Ads to worR bringing you the extra money that makes life a lot more fun. Just go tl-irough yotir home arid rake a list of every worthwhile thing you find vyhich you no longet- use or need . . . things like furniture, appliances, musical instruments, record players, draptes, sports equiptment and much more. Then dial 752-i for a friendly Ad Writer between 8: 30 a.m. &amp;amp; s n-m. A three on the special 7 day rete.</p>
        <p>James Harvey Baker, al to Lewis H. Melton, al $10.(X) James Harvey Baker, al to Douglas Henry Ross, al 10.(X) Mary Bruno to Charles S. Mangiapane, Jr. 10.00 Mary Bruno to Charles S. Mangiapane, Jr. 10.00 Dependable Trading Corp. to Leon L. Moore, Jr. 10.00 Edwards Leasing Corp. to I. J. Edwards, Jr. 10.00 Kenneth A. Talton, al to J. P. Quinnerly, Jr., al 10.00 J. H. Tucker, al to John Beaman 10.00 Tarheel Homes &amp;amp; Realty, Inc. to Bruce McDonald Williams, al 10.00</p>
        <p>James A. Adams, al to Leroy James, al 10.00 Onnie J. Bowling, al to Sybil J. Morris, al 10.00 W. W. Carson, al to James Earl Cobb, al 10.00 Simon Elliott Corbett to Robert Lee Smith 10.00 James Bobby Eure to May E. Harvey 1.00 Grace Free Wilt * Baptist Church, Inc. to Rufus Huggins  May. E. Harvey to James Bobby Eure 1.00 J. Franklin Harris, al to PeteV C. Eure, al 10.00 Leroy Johnson, al to Rachel Johnson Loftin, al 10.00 Standard Realty Co. to James Thomas Rogers, al 10.00 W. F. Tyson, al to Robert Bunn, Jr. 10.00 William Leroy Tingen, al to Joseph Daniel Joyner, al 10.00 B.  Vernon  Cox,  al  to  S.</p>
        <p>Reynolds May 10.00 B.  Vernon  ^-Cox,  al  to  S.</p>
        <p>Reynolds May 10.00  \</p>
        <p>B.  Vernon  Cox,  al  to  S.</p>
        <p>Reynolds May IOl.00 B.  Vernon  Cox,  al  to  S.</p>
        <p>Reynolds May 10.00</p>
        <p>Arthur Gene Howell, al 10.00 Fred Midgette, al to J. H. Harrell 10.00 Ralph E. Moore, al to W. W. Carson, al 10.00 North Side Lumber Co., Inc. to Emily S. Boyce 10.00 Robert E. Peele, al to Thomas L. Whichard, al 10.00 Lillie Irene Boyd Rhodes,.al to Brook Valley Realty Co., Inc. 1.00</p>
        <p>William Barnes, al to Marion L Barnes 10.00 Viola G. Buck to Robert M. Brown, al 10.00 Brewer &amp;amp; Marshall Concrete Products &amp;amp; Gen. Const. Co., Inc. to Howard F. Speight, al 10.00 Jack Oliver Carson, al to Jack Oliver Carson 10.00 Vance S. Harrington, al Harry E. Wilson 10.00 Arthur Gene Howell, al Charles A. (hwan, al 10.00 Fred Midgette, al to FVed Lee Midgette, al 10.00 Gladys Thompson Perkins, al to Rosalind T. Branch, al 10.00 Lionei P. Perkins^Sr-. al to</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>to</p>
        <p>(2) years And until their successors are elected and qualified.</p>
        <p>All candidates for office shall register their candidacy with the City Clerk in the Municipal Building in^ Greenville, North Carolina at least thirty (30) days prior to May 4, mi.</p>
        <p>That for the purpose of registration of any new electors who are not now registered, the registration books shall be opened at 9; 00 o'clock, A. M., on Saturday, the 3rd day of April, 1971, and shall be closed at 4:00 P. M on Saturday, the 17th day of April, 1971. The registration shall be kept open at the respective polling places on Saturday, the 3rd day of April, 1971; Saturday, the 10th day of April, 1971; and, Saturday, the 17th day of April, 1971, from 9:OOo'clock A. M. to 6; 00 o'clock P. M. Saturday, the 24th day of April, 1971 shall be challenge day. Registration books shall be open at all polling places from 9:00 A. M. fo 3;00 P. M. at which time qualified voters of the City may appear and object to the qualifications of any other registered voter.</p>
        <p>All persons residing within the City on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River,.who are eligible to register and vote in said election and who are not now lawfully registered shall register their names with their Registrars at the Main Fire Station located on the southeast corner of intersection of Fifth Street and Greene Street.</p>
        <p> All persons residing within the City on the East side of Evans Street who are eligible to register and vote in said election and who are not now lawfully registered shall register their names with their Registrar at the Elm Street Gym, located on the West side of Elm Street adjacent to the J. H. Rose High School as follows:</p>
        <p>(1) All persons residing on the West of Evans Street or North of Tar River, whose last name begins with either of the letters A, B, C, D, E and F will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. 1, at the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(2) All persons residing on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River whose last name begins with either of the letters G, H, I, j, K, L, M, N, and O will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. 2, at the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(3) All persons residing on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River whose last name begins with either of the letters P, Q, R, s, T, U,</p>
        <p>V, W, X, Y and Z will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. ?, at the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(4) All prsons residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters A, B,</p>
        <p>C, D, E, and F will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. 4, at the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>(5) All persons residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters G, H,</p>
        <p>I, J, K, L, M, N, and O will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. 5, at the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>(6) All persons residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters, P, Q,</p>
        <p>R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Y and Z will register their names with the Registrar at Polling Place No. 6, at the Elm Street Gym.  -</p>
        <p>There shall be six (6) separate polling places for the purpose of the registration of eligible voters of the City and the holding of all elections, general and special, in the City of Greenville, and each polling place shall be designated by number, that is. Polling Place No. 1, Polling Place No. 2, Polling Place No. 3 shall be located within the Main Fire Station located on the southeast corner at intersection of Fifth and Greene Streets. Polling Place No. 4, Polling Place No. 5, and Polling Place No. 6 Shall be located within the Elm Street Gym on Elm Street adjacent to the J.</p>
        <p>H. Rose High School. All registered and qualified electors residing West of Evans Street and all registered and qualified electors residing North of Tar River in the City of Greenville will vote at their respective polling places as follows:</p>
        <p>(1) All registered and qualified electors residing on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River whose last name begins with either of the letters A, B, C, D, E and F will vote at Polling Place No. 1 in the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(2) All registered and qualified electors residing on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River whose last name begins with either of the letters G, H, I, J, K, L, M, N and O will vote at Polling Place No. 2 in the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(3) All registered and qualified electors residing on the West side of Evans Street or North of Tar River whose last name begins with either of the letters P, Q, R, S, T, U, V, W, X, Yand Z will vote at Polling Place No.</p>
        <p>3 in the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(4) All registered and qualified electors residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters A, B, C, D, E and F will vote at Polling Place No 4 in the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>(5) All registered and qualified electors residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters G, H, I, J, K,</p>
        <p>L, M, N and O will vote at Polling Place No. 5 in the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>(6) All registered and qualified electors residing on the East side of Evans Street whose last name begins with either of the letters P, Q, R, S, T,</p>
