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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Clear and not quite to cold tonight, sunny and warmer Wednesday.</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 2  Tobacco Decisions Page 10  How They Voted Page 12  Expects Word</p>
        <p>93rd YEAR</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBUARY 12, 1974</p>
        <p>12'PAGES TODAY</p>
        <p>PRICE 10 CENTS</p>
        <p>The Senator At Yale</p>
        <p>ERVIN IN CLASSROOMU. S. Sen. Sam Ervin Jr. (D-N.C.), second from right, talks with students at one of Yale Universitys residentiai coileges in New Haven Monday afternoon. Er-</p>
        <p>Nixon Subpoena Is Lost in The Mail</p>
        <p>By LINDA DEU-TSCH Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  The U.S. Postal Service is trying to trace a missing registered letter containing a Los Angeles judges subpoena for the testimony of President Nixon,</p>
        <p>The subpoena, mailed by Superior Coiu^ Judge Gordon Ringers cleric on Feb. 4, had not arrived in Washington, D.C., Superior Court .by late Monday.</p>
        <p>The judge said, Im rendered speechless.</p>
        <p>Los Angeles Postmaster James J. Symbol said such a long delay in delivery of registered mail is not normal at</p>
        <p>all and that he was oixlering a trace on the letter.</p>
        <p>Ringer issued the order for Nixons testimony at the request of the Presidents former top domestic adviser, John D. Ehrlichman.</p>
        <p>The document asks Nixon t) testify at a hearing Feb. 25 a^ at the trial of Ehrliclm^l) an two other former White House aides, G. Gordon Liddy and David Young on April 15.</p>
        <p>Liddys attorney, Charles Gessler, raised the possibility that the Feb. 25 hearing might have to be postponed if the subpoena is not found and delivered soon.</p>
        <p>The White House has said</p>
        <p>Nixon will resist the order to testify, but it is likely that the Los Angeles hearing would not proceed until the matter of his possible appearance is settled.</p>
        <p>The Washington court, under the luiiform code covering out-of-state witnesses, was to hold a hearing on the matter following receipt of the subpoena. The Washington court could either order the subpoena served or quashed.</p>
        <p>Ehrlichman, Liddy and Young are charged with burglary and conspiracy in the 1971 break-in at the office of Daniel EUlsbergs psychiatrist. Ehrlichman also is charged with perjury.</p>
        <p>Says Duties Neglected^ By Board Of Governors</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Rep. Claude DeBruhl, D-Buncombe, sharply criticized the University of North Carolina Board of Governors Monday night and accused it of neglecting its duties.</p>
        <p>DeBruhl, a backer of proposals to expand the East Carolina University Medical School, told the House in a prepared speech that the governors and their supporters have been so preoccupied with the question of medical education, and so obsessed with denying East Carolina the full four-year facility is seeks ... that they have not, addressed other questions equally important.</p>
        <p>I am reluctantly inclined towards the belief that most of the current lieat and hassle over the medical school may be smokescreen designed to mask the boards serious failures and shortcomings in other areas, DeBruhl declared.</p>
        <p>DeBruhl said that recently officials of the University ^of North Carolina at Asheville and Western Carolina University had reached substantial agree</p>
        <p>ment as to who was to provide what service and where, but that implementation of those accords, and initiation of certain joint endeavors is still awaiting approval action by the Board of (Sovemors.</p>
        <p>DeBruhl told the House that the simple incontrovertible fact is that North Carolina needs more doctors and related health professionals and said it is obvious that we must train oiu- own.</p>
        <p>The Buncombe legislator said the state has the choice of ex-</p>
        <p>Trees Set Aside</p>
        <p>For Future Role.</p>
        <p>Bulletin</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP)  Soviet security agents and police ar-rested Alexander Solzhenitsyn at his wifes Moscow home today after the Nobel Prize-winning author refused to answer a summons to the state prosecutors office, famiiy friends reported.</p>
        <p>There was no official confirmation of the report.</p>
        <p>CRANE, Ind. (AP)  Two large groves of white oak will be set aside at the Crane Naval Ammunition Depot in southern Indiana for use as planking for the hull of the U.SB. Constitution.</p>
        <p>Theres no ru^, though. Replanking of the ships hull is scheduled in 2013 and again in 2053.</p>
        <p>Harley Thomas Jr., the depots forester who is in charge of the Mriiite oak groves, said' the trees take about 150 years to mature. At present, the'depot has about 27 million standing board feet of white oak, averaging 60 years of age.</p>
        <p>Old Ironsides, flagship of the U.S. Navy during the War of 1812, is undergoing a minor overhaul at Boston Navy Yard.' Plans call fmr her being returned to her docluide berth there in time for the 1974 summer tourist season.</p>
        <p>panding existing medical schools or we must now provide new facilities for training the personnel we need.</p>
        <p>He said if it is possible to expand existing facilities, I submit that those charged with their administration have been grossly negligent' in not undertaking that expansion earlier.</p>
        <p>DeBruhl said the time has come to refute for all time the ridiculous assertion that in addressing this concern the General Assembly is somehow overstepping its role and treading on sacred ground, usurping the role and function of the Board of Governors of the university, and in the process undermining the whole future of higher education in North (Carolina.</p>
        <p>The Board of (Sovemors is not and was never intended to be a fully autonomous body subject to no imput or control from the legislature which supplies its funds, DeBruhl asserted.</p>
        <p>BlOodmobile</p>
        <p>The Red Cross bloodmobile is visiting GreenvUie today, and is scheduled toTbperate at the Moose Lodge until 6:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>Before todays visit Pitt County was 266 pints behind its quota for the year.</p>
        <p>U-nU-nES MEETING Greenville Utilities Commission will meet tonight at 7:30 in aty Hall.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be held in Director (Charles Homes office.</p>
        <p>Expects To Advise N.C.</p>
        <p>Plan For Gas-Rationing</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRE8S (Carolina must have a plan.</p>
        <p>The executive director of the Governors Energy Panel, Fowler Martin, is quoted as saying that he probably will recommend this week a voluntary</p>
        <p>Ill have to clear it with (Jen. Tolson first, but its beginning to look to me like we should be thinking of a</p>
        <p>statewide plan, the Observer quoted him.</p>
        <p>Gen. John T. Tolson III, the chairman of the energy panel, had said previously</p>
        <p>that local officials in North Carolina should develop their own gasoline plans rather than wait for a statewide one.</p>
        <p>Tolson made the statement</p>
        <p>Monday as two cities, Burlington, population 36,000, and Havelock, population 6,000, started limited rationing. They are using the Oregon plan under which motorists can buy on alter-</p>
        <p>vin, who chairs Uie Senate Watergate committee, is on a three-day visit to Yale as a Chubb Fellow. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>statewide gasoline rationing plan for North (Carolina.</p>
        <p>The Charlotte Observer quotes him as saying in Raleigh in a telephone interview that he was studying rationing i^ans adapted in other states and believed North</p>
        <p>France And U.S. At Opposite Poles</p>
        <p>Civilian In Energy Parleys</p>
        <p>Toll By Barrage</p>
        <p>nate days, depending on whether their license-tag numbers are odd or even. Filling stations are open a couple of hours in the morning and a couple of hours in the afternoon.</p>
        <p>Avery Upchurch, who operates a station in Raleigh and is president of the North Carolinp Service Station Asociation, said rationing would do little good until supplies are increased. He said stations can sell their en-</p>
        <p>By DENIS GRAY Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)  The Cambodian military command today reported 139 killed and 46 wounded in the artillery and rocket barrage that hit the southern part of Phnom Penh Monday.</p>
        <p>Newsmen counted at least 200 wounded in the citys hospitals, and the military command said the death toll might go higher. Some of the wounded lay bleeding on cots in hospital hallways. Doctors said they were running low on plasma and medical supplies.</p>
        <p>Fires caused by the shelling reduced hundreds of homes to ashes. Police and rescue workers searched for more victims in the debris.</p>
        <p>Almost all of the dead were civilians, and many of them were women or children. Some ^ sources said as many as 10,000 persons may have been made homeless.</p>
        <p>The Khmer Rouge gunners poured 73 rounds of high explosive shells and 122mm rockets into densely populated market and slum areas in the southern part of the city during the middle of the afternoon. It was the wars most devastating bombardment of the (^m-bodian capital.</p>
        <p>Two roimds also landed in the presidential palace compoimd, killing eight persons and wounding a dozen more in shacks housing the palace guards and their families. Another round fell within 1(X) yards of the United States Embassy.</p>
        <p>The Khmer Rouge batteries were believed located just across the Prek Thnot River, six miles southwest of Phnom Penh. President Lon Nol ordered helicopter gunshi^-^i^d planes to attack the area.</p>
        <p>Hinom Penhs worst previous bombardmrat occurred in March 1972, when 112 persons were killed and 248 were wounded. The city has been shelled almost daily since Dec. 23; the attack Monday raised the total casualties to more than 300 dead and at least 700 wounded.</p>
        <p>In South Vietnam, the Saigon government released more Viet Gong civilian prisoners today and rieceived ,100 South Vietnamese military personnel from the Communists in the third day of a three-week exchange schedule.</p>
        <p>The plan calls for more than 4,000 civilian and military prisoners to be exchanged by March 1.</p>
        <p>By late this afternoon, the Saigon government had released 168 civilian prisoners to the Viet Cong. Eight others re-</p>
        <p>By ENDRE MARTON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The conference of 13 major oU consuming countries ends today with the expectation that it will schedule another high-level meeting at which producers and consumers, including those from the developing countries, will participate.</p>
        <p>But otherwise speeches by foreign and finance ministers Monday appeared to confirm the prediction that the problems of the energy shortage go far beyond what a two-day meeting could resolve.</p>
        <p>A communique to be issued tonight will show agreement on the seriousness of the situation and on the need for more study and further consultations. But, it is likely to camouflage the gap between the United States, on one extreme, and France, on the other.</p>
        <p>The United States, represented by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger and Treasury Secretary George P. Shultz, is pleading ir complete cooperation and promising assistance to its friends and allies who are far more dependent on Arab oil than this country.</p>
        <p>Michel Jobert, Frances foreign minister, does not want to hear of such close cooperation which, he contends, is impossible because the United States, a major oil producer, cannot be compared with other countries that have to import every drop of oil they need.</p>
        <p>Jobert, in an uncompromising speech, said that Europe must be free to tackle the problem and that it was not desirable</p>
        <p>to establish a system of preliminary consultations with the other big consuming entities, such as the United States.</p>
        <p>He also argued with Kissingers request for agreed rules of conduct in dealings with the producers. The consumers, Jobert said, should not try to define a new code ... let us not seek to establish or to impose a new world energy order.</p>
        <p>Kissinger suggested that the conference set up some follow-up mechanism  he called it a coordinating group  but Jobert did not like this idea either.</p>
        <p>Kissinger, as many times before'in speeches and press conferences, again was critical about bilateral deals such as Jobert concluded in two recent tours of the Middle East.</p>
        <p>The only result of imma-naged bilateralism will be to bid up prices perhaps even beyond present levels, and to stabilize them at levels that</p>
        <p>will ruin the countries making the bilateral arrangements before they ruin everyone else, Kissinger told the conference.</p>
        <p>A few hours later, at a White House dinner for the ministers. President Nixon backed up Kissinger on this point. It might be good politics to make such deals over the short term, but over the long term it is bad statesmanship, Nixon said in his toast.</p>
        <p>Jobert in his conference speech said there was nothing wrong with such bilateral arrangements, and he was supported by Britains Sir Alec-Douglas Home.</p>
        <p>But in his firm resistance against the U.S. position Jobert unexpectedly was left alone: many of his colleagues in the Ck&amp;gt;mmon Market were far more sympathetic to the Kissinger concept and one of them, Germanys finance minister Helmut Schmidt, in effect sided with the U.S. position.</p>
        <p>Pay Scale Set For Prisoners</p>
        <p>tire weekly quotas in seven or eight hours.</p>
        <p>Upchurch predicted the situation would improve. He urged motorists to be patient. He pointed out that the federal allocation plan has only begun this month and has not had time to work.</p>
        <p>All of the rationing plans have some merit, but youre still going to have lines and inconvenience for maybe two months, he said.</p>
        <p>Gasoline dealers in Winston-Salem planned to meet today to discuss a possible retail allocation system for Forsyth (Jounty.</p>
        <p>Service station operators in the Cliarlotte area will meet Thursday night to consider starting a plan to stop what their president, Wayne Mullis calls panic buying. Mullis avoided the using the word rationing. He said he would like to see a $3 minimum on purchases. He said this would end the problem of motorists seeking small amounts of gas to top off their tanks and clogging service station driveways.</p>
        <p>Mullis met Monday with CJiarlotte Mayor John Belk. The mayor told him he thought the city should not</p>
        <p>Paid A Dollar</p>
        <p>For A Dribble</p>
        <p>MONTPELIER, Vt. (AP)  Gas station operators have been complaining about the problem of topping off, the practice of stopping for a fill-up when a cars tank will hold only a small amount of gasoline.</p>
        <p>But the practice took a different twist at one Montpelier gas station. A woman asked for premium gasoline and was told there wasnt any left in the pump. She told the attendant she would give him $1 for whatever came out of the nozzle.</p>
        <p>The attendant complied, and only seven cents worti of gasoline dribbled into her cars tank.</p>
        <p>She paid the dollar and drove away.</p>
        <p>IMKTORS ORDERS NEW YORK (AP)-Actress Elizabeth Taylor says doctors ordo-s will keep her from attending an award ceremony held by the Hasty Pudding Club of Harvard University this week.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Inmates of North Carolinas prison system qualified for outside work will be paid $2.52 an hour to work on the state highway system, state officials said today.</p>
        <p>David Jones, secretary of social rehabilitation and contrdl,' said the program was worked out jointly by his agency and the Department of Transportation.</p>
        <p>I think this is just an example of how effective rehabilitation can be with two agencies working together, Jones said in a prepared statement announcing the start of the program.</p>
        <p>Jones said the program woidd allow prisoners to earn normal wages while also undergoing rehabilitive programs. North Carolinas General Assembly outlawed the use of unpaid prison labor last year. A bill is before the legislature which only authorize some use of the so-call prison road gangs.</p>
        <p>Jones said today elimination of the road crews had left prisoners restless and bored by inactivity. He said the situation had led to some misconduct.</p>
        <p>Jones and Lentz said the program would utilize about 950 prisoners qualified for the correctional systems workn*elease plan. They will work on secondary road projects and maintenance programs.</p>
        <p>Jones said the inmates would be paid at the same rate nonprisoners would be hired, with some inmates receiving up to $3.16 per hour.</p>
        <p>Since these will be workH^e-</p>
        <p>lease inmates, they could work on some federally funding projects, Lentz said.</p>
        <p>Lentz said highway department personnel would not be charged with custodial responsibilities for the prisoners, but supervisors would evaluate the work performance just as with any other employe.</p>
        <p>Lentz said the program would start in early March with 175 inmates, expanding to 575 in mid-March and reaching full capacity in October.</p>
        <p>He said regular highway employes would not be dismissed as a result of the program. Inmates will be employed only after a vacancy occurs due to normal attrition or due to expanded work loads, Lentz said.</p>
        <p>take any stand on rationing, but would colrate with whatever the dealers decide.</p>
        <p>Stations in some other cities around the state were open only three or four hours a day. And dealers urged motorists not to come in to top their tanks.</p>
        <p>The energy chairman, Gen. Tolson, said, local officials are more aware of the particular problems in their areas, and we think they should take the initiative for developing plans to meet their specific problem. Its not that were passing the buck. Its just that the situation varies greatly across the state, and I dont know of any single plan that will work out for everyone on a statewide basis.</p>
        <p>Re-Election Bid</p>
        <p>By Court Cierk</p>
        <p>Pitt County ' Superior (^urt Clerk H. L. Lewis Jr. fUed yesterday as a candidate for re-election to the post he has held since April 1, 1968.</p>
        <p>Lewis has had 28 years experience as assistant clerk and as (Jlerk of Superior Court in Pitt County.</p>
        <p>A Pitt native and farmer, Lewis graduated form Belvoir-Falkland High School and Smithdeal Massey Business Ckillege in Richmond, Virginia before entering service in World War II when he served 38 months</p>
        <p>handle the increased workload.</p>
        <p>Lewis noted that in 1946 the office handled less than 1,000 criminal cases while last year more than 18,300 criminal cases were routed through the Qerks office in addition to 2,625 civil cases, 350 special proceedings, 424 estates and -787 juvenile petitions.</p>
        <p>Lewis said his office last year handled over $1.5 million in fines and fees.</p>
        <p>Report More Parcels Acquired For CBD Proect</p>
        <p>By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writo-. Six more parcels were M:quired in the Coitral Business District Piroject since the January meting of the Redevelopment CkHnmission, the staff real estate officer reported M&amp;lt;mday night.</p>
        <p>Kirby Boyd said that the six acquisitions in the N. C. R-66 project brought the status of projected acquisitioas in CBD to rou^y 57 per cent.</p>
        <p>Boyd told commissioners that a structure on one of the parcels has been demolished and work has started toward the demolition of another structure.</p>
        <p>h) addition to the acquisitions, the real estate officer noted that options were (dnrained on two parcds on Dickinson Aveiue.</p>
        <p>Boyd reported that one parcel was acquired during January in the N.C. R-134'Southside Project and five structures were demdished in the project area.</p>
        <p>Dennis Trij^, assistant CBD project manager said that seven relocations were handled in CBD since the January meeting. Six of the relocations were residential, he said, and the seventh involved a business.</p>
        <p>The project managa; for the Southside Project, Bruce Jackson, told the board that two families were relocated in the N.C. R-134 area during the month.</p>
        <p>Cmnmissioners, acting on a short business agenda, amended omtracts with Jack Wallace for prdessiraial appraisal services in both CBD and Soudiside to bring the appraisals fees up to date.</p>
        <p>Following the guideline of the citys recently adopted revised perscxmel policy, commissioners voted to increase the reimbursement for travel involving the use of employees iMivately owned vehicles from ten cents to 12 cents per mile. Ihe increase, vriiich would coVer both in and out of town travel whoi an em-oyee uses his own car, was made retroactive to Feb. 1.</p>
        <p>Ihe attendance of two staff members at an upcoming meeting of the Carolinas Council of Housing, Redevelopment and Ckxle Officials in High Point was ai^oved.</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; Executive directw Joe Laney, vho will attend the land* marketing workshop Feb. 27  March 1 as an officer of the</p>
        <p>Candinas Council, said tha|t a nuonber of experts on laixl mat*keting are expected to ^on hand for the session.</p>
        <p>overseas.</p>
        <p>He became assistant clerk of 010*1 in 1946 and served in that capacity until becoming Clerk (rf Superior Court in 1968.</p>
        <p>Lewis is a deacon in the First Presbyterian Church and a member f the Elks Lodge and Is a past president* of the Association of Assistant and Deputy Clerks of the Siqx^or Court of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>He is married to the forma: Naomi Wagel of Aguata, Ky! and the couple has two sons.</p>
        <p>When Lewis first joined the staff of the Clerks office there were a total of five employees. Now' 16 persons are needed to</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0002" />
        <p>Big Decisions Facing Tobacco Growers</p>
        <p>By CARL L. TVER Reflector Staff Writer Faced with the rising cost of fuel and fertilizer, tobacco growers are having to make decisions now concerning increasing their 1974 salable tobacco poundage,</p>
        <p>Allowed a 10 per cent increase in their salable poundage again this year by the Secretary of Agriculture, growers must decide whether (* not to try and produce their maximum poundage now, iriiile {reparing their tobacco plant beds.</p>
        <p>If they are to produce their maximum poundage growers must insure they have an adequate supply of plants.</p>
        <p>In making their decisions, growers must consider the following facts:</p>
        <p>Diesd fuel and gasoline</p>
        <p>U.S. Of/ Companies Are Nationalized By Libya</p>
        <p>needed to power farm machinery have risen drastically in price.</p>
        <p>Fertilizer has almost doubled in {Nice from last year and may be in short supply.</p>
        <p>IP gas, used in curing tobacco has followed suit and jum|)ed between 11 and 13 cents per gallon at {Nresent prices.</p>
        <p>DELICATE SURGERYCambodian Army doctors operating at a soccer Reid and wearing helmets and flak jackets remove an explosive chunk of a grenade from the cheek of a 21-year-old soldier. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Took Grenade From Jawbone</p>
        <p>By CARL D. ROBINSON Associated Press Writer PHNOM PENH, Cambodia (AP)  For one week, the young Cambodian army soldier didnt dare speak.</p>
        <p>In a hospital where other wounded slept two and three to a bed, he had a room all to himself.</p>
        <p>Pvt. Pok Sarim was in danger of blowing up.</p>
        <p>In a minor scrap northeast of Phnom Penh last week, a Khmer Rouge fired an M79 grenade at him from a distance of 15 yards. The round, the size of a tennis ball, smacked into Pok Sarims right cheek and jammed into his jawbone. It didnt explode.</p>
        <p>The same thing had happened 'half a dozen times before in the Vietnam war; Usually the round lodged in a fleshy area. But Pok Sarims was tight in the jawbone, and the surgeons feared the slightest movement would blow up the patient  and themselves.</p>
        <p>Three days after he was wounded, the 21-year-old soldier and his pregnant 18-year-old wife were brought by boat to a military hospital in Phnom Penh. Doctors scheduled surgery for noon on Monday on the soccer field when the sun would provide an overhead o{)erating lamp.</p>
        <p>More than 200 soldiers, military families and medical {&amp;gt;er-sonnel gathered on the grass to</p>
        <p>Vaughn Out Of Contest</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Appeals Court Judge Earl W. Vaughn has taken himself out of a race for the Democratic nomination for the state Supreme Ck)urt and Ap{)eals Court Judge Robert A. (Fred) Hedrick said he is seriously considering getting in the race.</p>
        <p>Vaughn cited time and money pressures Monday as he announced he was withdrawing.</p>
        <p>Hedrick, who has long been considered a possible candidate, promised to have a formal statement within a few days.</p>
        <p>Superior Court Judge James G. Exum of Greensboro will be Hedricks primary op{x&amp;gt;nent if the Ap{&amp;gt;eals Court judge enters the race.</p>
        <p>Republicans have promised to contest the seat, but no GOP candidate has announced yet.</p>
        <p>Commander Of DAVA To Visit</p>
        <p>,Mrs. Alice Poteat of Charlotte, Disabled American Veteran Auxiliary Commando* for North Carolina, will visit the local DAVA Unit 37 Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be at 7 p.m. at the Three Steors Re^urant. Unit 37 Commander Doris Oakley urges all members to attend. She also reminds members the {Murty to be givoi at Uie Veterans Hosf^tal in prfirfaam Sunday.</p>
        <p>CLOSE UNrVERSITIES ACCRA, Ghana (AP)The government of Qiana cloeed the West African country's three universities after student doiumktrations Mmiday.</p>
        <p>watch.</p>
        <p>The operating team wore flak jackets under their smocks and steel helmets above their surgical masks.</p>
        <p>Pok Sarim was brought onto the field on a stretcher, wearing a sarong. Military police blew whistles to move the crowd away.</p>
        <p>The doctor slowly made his incision. Wind blew sand and dust across the o{&amp;gt;erating area. A lone cow ambled about.</p>
        <p>In less than five minutes, the o{)eration was over. A collective si^ and a smattering of applause and cheers went up from the crowd as the doctor pulled the brass-colored round from Pok Sarims jaw and gingerly rushed it to a nearby sandbag container.</p>
        <p>The operation went so quickly that the army ordnance officer who was to take charge of the grenade showed up after the doctor had dis|)osed of it.</p>
        <p>By HOLGER JENSEN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>TRIPOLI, Ubya (AP)  President Moammar Khadafy has retaliated against the Washington oU conference by completing the nationalization of the Libyan properties of three American oU com{)anies.</p>
        <p>The fresh slap in Americas face, as Radio Tri{&amp;gt;oli termed it, promised stormy weather later this week for Egypts pro-posal to ease the Arab oil embargo against the United States. The pro{x&amp;gt;sal will be argued at a meeting of the Arab oil nations o{)ening Thursday in the Libyan capital.</p>
        <p>Khadafy last September took control of 51 {&amp;gt;er cent of all foreign oil holdings in Libya. A decree Monday issued by his Revolutionary Command Council ordered nationalization of the other 49 {)er cent of the California Asiatic Co., owned by Standard Oil of California; the American Overseas Petroleum Co., owned by California Asiatic and Texaco; and the Libyan-American Oil Ck)., owned by Atlantic Richfield.</p>
        <p>Libyan-American is a minority partner in Wn Exxon concession in Libya, but oil sources said Exxons holdings were not affected by the nationalization decree.</p>
        <p>The nationalized properties produce 124,(XX) barrels of crude oil a day, or about five i&amp;gt;er cent of Libyas total daily production of more than two million barrels.</p>
        <p>The other American com-{)anies o{&amp;gt;erating in Libya are Mobil, which produces 120,000 barrels a day; Oasis, jointly operated by Continental, Marathon, Amerada Hess and Royal Dutch Shell, and producing 700,000 barrels; Occidental Petroleum, 370,000 barrels; Amoco</p>
        <p>Abuses Denied By Duke Power</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  The president of Duke Power Co. has branded as malicious charges and outright lies charges brought against the big utility by a student funded consumers group.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Public Interest Research Group (PIRG) issued a lO^ge re{N)rt at a news conference Monday that asserted Duke was guilty of a multitude of abuses stemming from its mismanagement and discrimination against the average citizen. It said Duke does not deserve the 17 {&amp;gt;er cent rate increase it has requested of the state Utilities Commission.</p>
        <p>Duke President Carl Horn Jr. said in a pre{&amp;gt;arcd statement:</p>
        <p>It is unfortunate that just any group can come along with no stake in the community and unanswerable to anyone and place malicious charges and outright lies before the public during a time of national crisis and whoi people are uncertain about the future.</p>
        <p>In declining to reply to PIRGs s{)ecific charges, Horn said, A rate case is just like a court case and we do not think its ethical to get involved with these people at this time.</p>
        <p>FEATURING</p>
        <p>Rose Bay Oysters</p>
        <p>(Shelled &amp;amp; Unshelled)</p>
        <p>Crab Meat All Kinds of</p>
        <p>Fish</p>
        <p>SPECIAL OFFER</p>
        <p>5c off per povndon any fish pvrcMsedl</p>
        <p>Simply bring this ad with you.</p>
        <p>IMwrsHj. Seafmi</p>
        <p>14tti A diaries St., Oreenvillo, N.C hours: 9tM AM. UNTIL TiW ^M.</p>
        <p>(Standard Oil of Indiana), whose daily production of 6,(100 barrds was sus{)ended by the Arab oil embargo because it went to the United States.</p>
        <p>The decree said the Revolutionary Command Council would set up a committee to determine com{)ensation for the com{&amp;gt;anies. It probably will be based on the net book value of the comi&amp;gt;anies, which is usually considerably bielow the real value to reduce taxes.</p>
        <p>Tri{x&amp;gt;li Radio said the nationalization was Col. Khadafys practical reply to a message last week from President Nixon explaining the aims of the Washington parley that opened Monday.</p>
        <p>The broadcast called the meeting of oil-consuming nations provocative and said:</p>
        <p>Revival Series Continues Here</p>
        <p>A revival is continuing through this weekend at the United Church of God.</p>
        <p>Speakers are the Rev. Leon Morris of Greenville and the Rev. Ruth Gann of Seven Springs. The public is invited, according to the ()astor, the Rev. Woodrow Tew.</p>
        <p>We will not be deceived by U.S. Secretary of State Henry Kissingers smile and diplomacy. We will remain true to our Arabism and will cratinue to deal strong blows to the monopolistic American interests. State Department officials in Washington said that, if Libya had seized the oU com{&amp;gt;anies holdings for political purposes, they would encourage lawsuits against the Libyan government. Several com{Mmies whose assets were seized earlier by Khadafy have begun action in various courts.</p>
        <p>No Pushing By The Passengers</p>
        <p>HOUSTON (AP)  None of the 16 {Mtssengers got out and pushed when the vriiicle in which they were riding ran out of gasoline Monday.</p>
        <p>They were prisoners being driven from the downtown county jail to the Harris County Rehabilitation Center near Humble.</p>
        <p>A sheriffs deHity was driving the vehicle. He radioed for help.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Utilities Ck)mmission will hear their criticisms at the rate hearing, Horn continued.</p>
        <p>Two PIRG s{x&amp;gt;kesman said their report was fully documented. He added that it was based on data from records of Duke Power Co., the Federal Power Commission and utility ex()erts from North Carolina and several neighboring states.</p>
        <p>The PIRG report contends that:</p>
        <p>Duke pays exhorbitant salaries and consultant fees and is wasteful in ex-[)enditures for advertising and sales ex{)enses, charities, trade associations and lobbying.</p>
        <p>That increases in the price of coal the firm wants to pass on to consumers could be reduced if Duke settles the coal miners strike at a Duke subsidiary in Harlan Ck)unty, Ky.</p>
        <p>Dukes rate structure is obsolete and "discriminatory against the small consumer in that high volume users of electricity are given rate discounts.</p>
        <p>Dukes board of directors now consists of men with numerous connection to big banks and financial institutions that set self-serving profit rates.</p>
        <p>Hearings On Fertilizer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A Senate Agriculture subcommittee is preparing to investigate the antici{&amp;gt;ated shortage of fertilizer and its implications on the food supply.</p>
        <p>Sen. George McGovern,' chaimum of the subcommittee on agricultural credit and rural electrification, will chair hearings Feb. 19 as the o{)ening {)hase of the probe.</p>
        <p>Thirty {)er cit of wir nations total production of field crops is directly attributable to the availability and a{)plication of fertilizer, McGovern, D-S.D., said in a statement today.</p>
        <p>When one considers the fact that our reserves of wheat are at 27-year lows and expected ' carryovers of com will be down to somewhere betwem 400 million and 600 million (bushels) this marketing year, the importance of reaching our production goals becomes all too obvious.</p>
        <p>Whether we are able to reach those goals will be determined not only by weather but also by the availability of essential fertilizer supplies, McGovern added.</p>
        <p>He noted that, while planted acreage is ex{)ected to increase sharply this year, the Agriculture De{&amp;gt;artment is predicting a seven i&amp;gt;er cent shortage of nitrogen fertilizer, while the Fertilizer Institute estimates the shortage at twice that figure.</p>
        <p>Remove</p>
        <p>Coins In Seal's Stomach</p>
        <p>PORTLAND, Ore. (AP) - A stomach o{)eration on Blimp, a seal at the Portland Zoo, yielded one dime, four nickels and sixteoi {&amp;gt;ennies.</p>
        <p>Veterinarians said one seal died last year from eating coins" and other metal objects thrown to him. by zoo visitors.</p>
        <p>Diesel fud, which last year sold for approximately 19.9 cents per gallon 18 selling today for between 35 and 38 cents.</p>
        <p>Gasdine, used to iwwer many mechanized tobacco harvesters ha$ risen from 31.2 cents last year to a present price of 43.2 cmts {)er gallon for agricultural use.</p>
        <p>Fertilizer, vriiich last year sold for around |60 per ton is bringing anywhere from $98 to 1130 per ton and the price is. changing regularly.</p>
        <p>Farmers in the area questioned about their planting intentions stated they were planning to tiy and produce their maximum {Mundage.</p>
        <p>Ralph Tucker , a local grower who last year grew 75 acres of tobacco feels the 10 per cent increase will be hard to break even on considering the present price structure.</p>
        <p>Tucker stated he felt a|&amp;gt;-proximately 5-10 {&amp;gt;er cent of the growers in his area would not try to produce their maximum {Mundage.</p>
        <p>Ex{)ort tobacco com{&amp;gt;anies are urging farmers to produce their maximum {wundage because of the increased need of tobacco to Jill export buyers needs.</p>
        <p>Tucker stated he felt he broke even on last years 10 per cent increase as prices did not rise pro{)ortionately compared with the increase in production cost.</p>
        <p>Another local grower, Wayne Stokes, who last year planted 103 acres, feels this years 10 per cent increase will not {&amp;gt;ay for itself unless prices are considerably higher.</p>
        <p>Stokes stated many growers in his area will not produce their maximum poundage this year.</p>
        <p>Last years crop saw approximately a two cent increase in the average price {&amp;gt;er pound paid.</p>
        <p>Die 1973 crop averaged 89 cents per pound, and the average cost of growing an acre of tobacco was approximately $1,100.</p>
        <p>Farmers who must increase their acreage will face the</p>
        <p>toughest battle in trying to break even on the increase in poundage, vliile farmers who try to increase their poundage per' )Bcre yield will stand more jchance in making a profit on the Increase.</p>
        <p>According to the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Agents, the average grower produces between 2,100 to 2,200 {xmnds per acre while tobacco teat plots have produced as much as 2,500 pounds maximum yield with proper management.</p>
        <p>In producing more pounds on more acreage the farmar increases his cost by spending more for fuel, fertilizer and labor to work the extra acreage while the producer getting more pounds i&amp;gt;er acre is working the same land area for a smaller increase in {noduction cost.</p>
        <p>Chester Worthington Jr., a grower who last year harvested 245 acres, feels the 10 per cent increase will not cause a large increase in production cost for growers who last year over sold their poundage allotment.</p>
        <p>Instead of having their salable poundage reduced by 10 percent this year, the, over-seller this year can sell the same number of pounds as he did last year.</p>
        <p>Watch Your</p>
        <p>FAT-GO</p>
        <p>Lose ugly excess weight with the sensible NEW FAT-GO diet plan. Nothing sensational Just steady weight loss for those that really want to lose.</p>
        <p>A full 12 day supply only $2.50. Ask Eckerd's drug store about the FAT-GO reducing plan and start losing weight this week.</p>
        <p>Money back in full if not completely satisfied with weight loss from the very first package.</p>
        <p>DON'T DEELAY gau FAT-aO today.</p>
        <p>Only $2.50 at</p>
        <p>Eckerd's Drug Store</p>
        <p>Bobs TV 74 Sale</p>
        <p>NOW IN PROGRESS</p>
        <p>DRASTIC REDUCTIONS ON ENTIRE STOCK</p>
        <p> WHIRLPOOL</p>
        <p> RCA</p>
        <p>KITCHEN AID</p>
        <p>ZENITH</p>
        <p>SONY</p>
        <p>Bobs TV &amp;amp; Appliance</p>
        <p>AYDEN, N.C.</p>
        <p>CARPET SALE</p>
        <p>Save on Shag and Sculptures</p>
        <p>Shag</p>
        <p>Save 37%</p>
        <p>399</p>
        <p>PRAYING FOR PEACEAn elderly Cambodian woman prays for peace as she seeks shelter in a ditch in the family vegetable garden during a Khmer Rouge rocket attack on Phnom Penh. Her home, in background, was destroyed in the attack. Tuesdays rocket and artillery attack may have left up to 10,000 homeless. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>ZALES</p>
        <p>Our People Make Us Number One</p>
        <p>your heart's in the right idace: Zales!</p>
        <p>a. Sterling silver puffed heart, matching</p>
        <p>18 rope chain, $12.95.</p>
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        <p>18" rope chain, $8.95. ,</p>
        <p>Zales Revolving Charge  Zales Custom Charge BankAmericard  Master Charge American Express  Layaway</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaia Slioppiiis Center (Open IS A.M. To t P.M. Monday Thro Saturday) Phone 7SS4141</p>
        <p>Was $6.79</p>
        <p>Sq. Yd.</p>
        <p>Preview</p>
        <p>Vibrant nylon pile, almost 1-inch deep. 6 Colors.</p>
        <p>Sculpture</p>
        <p>Save 22%</p>
        <p>Was $4.99</p>
        <p>388</p>
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        <p>Durable shed-resistant nylon yarn. 7 Colors.</p>
        <p>Sculpture</p>
        <p>Save $4 per yd</p>
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        <p>Nylon pile carpet resists shedding and fuzzing. 5 Colors.</p>
        <p>Call Today for a FREE Estimate</p>
        <p>Installation and Tran.sportation not included.</p>
        <p>^Prices in Effect through March If. 1974</p>
        <p>Use Sears Easy Payment Plan</p>
        <p>Vlfest End Shopping Center Phone 75A-21lTf Open Daily 9 A.M. Untile P.M.</p>
        <p>Sears</p>
        <p>SEARS, RCBVCK AND Ca</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0003" />
        <p>Local Fine Arts Festival Set</p>
        <p>Jaycettes Entertain Husbands</p>
        <p>ANNUAL VALENTINE BALLGreenville Jaycettes entertained their husbands Saturday night at the Ramada Inn. Music was provided by the August Tide for the approximately 100 people in attendance.</p>
        <p>Among the couple attending were, left to right, Mr. and Mrs. Chip Earnhardt ami Mr. and Mrs. Glen Fisher. Mrs. Earnhardt was chairman of the annual event and Mrs. Fisher is president of the Jaycettes.</p>
        <p>Ival is part of the Arts Greenville Womans Club and the Junior Womans Gub will cosponsor a local Fine Arts Festival March 2 at the Womans Gub building.</p>
        <p>The festival is aprt of the Arts Department program of the N. C. Federation of Womms Gubs. Contests are held every year on a local, district and state level.  The District Fine Arts Festival will be held in Greenville March 9 with the Womans Gub and the Junior Gub as cohostesses. Mrs. George Clapp and Mrs. Sue Vincent will serve as co-chairmen for the event.</p>
        <p>Students of city and county high schools are eligibly to participate in the categories listed below. All entries mint be pre-registered and ai^lication blanks may be obtained from chairmen of each category.</p>
        <p>The following categories are open to high school students: Sallie Southhall Cotton</p>
        <p>Mother Concerned About Son s Image</p>
        <p>iSSSS^</p>
        <p>iOeoA -</p>
        <p>all aroused. Its not like she doesnt know what shes doing either. She does it on purpose.</p>
        <p>Now I find myself hanging around her place, and I know this is not going to get me anywhere but in trouble. Dont tell me to stay away from her. I know thats what I should do, but I keep finding reasons to hang around her. Shes a good looking lady for her age, and half of me says, Stay and half of me says, Run.</p>
        <p>Have I got a problem or not? HALF AND HALP*</p>
        <p> DEAR HALF: You bet you have. But youre bright enough to see it coming, and wise enough to ask how to head it off. Listen to the half with the brains in it, and stay as far away from Mrs. Friendly as you can.</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>c it74 Dv,ciiK(a TriiMac-N. Y. Nws Synd., Inc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I have a 2-year-old son, and whenever we are in public a stranger is sure to say, My, what a cute little girl! This happens even when hes wearing his football suit.</p>
        <p>I never dress him like a girl. His hair is cut like most boys his age, but what really disturbs me is after I correct people, they go right on saying, What a beautiful little girl he would make.</p>
        <p>My son is learning the difference between boys and girls, and when people mistake his sex, they confuse him. I worry about what will happen to his development and self-image.</p>
        <p>Abby, please tell people to keep such comments to themselves. There are other mothers who have the same problem, so please print and Ill get 10 copies to hand to thoughtless people. MOTHER OF AN ALL-BOY BOY</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: An 18-year marriage has me bored stiff and dissatisfied. A moderate income provides adequate clothes, food and a small home with nothing left for my purse, vacation trips and those extra wants. People say, Count your blessings, but I ask myself, Am I supposed to be satisfied with so little as a home, three healthy, trouble-free kids, a vice-free husband whos home every night, who helps with the housework, embraces, and compliments me daily, and is good in bed [but his age is beginning to rob me of that]?</p>
        <p>Would anyone blame me if I left for a man who can show me some funeven if only for a little while?</p>
        <p>BORED</p>
        <p>DEAR BORED: I would be among those who would remind you to count your blessings. And yes, I would blame you for jeopardizing those blessings for some fiin, even if only for a little while.</p>
        <p>Scholarship: This scholarship - offers four consecutive years ta a state-siqiported institution to a girl grathating ffom an accredited hi|^ school in North Carolina and meeting the required academic and conduct records. For full information ccmtact Mrs. Sally Klingen-schmitt, 752^1776.</p>
        <p>Art:Students may call Idrs. Wellington Gray, TStMWlS, or Mrs. Vincent, 7W-59e2, for rules and regulations for the different categories of worit to be entered.</p>
        <p>Public Speaking; Gub women and stuttents wMiing to compete may obtain information on &amp;lt; topics, rules and regulations from Mrs. Frank Pollard, 758-5773, or Mrs. Barbara Brock, 758-4820.</p>
        <p>Music: Girl vocal, boy vocal, strings, piano, orchestral instrumental are eligible for competition. Telei^one Mrs. W. A. Pollard or Mrs. Bobby Swinson.</p>
        <p>Gafts: Gntact Mrs. George Fleming, 756-1755, or Mrs. Frances Mann, 756-7356, for information and entry blanks.</p>
        <p>Sewing; Mrs. W. E. Avery, 752-5288, or Mrs. Mann, 756-7356, will furnish information.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Gapp and Mrs. Vincent will be assisted by the following District Festival Gmmittee: Mrs. R. P. Rogers and Mrs. Shelly Basnight, publicity; Mrs. Melinda Behr, Mrs. Sylvester Green and Mrs. Joyce Koonce, trophies; Mrs. Wellington Gray, Mrs. R. E. Corbett and Mrs. Vickie Bishop, staging;</p>
        <p>Mrs. H. R.'Phillips, Mrs. EtU Gill, Mrs. Mickie Savage and Mrs. Karen Collier, registration; Mrs. Gray, Mrs. Gaynor Mills, Mrs. J. S. Savage, and Mrs. Brenda Isler, judging arts and crafts; Mrs. James H. Smith, Mrs. T. I. Moore, Mrs. Kay Cox and Mrs. Helen Snyder, reh^hments; Mrs. Ernest Holt and Mrs. Matt Gustafson, hospitality.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, GremvUle, N.C.Tuesday, February 12, I97&amp;gt;-3</p>
        <p>:-j</p>
        <p>At Wit's End</p>
        <p>By Erma Bombeck</p>
        <p>You know the trouble with some women? 'Th^ have no imagination. A neighbor was telling me th&amp;amp;other day that her little boy, Jody, wanted to bring a bull snake home from his vacation.</p>
        <p>What did you tell him? I arted.</p>
        <p>I couldnt think of a reason vliy he couldnt, rfie said, helplessly shrugging her shoulders.</p>
        <p>Are you kidding? I shrieked. A few jjrears ago, my son captured a small slimy specimen in a GAe bottle and I could think of ten reasons for leaving him behind. (The snake, not the boy.)</p>
        <p>). Snakes do not know their own minds. They may jump up and down and think they want to leave their Mommys and Daddys for a fun trip, but after two days away from home, its !ipit-up time.</p>
        <p>2. You would get bored with one another. After all, what can a snake do? Can he chase a ball after you throw it? Gn he walk to the shopping center with you</p>
        <p>on a leash? Gn he walk into a crowded room and keep it that way?</p>
        <p>3. Snakes are a minority , group. Face it. Do you want him</p>
        <p>to feel the pains of discrimination? Wouldnt it break your heart to have his admission refused at Bible School? Or to leave him outside in a Mason jar while you were inside with friends?</p>
        <p>4. Snakes are difficult to paper train.</p>
        <p>5. Snakes adhere to a diet of living things. What haf^ns when he runs out of mice and begins to eye our meter reader?</p>
        <p>6. How would we know if he got a headache?</p>
        <p>7. How would you explain it to him if someone accidentally hit him with a rake?</p>
        <p>8. You would be forcing on him a monks existence. How do you know he doesnt want to date and eventually have a family?</p>
        <p>Did he buy it? asked my</p>
        <p>neighbor bright-eyed. I mean did he realize that there were inherent differences l^ween a ' boy and a snake?</p>
        <p>Not untU I hit him with reasons 9 and 10.</p>
        <p>Which were?</p>
        <p>9. If you put that snake in the car with your mother, she will have a heart attack and drop dead.</p>
        <p>10. Ask yourself, do you want to be a motherless boy roaming through life with a sex-starved, militant, maladjusted snake in a Gke bottle?</p>
        <p>He chose you instead of the snake, right? she asked.</p>
        <p>No, but hes still thinking about it, I said.</p>
        <p>. LEMON CUSTARD</p>
        <p>PIES</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>SIS Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>Annual Card</p>
        <p>Bride-Elect</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHER; Consider it done. And equally damaging to a childs self-image is the little girl who is constantly mistaken for a boy!</p>
        <p>CONFIDENTIAL TO vRGO: It Is not true that people who threaten to commit suicide never do. Your friend needs help. I urge you to involve yourself and insist that she get it. Your Suicide Prevention Center offers free [and excellent] counseling in the Los Angeles area. Tell her to call 381-5111 for help.</p>
        <p>Entertained On Satiurday</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY; I "am a 17-year-old boynearly 18, and Ive always been big for my age. I live with my mother and a younger brother in a nice, friendly neighborhood. Thats the trouble, its too friendly.</p>
        <p>One of my neighbors is my mothers friend. Shes married to a great guy in his forties, and they have two nice kids. Theyre beautiful people, and Mrs. Friendly has always treated me like one of her kidsuntil lately. Shes been petting me, kissing me and running her fingers thru my hair. This was okay when I was 9, but now she gets me</p>
        <p>Problems? Youll feel better if you get it off your chest. For a personal reply, write to ABBY: Box No. 69700, L. A.. Calif. 90069. Enclose stamped, self-addressed envelope, please.</p>
        <p>Pilot Club Entertains At International Dinner</p>
        <p>LAUTARES JEWELERS</p>
        <p>Diamond Setting, Remounting And Repairs Done On The Premises</p>
        <p>Greenville's Only Registered Jeweler</p>
        <p>MEMBtR AMERICAN GEM SOCIETV</p>
        <p>The Pilot Gub entertained several local International families at a covered-dish Valentine dinner party Friday at the Immanuel Baptist Gurch feUowship hall.</p>
        <p>Guests were greeted by Mrs.</p>
        <p>^ Robert Starling, chairman of the clubs Education and International Relations Gnunittee, 'Mrs. John McCarthy, state I chairman of the Educational and 'International Relations Com-i 'mittee for Pilot Intomational,^</p>
        <p>Mrs. George Mann, a committee member, and George Mann, G-Pot.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Preston Fields presided at the registration table. Guntries represented included Germany, Switzerland, Spain, India, Japan, Korea, Italy and the U.S.A.</p>
        <p>Dinner tables were decorated with seasonal flowers, candles and Valentine decorations.</p>
        <p>G-PUot Bob Starling gave the invocalion. Pilot Club Vice President Mrs. Robert L. Smith gave the welcome.</p>
        <p>During the introduction of guests, the following women were recognized for their aid in planning the party with the clubs International Relations Gmmittee; Mrs. Avtar Singh of India; Mrs. Chikara Aizawa of Japan; Miss Hye Young Oh of Korea; Mrs. Manuel Marales of Spain; and Mrs. Leslie Jones of the Pilot Gub.</p>
        <p>Marriage</p>
        <p>Special recognition was given to Dr. Robert Franke of the ECU International Studies Department.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Starling, Mrs. McCarthy and Mrs. Mann led games and awarded prizra.</p>
        <p>Persons having international coBtumn were enouraged to wear them.</p>
        <p>Announced</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Albert Edward Jobin of New Monmouth, N. J., announce the marriage of their daughter, Rose-Anne Elyse, to Judson Eric Whichard Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Judson Eric Whichard of Rt. 1, Steves. The wedding took place Jan 19 at the First Unitarian Gurch, Lin-croft, N. J. The couple are residing in Lake Katrine, N.Y.</p>
        <p>MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9 A.M. TO 12 NOON</p>
        <p>REDUCED RATES LADIES</p>
        <p>(25 years and older, groups of 5 or more)</p>
        <p>^2.25</p>
        <p>Coffee &amp;amp; Donuts included For Resorvations, Gll</p>
        <p>758-2525</p>
        <p>Instruction Availablt</p>
        <p>Party Planned</p>