        <p>U, V, w, X, Y and Z will vote at Polling Place No. 6 in the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>The polls will open on said date, Tuesday, May 4, 1971, at 6:30 o'clock A. M. and will close at the hour of 6:30 o'clock P. M., on the same date. All persons who are registered and otherwise qualified to vote shall be</p>
        <p>eligible to vote in said election. Fc</p>
        <p>Rosalind T. Branch, al 10.00 Herbert E. Rogerson, al to Rosalind T. Branch, al 10.00 Robert Ray Taft, al to Harold K. Broughton, al 10.00 Willie Mae B. Taylor, al to Oscar Ross, al 10.00 Tarheel Homes &amp;amp; Realty, Inc. to Bobby Gene Grubbs, al 10.00 Tarheel Homes &amp;amp; Realty, Inc. to John Dixon, al 10.00 Frank M. Wooten, Comr., al to Rosalind T. Branch, al 10.00</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>North Carolina Pitt County The indersigned, having qualified as Administrator CTA of the Estate</p>
        <p>B. Vernon Ctox to S. Reynolds  ''^'e,  Jr.,  deceased.</p>
        <p>May 10.00  '  -  -    Carolina.</p>
        <p>Vallie S. Barwick, al to Ferrall</p>
        <p>line ad is only 68c per day</p>
        <p>Reflector</p>
        <p>Want Ads are tr-cjfy people power; and its no wonder, for they accomplish so m^ch for so little. Hop on ttie-toandwagon now! ^Youll be so glad you did.</p>
        <p>THE DAI LY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>209 do tea n cr f*! G 3troot,  r</p>
        <p>oville, IM.C.</p>
        <p>N. Sumrell 10.00 Jonas Franklin Edwards, Jr. to Edith Eagles Edwards, al 10.00</p>
        <p>Greenville Development Co. to John E. Hoofnagle, al 10.00 ,</p>
        <p>W. A. Hudson, al to William Ford, al 10.00 W. A. Hudson, al to William Ford, al 10.00 Lynndale Development Co. to "Donald E. Mon, al 10.^0 S. Reynolds May, al to Herbert H. Forrest 10.00 r Christine House Smith, al 1 to Josephine House Everett 10.00 Ottis Stokes, al to Annie G. Riillips 10.00 Turner Andrews, ^ to Fred Lee, al 10.00  "</p>
        <p>Brook Valley Realty Co. to Lillie Boyd Rhodes, al 1.00 Cherry Oaks, Inc. to Harold L. Dail, al 10.00  ,</p>
        <p>Natoma Lane Gresham to '*</p>
        <p>this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned at 113 West Third Street, or P. O. Box 5063, Greenville, North Carolina, on or before the 9th day of September, 1971, orthis notice wni be pleaded in bar of their recovery.</p>
        <p>All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned at the above mentioned adress.  '</p>
        <p>This the 9th day of March, 1971.</p>
        <p>Frank M. Wooten, Jr.</p>
        <p>Administrator CTA of the</p>
        <p>Estate of</p>
        <p>Eber Elmer Moor, Jr.</p>
        <p>March 9, 16, 23, 30, 1971</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; . RESOLUTION</p>
        <p>THE 01 TV</p>
        <p>COUNCIL OF*TMe CITY OF GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA DOES HEREBY RESOLVE THAT;</p>
        <p>A Notice of Municipal Election for the City of Greenville, North Carolina is hereby given.</p>
        <p>Pursuant to law, and by order of the City Council of the City of Greenville, North Carolina, notice is hereby given that a non-j&amp;gt;artisan election will be held in the City of Greenville, North Carolina, on Tuesday, the 4th day of May, 1971, for the purpose of electing:</p>
        <p>(DA Mayor, by popular vote, for a term of two (2) yehrs and until his successor is elected and qualified.</p>
        <p>(2) A City Council consistingbf six (6) members to be elected at large and from the qualified voter^ of the City pf Greenville for a term of two</p>
        <p>or the purpose of the registration of voters and the holding of sai&amp;lt;f-^ election, the following Registrars and Judges are hereby appointed:</p>
        <p>(1) Mrs. Margaret Churchill, whose address is 2519 South Memorial Drive, Greenville, N. C., is hereby designated and appointed Registrar, and Mrs. Enes Hathaway and Mrs. Rosa Lee Brewington are hereby appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No. 1 at the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(2) Mrs. Mary Hunnings, whose address is 1415 Broad Street, Greenville, N. C., is hereby designated and appointed Registrar, and Mrs. Juanita Lewis and Mrs Brenda Langley White are hereby appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No. 2 at the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(3) Mrs. Delois Bell, whose address is 604 Albemarle Avenue, Greenville,</p>
        <p>N. C., is hereby designated and appointed Registrar, and Mrs. Beulah Allen and Joseph C. Dudley are hereby appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No. 3 in the Main Fire Station.</p>
        <p>(4) Mrs. Betty M. Compton, whose address is 988 Greenville Boulevard, Greenville,  N.  C., is  hereby</p>
        <p>designated and appointed Registrar, md H. H. Compton and Mrs. Rachel Churchill are hereby appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No. 4 in the Elm Street Gym</p>
        <p>(5) Mrs. Esther G. Newman, whose address is  309  Meade  Street,</p>
        <p>Greenvjlle,  N.  C., is  hereby</p>
        <p>designated and appointed Registrar, ^d J. B. Newman and Miss Annie Turner are herertsy appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No 5 in the Elm Street Gym.</p>
        <p>(6) Mrs. Agnes G. Wilkerson, v^ose address is 120 Longmeadow Road, Greenville, N. C., is hereby designated and appointed Registrar, and Mrs. Margaret Evans and Mrs. Annie K. May are hereby appointed Judges for said election for Polling Place No. 6 in the Elm Street Gym</p>
        <p>The names of all candidates for office shall ^ placed on one ballot.</p>
        <p>There shall be visibly displayed fx'a* each of ttje $qid six ; t6; pdlling places the number of the polling place and the letters of the alphabet designating the polling ^ace where each elector shall vote.</p>
        <p>All ballots cast at each polling place shall be deposited in a poll box bearing the number of that particular polling place.</p>
        <p>A copy of this notice signed by the City Clerk sh^ll be published as the ' notice of said election, the registration of candidates for office and the registration of electors. Said notice shall be published in the Daily Reflector once in the issue dated March 9th, 1971.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY</p>
        <p>OF March, 1971.</p>
        <p>Frank M. Wooten, Jr.</p>
        <p>W. N. Moore Mar. 9</p>
        <p> ______</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0011" />
        <p>TTie Daily ReHector, GreenvHIg, N.C.Taeiday. March I. IfTl11</p>
        <p>to eiiij. Sell. Trade</p>
        <p>Use fast action -Reflector Classified Ads NOW!</p>
        <p>Public Notices</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER'S RE-SALE OF FARM LAND</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Pitt County, North Carolina, made in the special proceeding entitled "Mary Williams Witherington and husband, Burney L. Wilherington, el at. vs. James A. Duguid and wife, Mrs. James A. Duguid, et al.," the same being Special Proceeding Number 70 SP 325 on the special proceeding docket of said Court, and an order of re-sale entered by the Court on the 3rd day of March, 1971, the undersigned Commissioner will, on Monday, the 22nd day of March, 1971, at 12:00 o'clock. Noon, at the courthouse door in Greenville, N. C., offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash upon an opening bid of $32,500.00, subject to confirmation by the Court, the following described real property, to wit:</p>
        <p>That certain tract or parcel of land lying and being in Ayden Township, Pill County, North Carolina, and beginning at a pump pipe driven for a corner, Mrs. Della Cannon's corner on the west side of Old Creek Road, and runs as her line. South 80 deg. 30 min. West, 55 chains to a stake with pointers on the run of Contentnea Creek; thence up the bank of said Creek as follows: North 8 deg. West, 2.33 chains; North 47 deg. West, 5.2 Chains; North  4/  deg.  East,  2.10</p>
        <p>chains; North 6 deg. West, 2 chains; North 21 deg. West, 2 chains; South 88 deg. West, 1.50 chains; South 52 deg. West, 2 chains; North 7 deg. East, 1.12 chains; North 40 deg. East, 1.80 chains; North  14  deg.  East,  2.75</p>
        <p>chains to a stake, R. C. Cannon's corner; thence with the said Cannon's line as follows; North 83 deg. 30 min. East, 19 chains to a stake; South 44 deg. West, 0.90 chains to a stake; North 75 deg.  25  min.  East,  40.40</p>
        <p>chains to the aforesaid road; thence with the said road as follows: South 1 deg. West, 14 chains; South 10 deg. East, 3.85 chains to the beginning, and containing 85.7 acres, more or less. It being the same land which was conveyed to Mrs. Laura L. Worthington by J. R. Turnage and wife, and which deed is recorded in Book D-22 at page 84 of the Pitt County Registry. Being the same property conveyed by George Worthington and wife, Laura L. Worthington, to E. G. Worthington by deed dated November 1, 1940.</p>
        <p>The above described tract of land will be sold subject to the lien of the ad valorem taxes thereon for the year 1971.</p>
        <p>The purchaser at said sale will be required to deposit with the Commissioner 10 per cent of his bid as a good faith deposit pending confirmation of sale by the Court.</p>
        <p>This the 3rd day of March, 1971.</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee</p>
        <p>Commissioner March 9th and 15th</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF COMMISSIONER'S RE-SALE OF REAL PROPERTY</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an order of the Superior Court of Pitt County made in a civil action therein pending, and entitled "Pitt County and Town of Farmville, Plaintiffs, vs. Ludian Brown et al.. Defendants," and numbered on the Civil Docket of said Court 70CVD1555, and an order of re-sale entered by the Court on the 3rd day of March, 1971, the undersigned Commissioner will, on Monday, the 22nd day of March, 1971, at 12:00 o'clock. Noon, at the courthouse door in Greenville, N.C., exposf to public sale to the highest bidder for cash, subject to confirmation by the Court, the following described real property, to wit:</p>
        <p>Being located in the Town of Farmville, N.C., and beginning at the southwest intersection of Darden Street and McKinley Avenue and runs with said McKinley Avenue in a southerly direction to a stake, corner of Lot No. 188; thence with the line of Lot No. 188 a westerly direction to a stake, corner of Lot No. 187, 188, 155 and 155; thence running with the line of Lot No. 155 and 154 in a northerly direction 80 feet to Darden Street; thence with said Street an easterly direction to the beginning, and being Lots Nos. 185.and 187 of what is known as the Lincoln Park Subdivision la Farmville, N.C., map of which is recorded in Map Book 1 at page 45 of the-Pitt County Registry, and being the same property conveyed by J. H. Darden et al. to Wright Brown, now deseased, by deed dated March 31, 1915, and recorded in Book E-14 at page 329 of the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>The above described property will be sold subject to confirmation by the Court to satisfy the tax lien of Pitt County and the Town of Farmville thereon for unpaid property taxes; and the purchaser at said sate wilt be required to deposit wtth the undersigned Commissioner 10 percent of his bid as a good faith deposit pending confirmation of said sale by the Court.</p>
        <p>This the 3rd day of March, 1971.</p>
        <p>R. B. Lee Commissioner March 9 and 15, 1971</p>
        <p>TrtE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified Advertising Rates</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>Place your Classified ad for 7 days. The cost is less.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>3 Line Minimum</p>
        <p>1 Day30c Per printed line 4 Days27c Per printed line 7 Days or more25c per printed line</p>
        <p>Contract Rates Available</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$1.60 Per Column Inch Contract rates available.</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>All linage deadlines are 12:00 noon on the preceding day. Excepting Sunday which is 12:00 Friday and Monday which is 4:00 p.m. Friday. All display deadlines are 4:00 p.m. two davs in ad-.  PJibUsiatitfiilw Ex</p>
        <p>cepting Monday &amp;amp; Tuesday Which are both due by 4:00 p.m. Friday.</p>
        <p>ERRORS</p>
        <p>Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowances for errors after the 1st day.  .</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>CADILLAC 1959 sedan Deville, full power. $4200. Call 755-4507.</p>
        <p>NOTHINO LASTS FORBVIRI So for</p>
        <p>new or newer household goods check today's Want Ads I</p>
        <p>ELECTRA 225 1M8, Full power, loaded. Pinner White Chevrolet, 745 3141.</p>
        <p>FORD 1953 green &amp;amp; white, good condition, 3 new tires, $250. Call 758-3587.</p>
        <p>MAKE EVERY MINUTE COUNTI</p>
        <p>Time saving, money saving appliances are for sale in today's Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>FOR A-1 USED cars and trucks see Hastings Ford, Inc., E 10th St., 758 0114.</p>
        <p>1957 JEEP for sale. Low mileage, 7,500. Call Sutton's General Tire, 254 By Pass, 755 2320.</p>
        <p>WANTED TO BUY: Clean used cars, Harris Used Cars, 105 W. Greenville Blvd. Phone 755 5470. Dealer No. 5553.</p>
        <p>FIAT</p>
        <p>The biggest Selling car in Europe</p>
        <p>Brown-Wood</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>752-7111</p>
        <p>anBE auBB</p>
        <p>1959 MERCURY Montego, 2 dr. hardtop, burgundy with white vinyl roof, all vinyl interior, power brakes, power steering, cruise-o-matic, air conditioned, tinted glass, radio, WSW tires. Body side molding. 302 V8 engine, F 8&amp;lt; D Motor Co., 758-4408.</p>
        <p>59 HT MHIIIS7/UI] Value it HOMWTMa</p>
        <p>57ShaBlvd 27H12</p>
        <p>610 4-Door Sedan</p>
        <p>DriveaDatsun ...then decide.</p>
        <p>Datsun 510 4-Door Sedanits a lot more, car for your mojtiey.</p>
        <p>Base price includes:</p>
        <p> Whitewall tires</p>
        <p> Tinted glass</p>
        <p> Fully reclining buckets</p>
        <p> Safety front disc brakes</p>
        <p>Drive a Datsun... then decide.</p>
        <p>PRODUCT OF NISSAN</p>
        <p>HOLT </p>
        <p>Oldsmobile-Datsun, Inc.</p>
        <p>101 Hooker Rd. 756-3115 Where Service Comes First</p>
        <p>SERVICE</p>
        <p>DIRECTORY</p>
        <p>.Quick &amp;amp; Easy Reference For Business &amp;amp; Professional Services.</p>
        <p>EXPERT SERVICE AT YODR FIHQEflTIPSl</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CAR isn't becoming to you, it should be coming to us.Rick's Service Center, Complete Auto Sales &amp;amp; Service, 752-4342.</p>
        <p>BUSINESS MACHINES</p>
        <p>Hudson Business Machines, Inc.</p>
        <p> Victor Factory Service</p>
        <p>103 Trade St. 756-3175</p>
        <p>CARPET</p>
        <p>IF YOU need carpet instal^led or repairs donecall Robinson's Carpet Service, 756-1437 nights. All work guaranteed!</p>
        <p>Heating &amp;amp; Air Conditioning</p>
        <p>Heating &amp;amp; Air Conditioning Residential 8&amp;lt; Commercial Twenty-five years of Continuous service to residents of Pitt County Free estimates gladly given Generaly Heating Inc.</p>
        <p>1100 Evans St.  Tel.  752-4187</p>
        <p>HOME IMPROVEMENJ</p>
        <p>Roofing &amp;amp; Siding</p>
        <p>'installed by skill mechanics.</p>
        <p>Goodson Roofing &amp;amp; Aluminum Co. Inc.</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass 756-3103 Day756-2572 Night</p>
        <p>  UPHOLSTERY</p>
        <p>W UPHOLSTER anything. Thousands of y a^d of fabric and foam cushioning. 'Jackson's Tire &amp;amp; Upholstery, Dickinson Ave., 758-3276 day or 758-1505 night.</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTtVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>PONTIAC BONNEVILLE 1957,</p>
        <p>power steering, power brakes, vinyl top, automatic, air conditioning, V-8, real clean car. Pinner White Chevrolet, 745 3141.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 1951 Tempest Station-wagon, automatic transmission, rebuilt motor, new battery, new generator, new starter and new tires. Safety inspected for one year, $275 cash. Call 755-3175, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>OLDSMOBILE 1955 Cutlass, 2 door, hardtop, power steering, power brakes, automatic, air conditioning $1295. Brown Wood 758-7111.</p>
        <p>RAMBLER 1954 Classic, good condition, air. Call 752-3550.</p>
        <p>BOATS &amp;amp; EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>-V</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>...lOinS 0T9KIII8</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>756-2557</p>