        <p>Miss Beverly Mills, bride-elect of Garles Stokes Jr., was honored Saturday night with a miscellaneous bridal shower at the Black Jack Pentecostal Free Will Baptist c Church Fellowship Hall.</p>
        <p>Guests were greeted by Mrs. Carolyn Smith and Mrs. Peggy Knight.^ Mrs. Virginia Ann Gurkins presided at the bridal registry. Mrs. Linda Dixon and Mrs. Betty Fornes led the group in several party games.</p>
        <p>The refreshment table was covered with a candlelight lace cloth and featured a centerpiece of red carnations and white pom pons flanked by white burning tapers. White satin bows were attached at the corners.</p>
        <p>The gift tables were decorated with bows and wedding bells and were covered with white cloths.</p>
        <p>Punch was poured by Mrs. Edna Mills and Mrs. Louise Stokes served cake squares.</p>
        <p>The bride-elect was remembered with a corsage of deep pink carnations which complimented her hot pink and white dotted ployester gown.</p>
        <p>Hostesses for the occasion were: Mrs. Smith; Mrs. Dixon; Mrs. Fornes; Mrs. Gurkins; Mrs. Ruth W. Stokes; and Mrs. Elizabeth Braxton.</p>
        <p>Approximately 60 guests attended the occasion.</p>
        <p>Final arrangements were made for the annual card party at the meeting of the St. Peters Womans Club Wednesday evening. </p>
        <p>The event will be held Friday, Feb. 22, at 8 p.m. at the school. The price will be a donation of $1.25 per person.</p>
        <p>Plans were b^un for the St. Patricks Day party to be held at the Moose Lodge Saturday, March 16. Mrs. Ann Butler and MrsvGtherine Tronto are co-chairmen for the affair.</p>
        <p>A committee was formed to nominate new officers for the conuning year, including Miss Ada Jones, Mrs. (jiert Cunningham and Mrs. Flo McGuskey.</p>
        <p>Father Spillane opened the meeting, which was conducted by Mrs. Yvonne Kiernan. Reports were given by Mrs. Gert Gnningham and M:s. Peggy Hill.</p>
        <p>Gpids and a love centerpiece adorned the refreshment table, which was covered with a white lace cloth. Mrs. McGuskey and Mrs. Joe Berry were hostesses for the meeting.</p>
        <p>Birth</p>
        <p>WUUams Born to Mr. and Mrs. Jack WUliams, Tacoma, Wash., a daughter, Wanda Marie, on Feb. 4, 1974, in Madigan General Hospital, Fort Lewis. Mrs. Williams is the former Mary Toler of Farmville.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>Say I Love You!</p>
        <p>With:</p>
        <p>ESTEE LAUDER CHARLES OF THE RITZ</p>
        <p>GERMAINE MONTEIL NORELL</p>
        <p>YVES ST. LAURENT</p>
        <p>With</p>
        <p>Eastern North Carolina Largest and Finest Selection</p>
        <p>guerlain\shalimar</p>
        <p>CHRISTIAN DIOR JEAN NATE' LANVIN</p>
        <p>CHANNEL</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0004" />
        <p>4Hie Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.Tneiday, Febmary 12.-1274</p>
        <p>A Feeling We're Shortchanged</p>
        <p>Following the gas problems of late last week, area mt^rists must feel like drilling for their own el, and service station operators might demand battle stars for their efforts.</p>
        <p>It was that kind of weekend. </p>
        <p> Long lines formed at the few stations that had gas for sale Thursday, Friday and Saturday. At the end of the lines they found higher prices for gas, limits on the amount sold and often that the available gas had run out.</p>
        <p>Chapin Visited White House</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS andROBERTNOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Dwight L. Chapin, President Nixons indicted former appointments secretary who faces up to 20 years if convicted for perjury, recently visited inside the hallowed walls of the White House^ pointing up the strangely enduring relationship between the President and his fallen aides.</p>
        <p>Ordinary citizens are barred from the White House inner sanctum, but Chapin-indicted on four counts of perjury Nov. 29-had no such trouble while in Washington for a federal court appearance. On one occasion, he was closeted with present presidential aides in a senior aides vacant office.</p>
        <p>One aide told us Chapin was paying a courtesy call on old acquaintances. But, coincidental or not, his visit preceded new White House propaganda against deposed White House counsel John W. Dean III. In their campaign against the credibility of the chief accuser of the President and his former aides, Mr. Nixons present lieutenants are pointing to a confrontation in court next Friday (Feb. 15) between Dean and CJhapin.</p>
        <p>A hearing is scheduled that day on a motion by Chapins lawyers to prevent Dean from testifying against C^hapin on grounds  would violate the lawyer-client relationship. The White House has confided to newsmen that devastating crossexamination during the hearing will destroy Dean as the special prosecutors star witness against game much bigger than Chapin.</p>
        <p>Whether Dean  is</p>
        <p>demolished or even appears as a witness next Friday remains to be seen. Beyond dispute is the conscious interrelationship of  two</p>
        <p>separate proceedings; the Presidents defense against impeachment and  the</p>
        <p>defense of his ex-aides, ranging from H. R. Haldeman and John D. Ehrlichman down to Dwight Chapin, in criminal proceedings.</p>
        <p>Elliots Toe</p>
        <p>Former Atty. Gen. Elliot Richardson has been prosmied a political turnout by the militantly  con</p>
        <p>servative Mississippi Republican party when he makes his first political foray there later this month. He decided to stick his toe in Southern political waters to test reactions in hostile country to his possible - presidential candidacy. Richardson, the Boston brahmin who fell in last Octobers Saturday night massacre, is regarded in the South as far left, though in fact he is close to the Republican center. Never-theiess, powerful</p>
        <p>Republicans have (hedged to corral a large audience for him in Biloxi Feb. 25 for a frankly political speech. The chief guarantor: none other than the aggressively conservative C3arke Reed, Republican state chairman who heads the Southern Republican state chairmen.</p>
        <p>Reed feels Richardson, as Secretary of Health, Education and Welfare (HEW), plotted a subtle course for school integration which reversed headlong desegregation and helped make President Nixon a hero throughout the South.</p>
        <p>Richardson originally accepted a nonpolitical date at the University of Mississippi Feb. 24 but then asked Reed to help arrange a political speech as well.</p>
        <p>A footnote: Mr. Nixons animus against Richardson for refusing to help purge Watergate prosecutor Archibald Cox continues unabated. In his list of 1976 presidential prospects last week, the President conspicuously ignored the suave Estonian whom he named Undersecretary of State, Secretary of HEW, Secretary of Defense and Attorney General.</p>
        <p>To Breakfast Or Not?</p>
        <p>Two Republican members of the House Judiciary Committee, now beginning impeachment proceedings, reacted in opposite ways to the Presidents invitation to breakfast last Wednesday.</p>
        <p>The Crowder and Marching Society, an exclusive ingroup of Republican House members, was invited by charter member Nixon to hold its weekly breakfast hieeting in the White^House. Two members of the society, Reps. Thomas Railsback of Illinois and Trent Lott of Mississippi, are also members of the House Judiciary Committee.  i</p>
        <p>Railsback debated with himself, then decided not to attend, in keeping with informal agreement by committee Republicans to stay arms length from the Whit House during impeachment proceedings. But freshman Congressman Lott decided to</p>
        <p>go.</p>
        <p>I dont think we should ostracize ourselves from every White House function, Lott told us, adding that impeachment was scarcely  mentioned during breakfast. But considering the White House campaign suggesting that Judiciary Committee Democrats on record for impeachment should disqualify themselves as jurors, the question of entertaining jurors over fried eggs becomes relevant. On the day of the breakfast, Lott was one of 70 House members who voted unsuccessfully to set a White House-desired April 30 deadline on the committees proceedings.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Pubiished Monday Through Friday. Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers'</p>
        <p>Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>Home Deiivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 12.50</p>
        <p>By Mail One Year  $30.00</p>
        <p>Six Months  15.00</p>
        <p>Three Months  7.50</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED P^ESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to 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 publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>UNfFED PRESS INTERNAnONAL</p>
        <p>Advertising rates and deadlines available pon request Membo' Audit Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>The lines of cars formed at every station which had any gas to sell late last week,and, while there were reportedly some unpleasant incidents, most motorists seemed to be willing to wait their turn patiently in hopes of getting enough fuel to keep their autos running through the weekend.</p>
        <p>And where was the gas that we should normally be getting? Well, there was a strong feeling that North Carolina, which historically has had lite political clout in national politics, was as usual not getting its share. There was also a feeling that Eastern North Carolina was getting the least of what was available to the state.</p>
        <p>There was some indication that maybe North Carolina was being short changed on gas, but that something would be done about it.</p>
        <p>Federal Energy Director William E. Simon said changes would be made in the fuel allocation formula to shift some gas from well supplied arieas to those which were running short. North Carolina was one of those which will receive increased supplies.</p>
        <p>That, coupled with the fact that the government will soon allow refineries to shift from fuel oil production to gas production, may do something to alleviate the problem in our particular area.</p>
        <p>Last weekend might have been the worse so far for this area insofar as gas supplies are concerned. We dont look for plentiful gas supplies anytime soon, but it is posisible there will be some improvement in supplies.</p>
        <p>Recommending Major Change</p>
        <p>By BILL NOBLITT</p>
        <p>RALEIGH  Mental health services supervised and delivered at the comniunity level instead of at state-run mental hospitals is at the heart of sweeping revision of the system to be outlined in a Mental Health Study Commission report later this month.</p>
        <p>The thrust of an earlier fact-finding report delivered to the study commission chaired by Senator Kenneth C. Royall Jr., D-Durham, was that most (80 per cent) of current state efforts are directed a putting people with mental problems into institutions.</p>
        <p>And those institutions, a team of consultants concluded, are largely colorless, unsafe, unhealthy, and appear more concerned with just holding a client, not treating and releasing.</p>
        <p>That indictment of the present system, delivered last November, called for a shift away from institutional carea shift toward community care with a system structured from the bottom up rather than designed and run from Raleigh.</p>
        <p>New Directions</p>
        <p>A second phase of the rport froni consultants-^psychi-atrists, psychologists, architects, auditorsis due'in late February. It will contain specific suggestions for a new mental health system, and legislative proposals to bring such change about.</p>
        <p>Study commission memr bers are now poring over a draft of that report with an eye to making public what is called for in it by the end of the month.</p>
        <p>In March, Senator Royall expects to  have  the</p>
        <p>legislative proposals ready for introduction.</p>
        <p>Royall said he finds the recommendations generally excellent, but expressed some reservations about willingness of local governments to become as deeply involved in mental health services will be in community organizations with  full</p>
        <p>responsibility for prevention, detection, diagnosis, and treatment.</p>
        <p>Area mental health programs, covering one or more counties depending on population, would be set ujx, with an area board established to supervise the program.</p>
        <p>The board would consist of county commissioners, school superintendents, court, welfare, and health directors, one professional from each field in mental health, and a representative</p>
        <p>of the various associations! involved in mental health.</p>
        <p>Area Programs</p>
        <p>An area director hired by the area board would administer the local program. Contracts would be entered in with any public or private providers of service including state mental hospitals. Clients would be processed and served by the area staffs. Present regional programs operated by the state would be abandoned.</p>
        <p>The area program would be given wide and flexible authority to operate programs and to purchase them from any source. Admission to the system would be through the area office, not the state.</p>
        <p>A pilot project setting up four such area operations in fiscal year 1975 is proposed, and the Mental Health Study Commission would remain functional to oversee th changes.</p>
        <p>These key goals of the new mental health system are contained in the recommendations;</p>
        <p>Raise public awareness of positive mental health and signs of unusual behavior; alter attitudes that retard seeking help; inform people of where help is available.</p>
        <p>The principal thrust for delivery of mental health care services. . .will be centered in community based organizations charged with full responsibility for prevention, detection, diagnosis and treatment (through) planned and coordinated use of owned facilities, other agency services, private providers, and state operated institutions, the report suggests.</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>MISSING PRACTICE</p>
        <p>A world famous pianist is said to have remarked on one occasion that if he neglected to practice for one day he noticed it; if for two days, his Mend? noticed it; if for three days, the world noticed it.</p>
        <p>The same is true in the spiritual life. Prayr is either ci infinity value or of no value at all. Some peofde never resort to prayer until they confront shipwreck. And then they wonder why it is so hard^ to imay.'It takes as much ai^lication and persistence</p>
        <p>to become adept in larayer as in piano jdaying. One days ne^ect of prayer and a man notices it; two days and his frioids notice it; three days and perhaps by that time he will be so firmly oriented in another direction that he b^ins to wonder ..whether prayer isnt all a waste of time.</p>
        <p>Spiritual Bfe cannot be^kept alive without the same kind of assiduous cultivation necessary to maintain Iriiysical skills.</p>
        <p>By Elisha Douglas'</p>
        <p>Sketch</p>
        <p>Future</p>
        <p>In U.S.</p>
        <p>\ oii an* lMM*liy voreistti! You lu*ar? ExoiTstiir</p>
        <p>By JAMES J. KILPATRICK</p>
        <p>The Odds Are On Nixon</p>
        <p>NEW ORLEANSI have bieen on the road lately, flying the rib-eye circuit across the South, and distill this impression from a hundred conversations: Inflation may be Concern No. 1 in this region, but Topic No. 1 is impeachment. In every gathering, the first questions have to do with Richard Nixon; Will the old pro hang on to his title?</p>
        <p>The sports metaphor has unusual application down here. For good or ill, the South in recent years has lost many of its regional distinctions, but it has retained this much: Southerners, as a</p>
        <p>breed, are still wild about sports. The tradition goes back to the first fun-loving Virginian Cavaliers, with their racehorses and game cocks; it is manifested here in New Orleans today in the awesome Superdome, which squats like some massive Buddha over the central city, a $130 million idol for the fans.</p>
        <p>Givoi this obsession, it is not surprising to find that many Southerners look upon impeachment as a kind of novel spectator sport. It is Nixon in this comer and his collective opposition in the other. The Fight of the</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say Who's Complaining?</p>
        <p>(Dunn Daily Record)</p>
        <p>Unable to attack him on any otber score, one or two of the States more liberal newspapers have complained about the Senatorial Candidate Robert Morgan isnt resigning his office as Attorney General until after the primary.</p>
        <p>These same editors who now suggest that Bob Morgan ought to resign didnt suggest that Congressman Nick Galifianakis resign from congress last year when he ran for the United States Sepate. Nick spent more than a years time running while still drawing his $42,000 a year salary (and other thousands in fringe benefits) as a Congressman.</p>
        <p>They didnt suggest that Rep. Jim Holshouser resign from the legislature while he was campaigning for the office of Governor.</p>
        <p>They didnt suggest that Senator Hubert Humphrey, Senator Ed Muskie, or Senator George McGovern resign while they campaigned for the Democratic nomination for President. And they didnt suggest that McGovern resign from the Senate after he got the nomination.</p>
        <p>They didnt suggest that Richard Nixon resign as vice {x:esi(tent when he ran against Senator Jack Kennedy for the White House. Neither did they suggest that Mr. Kennedy resign from the Senate.</p>
        <p>Neither do other local and State officials resign to seek re-election or to run for higher offices.</p>
        <p>We could go one and one. The list is endless.</p>
        <p>The people of North Carolina are smart enough to know that Bob Morgan is following the right course. Hes doing exactly what they elected him to do.</p>
        <p>Its our prediction that he will be nominated and elected as our next United States Senator by one of the biggest majorities ever given a candidate in the history of this State.</p>
        <p>Century, folks, and how do you see the odds? After a few hours of such conversation, a political writer wants to yield to Howard Cosell.</p>
        <p>The approach may sound both cynical and superficial, but it has its advantages. There is this to be said of any sports event, that it is played by rules, that it is subject to referees or umpires, and that it winds up with a decision or a final score. However wildly the fans may disagree with the officials, the outcome is accepted. And there is this above all: No matter how passionately the fans may view a particular event, they understand that a sports event is not the be-all and the end-all. If Tulane loses, the university survives.</p>
        <p>It is no bad thing to look upon impeachment in this fashion. There has been entirely too much apocalyptic fulmination about the state of the President. If the House impeaches Nixon, and the Senate removes him from office, the Republic will survive. The old pro will have been toppled, but this is a familiar fate for old pros. Such an outcome would elate the Nixon haters and crush the Nixon rooters, but so long as the fans had seen a fair match, played by the rules, in, time the event would fade into the record books like last years Superbowlor last years vice president.</p>
        <p>^ What are the rules of this contest? The House Judiciary Committee is attempting to reduce them to writing now. Because not even his worst enemy  has  imputed</p>
        <p>treason to the President, it is clear that under the Constitution he could be impeached only for bribery, high  crimes  and</p>
        <p>misdemeanors. The terms come from the vocabulary of the criminal law. The Con-(Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>By STAN BENJAMIN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - For the United States to be energy-independent by 1980, the U.S. consumer will have to drive a more economical car and pay higher gasoline prices, the Federal Energy Office says. Theres more.</p>
        <p>Energy officials say independence also will mean higher parking fees, ydiicle registra- tion fees and fuel taxes, and maybe a tax on high energyconsuming appliances.</p>
        <p>Industries must cut the energy they use in manufacturing, recycle more of their materials, and shift their schedules to spread their use of electricity more evenly over the calendar and the clock.</p>
        <p>The electric power industry itself must shift more of its plants from burning oil to burning coal, the FEO says. As a result the nation must pt off for five years the achievement of some of its clean-air standards. While all this is going on, coal production must increase 60 per cent, oil production 22 per cent, natural gas production 15 per cent, and atomic power  now only a small contributor  must multiply tenfold.</p>
        <p>All this, it turns out, is what President Nixon meant by Project Independence, his call last month for a drive to make the United States self-sufficient in energy by 1980.</p>
        <p>The Federal Energy Office unveiled the details Monday in a background paper issued at the conference of major oil-consuming nations.</p>
        <p>With the sudden tripling of foreign oil prices since last October, the FEO paper said, it is clear that there has been a (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>40 Years</p>
        <p>By SUSAN PRICE -February 12.1934</p>
        <p>Committees from the Greenville Womans Club will begina drive to raise funds to wipe out or decrease the indebtedness on their club building in the city so the building will not have to be given up.</p>
        <p>The .distressing financial condition of the club was brought to the attention of a group of local businessmen here two weeks ago and at that time, $1,000 was pledged to aid in the drive to raise funds.</p>
        <p>The indebtedness as set forth was $7,500 and if the entire amount is not raised, it is hoped that the drive will cut the debt down to a point that the ladies will be able to carry on and retire the unpaid balance out of the clubs income.</p>
        <p>North Carolina Republicans gathered in Greensboro today to observe Abraham Lincolns birthday anniversary with their annual Lincoln Day Dinner. The principal speaker for tonights dinner will be Harold McGurgin of Kansas, a representative from Congress and the Republican leader in the House.</p>
        <p>The girls basketball team of the Greenville high school will play the Wilson team Thursday evening at 7:30 p.m. in the school gymnasium.</p>
        <p>President's Economic Gamble</p>
        <p>By BILL NEIKHIK Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - In announcing an end to most wage-price controls by May 1, President Nixon is gambling that the price exjdosion ripping through the U.S. economy will subside by midyear.</p>
        <p>The evidence is not altogether clear that the l(mg-awaited relief is at hand, even if the econorny slows to near-recession levels as expected.</p>
        <p>Some economists already are comparing Nixons decision to dit^ mandatory controls in all but the oil and health industries by May l with his ill-fated move to Phase 3 controls a year ago.</p>
        <p>That switch from mandatory to largely voluntary restraints on wages and</p>
        <p>{x-ices brought on such a wave of price increases that _ the dollar was devalued and the stock market shaken.</p>
        <p>Eventually, Nixon went back to mandatory controls, freezing prices for 60 days. The second freeze, however, did not meet the same success of the first (me in 1971. There were widespread shortages of beef and pork, ad prices (rf other meat went up sharply.</p>
        <p>Nixon followed the freeze with a tough wage-price system that squeeted the profits of businesses, yet failed to check the surge of prices.</p>
        <p>, The Presidents eccmomic advisers declared wage-price controls counter-productive and ail but useless in their annual economic report to Congress a week ago. They said Nixon would continue to</p>
        <p>decontrol the economy and eventually move to a free market.</p>
        <p>The White House strategy is clear. It believes the worst of the price increases are occurring now, largely because the Cost of Living Council is removing controls gradually, industry by industry.</p>
        <p>they will not raise prices sig--nificantly this year, those pledges could go down the drain if the economy changes drastically.</p>
        <p>The admin^rati(m plans to tteep the Cost of Living |ouncil as a watchdog over prices and wages. But outside of oil and health services, it would have little power.</p>
        <p>Many officials believe, however, that a number of companies that have had their profit margins squeezed by Nixons controls will now try to make up for lost time by raising prices.</p>
        <p>Although the Cost of Living Council is trying to extract nromises from industries that</p>
        <p>The administrations position is that no standby power to control wages and {x-ices is necessary, and is in fact an inflationary force in itself.</p>
        <p>The administrations projection of a mid-year tapering of price increases is not shared widely in Ccmgress and among economists.</p>
        <p>Yet, the administration is willing to take its lumps on the price front for sevo-al mOTe mwiths, at least.</p>
        <p>The President, who in 1971 said his administration w&amp;lt;Mild break the back of inflation, told Cwigress only a week ago that it takes time to do that Job.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>AgoToday</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0005" />
        <p>Energy Crisis Spurring North Sea Oil Search</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, February 12, 19745</p>
        <p>Varied Legislation Introduced</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM F. WRIGHT</p>
        <p>LONDON (UPI) - The mournful strains of a Scottish nationalist ballad mingle these days with the shattering sound of construction crews building giant oil rigs along the bonnie banks of Scotland.</p>
        <p>"Scotland is waiting, North Sea waves breaking</p>
        <p>"Oil rigs are taking the wealth from our shores,"</p>
        <p>The ballad, sung by conservationists and Scots protesting exploitation of the North Sea by American and British oil companies, laments the day when oil gushed forth from a lone wildcat well off Aberdeen on a stormy October day in 1970.</p>