        <p>Hours: 8-5 Mon.-Friday</p>
        <p>RENKIN 1959 15' fiberglass boat, walk through windshield, new top, 55 h.p. compass, lifting hooks, 18 gallon tank, trailer, $1550. ABC Moving &amp;amp; Storage, 752-4500.</p>
        <p>DAY NURSERY</p>
        <p>WALDROP ACRES Day Care Center, licensed, rural setting, children from 2 to 5. Willi transport to kindergarten. Call 755-5955.</p>
        <p>DOGS &amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>BLACK MINIATURE registered poodle poppies, $50. Call 758-3372.</p>
        <p>TWO MALE SIAMESE cats free, to good home. Call 524-5455, Griffon.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Female Help Wanted</p>
        <p>MTURE AND experienced secretary with knowledge of bookkeeping, should also have good typing and shorthand. Send resume or qualification to be considered to Ek)x 443, Greenville.</p>
        <p>AVON</p>
        <p>You can be likg the AVON lady on TV. You can be like the AVON lady in your neighborhood! High profits too. Call 758-2444 or write Mrs. Willa M. Wooten, Box 215 Leon Dr. Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED' SECRETARY.</p>
        <p>Must be excellent typist from dictaphone. To learn mortage loan business. Submit resume, Bowen Realty, P. O. Box 79, Greenville.</p>
        <p>MAIDS UP TO$125 WK BEST LIVE-IN JOBS NOW!</p>
        <p>Need 100 maids this week. Best homes in heart of New York City. Free room, board. Bring friends. Fare sent, rush refs. Free Gift. Write Dept. 17</p>
        <p>MISS DIXIE AGENCY 300 W. 40 St. N.Y.C. 10018</p>
        <p>Male Help Wanted</p>
        <p>EXPERIENCED AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>upholster, 5 day work week, salary plus commission. Call or apply in person at City Upholstery, Havelock, N.C. 447-4334._</p>
        <p>MANAGER WANTED. Etna Service Station, retirement, disability and hospitalization benefits, vacation and Christmas bonuses. Commission operation, guaranteed minimum income, split shift operation. Must be 21 years old and able to give references. Call 758-2410. Walter Williams.</p>
        <p>OUTSIDE SALES representative. Salary plus commission, company vehicle and expenses furnished. Apply in person only to manager of Singer, between hours of 9 a.m. to 12 noon.</p>
        <p>AAale-Female Help</p>
        <p>WANTED: PIANO PLAYER, Rag</p>
        <p>time and-or honky-tonk. Apply Snoopy's Pizza Parlor, 515 Cotanche St.or call Paul Green, 758-0545 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>WANTED: MAN or woman, 25 to 50, to collect debts and sell insurance.. Free hospitalization and life insurance. Guaranteed salary, plus commission. Write Box 552, Greenville.</p>
        <p>DUNHILL A National Personnel Service 758-2107</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WANTS TO KEEP 4 children. Five blocks from college. Call 758-3203.</p>
        <p>WANTED OFFICE WORK. Accurate typing, bookkeeping skills, ex-periepce in use of printing machine. Can give reference. Call Peggy Mullen 758-5781.</p>
        <p>FARM EQUIPMENT</p>
        <p>FARM equipment FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Ford-2000 X Diesel Ferguson-35, 3 cylinder Diesel Ford 3-14 Braking Plow 2 Row Bedder Drag Blade</p>
        <p>Ferguson-2 Row Cron-Bean-Peanut Ranter Deluxe-Perfect Ferguson Rotary Hoe Roanoke Offset Rotary Cutter</p>
        <p>Call J.C. Galloway at 752-3958</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>ONE 1955 FACTORY BUILT 2 horse trailer, electric brakes. Roy Tripp</p>
        <p>YELLOW CJABBAGE,collard plants, 755-3279, Marion* Mills.</p>
        <p>USED CLOTHES DRYER, 1 year old. Call 752-4885.</p>
        <p>VACUUM CLEANER, Electrolux with attachments, $20. One year guarantee. Will deliver. Call 752-4570.</p>
        <p>KELVtNATOR Appliances in stock, sfove, refrigerator and freezer. Home Furniture Co., 752-5583.</p>
        <p>CARPET SHAMPOOING. For free estimate call 758-1954.</p>
        <p>ROOM SIZE and area rug, new shipment. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 E. IQth St.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Miscellanaout For Sla</p>
        <p>CONTACT LENSES at a price you can afford. CALL 946-4024, Washington, N. C., Coastal Optical Center.</p>
        <p>ROOF LEAK9 Turn to the Want Ads</p>
        <p>and check the services</p>
        <p>Mcomoai</p>
        <p>iwaHy goto tho fob dono!</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; COMPANY</p>
        <p>3008 S. Memorial Dr. 756-2557 CLOSE-OUT 15 Percent Discount on All Chainsews</p>
        <p>USED GUNS: Shotguns, pistols and rifles. See us today for a special price on these bargains at Hodges Hard-V T c' ce*' 752-4155.</p>
        <p>BEAUTY SHOP equipment for sale. Day, 752-3157, night, 758-3502.</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED anginas, transmission, body parts. Free parts locating service.</p>
        <p>CRISP AUTO SALVAGE</p>
        <p>Phone 752-2572 N. Green St. Back of R^spess Barbecue</p>
        <p>USE-A-HOOVER, shmpooer, free with purchase of shampoo. Larry's Carpetland, 3010 E. 10th St.</p>
        <p>THE HOOVER CLEANER for the</p>
        <p>homes that care. You will like Hoover Convertible, 2 cleaners in 1. Smith Electric Co., 415 Evans St.</p>
        <p>WHOLESALE</p>
        <p>FACTORY</p>
        <p>OUTLET</p>
        <p>Offers tremendous savings on first quality ready - made drapes, manufactured at our store. Evan 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 S8 and 258 East of</p>
        <p>Snow Hill 747-3012 Master Charge</p>
        <p>SHEET ALUMINUM 23" x 35", .009 th inch thick. Used but not damaged. Excellent for outside sheeting of pack houses, barns, etc. 20 cents each or $15 per hundred. Contact Lynwood Owens, The Daily Reflector, *209 Cotanche St., Greenville, NC.</p>
        <p>DECOUPAGE SUPPLIES, paints, pumpkin purses, baskets, prints and hardware. Mary Carter Paint Center, 2805 E. 10th St. Call 752-3881.</p>
        <p>DRY CLEANING AT University Econo Wash, 203 Jarvts St., 4 dry cleaning machines, $2. per load. Open 24 hours, 758-9950.</p>
        <p>USED FURNITURE AND</p>
        <p>miscellaneous for sale. Call 752-4090, Wednesday and Thursday evenings.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Executive Desk/^</p>
        <p>60 X 30" beautiful walnut finish. Ideal for home or office.</p>
        <p>Special Price</p>
        <p>*143.30 *99.50</p>
        <p>TAFFOFFICE EQUIPMENT 569 S. Evans St.  752-2175</p>
        <p>TRY KEN'S FURNITURE. For good selections, service and lower prices, terms arranged to satisfy, 905 Dickinson Ave. 752-5583.</p>
        <p>GIANNINI GUITAR, flat top, nylon strings, case included. Take best offer. Call 755-5502.</p>
        <p>G.E. REFRIGERATOR, older model, excellent condition. Asking $40. Call 758-5530.</p>
        <p>SPANISH LOVE SEAT, 2 wrought iron end tables and lamps $150. See at Oakwood Acres, Lot 55 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>WHY DOES'THOMPSON Discount Furniture sell for less? No frills, just deals. No give aways. We trade. Try us and see. Free parking, termsup to 24 months. 804 Clark St. Call 758-3187.</p>
        <p>SHELLED PEANUTS, 5 pound bag $1.75. Keel Peanut Company.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>1958,15' SERRO Scotty travel trailer, $850. Call 755 2503.</p>
        <p>CAMPING TRAILER $100. or best offer. Call Carl Vanditord, Jr. 749-5551, Fountain after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>1970 TRAVEL TRAILER. 28 X 8</p>
        <p>Deluxe equipped. $2900. Parker's Trailer Park, Bridgeton, Rt. 17, North of New Bern.</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>GUITAR LESSONS, $2 per hour. Call 758-4059 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>LIVESTOCK</p>
        <p>GOOD SOW with 7 pigs, 2 weeks old. Call 745-3034.  _</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>2 4 3 BDRM., air conditioned AAobile home for rent. Central heat, good location. Call 752 3285.  _</p>
        <p>TRAILER FOR rent. Call 752-3262.</p>
        <p>12 Wl DE mobile home for rent, 2 and</p>
        <p>3 bedrooms. Call 758 3644.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM trailer, automatic wa^er machine, located in Ayden. Call 745-3542 J. D. Tripp.</p>
        <p>10' ANO 12' wides, paved roads, tree' water, call 752 581e atti? 5 p m. West PInevlew Court, Port Terminal RT</p>
        <p>spaces, paved roads, free water. Call 752-5816 after 5 p.m. West PInevlew Court, Port Terminal Rd.</p>
        <p>AIR CONDITIONED, carpet, separate dining room, washer and storage room. Call 756-3109 or 758-</p>
        <p>12 X 50, 3 BEDROOMS, IV3 bath. Bob's Mobile Homes, 264 By Pass, Greenville, 755-0544 or 752-2219.</p>
        <p>NEW' 12 X SO, 2 BEDROOM, Shady Knoll Trailer Park, 755-2892.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM furnished. Oak-wood Acres. Call 752-3881.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>1950 RITZCRAFT ROYAL, 12 x 60, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms, front kitchen, dining room, like new. Call 756-0951 after 5</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>12 x 52 HOUSE TRAILER, 2</p>
        <p>bedrooms. Call Kinston 527-4973 anytime.</p>
        <p>TWO BEDROOM, 1970 60 x 12, all</p>
        <p>electrical appliances. Originally sold for $7400. Call 752-7939.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>UNDERPINNING,, house and mobile home underpinning. Brick or block. Call nights 753-3503 Farm-vitle.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS in Real Estate see or call E. H. Williford, Realtor, 313 Cotanche St., 758-3911. List yourproperty with us. Night 752-</p>
        <p>4409.</p>
        <p>D TIPTON AGENCY</p>
        <p>756-0911 REAL ESTATE ANDINSURANCE</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass TIPTON ANNEX GREENVILLE'S 1 ONLY PROFESSIONAL REAL ESTATE BROKER</p>
        <p>DUPLEX, 3 BEDROOM apartments. Located 119 Stancil Dr. Good investment property or excellent home with income. For information or appointment to see: Call 758-1885.</p>
        <p>for better buys in real estate</p>
        <p>callorsee E. H. Williford</p>
        <p>List Your Property With Us 313 Cotanche PL 8-3911 Night 7S2-4409</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Ten acres excellent cleared farmland (West N.C. 1725} and 20 acres woodland, perfect for real estate development (East N.C. 1925). Entire 30 acres includes approx. 1.3 acres tobacco allotment and 3 acres corn. Between Gardnersville and Clayroot, 17 miles from Greenville</p>
        <p>$15,000.00 Devlopment Site</p>
        <p>Approximately 11 acres of land with large profit potential when developed as home lots. Includes sturdy frame 1 story house with 2 bedrooms, den, living room, pantry kitchen, ceramic tile bath, and huge back porch (18x45). Also, house trailer (8x28) and garage (30x50) excellent for horse stable. Located in Stokes, N.C. $20,000.00 Home Lot</p>
        <p>Nice home lot on high ground, 60 X 150; Powell St., in AAeadowbrook.</p>
        <p>$1,500.00 J,L. HARRIS &amp;amp; SONS REALTORS</p>
        <p>Jean Perkins 752-6396</p>
        <p>Property Mahagement RepairsPainting 204 W. 10th St.</p>
        <p>758-4711 Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>ONE HOUSE FOR SALE, 1208 Cotanche St., $5,000. Call 332 3022 Ahoskie, N.C.  </p>
        <p>FOR SALE TO settle estate, 7 room frame house, 2 baths, den, garage and storage. 915 Evans St., Greenville. Call 752-5853 for^more information after 6 p. m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>roofing-hardwar^</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DCX)RS 8. AWNINGS C. L LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>752-6116</p>
        <p>Homes For Sole</p>
        <p>205 Watuga Ave. 4 room house, living room, kitchen bath, 2 bedrooms.</p>
        <p>1523 Broad St. 3 bedroom, living, kitchen &amp;amp; bath.</p>
        <p>Both Houses near Klttrells Warehouse</p>
        <p>Total Rental Income Approximately $100 Month.</p>
        <p>(intact before April 1, 1971</p>
        <p>Joseph C. Williams 711 Christine Ct. Jacksonville, N.C. Phone 346-3546 '</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>SUMMER HOUSE, located on Duck Creek, 14 miles east of Washington oft Hwy. 254. Call Joe Hassell (120)-945-1435, Washington. N.C.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER. 7 per cent loan, 3 bedrooms, living room, family room, kitchen with breakfast area. Carport with storage at 108 Pearl Dr. Call 752 4224.</p>
        <p>402 AZTEC LANE, r bedrooms, 2 baths, family room, fenced-in backyard. Loan assumption with very low down payment. Move in immediately. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2515.</p>
        <p>HOUSE FOR SALE, just outside of town on Hwy. 254 E. 205 Circle Dr., large wooded lot, all brick, 3 bedroom, 2 baths, air conditioned, all built-in appliances. Electric heat, fully carpeted, large patio, country living. Must see inside to really appreciate. $25,900. Call 752 3008.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM, all electric home in Davenwood Subdivision on Stantonsburg Rd. Call Bob Smith 755-1130.</p>
        <p>NEW COUNTRY HOMES, one 3</p>
        <p>bedroom house, all electric. One 4 bedroom house, all electric. Located 8 miles north of Greenville on Stanton Mills Rd. just across Grinnel Creek. Call Bob Smith 755-1130.</p>
        <p>A Dream Home In The Country</p>
        <p>Choice 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch home. Living room, formal dining, den with fireplace. Air conditioned, 3 years old. Call Trish Thompson, Realtor, Bowen Realty, 752-7194 eves. 758-5017.</p>
        <p>YOU WILL GET "AAore For Your Money"</p>
        <p>New Homes Now Available In "Oek-mont" "Red Oek" "Greenbrier"</p>
        <p>Greenville Realty Co.</p>
        <p>752-2106  301  Ridgeway</p>
        <p>Anytime: 752-4224</p>
        <p>ELMHURST, 1507 Lohowood Dr., assume SVa loan, 2 bedrooms, brick house, 1 bath, living and dining room area with fireplace, kitchen - den combination , central air, carport with storage, $20,500. Call 755-1457 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 3 BE DROOMS, kitchen, dining combination, 1 bath, living room with fireplace, 1404 Polk Ave., 758 4852.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE BY OWNER. New 3</p>
        <p>bedroom house, kitchen, family room combination, central heat, air conditioning, wall-to-wall carpet, 2 complete baths, garage. Near T.L. Byrd Tabernacle on 254 By-Pass. Call 755-5050.</p>
        <p>215 CRESTLINE BLVD. By owner. Three bedrooms, 2 baths, kitchen, den combination, living room with foyer. Carport with storage. Call 745-6573 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, den, built-in carport, '/a acre lot. Black Jack area. Call 755-4500 day from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. or 758-3521 nights.</p>
        <p>Custom, Residential and Commercial Building, Featuring American Classic</p>
        <p>AMERICAN CLASSIC  * * HOMES * * *</p>
        <p>Call for Quotations and estimate day 756-0911, night</p>
        <p>756-3484</p>
        <p>TIPTON</p>
        <p>Builders, Inc.</p>
        <p>General Contractor License No. 5S6&amp;amp; 234 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>FOR RENT</p>
        <p>New Office Building Located In Greenville</p>
        <p>1500 Sq. Ft., air conditioned, off street parking. Suitable for doctor or dentist office. Can be converted into 2 offices. Will finish inferior t suit tenant.</p>
        <p>Night phone 752-2976. J. L. Tripp, Inc. 834-1398, Raleigh N.C.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Bell Bottom DungareeSi</p>
        <p>$4.95,</p>
        <p>Gi Overcoats,</p>
        <p>$4.00,</p>
        <p>Foot lockers.</p>
        <p>$4.50,</p>
        <p>Canteens,</p>
        <p>$1.00,</p>
        <p>Field Jackets,</p>
        <p>$7.95,</p>
        <p>Floor Wax,</p>
        <p>$1.50.</p>
        <p>Shiver Surplus</p>
        <p>Sales</p>
        <p>822 Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>NEED MALE ROOMMATE, tOr</p>
        <p>nished apartment. 2 blocks from campus. Call 758 3051 after 7 p m.</p>
        <p>THE CLASSIFIED MARKET is a</p>
        <p>great place to sell antiques. For a result-getting Want Ad dial 752-5156.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE to live in with nice family in Greenville area. Call D. C. Perry 795-4215 Robersonville.</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS Lbok! Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check with us First! 752 5700.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE FURNISHED DUPLEX</p>
        <p>apartment for rent. For information cali 752 4998 or 752-7752.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE Apartments</p>