        <p>So unlikely was the location that more than three years later Britons and continental Europeans, long accustomed to drawing 80 per cent of their oil needs from the Middle East, are only now beginning to grasp the idea of an oil boom on their very doorstep.</p>
        <p>The oil companies, urged on by the world energy crisis and the prospects of huge profits, are redoubling efforts to transform the North Sea and Scotlands bordering shores into what oil men say will be the Texas of Europe.</p>
        <p>Vast Oil Basin</p>
        <p>Geologists estimate that beneath the North Sea likes a vast basin of oil with commercially recoverable reserves of at least 1 billion tons, and probably much more.</p>
        <p>Peter Odell, professor of economic geography at the Netherlands School of Economics, estimates that by 1985 the North Sea will supply at least 44 per cent of western Europes total energy needs, making Europe far less vulnerable to the dictates of Arab states prepared to use oil as a political weapon.</p>
        <p>The British sector alone, according to government estimates, is expected to yield an annual 103 million tons by 1980, rendering Britain nearly self-sufficient.</p>
        <p>The first piped oil from the British sector is expected to reach shore early next year at Cruden Bay, north of Aberdeen, from British Petroleums Forties field, where the sectors first commercial deposits were</p>
        <p>Earnings By Firms Cited</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Springs Mills has announced sales of $538.7 million for 1973, the highest in the 85-year history of the textile and fooids company.</p>
        <p>Sales gained 35 per cent over the previous year. They include 43 weeks of operations of Sea-brooks Foods, Inc., which was acquired in March.</p>
        <p>. Net income was $19.26 million, the third highest in history. It was up 45.4 per cent.</p>
        <p>Eaming;s per share were $2.22, compared with $1.53.</p>
        <p>Jefferson Pilot Corp. has announced earnings of $2.13 a share in 1973, a gain of 30 cents or 16.3 per cit over the previous year. Earnings were 161.2 million, compared with with $44 million. Jefferson Pilot is the parent company of the Jefferson Standard Life Insurance Co. and the Pilot Life Insurance Co.</p>
        <p>The Washington group, a textile, food and retail group, reported at Winston-Salem that earnings per share for the year ended last Nov. 3 were ^.19, compared with a loss of 60 cents the year before.</p>
        <p>Elamings of $3.04 million compared with a loss of of $575,007. Sales,of $64.9 million were up 127 per cent.</p>
        <p>The Washington group operates 11 textile facilities, two food-products plants and more than 100 convenience food stores in North Carolina and Virginia.</p>
        <p>discovered in 1970.</p>
        <p>Smaller quantities of oil will probably start coming ashore by tanker later this year.</p>
        <p>Foreign Dominance</p>
        <p>The smaller Norwegian sector. where the first North Sea oil was discovered in 1968, is already providing Norway with more than 40,000 barrels a day.</p>
        <p>By 1980, the Norwegian sector is expected to provide between 50 and 70 million tons annually, enough to supply Norways needs and 42-62 million tom to other European countries.</p>
        <p>American and other foreign-owned oil companies hold about 58 per cent of the exploration and production licenses granted by the British government since 1970, with the rest allocated to British companies.</p>
        <p>Such foreign dominance, the relatively modest 12 per cent royalty the government says it will charge on production oil and liberal tax concessions for companies operating in the North Sea, have brought the government under fire from a parliamentary watchdog committee and Scottish nationalists.</p>
        <p>Spurred by such incentives and potentially big profits, the oil companies and firms providing support facilities on shore are pumping about 300 million pounds ($700 million) annually into Scotland, one of Europes poorest regions.</p>
        <p>New Jobs</p>
        <p>The oil boom is expected to create 100,000 new jobs in Scotland over the next 10 years. More than 10,000 men are already employed in North Sea jobs, including 2,000 on offshore rigs.</p>
        <p>Much of the money is swallowed up by the high cost of building and operating giant rigs lashed frequently by 100 mile-an-hour winds and 70 foot waves. .</p>
        <p>Weather conditions out here are rougher than anything I have ever seen, said Carter Hughes, a veteran oilman from Tulsa, Okla., supervising Occidental Petroleums Ocean Victory exploration rig off the Scottish coast.</p>
        <p>At least 20 persons have been killed so far in the search for North Sea oil. A Mobil rig</p>
        <p>Congress Is Low-Graded</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  A recent Harris survey has given Congress the lowest marks for performance in more than 10 years of polling about the federal legislative branch.</p>
        <p>The survey reported Monday that 69 per cent of those asked, "How do you rate the job (on-gress is doing?" said fair or poor. Twenty-one per cent said good or excellent, and 10 per cit were not sure.</p>
        <p>On individual topics. Congress received an 88 per cent negative rating on (xmtrolling inflation, 83 per cent negative rating on keeping spending under control and 82 per coit negative in inspiring confidence in government.</p>
        <p>Faring better was William E. Simon, the man in charge of the nations energy policy. He received a 35 per cent negative rating and a 26 per cent positive rating. But 39 per cent were not sure how to rte his performance.</p>
        <p>Cox To Speak At PTA Meet</p>
        <p>Glenn Cox, City School superintendent, will speak to the South Greenville PTA Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in the school auditorium.</p>
        <p>President Don BaUey urged all parents to attend. Final plans for the annual fund-raising spaghetti supper, to be hdd Feb. 28, will be made, he said.</p>
        <p>operating off the Orkney Islands sank during q recent gale shortly after its 56-man crew was evacuated by helicopter.</p>
        <p>On shore, the gladed glens and copper-green lochs of the Scottish Highlands and lowlands that once echoed to the wail of bagpipes now ring with the sound of construction crews building steel and concrete production rigs needed to get the oil flowing in commercial quantities.</p>
        <p>Conservationists Worried In the headlong rush for oil, conservationists fear the regions scenic beauty will be spoiled, sea birds will be driven from nesting grounds, oil spillage will blacken beaches.</p>
        <p>On Scotlands west coast, conservationists are fighting plans to establish a huge rig-building yard on the banks of Loch Carrn near the village of Drumbuie, where life among the handful of white-washed crofts has remained virtually unchanged down through the centuries.</p>
        <p>The Chicago Bridge and Iron Co., abandoned plans to build a rig yard on the scenic shores of Dunnet Bay in the Highlands, although a government inquiry ruled against conservationists who opposed the project.</p>
        <p>Plans to transform the Shetlands Islands, off Scotlands northern tip, into a major oil firm base have met with strong opposition from many of the 17,600 islanders.</p>
        <p>"We prefer to reniain uncivilized and remote, said Edward Bruce, a Shetland barber. You cnna buy peace. You canna buy quiet. We would be far better off without these oil people.</p>
        <p>Reception Hostile Molly Murray Threipland, a housewife from Yankton, S.D., who with her Scottish cattle-breeder husband helped lead the fight against the Dunnet Bay project, says:</p>
        <p>It will be monstrous if the government lets the oil companies spoil the beauty of Scotland.</p>
        <p>In areas where rig-building firms have been allowed to operate, the reception from local residents has been generally hostile.</p>
        <p>An American firm operating a yard at Nigg Bay, north of Aberdeen, has been forced to house its 700-man work force on board two old Greek liners anchored in Cromarty Firth because local authorities have refused permission for new housing in the area.</p>
        <p>There are no recreational facilities on board and the men spend a lot of their time drinking and brawling, a worker billeted on one of the ships said.</p>
        <p>Prices Soaring In Aberdeen, base for most firms operating in the North Sea, the oil boom has sent feal estate and other prices soaring.</p>
        <p>American oilmen sporting ten gallon hats and cowboy boots saunter along Abendeens sidewalks. A mens underwear shop catering to Americans flies the Stars and Stripes. The citys 1,000-strong American community has established its own school and country club, giving rise to civic criticism that the Americans should mix more with the local population.</p>
        <p>Surveying the bustle of a rig yard from a heath-clad hillside near Inverness, Jock McTavish, a local game warden, shook his head sadly and said;</p>
        <p>Maybe its a wee price to pay for progress, but I canna stop hoping things would stay as they were.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - Legislation to give union woiicers a new bargaining tool, to build heliports at lu&amp;gt;spitals in the state and to battle alcoholism have been introduced in the North Carolina General Assembly.</p>
        <p>R^. Thomas B. Sawyer, D-Guilford, introduced a bill in the House Monday night to</p>
        <p>amend North Carolinas right to work law to permit unions to bargain for an agency shop.</p>
        <p>Under the agency shop, workers have the right not to join the union, but they still may be required to pay special fees to support the cost of collective bargaining.</p>
        <p>Sawyer told newsmen that</p>
        <p>North Carolina has denied labor the right to bargain collec-</p>
        <p>noir introuced a bill to appropriate $250,000 to be used to</p>
        <p>tively as set forth in the Wag^ build heliports at licensed hos-</p>
        <p>Solzhenitsyn Fails Answer Summons</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your lndpend0nt Carrier If You Aro Unobld To* Roach Him Coll Tho Doily Rofloctor, 752-6166^ Botwoon 6:00 And 6:30 P.M. ^ Wookdoys And 8 'Til 9 A.M.</p>
        <p>On Sundays.</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP) - Author Alexander Solzhenitsyn failed today to answer a summons to the prosecutors office, but the police made no immediate attempt to bring him in.</p>
        <p>Solzhenitsyn, winner of the 1970 Nobel Prize for Literature and an outspoken critic of the Soviet 'government, has been subjected to severe official criticism for his publication abroad of The Gulag Archipelago, an expose of Soviet labor camps.</p>
        <p>He had been ordered to appear at 10 a.m. at the investigative division of the prosecutors office, the Soviet equivalent of the attorney general in the United States.</p>
        <p>As the deadline passed, friends said the writer was at home and had had no further contact with the authorities since he informed them Monday he would not obey the summons.</p>
        <p>In a situation of general illegality which for many years has existed in our country  and the eight-year campaign of personal slander and harassment against me  I refuse to acknowledge the legality of your ^ummons and will not CbhMf for an interrogation to any state organ, Solzhenitsyn said.</p>
        <p>A number of plainclothes po-</p>
        <p>MARTIN RUNNING CHARLOTTE (AP)Rep. James Martin (R-N.C.) today announced his candidacy for reelection to the U. S. House of Representatives from the Ninth Ck)ngressional District.</p>
        <p>licemen were around his apartment building this morning. But they appeared to be there only to observe those going in and out of the building.</p>
        <p>ner,.Act under the Roosevelt administration.</p>
        <p>Its my belief, he added, that one of the reasons the Democratic party is withering on the vine is because of the antilabor legislation weve had in the past.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, 25 House members cosponsored a proposal that would appropriate $2.4 million for use by the North Carolina Alcoholism Research Authority.</p>
        <p>'The bill said the money would be used to begin the total program necessary to eliminate alcoholism as a public health problem. It said approximately 500,000 North (Carolina residents are alcoholics.</p>
        <p>Rep. Daniel T. Lilley, D-Le-</p>
        <p>Inflatable Device For Heart Patients</p>
        <p>By DAN HALL Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP)  A pair of inflatable leggings soon may help some heart patients survive severe cardiogenic shocks, a sudden loss of blood to the heart muscles.</p>
        <p>The rubberized leggings are a series of five connected, inflatable collars. They are synchronized to squeeze blood back toward the heart between heartbeats.</p>
        <p>The device is the first designed to be applied completely outside the body, and it eliminates the present need for dangerous surgery on seriously weakened patients, according to Dr. Lawrence S. (Cohen.</p>
        <p>It will be used on the first cardiogenic shock patient within about six months, said Cohen. He is chief of cardiology at Yale-New Haven Hospital. He has supervised development of the leggings over the past six years.</p>
        <p>Dr. Rene Langou, Cohens assistant, presents a formal report on the project today to the American College of Cardiology in New York City.</p>
        <p>Death comes to about 85 per</p>
        <p>LIKE OLD TIMESThis gas&amp;lt;riine station in a small community south of Floridas state capital is in the midst of a gas war; instead of long lines its business as usual. The owner of the station, D. C. Painter, says his supplier suggested he sell his gas at 52.9 cents per gallon but Painter says its his privilege once he buys it to sell it for what he wants. Even at 43.9 Painter says* he makes a reasonable profit. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>TREAT YOUR VALENTINE TO SUPPER AT</p>
        <p>BUFFET -</p>
        <p>SERVING CREATIVE FOODS</p>
        <p>m Wan SIOHiiis Carter</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>rfwrrmTTTT</p>
        <p>Pi</p>
        <p>FREE BEVERAGE &amp;amp; ii*^CANDY FOR ALL LADIES,</p>
        <p>(Offer Good Thurs., Feb. 14th Only) 4:45 P.M. To 8 P.M.</p>
        <p>cent of the persons stricken by cardiogenic shock, Cohen said. He said the weakened heart, failing to supply enough blood to vital organs, starts a downhill spiral that eventually leads to death.</p>
        <p>We hope this device will tide the patient over the critical period of six to 12 hours.</p>
        <p>The inflatable leggings not only ease the workload on damaged heart muscles but also increase the flow of blood to the cardiac arteries, which supply the heart muscles, and to other vital organs.</p>
        <p>Benjamin Col....</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) fundamental change in the economics of petroleum production.</p>
        <p>In recent years, the report said, U.S. energy production has grown about 3 per cent per year. It must grow about 4.6 per cent per year to achieve energy independence by 1980.</p>
        <p>U.S. energy demand has increased more than 5 per cent annually for the last three years, and the FEO said studies indicated a long-range growth of kbout 3.6 per cent per year, or more.</p>
        <p>The growth of demand must, instead, be cut to 2 per cent a year, the FEO said.</p>
        <p>pitals in the state. The money</p>
        <p>Kilpatrick . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) stitution also speaks of conviction and of trial. I take all this to mean that an impeachable offense must be a criminal offense.</p>
        <p>If this is a reasonable construction, it follows that Nixon might fairly be impeached on such charges as obstruction of justice, evasion of taxes, acceiXance of bribes in the guise of campaign contributions, or the misappropriation of public fun^ to his private benefit. He could not be impeached for such actions as the bombing of Cambodia or the impoundment of various funds.</p>
        <p>Is there probable cause to believe the President has committed an impeachable offense? It seems to be highly doubtful. But if a majority of the I^ouse should vote to impeach, could proof of guilt be produced before the Seante? This strikes me as more unlikely still. As a defendant on trial, Nixon would be entitled to every protection of due process of lawto the presumption of innocence, to cross-examination of hostile witnesses, to the exclusion of hearsay testimony, to a final instruction on reasonable doubt.</p>
        <p>Will the old pro hold his title? I a'm no Jimmy the Greek, but if you want to make book; Three to one the House will not impeach, fifty to one the Senate will not convict. When the lights go down in the congressional Superdome, Nixon will be the winner, and like it or not, still the champ.</p>
        <p>would be provided on a 50-50 matching, basis with local governments and no more than $25,000 of state money would be spent on any one site</p>
        <p>A'heliport is a take off) and landing facility for helicopters.</p>
        <p>In the Senate, A. B. (Coleman Jr., D-Orange, put in legislation that would make simple assault and battery justified if the defendant in such a case could show he was sufficiently provoked with words or gestures.</p>
        <p>A bill introduced in the House would authorize a second superior court judge for the 7th District, which includes Edgecombe, Nash and Wilson counties.</p>
        <p>Sen. Kennedy H. Sharpe, R-Alexander, introduced a joint resolution in the Senate which would put the state on record as encouraging city and county boards of education to involve teachers to the maximum feasible in the operations of the public schools. The measure supports teachers who seek a greater role in determing education policy.</p>
        <p>In the only action on pending legislation, the House passed and sent to the Senate a bill making it a crime for a prison inmate to escape while on a community leave. A loophole in the current law does not provide criminal penalties for inmates who escape while on such leave, \diich is authorized by the Department of Corrections.</p>
        <p>The Senate passed and sent to the House a proposal which would eliminate a requiredment for a 30-day waiting period before a voluntary sterilization operation can be performed.</p>
        <p>Bite!</p>
        <p>Long-holding FASTEETH^ Powder.</p>
        <p>It takes the worry out of wearing dentures.</p>
        <p>TADLOCK INSURANCE AGENCY</p>
        <p>322 Evans Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 758-1165</p>
        <p>INSURANCE FOR</p>
        <p>MOME</p>
        <p>BUSINESS . AUTO</p>
        <p>PRESEN1N3 NEW P74</p>
        <p> - Brilliant Chromacolor Picture  100% Solid-state Chassis  30,000 Volts* of Picture Power</p>
        <p> Power Sentry System</p>
        <p> Solid-state Super Gold Video Guard -Tyner  Chromacojor One-button Tuning</p>
        <p> AFC</p>
        <p>'design average</p>
        <p>EARLY AMERICAN Th MALABAR  E4037M</p>
        <p>Authentic Early American styling. Gallery, decorative end panels and full flaring base. Genuine Maple veneers on top and base. Gallery and end panels of simulated matching wood material. Titan 300V Solid-State Chassis. AFC.</p>
        <p>V. A. Merritt &amp;amp; Sons</p>
        <p>207 Evans St. . Groenvilld, N.C. Phone 752-3736</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0006" />
        <p>^Tkc Dally Reflector. Greraville, N.C.Toesday. February 12. If74</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIQH (AP) (NCDA)  North Carolina egg markets steady Monday; Supplies fully adequate, demand fairly good. Weighted average prices for small lot sales of cmsumer grade eggs in carUms delivered nearby outlets: Grade A large whites 75.73, medium whites 72.72, small whites 68.13.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)(NCDA) Ntnrth Clardina hogs today were 50 cents to mostly $1.00 lower. Tops of 41.5042.50 at Kinston, Benson and Lumberton; 41.00-41.50 Rocky Mount; 39.00-41.00 Wilson and High Falls; 41.25 Mount Olive; 40.00 Salisbury.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH Carolina f.o.b. steady today adequate and</p>
        <p>(AP)North dock broilers with supplies demand good.</p>
        <p>Weights desirable. Estimated slaughter today totaled 1,188,000.</p>
        <p>Nw^ Carolina hens were'*^ steady on heavy types. Supplies adequate and demand fair to good. Heavies, at farm, 15-16 cents, mostly 15.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market retreated again today in the face of a long list of worries about the economic implications of the worlds energy problems.</p>
        <p>The 11:30 a.m. Dow Jones av-a*age of 30 industrial stocks was down 2.59 to 801.31, and declines outnumbered gainers by better than 2-to-l on the New York Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>Technical analysts noted that the market seemed to firm after the Dow Jones industrial average slipped briefly under the 800 level in early trading. On Monday the widely watched index had fallen 16.50 points.</p>
        <p>However, brokers said, concern about the availability and price of oil and a dark economic outlook for oil-consuming countries continued to dominate the market.</p>
        <p>British Petroleum headed the Big Boards most-active list, down V4 at llMs, in trading that included a 100,000-share block at that price.</p>
        <p>Analysts said BP and other oil companies with extnsive North Sea interests were under some selling pressure because of fears that British and Not-wegian governments soon might move to claim larger shares of the profits from North Sea OU.</p>
        <p>Exxon was down 1% to 79%, Phillips Petroleum lost 2 to 47^4, and Gulf Oil was down % at 2IV4.</p>
        <p>CSirysler climbed Va to 16%. Company offcials announced plans for expanded smaU car production, and Chairman Lynn Townsend said he believed the current quarter would be the lowest part of the valley for the auto industry and the economy generally.</p>
        <p>. At the American Stock Exchange, Syntex Was the volume leader, down % at 45%. The Amexs 11 a.m. market value index was down .48 to 93.20.</p>
        <p>'The Big Boards composite index of all its listed common stocks declined .30 to 48.27.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)</p>
        <p>AHisChal</p>
        <p>Alcoa</p>
        <p>AmAirlin</p>
        <p>AmBds</p>
        <p>AmMotors</p>
        <p>AmT&amp;amp;T</p>
        <p>BabckW</p>
        <p>Beat Fd</p>
        <p>Beth St</p>
        <p>Boeing</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>Burl ind</p>
        <p>CaroPw</p>
        <p>Celanese</p>
        <p>Chmpint</p>
        <p>ChesOh</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CocaCol</p>
        <p>ComwEd</p>
        <p>ContCan</p>
        <p>Delta Air</p>
        <p>DowChem</p>
        <p>Doke Power</p>
        <p>duPoot</p>
        <p>EasKod</p>
        <p>EasAirUin</p>
        <p>Es^ark</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>Firestone</p>
        <p>FlaPow</p>
        <p>FlaPwL</p>
        <p>FordM</p>
        <p>FordMcK</p>
        <p>GenDynam</p>
        <p>GenElec</p>
        <p>GenFoods</p>
        <p>GenMills</p>
        <p>GenMot</p>
        <p>GenTelEI</p>
        <p>GaPac</p>
        <p>Goodrich</p>
        <p>Goodyear</p>
        <p>Grace</p>
        <p>Greyhd</p>
        <p>GulfOil</p>
        <p>Honywell</p>
        <p>IBM</p>
        <p>intHarv</p>
        <p>lntT8.T</p>
        <p>IfitPap</p>
        <p>JOnLau</p>
        <p>KaisAlm</p>
        <p>KayserR</p>
        <p>KraftCo</p>
        <p>Kroger</p>
        <p>Ligg my</p>
        <p>Lock Hd Air</p>
        <p>Loews</p>
        <p>AAarcor</p>
        <p>Mead Cp</p>
        <p>Minn M M</p>
        <p>Mobil O</p>
        <p>Monsiin</p>
        <p>Nabisco</p>
        <p>Nat Distill</p>
        <p>01 in Corp</p>
        <p>Penney</p>
        <p>Pepsi Co</p>
        <p>Phil Mor</p>
        <p>Phi 11 Pet</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>Proct Gam</p>
        <p>Ralston</p>
        <p>RCA</p>
        <p>Rep StI</p>
        <p>Revlon</p>
        <p>Reyn Ind</p>
        <p>Roy C Cola</p>
        <p>St. Regis P</p>
        <p>Rockwll</p>
        <p>Scott Pap</p>
        <p>Sea Cst Lin</p>
        <p>Sears R</p>
        <p>South Co</p>
        <p>Sou Ry</p>
        <p>Sperry R</p>
        <p>Std Brds</p>
        <p>Std Oil cal</p>
        <p>Std Oil Ind</p>
        <p>Stevens</p>
        <p>Texaco</p>
        <p>Textron</p>
        <p>Texas Gulf</p>
        <p>UMC Ind</p>
        <p>Un Carbide</p>
        <p>Un Oil Cal</p>
        <p>Uniroyal</p>
        <p>U S Steel</p>
        <p>Wachovia</p>
        <p>Westg El</p>
        <p>Weyerhs</p>
        <p>Winn Dixie</p>
        <p>Woolworth</p>
        <p>Xerox Cp</p>
        <p>Midday stocks High Low Last 9%  9S4  9S%</p>
        <p>42'/i 9S*</p>
        <p>3SH lO'/i SIA 28H 31</p>
        <p>29'A \3'M 22'A 19H 21Sk 2'/i 16</p>
        <p>54H Id/h</p>
        <p>4246</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>10H</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>30</p>
        <p>13%</p>
        <p>22%</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>I6V4</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>I6V4</p>
        <p>110% 110 30  29%</p>
        <p>24% 24% 41&amp;lt;/4 415 53% 53% 19% 19%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>9%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>13%</p>
        <p>2i%</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>28%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>54%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>110</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>24%</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>53%</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>159% 159% 45% 97% 96'/^ 96% 5%  5%  5%</p>
        <p>26% 26% 26% 80% 80% 80% 15% 15% 15% 26 26 26 25% 25% 25% 43% 43% 43% 11% 11% 11% 19% 19% 19% 54  53% 54</p>
        <p>26% 26% 26% 57% 57% 57% 49% 49  49%</p>
        <p>24% 24% 24% 35% 35% 35% 15% 15% 15% IS 14% IS 24% 34% 34% 15  15  15</p>
        <p>21 Vj 21% 21% 70% 70% 70% 228  226% 227</p>
        <p>24% 24  34</p>
        <p>26 42 18%</p>
        <p>19 12%</p>
        <p>42%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>W% 57% lOSVj 104% 105 48  45% 47%</p>
        <p>71% 69% 71% 82% 83% 82% 39% 39% 39% 18% 18% 18% 34% 34  34</p>
        <p>52% 52 S3 42% 42  42%</p>
        <p>17% 17% 17% 27Vj 27% 27% 27% 27% 27% 15% 15% 15% 30% 39  39%</p>
        <p>83% 83% 83% 16% 16% 16% 46&amp;lt;/4 46  46%</p>
        <p>39&amp;lt;A 28% 38% 51% 51% 51% 28% 27% 27% 90  89%</p>
        <p>27  26%</p>
        <p>27% 26%</p>
        <p>41^ 41%</p>
        <p>32  31%</p>
        <p>12% 12%</p>
        <p>32% 31%</p>
        <p>42% 41%</p>
        <p>8% 8%</p>
        <p>38% 38 33% 32%</p>
        <p>21 20%</p>
        <p>33% 33%</p>
        <p>39% 39%</p>
        <p>17% 17</p>
        <p>Delay ECU Hearings</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Three legislative hearings on the East Carolina University medical school issue were postponed Monday night as the result of efforts to compromise the issue.</p>
        <p>Rep. Carl Stewart, D-Gaston, chairman of the House Appropriations Committee, told the House that the hearings set for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday before the Joint Appropriations Committee would be put off at least until next week.</p>
        <p>The Gaston legislators said that as a result of a meeing held at Greensboro Sunday in search of an ECU compromise, we had a request to delay ttie public hearings so we can see if some accommodation of differences can be reached.</p>
        <p>Stewart said if no agreement is reached, the hearings will be held on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next week.</p>
        <p>The Appropriations Committee has before it three bills dealing with North Carolinas medical education facilities.</p>
        <p>26%</p>
        <p>42&amp;lt;A</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>19%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>43%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>5%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>51%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>69%</p>
        <p>58'%</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>18'A</p>
        <p>19'A</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>42'%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>30%</p>
        <p>5'A</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>21%</p>
        <p>17'%</p>
        <p>70%</p>
        <p>45'A</p>
        <p>51'%</p>
        <p>35%</p>
        <p>12%</p>
        <p>14'A</p>
        <p>69'A</p>
        <p>Truckers To Map Policy</p>
        <p>KERNERSVILLE (AP)The newly-formed Southeastern Independent Operators Association planned to hold a meeting in Kemersville today to discuss what action will be taken in their continuing trucking protest.</p>
        <p>President Wilkie Cheek of Kemersville said the nationwide trucking strike has not brought about the results the truckers had hoped for.</p>
        <p>Weve wasted two weeks of shutdown. We havent accomplished a thing. All weve gotten is a six per cent surcharge which the little man is going to have to pay for.</p>
        <p>The reason we have been holding out, he said, is we cant feel we would be justified in going back o the road with a six per cent surcharge. It wont cover the rising costs of the past year, plus we dont want to go back at the expense of our fellow men.</p>
        <p>The trucking strike has largely broke up nationwide since federal officials agreed to freeze the price of diesel fuel and to allow truckers to add the six per cent surcharge to their costs.  '</p>
        <p>Most Interest Was In MPG</p>
        <p>SAN FRANCISCO (AP)  How many miles to the gallon does it get? was one of the most frequently asked question at the Northern California International Automobile Show this year.</p>
        <p>Some 40,000 visitors over the weekend seemed almost to regard the gas-guzzling big cars as museum pieces, choosing in-__  _  _  _  stead to examine carefully the</p>
        <p>the energy crisis and~ w cur- compact and smaU foreiin en-</p>
        <p>89%</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>31%</p>
        <p>12'A</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>41'A</p>
        <p>8&amp;lt;%</p>
        <p>38%</p>
        <p>32%</p>
        <p>20%</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>107  105'%  106'%</p>
        <p>Following are selected 11 a market quotations:</p>
        <p>Burroughs</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications Ptd.</p>
        <p>Heublein</p>
        <p>Jeff Pilot</p>
        <p>Tri South</p>
        <p>Wickes</p>
        <p>Wachovia Realty Eckerds Central Soya Hardees Integon Fieldcrest Harteras Income OVER THE COUNTERS Combined Insurance Franklin Life ,,NCNB Piedmont Air Little Mint</p>
        <p>Conner Homes  </p>
        <p>Guardian Care  ^</p>
        <p>Planters National Bank Daniel International Corp.</p>
        <p>178'%</p>
        <p>22'A</p>
        <p>45&amp;lt;A</p>
        <p>29%</p>
        <p>21'%</p>
        <p>13'%</p>
        <p>16'%</p>
        <p>14%</p>
        <p>16%</p>
        <p>6'A</p>
        <p>8'A</p>
        <p>16A</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>9'%-% 25% 26'% 32%  33'A 5-'% l'A-% l%-2 3%-% 26 BID 40 41</p>
        <p>Expressway Hit By Fuel Crisis</p>
        <p>ATLANTIC CITY, N J. (AP)  The Atlantic Qty Expressway is feeling the pinch of</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:30 p.m.The Patient Ciicle of The King's Daughters and Sons meets at the home of AArs. Clara Moye Shackell. Assistant hostesses are Mrs. T. I. AAoore and Mrs. Harvey Turnage.</p>
        <p>8:00 p.m.wiinia Council, Degree of Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous meets at AA BIdg. on Farm-ville Hwy.  ^</p>
        <p>WCONCSDAV 9:30 a.m.Pre-luncheon bridge for Welcome Wagon AAembers 9:30 a.m.Morning duplicate bridge at Bank of North Carolina 10:00 a.m.The Brookgreen Garden Club will meet at the home of Mrs. John Proctor.</p>
        <p>n :30 a.m.Welcome Wagon luncheon at Greenville Golf and Country Club 1:30 p.m.Afternoon duplicate bridge at Bank of North Carolina 6:30 p.m.Kiwanis Club meets</p>
        <p>7 00 p.m.-Dlsabled American Vet^ans Chapter No. 37 and Auxiliary meets at Three Steers Restaurant</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Jay-C-Ettes meet 8:00 p.m.Oreenvllle White Shrine meets St Masonic Temple I 00 p.m.Pitt County Al-Anon Group maets at AA BMg. on FarmvllleHwy. Telephone 756J222 or 7564)567 8:00 p.m.The Matron Club will meet at the home of Mrs. Lillian Jones</p>
        <p>8 00 p.m.Pitt Co. Association tor Retarded Children meets at Wahl-Coates School</p>
        <p>MASONICNOnCE Mt. Hermon Lodge No. 35 A.F. an^ A.M. will meet at the Masmiic Hall Tuesday at 7:30 pjn.</p>
        <p>William H. Jtmes, Master Sam Hemby, Secretary</p>
        <p>Steel Desk Swivel Chali</p>
        <p>Side Chair</p>
        <p>tail hours and sales at its one service area, a sp&amp;lt;^e8man&amp;gt; said.</p>
        <p>Harry Ambrose, director of the expressway, said the service area at Folsom, halfway along the 44-mile toll road from Camden to Atlantic aty, will close at 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>The station has been open 24 hours a day, Ambrose said, adding a maximum limit on sales of $3 was imposed last weekend, after a limit of $5 had been in effect some time.</p>
        <p>He said the station has sold 30,000 gallons of gasoline so far this month but has only 20,000 gallons in reserve for the rest of February.</p>
        <p>Elmhurst PTA Meets Thursday</p>
        <p>Elmhurst PTA will have entertainment directed by Physical Education teachers -Charles Grumpier and - Gaiy Hess Thursday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be held in the school audiUNTium.</p>
        <p>tries.</p>
        <p>Two young men admiring a $13,000, 23-foot luxury camper were asked whether they were considering its purchase.</p>
        <p>Are you kidding? answered one. The only place Id be able to camp with this thing is in my own backyard.</p>
        <p>I Obituaries | Fultord</p>
        <p>Decade</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>BETHELMiss Rosa Lee Brown died Sunday in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>She was the daughter of Mrs. Bettie*^rown of Bethel. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Corey</p>
        <p>Mrs. OUie Miller Corey of Rt. 1, Winterville, died Saturday at Htt Memorial Hospital. Funeral services will be conducted Thursday at 4 p.m. at Good Hope FWB Church with Bishop W. H. Mitchell offciating. Interment will follow in the Winterville Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A native of Greene County, Mrs. Corey was a member of Good Hope FWB Church.</p>
        <p>Surviving are three sons, Walter Cwey of Greenville, James E. Corey of Chicod and William Henry Barnhill of Rt. 1, Winterville; three step sons, Bobby, Melvin and Jesse Corey, all of New York; three daughters, Mrs. Lillie Tyson and Mrs. Mary McLai^om, both of Rt. 1, Winterville, and Mrs. Betty McLawhom of Red Bank, N.J.; one step daughter. Miss Essie Corey of Greenville; three brothers, Henry, Willie and A. D. Barnhill, all of Rt. 1, Winterville; 33 grandchildren; 18 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will be at the Norcott and Company Memorial Chapel from 7 p.m. Wednesday until take to the church one hour prior to the funeral. Family visitation will be held Wednesday from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the chapel.</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>FOUNTAINTimothy  B.</p>
        <p>Edwards died Sunday in New Haven, Conn.</p>
        <p>The child was the son of Mrs. Bessie Lee Edwards and the grandson of Mr. and Mrs. Jimmie Lee Edwards of Fountain. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Californias wine industry accounts for more than 70 per cent of the UJS. market.</p>
        <p>Court Balks At Voodoo</p>
        <p>MIAMI, Fla. (AP)  The court was bedeviled when a defense lawyer asked to have the defendant examined by a voodoo doctor or an exqTcist.</p>
        <p>Whats a voodoo itoctor, Circuit Court Judge Dan Satin asked at a hearing Monday.</p>
        <p>One who by training and apprentice and research has learned about the powers of voodoo, reped defense lawyer David Cerf.</p>
        <p>Cerf pointed out that the defendant, Harvey Lee Outler, had been determined competent to stand trial for the murder of his common law wife but the evaluating doctor said Outler believed he was under a curse.</p>
        <p>Cerf said Outler, 36, belived that Mable Young, 31, had used roots to put a curse on him. Police say Outler shot Mrs. Young in the face with a pistol AprU 13.</p>
        <p>Your honor, a voodoo curse is just as deadly as a threat with a gun, Cerf said. And he showed the judge a list of persons he called voodoo doctors, exorcists, or other experts.</p>
        <p>Satin said: I respect any mans rights. But if you think Im going to appoint a voodoo doctor, youve got another think coming.</p>
        <p>Cerfs motion was denied.</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>Chance of showers each day Thursday through Saturday and turning colder Saturday.</p>
        <p>&amp;gt; Jordan ^ </p>
        <p>Miss Lucy Jordan of Rt. 2, Greenville died Saturday in N.C, Memorial Hospital in C^pel Hill.</p>
        <p>Funeral services .will be conducted Thursday at 4 p.m. at Cedar Grove Baptist Church by fte Rev. H. A. Wilson, pastor. Rurial will be in the Jor^n Family Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Miss Jordan, a Pitt County native, lived most of her life in the B^s Fork community. She I was a member of Cedar Grove Church.</p>
        <p>She is survived by Miss Gonnie , Mae Jordan of Rt. 4, Greenville; Mrs. Willie Mae Artis of Rt. 2, Ayden; Amos H. Jordan of Rt. 4, Greenville, aixl Leroy Jordan of Rt. 2, Greenville.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home and family visitation will be Wednesday from 8 to 9 p.m. The family wUl be at the home of Miss Jordan.</p>
        <p>Mattocks</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mrs. Rosa Tyson Mattocks, who died in Wilson Memorial Hospital Thursday, were conducted today at 2:00p.m. at St. J&amp;lt;^n Free Will Baptist Church, with the Rev. J. S. Lucas officiating.</p>
        <p>Burial will follow in Sunset Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>She was a member of the St. John Free Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>She is survived by two daughters, Mrs. Dorothy Tyson of the home and Mrs. A^es Smith of Farmville; three sons, Raymond Streeter of Portsmouth, Va., Lonnie Streeter of Newark, NJ., and James Allen Streeter of Seat Pleasant, Md.; 22 grandchildren; five great grandchildren, two great great grandchildren; two brothers, William H. Tyson of Farmville and Calvin Tyson of Norfolk, Va.</p>
        <p>Tumage</p>
        <p>Mr. David Turnage of Greenville died Monday. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Wainwright</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE-Jarvis CarroU Wainwright, 35, of 103 N. George St., died Monday night.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 3 p.m. from the Church Street Chapel of the Farmville Funeral Home by the Rev. Charles Millard and the Rev. Rod Morgan. Burial will be in Oestlawn Memorial Gardens here.</p>
        <p>Mr. Wainwright is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Peyton Wainwright of Farmville; five sisters, Mrs. Lyman Avery and Mrs. Wright Corbett, both of Farmville, Mrs. James Johnson of Rocky Mount, Mrs. Linwood Proctor of Tar-boro, and Mrs. (Gordon Glidewell of Richmond, Va.; four brothers, Marvin W. Wainwright of Farmville, Charlie P. Wainwright Jr. and Dalton T. Wainwright of Pinetops, and Horace C. Wainwright of New Bern.</p>
        <p>Summarizes Of PTI Service</p>
        <p>. Dr. William E. Fulford, Jr., president of Pitt Technical Institute, summarized the flrst decade of PTI sowice for the Greenville Rotarians Monday night.</p>
        <p>Fulford outlined how the institute had grown from 98 curriculum students in 1964 to over 1060 in 1974. But our true contributions to Pitt County, he assoted cannot be measured .growing in terms of enrollments and Fulford graduate. We have trained local law enforcement, fire department^, rescue squad and other public service personnel.</p>
        <p>Over 10,500 Pitt County adults participated in our extension programs last year alone.</p>
        <p>Additionally, Fulford cited the</p>
        <p>ecmiomic impact of the institution. In fiscal year 1972-73, he stated, "Pitt County allocated $144,316 to PTt. During this same period, the school generated ^,199,853 back into the economy of the county. That is not a bad return on anyones Ux doUar.</p>
        <p>During its first decade, Pitt Tech has exparienced some pains. President listed inadequate facilities as the chief among these difficulties. We have far outgrown our facilities, he said. Currently, we cannot even get all our cticulum programs on campus. We have recently received some construction funds from the state and county.</p>
        <p>but we are still far from being able to me^ present needs for facilities. This must be our priority for the next few years. Fulford concluded his remarks by reiterating the point that PTT was the peoples institution. We exist to provide those educational services which meet the needs and desires of the people of Pitt County. If these nee^ are academic, vocational, or industrial, we strive and itiudl continue to strive to provide the maximum degree of, quality programs to fulfill them. Our plans shall continue to be predicated iqwn your personal interest and involvement in the planning and implementation of all our activities.</p>
        <p>Firms Merge Plans To Build Shopping Center</p>
        <p>FARMVILLEMarvin V. Horton of Horton &amp;amp;. Associates, Inc. and J.Y. Monk, HI of Monk Associates have announced the merger of their plans for Farm-villes new shopping coiter. The shopping cent* will be owned and developed by the two firms as a joint venture to be known as Horton-Monk Associates. It will be called Farmville Square</p>
        <p>MaU.</p>
        <p>The Shopping center will be located on a 24-acre site being purchased from the Davis heirs at the intersection of U.S. 264 and Field Street. It will be constructed in two stages. The first stage will contain 86,000 square feet and parking for 500 cars.</p>
        <p>Tenants for the initial phase</p>
        <p>Auditions Are Set For Taient Pageant</p>
        <p>Girls between five and 17 will_ be interviewed and auditioned for the 1974 State Talent Pageant Sunday at 2 p.m. at the Elm Street Recreation Center in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Residents of Pitt, Hyde, Dare, Beaufort, Bertie, Greene, Martin, Tyrrell, and Washington Ck)unties are eligible in the auditions, which are prerequisite to the International Talent Pageant. A field director from the Pageant headquarters will select six girls to represent their community in the state finals.</p>
        <p>Girls will be required to perform a ta^t display of approximately one to three minutes and wm be taught how to model on the runway.</p>
        <p>The competiti^ is divided into</p>
        <p>Miss Teen  13 to 17.</p>
        <p>At the state level, six girls will be selected for the international pageant and will receive all expenses for the contestant and chaperone, vhile attending the international finals. $3,000 in cash scholarships will be awarded the winners for use in furthering their artistic development.</p>
        <p>Ken Malone, a dancer and dance instructor, is director of the pageant.</p>
        <p>Change In Meeting Place</p>
        <p>three age groins:  Miss</p>
        <p>Petitefive to eight years old; Little Miss  nine to 12; and</p>
        <p>A last minute change of the meeting place for the Greenville Writer Club meeting tonight has been announced.</p>
        <p>The meeting, beginning at 8:00 ,  -  -  p.m.,  will be at the home of Dr.</p>
        <p>Roc root lOnA^aOt &amp;amp;nd Mra. WUUam Stephenson,</p>
        <p>1611 Oaklawn Avenue instead of at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Raynor as previously announced.</p>
        <p>May Apply For Kindergarten</p>
        <p>GRIFTONApplications are now being accepted for kindergarten at Grifton School for the 1974-75 school year.</p>
        <p>To be eligible for the program, a child must be five years old on or before Oct. 16, 1974.</p>
        <p>The pre-school clinic will be held Wednesday, March 20 at the Grifton School from 9 a.m. until 12 noon.</p>
        <p>Applications may be obtained from the Grifton School office.</p>
        <p>An Hour Earlier</p>
        <p>The February meeting of the Greenville Recreation Commission will take place an hour earlier than the regular meeting hour.</p>
        <p>The meeting will be at 7:00 p.m. Wednesday in the office of Recreation Department Director Boyd Lee at Elm Street Recreatirai Center.</p>
        <p>Several items will be discussed at the February meeting, and the public is invited to attend.</p>
        <p>MEETS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>Anderson Lodge No. 11972 will meet tonight at 7:30, at the Masonic Hall on W. Fifth Street.</p>
        <p>Jesse Hooks, N.G. Samuel Hemby^P jS.</p>
        <p>include Winn-Dixie Super Market, Ben Franklin Variety Store, Sears-Roebuck &amp;amp; Co., Family Dollar Store, a drug store, and other specialty shops and service stores. (Construction will begin as soon as site preparation is completed.</p>
        <p>Architect for the (X'oject is Jack O. Boyte &amp;lt;rf Charlotte. Engineers are McDavid Associates of Farmville. Leasing Agent is William J. Branstrom of Masten-Faison-Weatherspoon of, Charlotte. Managing Agent is Blue Ribbon Properties, Inc. of Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Marvin Hortcxi of Hmrtcm &amp;amp; Associates said that his firm still intends to develop their original site on the Dr. Paul Jones |M*operty.</p>
        <p>Both Monk and Horton are natives of Farmville. They said they intend to develop a shopping center that wUl reflect credit upon the entire greater FarmvUle trading area and complement the fine downtown business district Farmville already has.</p>
        <p>Dr. Sloane To Speak To Ass'n</p>
        <p>Dr. Jerry Sloane, clinical director of the Eastern TEAC(CH Cmiter here, wiU speak to the' Pitt County Association for, Retarded (ChUdren Wednesday at 8 p.m. at Wahl-Coates School.</p>
        <p>TEACCH (Treatment and Education of Autistic and Related Conununication Handicapped ChUdren) is a North Carolina state-supported program which has received' national attention. The Eastern  Center is housed at the ECU ^ Developmental Evaluation Clinic here.</p>
        <p>LOSING HAIR</p>
        <p>DRY</p>
        <p>5 SHIRTS AUNDERED</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>CLEANIN</p>
        <p> used hangers to help us to continue our half price policy.</p>
        <p>Minnesota has an average annual rainfall of 25 inches.</p>
        <p>Two Drawer Steel-File Gray-Tan Utter Size</p>
        <p>34.50</p>
        <p>SINCE mi 120 EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>PHONE</p>
        <p>758-11148</p>
        <p>COUPON</p>
        <p>FOR TUES.</p>
        <p>NO LIMIT</p>
        <p>1/2 MR. CLEAN 1/2</p>
        <p>DRIVE IN</p>
        <p>Price  CLEANERS</p>
        <p>1501 DICK INSON AVE</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>Frank Moran Shows He ReGrew Hair. He Did Not Have Male Pattern Baldness.</p>
        <p>EBB'S HAIR CONSULTANT WILL EXPLAIN HAIR PROBLEMS FREE AT THE Holiday Inn US 13 Memorial Dr. Greenville, N.C. Thursday Feb. 14 HOURS i P.M. to 8:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>Louisville, Ky.. Feb. 12. Now is the time to act on this great opportunity. Every hair-worried person (man or woman) should .take adyaotaga.ol is FitEC CONSULTATION. AAany users have reported not only stopping their hair from thinning. . .but are really growing more hair.</p>
        <p>OUARANTSEO</p>
        <p>YOU will be given a written guarantee on a pro-rated basis from the beginning to the end. Naturally we could not give you such a guarantee if It didn't work.</p>
        <p>CAN'T HELF pattern baMness is ttw cause of a great ma|ority of cases of baldnass and axcessive hair less, far which ne method is effectiva. Shh Hair Sj^ialists cannot help these who are slick held after yeers ef tradeal hair</p>
        <p>toss.</p>
        <p>jBut, if |baid,h</p>
        <p>yob are not already slick Id, how can you be sure what Is</p>
        <p>actually causing your hair loss? Even if baldness seems to "run m the family," this is certainly no proof of the cause of your hair</p>
        <p>Many conditions can cause hair loss. No matter which one is causing your hair loss, if you wait until you are slick Bald and your hair roots are dead you are toyond help. So, if you still have</p>
        <p>^  7  na</p>
        <p>would like to stop hair loss and grow more hair. . .now is the time to do something about It before it's too late.</p>
        <p>FREE CONSULTATION</p>
        <p>Jest take a few minutes of your time on Thursday, Feb. 14, and</p>
        <p>00 to the Holiday Inn US is Memorial Dr. In Oreenville, N.C. between 1 p.m. and 8:10 p.m. and ask the Desk Clerk for j. M.</p>
        <p>1 Jones, room number.</p>
        <p>There is no charge or obligation. . .all consultations are private, you will not be embarassed in .any way.</p>
        <p>,....</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0007" />
        <p>Sports the DAILY REFLECTOR Classifed</p>
        <p>TUESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBUARY 12, 1974Pirates Roll Past Appalachian, 76-68</p>
        <p>Big Orange In Opening Victory</p>
        <p>DUDLEYNorth Pitts unbeaten girls moved into the second round of the Eastern Carolina Conference tournament last night with a 46-18 romp over Greene Central.</p>
        <p>The loss closed out the year for Greene Centrals girls, who pack it up again until next year. North Pitt will now meet the winner of the Charles B. Aycock-Ayden-Grifton game later this week.</p>
        <p>In one of the junior varsity games, D. H. Conley took an 83-56 romp over Eastern Wayne. They will face North Lenoir, a winner over Southern Wayne in the other junior varsity game.</p>
        <p>Conleys jvs placed five players in double figures in their victory. Robert Harris led the way with 18, while Joey Bagett and Calvin Hawkins each had 16, Chariie Keys had 13 and Melvin Williams had 12.</p>
        <p>In the lone girls game played. North Pitt had little trouble in rolling up the first victory. By</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>JV D. H. Conley 83, Eottern Wayne M Olrl' Oame Greene CentralSuofl, Tripp 10, Barrow 2, Pridoen 2, Whitley 2, Shlnoleton 2, Hooker, Batts, Lee, Guroanus, Hilliard, Ginn, Speight.</p>
        <p>North PittJ. James 9, Whlchard 14, D. Pollard 3, Manning 13, Pollard 3, Goole 4, L. James, Brovyn, Andrews, Olxon, M. James Greene Central  4  4  4  418</p>
        <p>North Pitt  13  II  11</p>
        <p>Wayne Defeats Pitt Technical</p>
        <p>WINTERVILLE - Wayne Community College gained an 88-57 victory over Pitt Technical Institute last night. The game was the final regular season contest for the Paladins.</p>
        <p>Pitt Tech inched out into a 4-0 lead in the first minute of the game, but Wayne came back, over the next four minutes to hold a. 10-1 scoring advantage, building up a 10-5 lead.</p>
        <p>They steadily built this up to a 23-10 lead with 12 minutes to go, and continued to inch away after that. Pitt Tech fought back, however, cutting the lead to 50-42 at the half.</p>
        <p>In the s^ond half, however, the ball refused to drop for the Paladins, who went the first six minutes without a point, then got a couple of free throws to break the ice. Still, despite getting good shots, the ball wouldnt go for Pitt, and they were outhit in the half, 38-15.</p>
        <p>We played well compared to how we did in the past, Coach Charles Coburn said. We</p>
        <p>played good defense, and our offense was good too, but the ball just wouldnt go in the hoop. The score really didnt indicate what kind of game it was.</p>
        <p>Murray led the Wayne scoring with 22 points, while Hill had 12, Coor had 11 and Best and Barbee each had 10. For Pitt Tech, Charles Jordan had 18, Danny Thomas had 14 and Robert Hardy had 13.</p>
        <p>^itt finished the regular season with a 4-12 record. They open tournament play in their conference on A^May, playing host to Martin Tech. "ie winner of that game meets regular season champ James SfMimt on the following Friday for the tournament title.</p>
        <p>Wayn*</p>
        <p>Hill</p>
        <p>Barnes</p>
        <p>Murray</p>
        <p>Stafford</p>
        <p>Coor</p>
        <p>Best</p>
        <p>Barbee</p>
        <p>Hawttiorne</p>
        <p>Wooten</p>
        <p>Reed</p>
        <p>Filler</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>f t Pitt</p>
        <p>0 12 Thomas 0 0 Hardy</p>
        <p>4 22 Jordan-0 8 Barrett</p>
        <p>5 11 Watson 2 10 Smith</p>
        <p>0 10 Wilkers</p>
        <p>1 1 Hussey 0 8</p>
        <p>0 0 0 6</p>
        <p>f t</p>
        <p>4  14</p>
        <p>5  13 0 18 0 6 0 2 0 0 0 2 0 2</p>