        <p>2-bedroom, electric heat, 6-closets, fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher, club house, swimming pool, laundry facilities.</p>
        <p>1212 Redbanks Rd. Tel.: 756-4151</p>
        <p>STRATFORD ARMS Apts., 1900 S. Charles St. An exclusive community designed to provide the ultimate in gracious living. AAodern 1, 2 and 3 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom Townhouses. Furnished or unfurnished. 756-4800.</p>
        <p>CEDAR LANE efficiency apartments, furnished. University Town House, furnished or unfurnished, Cholet Apartments in Winterville, unfurnished. Call 745-4310, Tar Heel Homes &amp;amp; Realty, Ayden, N.C.</p>
        <p>ONE 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>2 BEDROOM FURNISHED apartment. Heat and water furnished, wall to wall carpet, air conditioned. $130 per month. 2401 E. 3rd St. 2 bedroom unfurnished apartment. Heat and water furnished, wall to wall carpet, air conditioned. $100 per month. 2402 E. 3rd St. Call M. E. Sutton, 752-5121, C. L. Thigpen, Jr.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED OR UNFURNISHED 2</p>
        <p>bedroom, all electric apartment for rent. Fully carpeted. Call 755-3450 after 6 p.m. Carriage House Aapartments.</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES APTS.</p>
        <p>1, 2, &amp;amp; 3 Bedrooms Available Washer-Dryer Hook-Ups Hotpoint Equipped_TSJ^JS</p>
        <p>MID^TOWN apartments, Winterville, 1 bedroom furnished. Call Turcott Realty 752-3881.</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA, 208 S. Elm St., 1 and 2 bedrooms, completely furnished, central heat and air, utilities also furnished. 752-3375.</p>
        <p>FOR RENT  BRENTWOOD</p>
        <p>Apartments. Modern; completely furnished. 2 Bedroom, air conditioned. See resident manager, East 10th Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>2 bedroom townhouse Apartment Unfurnished</p>
        <p>Fully carpeted, stove, and refrigerator,  water,  and</p>
        <p>sewage provided. 7S2-422S. 5 blocks from ECU.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>THE ONLY THING YOU NEEDTOKNOW ABOUT REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>IS 752-6140</p>
        <p>Houses For Rent</p>
        <p>1509 E. 5TH ST. Call after 7 p.m. 752 2395._</p>
        <p>SIX ROOM house tor rent. Near university. Call 756-0982.</p>
        <p>BY NOW YOU SHOULD KNOW</p>
        <p>appliances sell fast with a Want Ad.</p>
        <p>FIVE ROOM HOUSE tor rent. Has hot water. Call 745-3723.</p>
        <p>Rooms For Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHED BEDROOM for rent, 1208 Chestnut St. Inquire inside or call 752 2964.</p>
        <p>COLLEGE BOY TO Share room, private entrance, air conditioned, wall to wall carpet, refrigerator. Call 755 3553.</p>
        <p>NICE ROOM FOR boys, very close to campus. Call 752-4020.</p>
        <p>FOUR ROOM FURNISHED apart menf. Call 752-4329 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>ROOM FOR RENT, air conditioned, outside entrance, near college. Call 752-4287 or come by 515 Maple St. after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>I, CARL S. NICHOLS, will not be responsible tor any debts by anyone other than myself. Pub. March 3, 4, 5, 7, 8, 9, Carl S. Nichols.</p>
        <p>RESORTS</p>
        <p>WATERFRONT ANO oft waterfront lots and homesites. Oriental, N.C. on Neuse River. Finest sailing and cruising wafers. Phone Greenville, N.C. 919 7 52-7101 Weekdays 9 a.m.-5 p.m. or write P.O. Box 555 Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>WE WILL do your farm ditching and general backhoe work. Call 758-3240 after 5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WE WOULD LIKE to buy good clean late model used cars. Stop by Smith-Waldrop or call 755-4257.</p>
        <p>THREE BEDROOM HOUSE in good condition, located between Greenville and Farmville. Call 756-3225 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>COUPLE WANTS TO rent small apartment. Preferably close to E. C. U. and partly furnished. Call 758-5590.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN</p>
        <p>the BEST ECONOMY CAR on the market for the price.</p>
        <p>WE ARE SELLING</p>
        <p>ANDSERVICING</p>
        <p>THEM</p>
        <p>at:</p>
        <p>Joe Peclieles Volkswagen, Inc.</p>
        <p>U.S. 264 By Pass-Greenville 24,000 miles or 24 month warranty</p>
        <p>BIG VALUE DRUGS</p>
        <p>HAS</p>
        <p>THE LOWEST PRESCRIPTION PRICES IN TOWN</p>
        <p>East 10th Street Shopping Center</p>
        <p>SvS</p>
        <p>NEW</p>
        <p>MONTEGO *</p>
        <p>? Dr Sppfi.ll V.ilup p.ifk.iqt' V8 .iiitnm.rfic If ,1 nsTiission, powor stppr niq, WSW tirps. t.idio, ,ill vinyl whopl covpis, gold qold int prior, ciir conditloninq. Stock No. i 17 Was S3996</p>
        <p>3313</p>
        <p>Plus T.m T,iqs 4 Sr rvici</p>
        <p>220i Diekmson Ave</p>
        <p>Smith-Waldrop</p>
        <p>Motors</p>
        <p>(;\k:</p>
        <p>IKlCK&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>RETIRED (ACTIVE) COUPLE</p>
        <p>jA'Unrque opportunity for healthy retired couple to^operate^ own business.</p>
        <p>^ Only labor involved is collecting money from customers. No investment necessary.</p>
        <p>^ Income'unlimited.</p>
        <p>IF INTERESTED, APPLY IN PERSON AT</p>
        <p>SAVINGS SELF-SERVICE STATION</p>
        <p>3309 So. Memorial Drive, Greenville Across the street from Bright Leaf Motors</p>
        <pb facs="00091236_0012" />
        <p>11Th* Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Tain^y .</p>
        <p>Jittery 16-Y Hijacker Talk: Seeking Hav</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>In</p>
        <p>O</p>
        <p>MIAMI (AP) - A pilot coaxed jittery 16-year-oId high school pupils into surrendering a loaded pistol Monday after the youth hijacked a National Airlines jet to get away from parents on my back.</p>
        <p>Thomas Kelly Marstpn of Mobile, Ala., was later arraigned before U.S Magistrate Michael Osman and bond was set at $10,000. A preliminary hearing was scheduled for FYiday.</p>
        <p>^ Marston boarded the plane in Mobile and presented a loaded 38 caliber revolver instead of a ticket to a pair of stewardesses on the New Orleans-bound flight.</p>
        <p>Senior Hostess Georginia Castro and a ticket agent took the youth to Captain Robert L. Carter. Marston-told the pilot to clear the plane of passengers and fly to Canada, Carter said.</p>
        <p>"He said he was having family problems, that he was not doing well in school and his parents were on his back. Carter said at a news conference here.</p>
        <p>He was very vague on why he wanted to go to Canada. He mentioned that there were a lot of draft dodgers there.</p>
        <p>He was a very naive young man, to think he could get away with it. We told him that if we flew out of the country, he would be facing extremely serious charges and if he allowed us to return to Mobile, it would be much easier on him, Carter said.</p>
        <p>Carter said the youth responded Mobile was the last place he wanted to go and it was then Carter figured he could talk the young man out of</p>
        <p>Nixon Honors Hyde Family</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  A Hyde County, N.C., family was honored Monday by President Nixon as the National Farm Family of 1970.</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Gerrit Boer-emas of Swan (garter and their four children were greeted by the President at the White House. They were in the capital to receive their award from the Farmers Home Administration of the U.S. Department of Agriculture.</p>
        <p>The elder Boeremas emigrated to the United States from Holland in 1949 and worked on dairy farms in Missouri and .Minnesota before coming to North Carolina in 1957. In 1959 they applied for farm ownership loans from the FHA nd have since increased the value of their property from $15,000 to more than $75,000.</p>
        <p>Billing Policies Will Be Probed</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The North Carolina Utilities Commission has announced that ii will investigate the billing practices of utilities.</p>
        <p>This will affect every household in the state.</p>
        <p>Dates for the hearings will be -set later.</p>