        <p>37 14 U Totals</p>
        <p>Wayne C.C. Pitt Tech</p>
        <p>9 57 38-88</p>
        <p>NFL</p>
        <p>Set</p>
        <p>Players To Bargain</p>
        <p>By TOM SEPPY AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Ed Garvey admits to having played only high school football  but he has become a bun-under the saddle of National Football League owners and Commissioner Pete Rozelle, as weU as the lightning rod for the professicmal players.</p>
        <p>For the past three years as executive director of the NFL Players Association, the 33-year-old Garvey has challenged, taunted, cajoled, negotiated, lambasted and sued the NFL owners and Rozelle on behalf of the some 1,200 players who are members of the pro football union.</p>
        <p>The biggest test in the history of the 18-year-old association  the Super Test in the jargon of the league  opens March 16 when the unicm and the owners begin negotiations on a new collective bargaining agreement.</p>
        <p>Commissioner Rozelle and union boss Garvey have fn-"gffgedm some hloody battles, but the negotiation of a new contract threatens to be a Super War.</p>
        <p>In his plush offices in downtown Washington, Garvey tells an interviewer that a playmv strike or am owners lodcout next summer would not bmiefit anyone; that the players want to play football, but they also want their freedom from the yise-ti^t grip he says the owners hold thmn in.</p>
        <p>Though he makes such statements with ai^&amp;gt;arent sincerity. ^ along with a typically gener-01 dose of ofibeat humor  one geto the feding that there</p>
        <p>will be a strike or a lockout unless the players win most, if not all of their demands.</p>
        <p>Garvey spmit each week of last years football season meeting with the players on the NFLs 26 teams to learn what demands the union should make when it confronts the Managemoit Council, bargaining agent for the owners. The players meet March 2-6 in Chicago to hammer out a final position.</p>
        <p>The youthful4ooking, bespectacled Garvey quickly says the primary battle in the negotiations will be what the players are callkig the freedom issues, although they expect skirmishes over the old standbys of basic salaries, pension plans, and medical bmiefits.</p>
        <p>the end of the first period, the Big Orange Machine had ground out a 13-4 lead. They held Greene Central to four points again in the second half, and dumped in 18 of their own, running the lead out to 31-8.</p>
        <p>In the third period. North Pitt again outshot the Ewes, 11-6, and boosted their lead to 42-14. They finished it up with an even 4-4 final period.</p>
        <p>Wanda Whichard led North Pitt with 14 points, while Kathi Manning added 13. Judith Tripp led (freene Central with 10 points.</p>
        <p>Tonights girls action sends Ayden-Grifton against Aycock at 6 p.m., with Eastern Wayne and Farmville Central meeting at 9</p>
        <p>PISTOL PETE POPS-^ete Maravich (44), Atlanta Hawks guard, makes a lone-hand jump shot against three Philadelphia players in the first half of</p>
        <p>action in Atlanta Monday night, Philadelphia went on to win the game, 116-95 despite 32 points by Maravich. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Jamesville Girls, Bear Grass Teams Are Ousted</p>
        <p>WASHINGTONThree of the four Martin County teams in the Beaufort-Hyde-Martin Tournament were ousted last night in the first three games of the event.</p>
        <p>Bear Grass lost both their girls and boys games. The girls fell to Belhaven, 53-30, while the boys lost to Bath, 68-43. The Bath girls also won, eliminating Jamesville, 47-19.</p>
        <p>Tonights  action  puts</p>
        <p>Belhaven against Chocowinity and Aurora  against  Mat-</p>
        <p>tamuskeet in boys action, while Pantego meets the Mat-tamuskeet girls.</p>
        <p>The lone Martin team left, Jamesvilles  boys,  meets</p>
        <p>Pantego on Wednesday.</p>
        <p>In the opening game, Bath had little trouble in rolling past the Jamesville girls. By the end of the first period, Bath had just about all it needed, rolling up an 18-0 lead. In the second frame, they outscored Jamesville, 11-6, and took a 29-6 lead into intermission.</p>
        <p>Bath continued to pull away in the third period, hitting 16 while the Bullets got 13. That made it 45-19. Action was at a stand-still in the final period, as Bath got two points and Jamesville again went scoreless.</p>
        <p>Joan Leggett led Bath with 22 points, while April Ross had 11.</p>
        <p>In tte second game, the Bath boys gained their victory over Bear Grass. Bath shot out to a 20-6 lead in the first period and was never bdiind. Ihey outhit the Bears again, 20-10, in the</p>
        <p>second frame, and led, 40-16 at halftime.</p>
        <p>Bath continued to outhit Bear Grass in the third quarter, 17-12, upping its lead to 57-28. Bear Grass outhit them in the last period, 15-11, but it didnt matter.</p>
        <p>Donald Gibbs led Bath with 19 points, while Ronald Parker had 14, Anthony Singleton had 12 and James Gibbs had 10. Hilton Armstrong led the Bears with 14 points.</p>
        <p>In the final game of the night. Bear Grass girls were eliminated by Belhaven. Belhaven inched out into a 9-5 lead after one period of play, then shot away. They outhit the Bears, 14-6, and built up a 23-11 lead in the second quarter.</p>
        <p>Belhaven continued to blast the Lady Bears in the third quarter, hitting 18 to just a pair for the Bears. That upped it to 41-13. Bear Grass had a 17-12 advantage iii the final period, but, as for the boys, it was too late.</p>
        <p>Rosita Fonville led Belhaven with 21 points, while Ruby Borden had 12 and Bemeta Whitfield had 10. The Bears were led by Ck&amp;gt;lar Rogerson with 13 and Janet Holliday with 11.</p>
        <p>Sectional</p>
        <p>Tournament</p>
        <p>FIRST GAME</p>
        <p>Jamesville DO. Williams, T. Hardison 2, C. Hardison 2, Martin 6, Perry, Leggett, Keys, De Williams 2, Ellis 2, Tetterton 3, Barber 2,</p>
        <p>BathBoyd, Gregg 7, Odom 2, Mann, Cutler, D.Boyd, Winston, Leggett 22, Ross 11, Douglas 2, O'Neal 1, Shoemaker 2.</p>
        <p>Jamesville</p>
        <p>Bath</p>
        <p>0 4 13 18 11 14</p>
        <p>019</p>
        <p>247</p>
        <p>Second Game</p>
        <p>B. Grass</p>
        <p>A'strong</p>
        <p>J. Biggs</p>
        <p>Rogers</p>
        <p>G'dner</p>
        <p>C'ford</p>
        <p>Stokes</p>
        <p>Hodges</p>
        <p>B'field</p>
        <p>H'rison</p>
        <p>M. Biggs</p>
        <p>W'liams</p>
        <p>Totals</p>
        <p>f t Bath</p>
        <p>0 14 Davis</p>
        <p>1 3 Parker 4 D. Gibbs 2 J. Gibbs 6 Sin'ton</p>
        <p>8 R'dall 4 Hopkins 0 W'liams 0 0 0</p>
        <p>f t</p>
        <p>1  5</p>
        <p>2  14</p>
        <p>3  19</p>
        <p>4  10 2 12 0 2 2 4 0 2</p>
        <p>5 43 Totals</p>
        <p>Bear Grass Bath</p>
        <p>4 10 12 1543 20 20 17 1148</p>
        <p>TMnlGame Bear GrassWhitaker 2, C. Rogerson 13, Holliday 11, K. Rawls 2, Mizelle 2, D. Leggett, Hodges, D. Rogerson, Harden, L. Leggett, Taylor, Beach.</p>
        <p>BelhavenFonville 21, Farrow, Smith 4, Whitfield 10, Borden 12, Taylors, Dudley, T. Taylor, Satchel, Davis, Spencer, Jinefte. Bear Grass  5  4  2  1730</p>
        <p>Belhaven  9  14  18  1253</p>
        <p>We know that if we can eliminate the standard player contract, that alone would in-' crease salaries more than anything" we ~ coifld idiiii^lish' in coUective bargaining because it would give the individual some freedom to negotiate on his own. So that becomes more important than raising the minimum.</p>
        <p>Robersonvilie Girls Get Win</p>
        <p>other items, such as the players disatisfaction with artificial turf, also will be on the agenda, according to Garvey. But the major issues center around the control of Rozelle, whom the union believes is a tool for management  despite Rozelles contention that its his job to represent btrth the owners and the players.</p>
        <p>ROCKY MOUNTRobers-bvilles' girls advanced to the semi-finals of the Eastern Plains Conference Tournament with a 49-22 romp over North J&amp;lt;rfinston last ni^t,.</p>
        <p>Roborsonville now will meet regular season champicm West Edgecombe on Thursday at,7 p.m. at Atlantic Christian College.</p>
        <p>Robersonvilie rushed away to a 16-5 lead in the first period of play. North Johnston came back in the second frame, outhitting the Eaglettes, 12-10, but Roberswiville stUl led at. the half, 26-17.</p>
        <p>In the third frame, sonville hdd J&amp;lt;dinston</p>
        <p>as they popped in eight of their own. Than ran it out to 34il7. They finished off their foes, iS-O, in the final period.  V</p>
        <p>Beatrice Forrest and Phyllis McNeU led RobersonviUe with 11 points each, while Elaine Forrest and Cindy Daniels each had 10.</p>
        <p>Tonight, Robersonvilles boys join in the action, meeting West Edgecombe at Elm City. The winner advances to another Thursday night game at Atlantic Christian.</p>
        <p>Rose High School will play host to wrestling teams from throughout the northeastern part of the state Friday and Saturday in the Sectional Wrestling Tournament.</p>
        <p>Some 18 teams are expected to take part in the annual event, a preliminary to the state tournament next week in Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>Fridays activities will get underway at 8 a.m. with weigh-ins at Elm Street Gymnasium, next door to Rose High. Preliminaries will begin at noon in the Rose gym, with quarter finals starting at 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Saturday, weigh-ins will be held from 12;30p.m. until 2 p.m., with the semi-finals starting at 2:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Consolation matches will start at 6:30 p.m., with the finals getting underway at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Winners and runners-up in each weight-class will advance to the state tournament.</p>
        <p>A team trophy will be presented to the school garnering the most points, and a trophy will be presented to the boy named the Most Outstanding Wrestler of the tournament. Ribbons will be presented to individual winners for the first three places.</p>
        <p>Adhnission to the tournament is  fbr; students and $1.50 for</p>
        <p>adults.</p>
        <p>Jack Krol, 1973 Tulsa Oiler pilot, will manage the Arkansas Travelers in the Texas League next season.</p>
        <p>North johfistooWatson 2, Jonas 5, WInham 3, Woodard 7, Askew 2, P.. Watson 2, Simmons 1.</p>
        <p>Robersonvilie:^. Forrest 10, B. Forrest 11, Daniels 10, AAcNeii il, Vat^iford 4, Lawrence 3, James. Mouring, Sheppard, sJohnson, Coletrain, Respess.</p>
        <p>^Monn Johnston  * ! !</p>
        <p>Robersonvilie   &amp;gt; </p>
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        <p>BOONEEast Carolina Universitys Pirates ran out to a 21-point lead midway through the second half, then held off Appalachian State University in the final 10 minutes to take a 76-68 victory over the Mountaineers.</p>
        <p>The victory upped the East Carolina Southern Conference record to 7-4 and moved them back into third place in the conference standings ahead of Davids&amp;lt;m. The Bucs have 11 more percentage points than do the Wildcats, who are 5-3.</p>
        <p>The position of the Wildcats in the league standings will be largely settled on Saturday night, when they play host to the Pirates in a key conference game. Should the Pirates win the game, it would be likely that Davidson would finish in fourth place in the league standings.</p>
        <p>The Pirates had little trouble with the Mountaineers, leading all the way. They broke open a tie game after the first couple of minutes and pushed into an eight point halftime lead. In the second half, they continued to pull away, moving out by 21 near the 10 minute mark, but eased off after that and were content to gain the victory without a large margin.</p>
        <p>The Bucs shot a fine 53.3 percent from the floor, while Appalachian hit 45.5 per cent. TTie Bucs, who had a terrible night at the foul line against William &amp;amp; Mary, rebounded in this game to shoot 75 per cent. ASU had the poor night, making just 44.4 per cent of their free throws.</p>
        <p>East Carolina and Appalachian were both credited with 39 rebounds, amazingly. It appeared to observers, however, that East Carolina held a definite edge in the rebounding, despite the official statistics. Nicky White led the Bucs, hauling down 10, while Robert Geter collected nine.</p>
        <p>In turnovers, the Bucs held an edge, losing the ball 18 times as compared to 24 for the Mountaineers.</p>
        <p>Geter put the Pirates on top with a quick jumper, but A1</p>
        <p>Happy St. Ties Coke</p>
        <p>The Happy Store pulled into a tie with Coca-Cola for the league lead in the City Basketball loop last night, downing the Eagles. The two teams are tied with 11-1 records and two games to play.</p>
        <p>In the opening game, Carolina Dairy nipped the Book Exchange, 49-47. The Exchange ran out to a 25-17 lead in the first half, but couldnt hold onto it. Carolina Dairy came back to outhit them, 32-22, just enough to win it.</p>
        <p>Bill  Bateman led the</p>
        <p>Dairymen with 15 points, while Lester Wells had 10. For the Exchange, Alan Jackson had 15, Phil Duffy had 12 and Mike Jackson had 10.</p>
        <p>Happy Store came away with its win in the second game, as the Eagles fell, 66-53. The Happy Store built up a 30-22 lead in the first half, they outscored the Eagles, 36-31, in the second.</p>
        <p>Lonnie Payton led the Happy Store with 18 points, while Tommy Whichard had 15. For the Eagles, Ronnie Stdces had 14, while Wayne Hardee, Lin-wood Brown and Bobby Gaynor each had 10.</p>
        <p>In the final game, Edwards took a 73-52 win over the Bucks, 35-24, in the second half.</p>
        <p>Life Insurance  Pension Plans</p>
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        <p>Gentry hit on a backdoor shot to tie it up. Roger Atkinson hit again for the Bucs, but Gentry came through again, making it 4-4.</p>
        <p>Atkinson tossed in a missed shot and Donnie Owens canned a jumper to up the score to 8-4 for the Bucs, but again ASU fought back, finally gaining a 10-10 tie on another easy shot by Gentry.</p>
        <p>It was tied once more at 12-12, but White put the Bucs back in front with a jumper, and Buzzy Braman hit on a fast break on the next possession. White hit from underneath the next time down, giving the Bucs an 18-12 lead.</p>
        <p>After Ed Kane hit for the Mountaineers, White and Braman both connected to run the lead out to eight, 22-14. Don Taylor got a three-point play to cut it back to five, but a free throw by Gleter, and baskets by Reggie Lee and Creter ran it out to 31-21, the biggest Pirate lead of the half. Taylor hit in Uie final minute to cut it back to 31-23, however, and it stood that way at intermission.</p>
        <p>White and Owens tossed in early baskets in the second half to run the Bucs to a 12-point lead, 35-23. The two teams then swapped baskets until Owens drove in to make it 43-31, again a 12-point lead.</p>
        <p>Geter tapped in a ^t and Larry Hunt scored from under the nets. Hunt then added a driving layup to run it out to 49-31, and 18-point bulge.</p>
        <p>Kane broke the Pirate string, but (jieter came back with a free throw and Lee got a basket. Gregg Ashom hit two free throws and that made it 54-33, a 21-point lead.</p>
        <p>At that point, ASU began to press, and caused a couple of turnovers before the Pirati adjusted. Mark Campbell and Taylor both hit jumpers and Davis got a free throw with 8:56 left to cut the lead to 54-38.</p>
        <p>with 2o; while Lee hit 14 and Geter dumped in 10. Davis 24 led all scorers, urtiile Dave (}ook had 12 and Taylor had 10.</p>
        <p>The Bucs are now idle until Saturday, when they travel to meet Davidson in their final road game of the regular season. They return home to close out the year against Richmond and The Citadd the following week.</p>
        <p>ECU</p>
        <p>White</p>
        <p>Af'soh</p>
        <p>Geter</p>
        <p>Owens</p>
        <p>Lee</p>
        <p>Ashorn</p>
        <p>Hunt</p>
        <p>Braman</p>
        <p>Edmonds</p>
        <p>Marsh</p>
        <p>Total</p>
        <p>f t ASU</p>
        <p>2 20 V'rich 2 8 Cook 2 10 Kane 0 4 Davis 2 14 Gentry 2 2 Taylor 0 6 C'bell 0 A Barnes 0 0 Desnica 2 4</p>
        <p>1  t 0 4</p>
        <p>2  12 0 A 4 24 0 8 2 10 0 2 0 4 0 0</p>
        <p>32 12 7A Totals</p>
        <p>30 8 a</p>
        <p>East Carolina Appalachian State</p>
        <p>31 457A 23 45a</p>
        <p>Wednesdays Sports Basketball</p>
        <p>Beaufort-Hyde-Martin Tournament at Washington Northeastern Girls Tournament at Williamston Eastern Carolina Tournament at Southern Wayne</p>
        <p>Industrial League Vermont-American vs. Greenville Utilities Prepshirt vs. Fieldcrest Grady-White vs. State Highway</p>
        <p>City League Book Exchange vs. Kentucky Fried Chicken Happy Store vs. Coca-Cola The Bucks vs. Carolina Dairy</p>
        <p>At tiiat point, Davis,-tiie second leading scorer in the conference, had only ninepoints, but he came on from there to hit 15 more and maintain his average.</p>
        <p>'Rie Bucs seemed to be content to roll along, scoring when they could, as they let their margin do the trick for them. Appalachian, whch had been in a slow tempo for most of the game, still stayed with it to a certain extent, as they easted back. With 6:29 left, they had cut the lead to 13, at 60-47, but they were behind again by 15, 70-55, with less than five minutes to play.</p>
        <p>With 2:05 showing, Lee hit two free throws to make it 74-57, a 17-point bulge, but the Mountaineers went on an 11-point binge in that period to cut it back to as little as six points, but still offered no real threat to win it. Davis hit nine joi those 11 points in the final two minutes, five of them coming in the final 30 seconds.</p>
        <p>Atkinson hit a pair of free throws with one second left for the final margin.</p>
        <p>White led the Pirate scoring</p>
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        <p>Creighton Zooms Into Top 20</p>
        <p>By BRUCE LOWITT AP Sports Writer'</p>
        <p>A week ago, Creighton University couldn't even be found in that basemeit category known as CHhers receiving votes. Today, the Bluejays from Omaha, Neb., are living in the high-rent district known as The Associated Press College Basketball Poll.</p>
        <p>They may not be up there with perennial penthouse dweller UCLA or up on Nob Hill where North Carolina State, Notre Dame, North Carolina and the rest of those high-roU-ers reside.</p>
        <p>Creighton is No. 17, one of three new members in the elite Top Twenty. But while the Bluejays bounded into the listing without so much as a stop</p>
        <p>over among the others, I9th-ranked Utah and No. 20 Arizona came mit of that alphabetical, nci-numerical pack.</p>
        <p>Crei^ton achieved its lofty perch  and knocked Marquette from the No. 6 rung to No. 9  by upsetting the Warriors 75-09 last Saturday. The feat brought the 'Bluejays' record to 18-4 and brought them 40 points in the voting by The AP's nationwide panel of sports writers and broadcasters.</p>
        <p>In the so what else is new? category, UCLA retained the No. 1 berth. The Bruins, who flattened Oregon's Ducks 84-66, then got shook by Oregon States busy Beavers before prevailing 80-75 to raise their record to 18-1, garnered all but</p>
        <p>one of the SO flrsti&amp;gt;lace votes for 998 points.</p>
        <p>Notre Dame, also 18-1, got the other No. 1 vote. But the Fighting Irish, who squeezed past Michigan ^te 91-89, then romped ovr LaSaUe 98-78 and Duke 87-68, wound up third again with 797 points.</p>
        <p>North Carolina States 17-1 Wolfpack on flie strength of its stampedings of Georgia Tech and Furman, still got enough runner-up nods to gain the No. 2 spot once more ahead of Notre Dame with 893 points. North Carolina, 17-2, remained No. 4 with 642 points after whipping Furman and Georgia Tech, too.</p>
        <p>A week ago, Vanderbilt squeezed out one first-place</p>
        <p>1.</p>
        <p>Donohue Wants To Get Behind A Wheel Again</p>
        <p>By BLOYS BRITT AP Auto Racing Writer DAYTONA BEACH, Fla. (AP)  Mark Donohue has been officially retired as a driver for four months, but he admits: I want to get behind the wheel of a race car again so bad it hurts.</p>
        <p>Donohue, acknowledged to be among Americas top five, and surely its best road course driver, quit racing last October after winning the 1973 Can-Am Challenge Cup sports car series.</p>
        <p>I have accomplished all I had hoped to do, he said at the time. I want to quit while Im on top. Ill soon be 37 years old and I dont want to start going downhill.</p>
        <p>The Brown University graduate is in Daytona Beach to manage a car entered in the $200,0(X) Daytona 500 stock car race Feb. 17and to take his own last fling behind the wheel.</p>
        <p>He is one of six drivers who will race German-made Porsche Carreras Friday in the final heat of the inaugural International Race of Champions. He was committed -to the series before he unexpectedly announced his retirement after the first three heats were completed at Riverside, Calif., in which he wound up with the</p>
        <p>most points among the original field of 12.</p>
        <p>His last ride, if he sticks to his decision, will be against men who also rank somewhere in the top 10 among American drivers. They are David Pearson, A.J. Foyt, Bobby Unser, George Follmer and Peter Rev-son.</p>
        <p>The top prize is $35,000 and Donohue admits he would like to win it.</p>
        <p>Thats a tough bunch to work against, said the blond, tousel4iaired engineer, who now lives in Reading, Pa., where he manages the racing enterprises of Roger Penske, his long-time friend and coach.</p>
        <p>But the urge is so great to compete again that I dont care if I crash, run off the course, or anything, he added ,.with a smile. I cant wait to get going.</p>
        <p>Donohues main interest now, aside from doing well in his last outing as a driver, is an American Motors Matador-r-the only factory-backed machine in stock car racingthat will be driven in Sundays 500-mile conclusion of Speed Weeks by Gary Bettenhausen.</p>
        <p>Bettenhausen, son of a famous Indianapolis driver of the 1940 and 1950s, will take Donohues place in the Penske oper-</p>
        <p>All Bows Out Of Quarry Bout</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Former heavyweight champion Muhammad Ali has reneged on a proposed fight with Jerry Quairy, who feels hes a victim of a conspiracy.</p>
        <p>The fight seemingly was set for Madison Square Garden May 13 and a press conference supposedly was scheduled to be held today to announce the signings.</p>
        <p>But Monday the Garden announced that the conference had been canceled because there was no fight to announce.</p>
        <p>Ali, who could receive as much as $850,000, maybe much more, for meeting Quarry, who he had knocked out twice previously, decided he needs the rest more than the activity.</p>
        <p>Matchmaker Teddy Brenner said Monday, I was supposed to get together with Alis representatives today to finalize the fight. Bob Arum and Herbert Muhammad were both in town, and about two oclock I figured it was time I called them.</p>
        <p>Whats up? I asked Arum. Its off, h said.</p>
        <p>Arum, who called Alis decision a shock, said, Ali was all for it, but hes a human being, too. He told me he want</p>
        <p>ed to rest until September. He didnt want to go back and put on the gloves so soon after (Joe) Frazier.</p>
        <p>Ali outpointed Frazier in 12 rounds two weeks ago.</p>
        <p>Alis main objective is to meet champion (jleorge Foreman in September and apparently he thinks that Quarry is too great a risk to take at this time.</p>
        <p>Quarry, who had flown in from California, was outraged by the cancellation.</p>
        <p>Im being boycotted by black fighters, he charged.</p>
        <p>He said that he had reached an agreement to fight Foreman but that fight had been canceled and also that the Garden had arranged a bout with Ken Norton but that also fell through.</p>
        <p>Foreman, Norton and Ali are black. Quarry is white. Im am not trying to derogate any race or religion, Quarry said, but I really think that theres a conspiracy.</p>
        <p>Quarrys manager, Gil Clancy, concurred.</p>
        <p>Arum, in answer to Clancy, said, Thats the most absurd thing Ive heard. Ali just wants a vacation.</p>
        <p>Philadelphia In Romp By Hawks</p>
        <p>ATLANTA (AP)  We lost our cool in the third quarter and we got xompletely out of the game, said a frustrated fk&amp;gt;ach Cotton Fitzsimmons , after the Hdladelphia 76ers. routed his Atlanta Hawks 116-95 in the only National Basketball Associatitm game played Monday night.</p>
        <p>Its very frustrating, said Fitzsimmons. A team has to keep its poise.</p>
        <p>The 76ers, who led 51-44 at halftime, fdl-bdiind 52-51 after eight straight Hawk points but exploded to a 90-72 margin after three periods when Atlanta was nailed dth flve technical fouls in the quqrter.</p>
        <p>It was the 76ers third straight triumph over the Hawks, who</p>
        <p>fell to 27-37. Hiiladeli^a has won only 18 of 58 contests.</p>
        <p>. Tom Van ^s^^e was the spark the 76ers needed in the third quarter, scoring 17 of his game-high 35 points, including a unique flve-point play.</p>
        <p>The blond forward converted a threeiwint play and when Atlantas Jim Wartiington protested, Washington was assessed two technical fouls and thrown out of the game. Van Arsdale converted the fouls, putting the 76ers ahead 62-54 which soon became a rout.</p>
        <p>Fred Carter added 26 ^ints f&amp;lt;M* the 76&amp;amp;n adule Pete Mara-vich led the Hawks with 35.</p>
        <p>There were no games in the Amorican Basketball Associ-atkm Blmiday night.</p>
        <p>ation, driving some 15 races on the Grand National circuit of the National Association for Stock Car Auto Racing and all of the big car (Indianapolis-type) events for the U.S. Auto (hub. Donohue will oversee the whole operation.</p>
        <p>Sure, Ill miss driving, he said with a smile. But you have to face losing something before you realize how much it meant. I guess I took fame and acclaim for granted...</p>
        <p>I know there will be times when Ill think about the big money I was making. Ill miss the deference paid by fans and writers to a champion. But I. feel quitting viiile you are at the top is the right thing to do.</p>
        <p>Donohue is no stranger to the Daytona road course. He won the Daytona 24-hour race in 1969, and in 1970, he posted the all-time qualifying record for the 3.81-mile course, 133.919 miles per hour in a Penske-pre-. pared Ferrari prototype.</p>
        <p>He also has won three Trans-Am road racing titles, two national championships in the old U.S. Road Racing series, one Can-Am driving title, the 1972 Indianapolis 500, the first 500-mile championship race at Po: cono. Pa., and a major Grand National stock car racethe Winston Western 500 at Riverside, Calif.</p>
        <p>It is going to be hard to leave it all, Donohue admitted. And really, the only thing I havent done that I wanted to do in my career was drive and try to winthe world Formula One Grand Prix series.</p>
        <p>Had he continued active as a driver, it is believed Doiiohue would have mounted a challenge in Formula One, which is the only major series the wealthy Pennsylvanian never tried.</p>
        <p>But Donohue added, Now that I have made my decision to retireand it was mine without any outside pressuresmy friends agree with me that Im doing the right thing.</p>
        <p>Seek To Get Coach</p>
        <p>DAVIDSON, N.C. (AP)Forty-eight of the 50 members of the Davidson football squad have signed a petition asking that assistant coach Dave Roberts be named head coach.</p>
        <p>However, the athletic director, Dr. Thomas M. Cartmill, indicated Monday that the successor to Dave Fagg, who resigned last month to became an assistant at Georgia Tech, will be an outsider.</p>
        <p>First of all, Cartmill sid, none of us were aware that coach Roberts was interested in the job, and we still havit been advised whether that is the case. Ive talked with him and told him that we definitely want him to stay. But his age and the fact that hes had no head coaching e]q)erience are the main things against him. Id say. Its certainly nothing else. I think his popularity is evidit from the petition.</p>
        <p>^Wve'had about 50 applicants for the job and are stiU considering afatout 10. We hope to find the man within three weeks.</p>
        <p>Roberts is a 27-year-old native of Bethesda, Md. He has been a Davidson line coach for the last two seasons.</p>
        <p>Davidson decided last fall to grant football scholarships i1-marUy on the basis of need.|</p>
        <p>vote. But the Commodores, 18-1, had a shaky week, barely beating Alabama and Mississippi State 60-59. Ihey lost that flrst-place vote but they still held on to fifth place with 576 points.</p>
        <p>Maryland, 15-4, taking advantage of Marquettes woes and its own victories over Virginia and CSeorge Washington, moved up one rung to take over the Warriors No. 6 ranking with 431 points. Pittsbitfgh, 19-1,10th a wedk ago, bounced up to seventh with 386.</p>
        <p>Alabama, 16-3, stayed ei^th with 331, Marquette, 18-3, got 302 for ninth and Long Beach State, 18-2, dropped down one spot to round out the Top Ten with 299 points.</p>
        <p>In the Sec(md Ten are Providence 256, Indiana 215, Southern California 146, South Carolina 134, Michigan'76, Kansas 57, (Creighton 41, Louisville 40, Utah 25 and Arizona 17. Texas-E1 Paso, Oral Roberts and Maryland-Eastern Shore fell out of the Top Twenty.</p>
        <p>Ihe Top Twenty, with first-place votes in parentheses, season records through games of</p>
        <p>Saturday, Feb. 9 and total points. Points tabulated on basis of 20-18-16-14-12-10-9-8-7-6-5-4-3-2-1:</p>
        <p>1. UCLA (49)</p>
        <p>18-1</p>
        <p>998</p>
        <p>2. N. C. St.</p>
        <p>17-1</p>
        <p>8IK^^</p>
        <p>3. N. Dame (1)</p>
        <p>18-1</p>
        <p>797</p>
        <p>4. N. Carolina</p>
        <p>17-2</p>
        <p>,642</p>
        <p>5. Vanderbilt</p>
        <p>18-1</p>
        <p>576</p>
        <p>6. Maryland</p>
        <p>154</p>
        <p>431</p>
        <p>7. Pittsburgh</p>
        <p>19-1</p>
        <p>386</p>
        <p>8. Alabama</p>
        <p>16-3</p>
        <p>331</p>
        <p>9. Marquette</p>
        <p>18-S</p>
        <p>302</p>
        <p>10. Lng Bch St.</p>
        <p>18-2</p>
        <p>299</p>
        <p>11. Providence</p>
        <p>18-3</p>
        <p>256</p>
        <p>12. Indiana</p>
        <p>14-3</p>
        <p>215</p>
        <p>13. Southern Cal</p>
        <p>16-3</p>
        <p>146</p>
        <p>14. S. Carolina</p>
        <p>16^</p>
        <p>134</p>
        <p>15. Michigan</p>
        <p>15-3</p>
        <p>76</p>
        <p>16. Kansas</p>
        <p>154</p>
        <p>57</p>
        <p>17. CYeighton</p>
        <p>184</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>18. Louisville</p>
        <p>154</p>
        <p>40</p>
        <p>19. Utah</p>
        <p>16-5</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>20. Arizona</p>
        <p>164</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>Others receiving votes, listed alihabetically: Arizona ^te. Centenary, Cincinnati, Florida State, Kansas State, Manhattan, Maryland-Eastern Shore, Nevada-Las Vegas, New Mexico, Oklahoma, Oral Roberts, Purdue, St. J(ns, N.Y., South Alabama, Southern Illinois, Syracuse.</p>
        <p>Furman Up Top</p>
        <p>By THE ASSOCIATED PRESS</p>
        <p>Furmans defending champion Paladins can move to within a victory tonight of the top seeded spot in the Southern (Conference championship basketball tournament beginning Feb. 27.</p>
        <p>The Paladins, 9-1 in league play and 14-7 over-all, play host to The atadels Bulldogs, 3-6 in the conference and 9-9 against all opposition, in the only circuit oocounter scheduled.</p>
        <p>A victory tonight and another Saturday night at home against Virginia Militarys Keydets would assure the Paladins the&amp;gt; top spot in the four-day championship toumamoit.</p>
        <p>Tonights only other action has Richmonds l^iders, 9-10 over-all, at home against Virginia Techs Gobblers, 12-8, in a nonleague scrap. The Gobblers are redi from a 72-54 triumph Monday lght over WAliamand Marys Indians.</p>
        <p>Wltoll be seeded second became even more uncertain Monday night when East Caro-</p>
        <p>Seeks To Wrap Tourney Berfh</p>
        <p>lines Pirates outlasted Appalachian States Moimtaineers 76-68 in the only Mgue game on the schedule.</p>
        <p>The triumph boosted the Pirates to 7-4 in league play, just half a game behind Richmond at 7-3.  East Carolina also</p>
        <p>moved up to third place, displacing  idle Davidson, 5-3</p>
        <p>against conference foes.</p>
        <p>Nicky  White and Donnie</p>
        <p>Owens kept the Pirates in front after intermission after the last-place Mountaineers, who have won only once in 10 league starts, remained close most of the first half.</p>
        <p>White finished with 20 points and Reggie Lee added 14 for East Carolina, now 12-9 overall. Owens had several key. steals. Appalachians Stan Davis, the leagues No. 2 scorer, had a game-high 24 points as the Mountaineers fell</p>
        <p>to 4-16 against all opposition.</p>
        <p>Virginia Tech staged two scoring spurts to shake loose from William and Mary, most of vliose scoring was provided by freshman Ron Satterthwaite with 21 points and sophomore Mike Arizin with 16.</p>
        <p>Ahead by only 25-21, the (Sob-blers ran off the last 10 points of the first half for ^ 14-point margin, only to see thp Inmans cut the gap to four points with seven minutes left. After upping its lead to five. Tech ran off eight straight points to put it away.</p>
        <p>CSiarlie Thomas had 16 points for Tech and Chraig Ueder, coming off the injury list, finished with 13, nine from the fdul line. Freshman Duke Thorpe had 12 points and 13 rebounds as the Ciolbblers out-rebounded the Indians by a 51-35 margin.</p>
        <p>Threat Sickens LSU Coach After Defeat</p>
        <p>Union Carbide Holds its Lead</p>
        <p>By FRED ROTHENBERG AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Any evaluation of the Van-derbUt crowd depends on which side of the court youre sitting ... And which side of the final , score youre sitting on.</p>
        <p>This was the best crowd weve had all year, said Vanderbilt Coach Roy Skinner, whose fifth-ranked Commodores required some clutch foul shooting in the last 30 seconds to squeeze past Louisiana State 91-88 in a Southeast Conference college basketball battle Monday night.</p>
        <p>But LSU (toach Dale Brown painted a much bleaker picture of the Nashville crowd.</p>
        <p>Tonight was just sickening, said Brown, who revealed that a man had called the Vandy field house at halftime and threatened to shoot LSU player Collis Temple and the LSU coach. If this is freedom, weve really messed it up.</p>
        <p>In other games involving Top 20 teams, eighth-rated Alabama remained one game behind Vanderbilt in the chase for the SEC title with a 76-74 victory over Mississippi State; 12th-ranked Indiana steamrolled Wisconsin 81-63, 15th-rated Michigan nipped Northwestern 50-48, and newcomer to the rankings. No. 17 Creighton, whipped St. Johns of Minnesota 81-43.</p>
        <p>The Vanderbilt-LSU game opened under heavy tension. Not only had the Tigers pinned a 84-81 loss on the (tonunodores Jan. 12 in Baton Rouge but an ugly fight broke out near the end of the earlier game, involving (tonunodore Captain Jan van Breda Kolff and LSUs Temple. Temple was later reprimanded by the SEC com-</p>
        <p>^ Your "good neighbor" for</p>
        <p>fW</p>
        <p>(Bicum</p>
        <p>Service</p>
        <p>on damage to building and contents</p>
        <p>Claims up to S250 for damage to buildings and contents can be settled on-the-spot for State Farm policyholders. They present their bill and get a settlement check for State Farms share of damage caused by fire, lightning, wind storm, haii or glass breakage. Call me tor all the details.</p>
        <p>EARL THOMPSON</p>
        <p>200 East Greanvilla, Blvd.</p>
        <p>(Greanvilla TV A Appliance Center Bldg^)</p>
        <p>. Office Phone 7Sa-3422</p>
        <p>Like a good neighbv. State Farm is titere.</p>
        <p>AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION SERVICE</p>
        <p>.. All American Makat A Models</p>
        <p>ROY SPEIGHT'S SERVICE CENTER</p>
        <p>$# N. Greene St. Ph. TS2-3904</p>
        <p>misioner for his role in the incident.</p>
        <p>There were no on-the-court incidents Monday night.</p>
        <p>LSU, 5-7 in the SEC and 11-9 over-all, was led by the inside shooting 0 Glenn Hansen, who had 35 points, and Eddie Palu-binskas 27.</p>
        <p>Van Breda Kolff had 16 points for the Ctommodores, who are in first place in the SEC with an 11-1 record, 19-1 over-aU.</p>
        <p>Charles Qeveland hit a long jumper with one second remaining for its victory over Mississippi State.</p>
        <p>Soihomore ()uinn Buckners 17 points paced Indiana to the victory over Wisconsin, its eighth in a row.</p>
        <p>The triumfh raised the Hoo-siers marks in the Big Ten to 7-1, leaving them one-half game</p>
        <p>bdiind Michigan, and evened Wisconsins record at 44 in the confer)ce.</p>
        <p>Northwesterns Bob Hildebrand missed two free throws with three seconds left, enabling Michigan to escape with the victory.</p>
        <p>Hie Creighton Bluejays, upset winners over Marquette at Milwaukee Saturday night, connected on 58 per cent of their first-half shots as they moved to their 19 victory against four defeats.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in college basketball it was Michigan State 75, Ohioitate 67; Iowa 112, Purdue 111 W triple overtime; Auburn 99, Kentucky 97 in overtime; Florida 87, Georgia 74; Ten-nesssee 65, Mississippi 57; West Virginia 78, Syracuse 77; Austin Peay 94, Morehead 83, University of Tennessee-Ciiatanooga 98, Tennessee Wesleyan 66.</p>
        <p>Union Carbide continued to hold to the lead in the Division II of the Industrial Basketball League last night.</p>
        <p>In the opening game of the evening,  North  Carolina</p>
        <p>National  Bank  downed</p>
        <p>Wachovia, 66-60, eliminating the losers from any shot at the title. NCNB built up a 26-21 lead after the first half, then held off Wachovia, 40-39, in the second half to win it.</p>
        <p>Henry Wood led NCNB with 21 points, while Tixiy Whitehurst had 17 and Leon Johnson had 14. For Wachovia, Hal Daniel had 27, Randy Brooks had 16 and Terry Sparrow had 10.</p>
        <p>In the second game, State Highway took a 6045 win over Greenville Utilities. By half-time, the Highwaymen had struggled into a 29-27 lead. But they broke it open in the second half with, a 31-18 advantage.</p>
        <p>Bobby Edwards led the Highwaymen with 17 point, while Fred Mills had 14. Greenville Utilities was led by Melvin Reese and Jimmy Sutton, each with 12.</p>
        <p>Union Carbide captured a 62-58 win over the Post Office in the final game. The Batterymen slipped into a 26-22 lead in the first half of play, then matched the Postmen the second half, as each team scored 36 points.</p>
        <p>Garland Warren led Uniim Carbide with points, while Alphonza Mayo had 18 and Tommy Roach had 17. For the Post Office, Frank Ligon had 20, and Thomas Perkins had 12.</p>
        <p>Church League</p>
        <p>w</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Immanuel</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Presbyterian</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Black Jack</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Oakmont</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>St. James</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>Trinity</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>10</p>
        <p>Don McGlohon</p>
        <p>INSURANCE</p>
        <p>Hincs Agency, Inc.</p>
        <p>Canada Dry Kentfl</p>
        <p>KENTUCKY STRKKSHT BOURBON WHlSKEY.Oe PROOF. BOTTLED BY CANADA DRY DISTILLERS CO.. LOUISVILLE. KY</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0009" />
        <p>Th Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Psychology In A Worm Smile</p>
        <p>Tony was so Uue that he debated suicide. Then a girl at the restaurant saved his life! For restaurants are an excellmt place for practicing psychology. And they also are an effective spot for Cupids archery!</p>
        <p>ByGEORGE W. CRANE Ph.D.. M.D.</p>
        <p>CASE Z-550: Tony T., aged 63, lost his wife a year ago.</p>
        <p>Dr Crane, he began, I remember your saying that a smiling waitress exerts a splendid psychological service to her patrons.</p>
        <p>Well, I can give you a personal example to prove it.</p>
        <p>My wife and I had been happily married for exactly 40 years when she succumbed to cancer.</p>
        <p>Our 3 children were grown and living clean acros the continent.</p>
        <p>So I felt doubly alone and forsaken.</p>
        <p>. My apetite was gone so I lost 25 pounds in weight.</p>
        <p>In fact, one day I was so blue and lonely that I considered taking my own life.</p>
        <p>But I happened to be walkii past a little ' restaurant decided to get a cup of coffee while I was debating suicide.</p>
        <p>A smiling young waitress came over and greeted me cordially.</p>
        <p>She asked me what Id have to eat and I told her just a cup of coffee.</p>
        <p>But she said I ought to eat something more solid for she commented that I look thin.</p>
        <p>Well, during her spritely conversatjon, I finally did order a full lunch.</p>
        <p>And she stopped by my table several times to say a cheery word.</p>
        <p>Well, I perked up, partly due to the good food but probably more because of her sincere</p>
        <p>friradlinesa.</p>
        <p>And wdien rtie said goodbye, she invited me to come back for dinner, since they were having delicious beef stew.</p>
        <p>She must have changed my outlook entirely, for whm I' stepped out of the restaurant, the world looked like a friendly place.</p>
        <p>So I decided to postpone any rash act like swallowing a bottle of sleeping pills.</p>
        <p>And I returned that night for dinner, where she again was cheerftil and even patted me on the back after my dinner was over.</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane, she Uterally gave me a new will to live and doubtless saved by life by her friendly smile and cordial conversation.</p>
        <p>Bravo, Waitresses!</p>
        <p>Waiters and waitresses literally can function as splendid psychologists, as thie girl demonsh*ates.</p>
        <p>For most of us associate eating with a friendly social group, since our frst contact with a dinner table was when we were placed in our high chair, and dine with our parents and siblings.</p>
        <p>All through life, therefore, one of the many facets called the flovor of food is this happy</p>
        <p>social environment at meal time.</p>
        <p>Thats why widows and widowers, who dine akme at home, lad[ ai^ietite!</p>
        <p>The aromA and 4 taste qualities are still isresent with their food.</p>
        <p>But this vital social element is missing, so they lack their usual zest for dining.</p>
        <p>A cheerful, sympathitic waitress or waiter thus can serve as a splendid Iwme missionary, at the same time they are serving food effciently.</p>
        <p>So leam to turn on a smile and offer a cheery greeting to ALL patrons, but especially to lonely oldsters like Tony!</p>
        <p>Being a good waitress or waiter rates on a par with charitable woik on the Hope Ship or other missionary activities, so you college youth diould try such jobs.</p>
        <p>They also are an ideal place to develop romances, for when a man has eaten a good meal, the waitress looks far more beautiful to him!</p>
        <p>(Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 25 cents to cofer typing and printing costs vdii you send for one of his booklets.)</p>
        <p>Long Form For Local TV News</p>
        <p>Thornsby . .</p>
        <p>By JAY SHARBUTT AP Television Writer NEW YORK (AP)  The TV news business is the subject of todays dissertation. First up: The recent decision by WNBC-TV here to start doing a two-hour local vening news show by mid-April or early May.</p>
        <p>The step is considered radical for Fun City, but remember, this is a hamlet where attending old movies is considered avant garde.</p>
        <p>The long form of local TV news is old hat for Los Angeles viewers. It began there in April 1968 at KNBC-TV, an NBC-owned station, with two hours of local, state, national and world news in the early evening ,each week night.</p>
        <p>The first show ran from 5 to 6 p.m., followed by the national half-hout NBC news and then  another hour-long local news show.</p>
        <p>The format was changed m November 1970 to two separate, but consecutive, local evening news shows. They started at 5 p.m., ended at 7 p.m. and were foUowed by the NBC Nightly News.</p>
        <p>It still works that way and the long form concept there is starting to get competition from two other major TV stations.</p>
        <p>Last week, rival KNXT, owned by CBS, went from aii hour-long evening news show to 90 minutes, starting at 5:30 p.m. The new format features separate half-hour and hour-long news programs, each with</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV CK. 9</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Truth or 7:30 Tell The Truth 8:00 Maude 8:30 Hawaii 5 0 9:30 Movie 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie WEDNESDAY 6 00 Arthur Smith 6:30 Meditations 6:35 Carolina 8:00 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 joker's Wild 10:30 Pyramid 11:00 Gambit 11:30 Love of Life</p>
        <p>Tips</p>
        <p>11:55 Timely 12:00 News 12:30 Search 1:00 The Young 1:30 World Turns 2:00 Guiding Light 2:30 Edge Night 3:00 Daytime 90 4:30 Lucy Show 5:00 Mod Squad 6:00 News 6:30 CBS News 7:00 Truth or 7:30 Tell The Truth 8 00 Sonny &amp;amp; Cher 9:00 UNC at Mary 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>its own anchorman, before the CBS Evening News at 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>And this spring, another network-owned station in Los Angeles, KABC-TV, is moving to a two-hour local news format in the early evening, according to A1 Primo, vice-president for news at ABCs fve TV stations.</p>
        <p>He said the same spring change will occur at KGO-TV, the netyvorks San Francisco station.</p>
        <p>ABC-TVs fine aose-Up investigative series plans to investigate  stand by, now  television. Itll be the September offering for the series, recently renewed for a second season.</p>
        <p>Av Westin, ABC News vice-president for documentaries, says the show wont involve the oft-criticized television news area.</p>
        <p>Instead, itll concentrate on the equally-criticized area of entertainment programming by all three major TV networks.</p>
        <p>He says it will cover the decision-making processes that bring certain kinds of programming to the air, and also touch on the controversial ratings that decide the fate of network TV shows.</p>
        <p>CBS 60 Minutes, which last month did an excellent study of junkets and other joiv-nalistic problems, now is toiling on a new piece about local TV news shows, using the colorful San Francisco market to illustrate what is happening in many regions.</p>
        <p>Among other things, itll inspect the role of news consultants hired to suggest ways local TV news efforts can draw more viewers.</p>
        <p>However, Harry Moses, producer of the segment, says the advisors arent the main thrust of the story, filmed at three stationsKRON, KGO and KPIXnow engaged in a hard scrap for ratings leadership.</p>
        <p>"Your center of gravity wasn't mode for those heels I "</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 13, 1974</p>
        <p>CARROLL RICHTER'S</p>
        <p>KMOSCCffE</p>
        <p>from the Carroll Righter Institute</p>
        <p>Pilot Film On N.C. Craftsmen</p>
        <p>WITN-TV Ch. 7</p>
        <p>Sq'</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7 00 Dragnet 7 .30 Hollywood 8:00 Adam 12 8:30 Movie 10:00 Police story 11:00 Nevrt 11:30 Tonight WEDNESDAY 6:25 Your Future 6.55 Nevys 7.00 Today 7:25 News   -</p>
        <p>' 7:30 Today ':25 News 8.30 Today 9:00 Mike Douglas 10:00 Dinah's Place 10:30 jeopardy 11:00 Wizard Odds 11:30 Hollywood Sq.</p>
        <p>12:00</p>
        <p>12:30</p>
        <p>12:55</p>
        <p>1:00</p>
        <p>1:30</p>
        <p>2:00</p>
        <p>2:30</p>
        <p>3:00</p>
        <p>3:30</p>
        <p>4:00</p>
        <p>4:30</p>
        <p>5:00</p>
        <p>6:00</p>
        <p>6:30</p>
        <p>News Baffle Noon News Jack Pot On A Match Our Lives Doctors Another World Marriage Somerset Bewitched Wild West News</p>
        <p>NBC News</p>
        <p>7:00 Dragnet 7:30 Sportsman 8:00 Chase 9:00 Movies</p>
        <p>11;00'*News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV Ch. 12</p>
        <p>1:00 My Children 1:30 Make Deal 2:00 Newlyweds 2:30 In My Life 3:00 Gen. Hospital 3:30 One Life 4.00 Gllligan 4:30 Gomer Pyl# 5:00 Bey-.-Mtlbiitles 5:30 Total News , 6:00 ABC News 6:30 Beat Clock 7:00 Andy GrlHlfh 7:30Price Right 8:00 cowboys 8:30 AAovie 10:00 Doc Elliott 11:00 News 12 11:30 Entertainment 1 ;00 AAornIng News 1:10 Sign Off</p>
        <p>WUNK-TV Ch. 25.</p>
        <p>1:30 Phy. Science</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Andy Griffith 7:30 Dusty's Trail 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Movie 10:00 Marcus Welby 11:00 News 12 IJ &amp;gt;30</p>
        <p>' 1:00 Morning News 1:10 Sign DM ^ WEDNESDAY 6:30 Batman 7:00 Bullwinkle , 7:30 underdog 8:00 New Zoo 8:30 AAontage 9:30 Movie 11:30 Brady Bunch 12.00 Password 12:30 Split Second</p>
        <p>Dr. Robert Rasch, chairman of the Communication Arts Department at East Carolina University has completed a pilot film for  series of educational movies about North Carolina craftsmen.</p>
        <p>The film, entitled North Carolina CraftsmenPaul Minnis explains the unique and high acclaimed ceramic methods of Paul Minnis, former chairman of the ECU Ceramic Department. Minnis currently owns a pottery business in Knightdale.</p>
        <p>Rasch says the film wUl be marketed nationally to a variety of groups interested in arts and crafts. And he hopes the flm will pave the way for additional movies about Dni^rtaht' craft^ smen in the state.</p>
        <p>general TENDENCIES: Morning favors developmg a new course of action whereby you can impress those vital to your success. Later you find lack of support from officials Which causes you to postpone putting such desirable plans m action</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar 21 to Apr 19) Accept assistance of friends in am, but later there is delay Go after that personal aim in p m. Use the direct approach</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr 20 to May 20) Get your actual work done early since later your associates are very demanding, but to a good purpose Dont lose temper with mate tonight.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) A fine idea should be studied carefully early, then put to work m p m A pleasing letter arrives. Show care with opposite sex</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Take time to please loved one mam, but be careful a bigwig does not cut off backing on grounds you are indolent</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug 21) Handle that famy affair early and well since further procrastination could bring about dire results Be helpful Work quietly</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug 22 to Sept 22) Take care of important matters early, then compliment others and gain their favors. Reach better understandmg with co-workers for efficiency.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept 23 to Oct 22) Monetary affairs can meet with big success mam, but take it easy after lunch or you could lose a good deal Follow experts advice.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct 23 to Nov 21) Get busy early at whatever means the most to you and be kind toward aUies for best results Be well groomed for greater self-confidence.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov 22 to Dec 21) Plan early how to gam aims, but dont act forcefully later Assist those who are</p>
        <p>having rough sledding Be on time</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec 22 to Jan 20) A fascinating friend can give you fine ideas and suggestions, but dont act on them just yet Avoid gioup meetings, others are edgy</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan 21 to Feb 19) Good day for some career changes, but dont try to lord it over others or you get</p>
        <p>nowhere Take no chances with reputation.  .</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb 20 to Mar 20) You can be highly inspired m a m and can make changes that are necessary, or put ideas across, but take it easy after lunch</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY he or she will have much abihty at educational work early m life and should have the advantage of a college education, so prepare for it now. Your chd is likely to choose trouble-shooting vocations that require the ability to solve all kinds of problems intelligently. The physique is fine here and sports are a must. The religious</p>