        <p>The practices vary widely. Charol ina Power &amp;amp; Light &amp;lt;3o. has only one figure on its monthly residential bills, but the Duke Power Co. has two, net and gross. CXistomers who pay within 15 days pay the net amount. But those who pay after that pay the gross amount, whch is 5 per cent more.</p>
        <p>Some electric cooperatives give discounts to customers who read their own meters, and others do not.</p>
        <p>it.</p>
        <p>Over Knoxville, said Marston and handed liis ing the pilot The plane then txaar and landed at am.</p>
        <p>Marstons fatHe*~ , Marston. saidl that the boy left foa a.m. much ear*lie* and that at 7:22 sk .nr reported their son , weapon and an missing to police.</p>
        <p>When the plane los</p>
        <p>'ler mind</p>
        <p>loacl. it.</p>
        <p>ar*ound aC 1^ 1. ; 33</p>
        <p>ill H.</p>
        <p>:)Kidlot&amp;gt;ile R~ool Skt. 6 usxa^kl  C'atmilyr 'W'i t Ix a a'Txol&amp;gt;ile,</p>
        <p>le- at</p>
        <p>9:16 A . nn _ , 3rojinis IVIa a seat l^^-lnsind tl*e pil oHmrme p^lated ctuin and folcJtos^d Ivis ar</p>
        <p>s^id .</p>
        <p>Me?  very</p>
        <p>tHe f&amp;gt;ilot -Btaiicl- WT-ie^i him wot tor s:&amp;gt;o&amp;gt;int tlTie he heldl ic orlo'wnwat~oJi at the?  Me</p>
        <p>any t Ixx-e-a ts . * *</p>
        <p>IVdlax-ston with a3ai*&amp;lt;r*-aft piraey by fe*e-t~aal marshals to lVi;ol:&amp;gt;iler after FHIis do^vn  xra  h^iami,</p>
        <p>home</p>
        <p>rston took t. laid the ide him Oarter</p>
        <p>able,** asked sun at us, or pointed ver made</p>
        <p>s charged and held for return ht &amp;lt;475 set rMational*s</p>
        <p>RALEIGH &amp;lt;AF&amp;gt; amended state goes back to th floor action Wedn the final stage fosr* approval of new k levies.</p>
        <p>Sen. John Bur rm Hanover, who intsr-original bill. Monda, the measure placed days calendar for</p>
        <p>Cite Bu Cut Eff</p>
        <p>WASHINGXOPSr port released IVI U.S. Disarmament Fayetteville, N.C., i five metropolitan veyed which has rate of unemploym.4 A total of 219 studied by the which said the U.S. would be able tc sharp cuts in defen The agency saidi fense Departi^enf slashed, the resuLl tr ployment rates side red **tolerable .</p>
        <p>TTie report said * politan areas seven were predi jobless levels in per cent of the ax force. Eayettevillc Lawton, Okla., rey, Calif., r&amp;gt;ulm Wis., and San H&amp;gt;a were considered thei</p>
        <p>The study said would be able to adjm fense cutback ease, dnd that economy is not arms spending.</p>
        <p>Offer Co*, m-~ Stocks, I</p>
        <p>Pitt Technical begin a 20-hovur Bonds course at 7 f&amp;gt; in room 206. This meet each Thursda&amp;gt;r until 9:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Course ccMitent wi.UL study of Securifi^</p>
        <p>vestments,  El</p>
        <p>Technical Side of t others.</p>
        <p>Interested persora Pitt Tech for formation.</p>
        <p>IBfff</p>
        <p>n&amp;gt;rsiew^</p>
        <p>laad Ines-</p>
        <p>ly t&amp;gt;o</p>
        <p>fcy the said ^ of fixe</p>
        <p>near-srcsaaf ir cuncurnr^nce with the  dxan^es.</p>
        <p>The? f-foxase anrxendesd the bill last  fn make any vote of</p>
        <p>the  mandafox-y  on coun</p>
        <p>ty COnramissioners considering a 4ocal S4BaJ[^^s faxc. &amp;lt;Zk&amp;gt;nrrr~nissioners, however*-, would not fce required to suJt&amp;gt;nrmit tfxe levy to a referendum fc^foM-e  imi&amp;gt;osin|S the  law.</p>
        <p>Bux-rae-y *s  oxri^inal k&amp;gt;01  would</p>
        <p>have sxlloxa^^ed comrraissioners to ignoK-e  xresults of a referen-</p>
        <p>dunrx ar- cieciding whether to pass a ccajmty tax.</p>
        <p>The djv^xraexral .Asstemhly began its ei^hflra  full xveek Monday</p>
        <p>night .</p>
        <p>In tJh^ X-Xoaase, twro hills easily passedi ^^'V'in^ xrescaae vehicles the sar-ne^  ri^ht-of '^vay  privi</p>
        <p>leges fiares trrucks have.</p>
        <p>Sen. f&amp;gt;a-v-id ETahexrty, Fl-Cald-w^l, infmoduced a hill that would xree^iaaixre sexrvice stations offex-ira^5 s^^lf-service and attendant-(&amp;gt;taarra^&amp;gt;edl gasolines to mark the diff^xr^sr-ce in j&amp;gt;x-ices clearly. FTahearfy *s hill woaald pwovide a fine ui^ fo ^50 or a 30-day. jail senteraese foxr violations.</p>
        <p>Bep. CZr. W-  Phillips, D-Ouil-</p>
        <p>ford, aarafaroduced a hill in the House fo eappr^opriate ^3 millicm in staf^ faands durara^ the next tw^o y^a.r*s to  puhlac libraries.</p>
        <p>The hiM woxald duplicate an ap-inroprieafioa-a made hy the 1969 legislafrarres  in an  attempt to</p>
        <p>help eejfaajFaliage  state and local</p>
        <p>suppoart:  of  fihraries.</p>
        <p>Cha-'</p>
        <p>Ix</p>
        <p>t. and</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>iia-</p>
        <p>ABC lm5|jiea hsve faledi charges ea ni^hf erl.aak&amp;gt; dancer-s .</p>
        <p>The imxnoamil a tainm^a-at througtfa countiraaat The erlaa thority of rage &amp;lt;ZZk&amp;gt;ni regul ea f e places gdnS ra&amp;lt;ji The ^ A^ondeay- t: cluh will previoaas </p>
        <p>  State</p>
        <p>-ar enforcexment agents foxju- xaaoxre obscenity gainst the Cest Bon , avhida has had nude</p>
        <p>^nts x-epoxrted lewd, JBand ixnpr-oper enter-iara the cluh on F*eb. 16 P'eh -  19, eacb date</p>
        <p>a separate charge, h is fi^htin^ the au-the .Alcoholic Beve-1 (AMO Board to en tertairaraaent in =h have hxrown-bag- licenses . hoard -will meet o decide avh ether the arretain its licenses on k&amp;gt;scenity charges.</p>
        <p>Two Politicos Resign Mine Safety Posts As Pay-Off Charges Made</p>
        <p>SEARCHING  South VieCnamese paratroopers march single file through elephant grass in a search &amp;lt;^eration for the enemy inside Laos. The paratroq&amp;gt;ers are 10 miles from the Vietnamese border. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>No Broadcast Blip For Winston-Salem</p>
        <p>Four</p>
        <p>WINSTON-SALEM, N. C. (AP)  This tobacco-manufacturing city has been saved from the blip-blips.</p>
        <p>The Federal Trade Commission has given assurance that despite the banning of cigarette advertising on radio and television, the name of the city, after which two brands of cigarettes are named, can continue loud on the airwaves.</p>
        <p>Wallace Carroll, editor and publisher of the Winston-Salem Journal and Sentinal, had complained to the FCC that in a recent nationwide television broadcast of a professitmal bowling tournament, called the Winston-Salem Classic, the name of the city was hardly mentioned. Carroll urged the FCC to assure broadcasters they would not be sent to prison if they said Winston-Salem instead of using the blip blip sound every time the name of the city came up.</p>
        <p>He also asked the commis-sicHi to grant the networks the same immunity if they men-</p>
        <p>Western Bond Trains Deputies</p>
        <p>KINGMAN, Ariz. (AP)  Mc^ave County Sheriff Floyd Cisney has come up with a new way to raise money for his departments training fund.</p>
        <p>Cisney formed a musical group called Country Music Rejects. The western band plays at dances and other events in this northwestern Arizona County. Cisney plays lead guitar.</p>
        <p>F\mds raised to date have allowed five dptis to attend a homicide investigation work-' shop held in Phoenix recently.</p>
        <p>DUMP DEFENDANTS</p>
        <p>INDIANAP JLIS (UPI)  Indiana Attorney Cileneral Theodore L. Sendak has filed the states first lawsuit under a 1969 state law forbidding operation of open dumps. Defendants Mr. and Mrs. Horner T. parnell were charged with operating a dump at rural Evansville in Southern Indiana.</p>
        <p>DEFY *QUAKLE:</p>
        <p>PASADENA, Cal m Scientists at the Institute of Teol-axrm extensive studies x-rx &amp;lt; ing Southern Califo quake showed mod-^ pers are able ko strong temblors mage.</p>
        <p>Dr. George  _</p>
        <p>Caltech professox- oX* ing, said 200 instx*vxxrarm throughout tall buxJR their measuremexat:s^ computer showexX buildings were s ~ low, old buildixa damage.</p>
        <p>aaaX  foarxraia y-</p>
        <p>^oMo-w-</p>
        <p>xrxrafc-k:k-ast:axacl da-</p>
        <p>'omxssxraex-,</p>
        <p>DRIVE A LITTLE AND SAVE A LOT''</p>
        <p>AYDEN CARPET OUTLET</p>
        <p>DEALERS IN</p>
        <p>CABIN CRAFTS COLLINS a AIK#W%. WORLD CAR PETS</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT PRICES INSTALLATION SERVICE</p>
        <p>200 EAST AVE. AYDEN, N. C.</p>
        <p>746-6 1</p>
        <p>OPEN FRIDAY NIGHTS TIL 9 P.AA.</p>
        <p>NjQVSiand</p>
        <p>Tnstali</p>
        <p>sw-eat; it:  ouL  again next year? Right now,</p>
        <p>'w-lxil.e ouir ex-ew's Aire available and our equipment st^oclcLS Axne groox:!, we can offer you substantial on H-Anxro3c comfort systems designed just JhaonxA. OTaU today for a free estimate, and A11  wrlxAn  beats on next sununer!</p>
        <p>General Heating Inc.</p>
        <p>tioned a certain British statesman whose first name is identical with our first name...and his great ancestor, the Duke of blip (Marlborough).</p>
        <p>In the same playful spirit, William B. Ray, chief of the complaints and compliance division of the FCCs broadcast bureau has replied;</p>
        <p>The possibility also extends to poetry and song: Hark! Hark! the blip at heavens gate sings....and If I had the blips of an angel, over these prison walls I would fly.</p>
        <p>Ray also wrote:</p>
        <p>I think you will find that the federal government will apply the law reasonably, although it will not overlook any attempts to evade the intent of the statute...Although the commission realizes that it would be possible to devise means to advertise cigarettes in other than traditional forms, please be assured that it has no intention of bli{^ing ^\^nston-Salem off the air.</p>
        <p>By STAN BENJAMIN  Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Two former Republican party workers have resigned from a federal advisory committee on mine safety research in the wake of charges the committee was composed to pay off political</p>
        <p>Scott Lauds Henley Role</p>
        <p>HOPE MILLS, N. C. (AP) -State Sen. John Henley, D-CXim-berland, won praise from Gov. Bob Scott Monday night for his work on reorganization of state government.</p>
        <p>Scotts comments came at a dinner meeting of the Hope Mills Lions Club as the senators friends and neighbors gathered to observe John Henley Day.</p>
        <p>When he has a job to do he does it promptly, Scott said. He does it honestly. He does it cleanly. He does it well.</p>
        <p>One of his special traits is the ability to work with diverse groups of people, to exercise friendly persuasion while still pursiang his goal vigorously, Scott said.</p>
        <p>He noted that Henley had headed the study commissiwi which worked out a proposed plan for state government reorganization.</p>
        <p>Ms conscientious, objective approach helped secure voter approval last fall for a constitutional amendment to implement the reorganization, the governor said.</p>
        <p>He called Henleys work on reorganization a high point in his career of public service to Hope Mills, (Cumberland County and North Carolina.</p>
        <p>debts rather than advance mine safety.</p>
        <p>Rep Ken Hechler, D-W.Va., had questioned the quali-fcations of three members of the committee, accusing President Nixon of tolerating the appointment of party hacks ... to pay off political deji^ts.</p>
        <p>Interior Secretiiry Rogers C.B. Morton said he would review the a|^pointmits, made before he took office by acting Secretary Fred J. Russell. Russell resigned as undersecretary at the end of February, at Mortons instigation.</p>
        <p>The Interior Department confirmed today that two of the committee members had resigned, also in February.</p>
        <p>One, Mrs. Sara Abemethy, of Altus, Okla., was among the three whose qualifications were questioned by Hechler; the other, Frank L. Kraft of Aberdeen, S.D., was not.</p>
        <p>Both had been active in Republican party politics.</p>
        <p>'The Federal Mine Health and Safety Act of 1969 requires that appointees, who are paid up to $100 a day plus expenses during infrequent meetings, must be knowledgeable in the field of coal mine safety research.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Abemethy is a former fine arts student, a member of the Board of Regents of Oklahoma College of Liberal Arts, and the widow of a physician. 9ie is also a former co-chairman of her county Republican committee and recently joined the staff of Sen. Henry Bel-Imon, R-Okla.</p>
        <p>An Interior Department source said Mrs. Abemethy cited her new job with Bellmon as the reason for her resignation.</p>
        <p>Kraft is a former travelling representative of Cargill, Inc., the company that owned a</p>
        <p>Louisiana salt mine where 21 men were killed in a Are in 1968. He is a former Republican county committeeman of Brown County, S.D.</p>
        <p>Kraft said he was forced to resign by the demands of other commitments, the Interior source said.</p>
        <p>Hechler had also questioned the mine safety qualifications of Jo Ann Gray of Denver, a former airline stewardess and Republican state committee woman; and of Robert F. Zins of Arlington, Va., a patent, trademark and antitrust lawyer and former GOP chairman in Fairfax (^unty.</p>
        <p>UNITXD STATBS OSeARTMaNT OX AORCUIlTURH. aoricultural RRSRARCH SRRVICR. ORXICR OR TMR ADMINISTRATOR. Ntlc Is tMrcBy vm tlist iMcauss of ttM oxistonco of Nor ctwloro in Rl Raso Cownfy, Toxas, and ttw nafwra and axtant of owtbroaks of thia Nsoaso, a portion of tho aforosald CowntR ia quarantinad undar amondmonfs of ttio raqulations In 9 CRR Part 74. Tlia rastrlctions partainlna fo ffio Infartfafo mevamant of swina and awlna products from or fkrodpti quarantlnod aroas as confainod in f CPR Part 74, aa amandad. apply to flio oroo qwarantlnod. Notlco la alto horofey pivon thot portient of Ratos. Chowan, Parquimans, and Pitt Cawntlos In North Carolina, and a portion of Dallas Covnty, Alabama, ara oxcladad tram ttw artas quarantinad bacausa af hep chalara undar amandmants af tha rapplatlana In t CPR Part 74. Tharofora. ttw raatrlctlafw partaininp to tho intorstato nwvomont of swIna and twin# products from or thrawpb quarantinad aroas at containad In 9 CPR Part 74, as amandad. will not appfy to ttw axcludod aroot. Howovor. ttw rostrictiens partaininp to tho Intorstato movomont of twino and twino products from nonqusrantinod aroas containad in told Part 74 will apply to ttw axcludod arooa. No aroot In Oafos, Chowan, Parquimans, and Pitt Cbumiat in North Carolina or in ttw Stott of Alabama ramain undor ttw quaramina. Furttwr, ttw Stato of Alabama it addad to ttw list of hop cholora aradlcation Statos in S 74.S (f), and ttw spacial provisions partaininp to tho intorstato movomont of twino and swina products from or to such aradlcation Statos art appllcabW to Alabama. Tha amand-mants of ttw rapulatlont will ha puMlshad in tha Fodaral Raplstar. Datallad infarmatlon concarninp ttw amandnwnta may alao bo obtalnad from Dr. R. S. Cox, ANN Vatarlnarian In Charpa, Room Ml. 70S CMoradoStraat, Austin. Taxas7P701, Dr. W. W. Harkins, ANN Vatarlnarian in Charpa. Pest DHica Rex 24S4, SM Aprlcultural Buildinp. Ralaiph, North Carolina I74P3. and Dr. B. C. Swindle. ANN Vatarlnarian In Charpa, Pest DHica Bex 1749, 431 Sauth McDonouph Street, Montpomery. Alabama Min. Dona at Washinptan, O.C., this 19th day of Pabruary 1971. (s) Ooerpo W. Irvinp, Jr., Administrator, Aprlcultural Rataarch Sarvict</p>
        <p>PROLIFIC MINIBIKES</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (UPDThe rising tide of minibike pt^ulari-ty may one day force cities to provide large golf course4ike acreage for motorized bikers, says George Hjelte, retired manager of the Los Angeles recreation department.</p>
        <p>More than a million of the sputtering machines are registered in the nation, with a quarter of them in California, where the craze first took root.</p>
        <p>TADLOCK INSURANCE AGENCY</p>
        <p>322 Evans Street Greenville, N. C. 27834 758-1165</p>
        <p>INSURANCE FOR HOME</p>
        <p>BUSINESS ' AUTO</p>
        <p>HOW LONG HAS IT-BKN SINCE THE GOOD TIIMES ROLLED?</p>
        <p>Is it time fora new car in your family? Or maybe a good second car? A convenient p ly d PNB auto loan can start things rolling.</p>
        <p>Just tell your dealer you want Planters financing. Or talk with a Planters mn at any &amp;lt;x&amp;gt;nvement office. Hell tciilor a loan plan to make it ^sy to own a new car. And youll have good times rolling again in no time.  ' .</p>
        <p>FIANTE RS NATIONAL BANK</p>
        <p>1 TOO</p>
        <p>752-4187</p>
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