        <p>fervor is great.  .</p>
        <p>The Stars impel, they do not compel  What you make ol</p>
        <p>your hfe is largely up to YOU!  r  u</p>
        <p>CarroU Righters Individual Forecast for your sign tor Mwch IS now ready For your copy send your birthdate Md $1 to Carroll Righter Forecast (name of newspaper). Box 629, Hollywood, Calif 90028.</p>
        <p>.  ((c) 1974, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>CINEMA PARK</p>
        <p>m-rim shppiic ciith</p>
        <p>St ARTS TOMORROWI</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Your Future 7:30 Gov't Inst. ' 8:00 NC News 8:30 The Arts 9.00 Dialogue 10:00 Gen. Assembly</p>
        <p>2:00 Fr. Chef 2:30 Humanities 3:00 Film</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>9:30 Phy. Science 10:00 Sesame St. 11:00 Math 11:30 Film 12:00 The Arts 12:30 Elec. Co.</p>
        <p>1:10 Ready Set Go</p>
        <p>3:30 Conversations 4:00 Mr. Rogers 4:30 Sesame St. 5:30 Elec. Co.</p>
        <p>6:00 Hodgepodge A-.30 Decisions 7:00 Now 7:30 Conversations 8 00 BIH Moyers 8:30 Theatre 10:00 Gen Assembly</p>
        <p>^^WSody*</p>
        <p>cAlleit</p>
        <p>TDiaqe</p>
        <p>'Keaton</p>
        <p>III</p>
        <p>SleepeY'</p>
        <p>mJBSSSSi^</p>
        <p>Batted Artists</p>
        <p>Shows Daily At</p>
        <p>2-3:45-5:30-7:15-9</p>
        <p>imuwi iumiii</p>
        <p>TOMORROW!</p>
        <p>The New King of Kung Fu-Karate</p>
        <p>CUang'V\j</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>HCOLOR</p>
        <p>AMERICAN MTERNATIONAL I</p>
        <p>Shows Daily 1-3-5-7-9  ,</p>
        <p>Doors Open 12:30 P.M.J</p>
        <p>Ambulance Courses Set</p>
        <p>Th* DaUy Reflector, GreenvUle, N.C.Taeiday, February 1*. ltT4</p>
        <p>LA</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Pitt Technical Institute will-begin Ambulance Attendant Courses EU)3 and E04 Wednesday at 7 p.m. in the Greenville American Legion Building.</p>
        <p>The total course length wUl be 32 hours, 24 hours for E03 and six hours for E04. &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Class sessions will be conducted Mondays and Wednesdays from 7 p.m. to 10 p.m. Tuition is $2.</p>
        <p>This is the last time the N, C. State Board of Health will EOS and E04 training to be conducted for colification. A new course has been developed to replace E05 and E04 courses.</p>
        <p>Any amtNilance service or rescue squad member needing this training shmild attmd the first session.</p>
        <p>Vem Jones, consultant of the N. C. State Board of Health, will be present to explain requirements of new programs of training.</p>
        <p>For additional information, interested persons may call or visit the Institute.</p>
        <p>UN Plans Big Year For Women</p>
        <p>! NEW YORK (UPI) - The United Nations is planning to</p>
        <p>mark 1975 as International Womens Year.</p>
        <p>The role of women in economic and social develop</p>
        <p>ment and ways in which they can and should benefit from the development process are matters being considered by planners, distinguished women from member countries,' appointed to the Ck)mmission on the Status of Women. They recently met at the United Nations to plan for the event. The Commission on the Status of Women is a part of the United Nations Economic and Social Council.</p>
        <p>MEADOWBROOK</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>tIk house of</p>
        <p>SEVEN CORPSES</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL AMUSEMENTS CORE COLOR</p>
        <p>GOREN ON BRIDGE</p>
        <p>TICE</p>
        <p>DRIVE-IN</p>
        <p>THEATRE</p>
        <p>ENDS TONIGHT</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN  m, m CMcaw TTUMR</p>
        <p>Neitbn* vulowable. East deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH 4 J72 &amp;lt;78&amp;lt;S4 0 AJ 4 K Q 1 S WEST  EAST</p>
        <p>4 ItiS  4 Af</p>
        <p>It?  ^KQJSS</p>
        <p>0 t654  0 K832</p>
        <p>4 8743  488</p>
        <p>SOUTH 4 KQ843 &amp;lt;7 A2 0 Q18 7 4 A J2 The bidding;</p>
        <p>East South West North 1V  Dble.  Pass  3  4</p>
        <p>Pass  3 4  Pass  4  4</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Open  lead: Ten of</p>
        <p>While half a loaf might be better than none at all, being half right at the bridge table is generally no better than brig completely &amp;lt;tff the track.</p>
        <p>South correctly considered his hand too strong and his support for the minor suits too good to insist ^on his spades. Therefore, he made a takeout double, intending to bid spades at his next turn. When North showed a hand that was better than average with his jump response, South felt free to introduce his five-card suit and a good game was reached.</p>
        <p>West led the ten of hearts</p>
        <p>and, to guard against the danger that it was a singleton, declarer won the ace. Since the opening bid marked East with every missing hi^ card, declarer entered dummy with a club to the ten and led a low spade to his king, which held. He continued with a spade to the jack. East took the ace, cashed the king of hearts and continued with the queen. Declarer was a dead duck. If he ruffed low. West would ovemiff with the ten. If he ruffed with the queen. Wests ten would be promoted to a trick. Since declarer still had to lose a diamond trick, that meant down one.</p>
        <p>Declarer was on the right track when he crossed to dummy to lead a low trump toward his hand. However, that should have been only the first stage in his plan. After winning the king of spades, declarer should have re-entered dummy with the ace of diamonds and led a second spade toward the queen!</p>
        <p>Note the difference that, this play makes. East wins the a^e of trumps and cashes the king of hearts. Now, when he leads another heart declarer can ruff with the queen to prevent an overruff. The jack of spades is still in dummy to draw Wests ten of trumps, and declarer makes the contract, losing a trick in each suit except for clubs.</p>
        <p>Barring the area around the mouth of the Mississippi River, the Louisiana shoreline is receding from six to 125 feet each year.</p>
        <p>FEMALE</p>
        <p>RESPONSE</p>
        <p>RATEDR</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ACROSS 23. Hanging on 1. Public  one  side</p>
        <p>announcements 24. Dream image</p>
        <p>4. Unskilled 7. Counterpart II! Jurisdiction: Old English</p>
        <p>12. Midianite king</p>
        <p>13. Musical work</p>
        <p>14. Greek letter</p>
        <p>28. Indian baby</p>
        <p>30. Sand hill</p>
        <p>31. Son of Bela</p>
        <p>32. Cap</p>
        <p>33. French coin</p>
        <p>36. Cornucopia</p>
        <p>37. Overthrow</p>
        <p>msay gljcieh</p>
        <p>BQGGQU ssonsa Hlia HQQ BEaH QBQOS DEEi aim a!SS3 ESaQES</p>
        <p>asaaa aau asa aaa mamn anaa</p>
        <p>ciQBiiDa naaaa aDEDias] masnB aaaaa oaama</p>
        <p>15. Russian fighter 38. Smoked</p>
        <p>plane 16. Fastidious 47. Praise</p>
        <p>19. Control</p>
        <p>20. Alleviates 22. Diocese</p>
        <p>salmon 39. Relative</p>
        <p>42. Ancient slave</p>
        <p>43. Lincoln</p>
        <p>44. Space walk</p>
        <p>45. Head: Fr.</p>
        <p>SOLUTION OF YESTERDAY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>46. Supreme Being 4. Twin of</p>
        <p>47. Prate  Romulus</p>
        <p>DOWN  Desirous</p>
        <p>1. Enzyme</p>
        <p>2. Period</p>
        <p>r-</p>
        <p>rr</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>K&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>M</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>id</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>24</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>b</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>h</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>q</p>
        <p>4k</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>"</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>*2</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>H</p>
        <p>Va</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;16</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>41</p>
        <p>Par lime 22 min.</p>
        <p>AP Nmwtfmaturm$</p>
        <p>2-12</p>
        <p>6. Transformation</p>
        <p>7. Protagonist</p>
        <p>8. English painter</p>
        <p>9. Eureka red 10. French river</p>
        <p>18. One designated</p>
        <p>19. Huge wave</p>
        <p>20. General Arnolds nickname</p>
        <p>21. Utmost hyperbole</p>
        <p>22. Haggard novel</p>
        <p>24. Greek letter</p>
        <p>25. Jailor</p>
        <p>26. Unbroken</p>
        <p>27. Converged 29. Grampus 32- Crated</p>
        <p>33. Stew</p>
        <p>34. Ascended</p>
        <p>35. Uncles wife</p>
        <p>36. Tramp 38. Loiter</p>
        <p>40. Marsh elder 41.SiesU</p>
        <p>2M PLAYHOUSE THEATRE</p>
        <p>Now at Fass Brothers!</p>
        <p> Mile* Watt or Ortanvillt On Farm-villa Hwy. (2M1 Phone 7S6-8M8</p>
        <p>now</p>
        <p>SHOWING</p>
        <p>ADULT</p>
        <p>ENTERTAINMENT</p>
        <p>COLOR</p>
        <p>Massage</p>
        <p>l&amp;gt;$ak^73</p>
        <p>in color</p>
        <p>^ For Mature Ladies and Gentlemen</p>
        <p>fejRVHell Up In Herlem{Rf|p^y, rrpAPER CHASE (PO)</p>
        <p>SHOWTIME AAONDAYSUNDAY</p>
        <p>4:00-7:36-9: Op</p>
        <p>'</p>
        <p>TRY OUR</p>
        <p>WHOLE FMEDFUHINDER</p>
        <p>ALL YOU CAN EAT</p>
        <p>$1.69</p>
        <p>served with Hush Puppies, French Fries &amp;amp; Cole $law</p>
        <p>419 W. MAIN ST. WASHINGTON / 946-1301</p>
        <p>4:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>LUCY</p>
        <p>Follow the lony ontio of the First llody of Comedy, Lucille Boll. She's oiways in a laughable jam!</p>
        <p>5:00 p.m.</p>
        <p>MOD</p>
        <p>SQUAD</p>
        <p>Stirring drama of three young police officers who or* olwoys willing to put their lives on th* Jine for justice.</p>
        <p>6:00 pm</p>
        <p>EARLY</p>
        <p>EVENING</p>
        <p>REPORT</p>
        <p>I pm</p>
        <p>CBS</p>
        <p>EVENING</p>
        <p>NEWS</p>
        <p>Vance Morris onchors Eostern Carolina's professional news team. Fast ond foctuol coverog* of th* news, weather, and sports.</p>
        <p>No msttsr whert it hspptns, the CBS news team will Im there. Join Walter Crenkite with fcliew reporters Dan Rathar, Rogar Mudd, Eric Savaraid and efhars.</p>
        <p>7:00 pm TRUTH OR CONSEQUENCES</p>
        <p>'Know-it-</p>
        <p>Nabedy iikas a All mat's why it's fun</p>
        <p>whan m# cantastants hava to pay tho prica on mis zany shew.</p>
        <p>7:30 pm TO TELL THE TRUTH</p>
        <p>Gofry Moor* hosts this populor panel show. Bill Cullen, Peggy Coss, Gen* Rayburn, ond Kitty Cortil* od to th* fun.</p>
        <p>8:00 MAUDE 8:30 HAWAII FIVE-0 9:30 SHAFT 11:00 FINAL REPORT 11:30 CBS LATE SHOW</p>
        <p>"Harpy</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0010" />
        <p>Datty Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Taesday, Pebrnary 12, 1974</p>
        <p>How N.C. Congressmen And Senators Voted</p>
        <p>THE PILE GETS BIGGER AND BIGGERAccumulated snow near a home in Calumet (Mich.) almost covers a yard light and icicles up to eight feet long hang form the roof. The area has long</p>
        <p>been known as the snow belt of ttie copper country where about 187-inches of snow fell in 1973. In January of this year 59 inches was recorded. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>PFANurs</p>
        <p>1/ i'E5,,viA'AM?\</p>
        <p>By ROLL CALL REPORT WASHINOTONHeres how area Members of Congress were recM'dedon majmr roll call votes Jan 31 through Feb. 6.</p>
        <p>HOUSE DEPOSIT INSURANCE Rejected, 170 for and 202 against, an ammdment that would have set a $80,000 insurance limit for municipal, state and federal government dqwsits in hanks and savings-ai^4oans.</p>
        <p>In rejecting the amendment, the House voted to insure such deposits for 100 pm* cent of their value, the oyerall bill was later passed and sent to the Smate.</p>
        <p>If the bill becomes law, nivate deposits will h/e insured for up to $50,000 and public deposits will receive 100 per cent coverage. At present, both government and private deposits have a maximum of $20,000 in federal deposit insurance.</p>
        <p>One effect of full coverage for government deposits is that public units probably will shift many deposits from banks to savings^d-loans, which pay higher interest rates.</p>
        <p>Most municipal and state deposits now go to banks because only banks can issue the municipal and state bonds needed as collateral (insurance) for deposits in excess of $20,000.</p>
        <p>Supporters argued that 100 per cent coverage will damage the municipal and state bond industry, and cause a loss of revenue for banks.</p>
        <p>Opponents argued that shifting deposits to savings-and-loans will mean more income for governments and also will free up money for home mortgages.</p>
        <p>Reps. Wilmer Mizell (R-5), Earl Ruth (R-8) and James Martin (R-9) voted yea.</p>
        <p>Reps. Walter Jones (D-1), L. H. Fountain (D-2), David Henderson (D-3), Ike Andrews (D-4), Richardson Preyer (D-6), Charles Rose (D-7), James Broyhill (R-10) and Roy Taylor (D-11) voted nay. IMPEACHMENT INQUIRY Passed, 342 for and 70 against, a motion to block amendments to the House resolution granting subpooia powers to the House Judiciary Committees investigation of the impeachment of the President.</p>
        <p>The motion was to invoke the previous question. Its approval closed debate and forced an immediate vote on the overall resolution.</p>
        <p>Following the vote, the-House overwhelmingly passed the resolution. As a House resolution</p>
        <p>it becomes effective without the need tw concurrence by the Siate and the lh*e8ident.</p>
        <p>Supporters argued that a thorough impeachment investigation can only be accomplished if the conunittee is granted broad powers to subpoena evidence and compel witnessesincluding  the</p>
        <p>President-^ testify. Rep. John Rhodes (R-Ariz), the House Minority Leader, expressed satisfaction that the committee would not abuse its powers.</p>
        <p>Of^nents argued that the powers are too broad. Most opponents wanted to attach amendments prohibiting the subpoenaing of evidence not directly related to impeachable offenses, and setting an Ainril 30 cut-off date for the coinmittees inquiry.</p>
        <p>Jones, Fountain, Haiderson, Adrews, Preyer, Rose, Broyhill and Taylor voted yea.</p>
        <p>Mizell, Ruth and Btortin voted nay.</p>
        <p>SENATE GENOCIDE DEBATE FaUed, 55 for and 38 against, to end a fllabuster against the genocide treaty resolution. Hie vote fell sevai short of the two-thirds majority needed under Senate rules to end debate. </p>
        <p>The genocide treaty was ffrst sne to the Senate in 1949 by Presidmt Truman. It defines genocide as any systematic mass murder of moital torture of ethnic groups, such as Hitler aplied to Jews in World War II, and calls for establishing an international tribunal for prosecuting persons accused of genocide.</p>
        <p>All Presidents since Truman have endorsed the treaty, but the full Senate has never taken a vote on whether the U. S. should become a signatory.</p>
        <p>Supporters of the treaty argued that the Senate should vote its conscience and have the U. S. join the 78 other nations that have signed the treaty.</p>
        <p>Opponents argued against subjecting American citizens to the whims and caprices of an international tribunal which would not be bound to observe the Constitutions guarantees of due-process.</p>
        <p>Seiis. Sam Ervin (D) and Jesse Helms (R) voted nay. LEGAL SERVICES Passed, 89 for and 17 against, the legal services bill that establishes an independent, non-profit corporation to take over the legal programs for the poor which the Office of Economic OK&amp;gt;ortunity has run since 1964.</p>
        <p>The bUl, which now goes to the</p>
        <p>House, has the Administrations backing.</p>
        <p>It calls for an eleven-member board, appointed by the President with Senatp confirmation, to . run the corporation. TTie (xrogram will coat $71.8 million in fiscal 1974, $80 miUion in fiscal 1975 and $100 miUion in fiscal 1976.</p>
        <p>Supporters argued that all members of society should have access to competoit legal advice, even if they cant afford to pay for it.</p>
        <p>Opponents argued that i bill does not ^contain sufficient safeguards against Naderesque trouble-making by legal service lawyers.</p>
        <p>Ervin and Helms voted nay. LEGAL SERVICES LOBBYING Rejected, 29 for and 59 against, an amendment to prevoit legal services lawyers from giving advice to their clients on how to lobby for legislation or register to vote.</p>
        <p>The rejected amendment also would have banned the lawyers from participating in any political activities, on the job or off.</p>
        <p>Supporters of the amendment argued that legal services lawyers often get too zeal&amp;lt;^ and that strict rules are needed to keep them out of the partisan politics.</p>
        <p>Opponents argued that many political matters fall within clients constitutional rights, and that restricting lawyers in this area would give poor people second class counsel.</p>
        <p>Ervin and Helms voted yea  LEGAL SERVICES IN DEPENDENCE Rejected, 30 for and 58 against, an amendment to increase Congress control of the proposed legal services corporation.</p>
        <p>By rejecting the amendment, the Senate let stand a provision that prohibits any congressional or Administration interference in the policies of the corporation.</p>
        <p>The Corporation, therefore, is free to decide how to spend its money and vdiich types of services it will offer, exc^ for explicit prohibitions against such activities as counseling draft dodgers and deserters.</p>
        <p>Supporters of the amendment argued that Congress has responsibility to the taxpayers to review federal programs.</p>
        <p>Opponents argued that the corporation must be insulated from the political pressures that Congress and the President can exert.</p>
        <p>Ervin and Helms voted yea.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>ADVERTISEMENT</p>
        <p>Pursuant to Sactlon 140, North Carolina General Statutes, sealed proposals on forms prepared by the Engineer will be received by the GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMMISSION, GREENVILLE, NORTH CAROLINA, at the oHIce of the Director, until 2:0(J&amp;gt;.M.*MaFcfi7, 1974 and immediately thereafter publicly opened and read, for Furnishing Materials and Equipment for 115 KV Switching Station.</p>
        <p>Complete sets of Drawings, Specifications, and other Contract Documents may be inspected by the office of L.E. Wooten and Company, Consulting Engineers, 120 North Boylan Avenue, Raleigh, North Carolina, and In the City Hall, Greenville, North Carolina.</p>
        <p>One set of Drawings, Specifications, and other Contract Documents may be obtained from L.E. Wooten and Company, upon payment of a deposit of $10,u00 which is nonrefundable.</p>
        <p>.GREENVILLE UTILITIES COMPANY</p>
        <p>Charles O'H. Horne, Jr. Feb. 12, 19, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE INTHEOENERAL COURTOF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION BEFORE THE CLERK North Carolina Pitt County Under and by virtue of an order of the Clerk of Superior Court of Pitt County, made in the special proceedings entitled James Lee Clark and wife, Carolyn Clark VS. Courtney R. King and Husband, John Doe King, and David T. Greer, Administrator C.T.A., the undersigned commissioner will on the 2oth day of March, 1974, at twelve o'clock, noon, at the Courthouse door in GreenvI.le, North Carolina, offer for sale to the highest bidder for cash that certain tract of land lying and being in Ayden, Township, Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>A lot of land being located at 308 Planters Street, Ayden, North Carolina. Being approximateiy 50 feet by 150 feet and being more particuiarly described as foilows: Being in the Town of Ayden, North Caroiina, West of Venters Street, and being Lot No. 20 in Block No. 4 of the division of the W.  L.  Venters</p>
        <p>Property; and being bounded on the East by Lots 4,5 and 6 of the division of the W. L. Venters Property; and being bounded on the South by McKinley Avenue;  and  being</p>
        <p>bounded on the West by Lot 19 of the division of the W.  L.  Venters</p>
        <p>Property; and being bounded on the North by Lot No. 7 of the division of the W. L. Venters Property, and being a part of the Tarauseva-Wihdham Company division of the W. L. Venters Property, and being more particularly described in a deed dated November 18, 1909, to Abram Clark and recorded in Book J-9-144, of the Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>This the 16th day of January, 1974. Laurence S. Graham Commissioner 114 East Third Street Greenville, N. C. 27834 (919) 758^5445 Jan. 22, 29; Feb. 5, 12, 1974</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIV.E</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>Recalls Airship Travel As Luxurious, Practical</p>
        <p>EDITORS NOTE: The Soviet Union is reported planning to build a ntx:lear-powered dirigible capable of carrying 180 tons of frei^t and 1,800 passengers. In the following article, the son of a famed German dirigible commander discusses the past and future of commercial airships.</p>
        <p>^OWEN THERE IS AH ALARM BY THE FIRE AX/</p>
        <p>GOOP. HOW</p>
        <p>listen to me carefully.</p>
        <p>PARLING </p>
        <p>STILL BROOPIHG ABOUT THAT POOR. BPRASGLEP WOMAN yOUR CREW PUUEP</p>
        <p>SHE 9AIP HER NAME WAS CWIVERS .THAT SHE F6U-OVERBCARP FROM</p>
        <p>...THE HARBOR POLICE HAVE NO RECORP OF ANY ALERT. STRANGE?</p>
        <p>By KLAUS F. PRUSS Associated Press Writer FRANKFURT, Germany (AP)  In rainy twilight of May 6, 1937, the German Zep-,pelin Hindenburg with 97 persons aboard approached a U.S. naval airbase after a nonstop flight across the North Atlantic Without warning, the largest airship ever flown exploded and its lAiattered hulk collapsed on the sandy field at Lakehurst, N J., killing 36 persons.</p>
        <p>My father, Capt. Max Pruss, was commander of the Hindenburg and one of the survivcxrs</p>
        <p>Campus To Host Diocesan Meet</p>
        <p>Tlie annual meeting of the Episcopal Diocese of North (Carolina is sdieduled to be held March 1-2 on the campus (rf East Clarolina University.</p>
        <p>Sessions will be held in the .dining hall of South Cafeteria. Between 400 and 600 delegates are expected, with Bishop Hunley Elebash of Wilmington presidUng.</p>
        <p>HEART PATIENTS RETIRE ZAGREB, Yugoslavia (AP)  Of all Yugoslavs retiring early because illness, 51.2 per cent do so because heart alimento, Vus magazine said. It called for alarm siiKe heart patients are mostly hi^y skilled peo{de with great responsibilities.</p>
        <p>of the crash. He and other airship enthusiasts were convinced that accounts of that crash caused the demise of transoceanic airship travel a decade before airplanes were to achieve the same goal. Airship construction in Germany was halted with the start of World War II.</p>
        <p>Some aircraft designers now consider airships to be an answer to requirements of contemporary transportation, in which energy savings and ivi-ronmental protection are important concerns.</p>
        <p>TTie 1973-74 edition of Janes Freight Containers, an authoritative referoice on transportation, recently reported plans by Soviet designers for a nuclear-powered airship capable of carrying 180 tons of freight and 1,800 passengers at a cruising speed of 190 m.pJi.</p>
        <p>The first of the Zeppelins, named after inventor Ck)unt Ferdinand von Zei^lin, flew in 19Q0 at Lake (instance in south Germany. The construction company, Zeppelin Metal-Iwerke, still operates at Frie-drichshafen, but it builds aluminium containers and radar equipment now instead of airships.</p>
        <p>The first Zeppelin passenger service was inaugurated in</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET, 1967, half ton pick-up, 6 cylinder A-1 condition. $600. Call 752-6065 or 758-1908 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p> ^^</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 758-0114.</p>
        <p>LTD COUNTRY SQUIRE Station Wagon, 1971. Air, power brakes, power steering, power seats, power windows, speed control, 10 passengers, excellent condition, 50,000 miles, reasonably priced. Call 753-4287 after 6.</p>
        <p>Garner Named To Ins. Council</p>
        <p>Mr. Leslie H. Garner of Greenville has been appointed by Insurapce Commissioner John Ingram to the Commissioners Insurance Council.</p>
        <p>Ingram said that the 17-member couDcfl W1 serve* as my eyes and ears with the pe(^Ie of North Carolina, keq^ the Department of Insurance hi touch with the peofde and their proUems, and advising me bow we can best solve these problems.</p>
        <p>1910, and airships served as long-distance German bombers in World War 1. The first regular transoceanic schedule was set up in the 1920s, connecting Germany with the United States, a three-day flight, and with Brazil, a five-^y flight.</p>
        <p>I vividly recall the Hindenburg, which was truly a flying luxury hotel. This airship was 804 fe^ long, 147 feet hi^ and was powered by four diesel engines at a crusing speed of 78 miles an hour.</p>
        <p>As a 9-year-old, I was aboard the Hindenburg in 1938 on flights betwei Lake Constance and Frankfurt, the European airship terminal.</p>
        <p>Passenger facilites were located within the rigid hull of the airship. There were promenade decks and loungea^with large windows to view The scenery floating by, a dining room and bar, and staterooms with hot and cold running water.</p>
        <p>Auctioneering Course Slated</p>
        <p>Courses in tobacco auctioneering and tobacco marking will be offered at Pitt Technical Institute during spring quarter if enough interest is ejqnressed.</p>
        <p>Plans are to offer each course, beginning in March, either day or night, should enough interest and demand bq stated.</p>
        <p>The student should acquire fundamental basic skills and practical experiences necessary for succemful performance lu either an auctioneer or ticket marker.</p>
        <p>Ray Oglesby will instruct the tobacco auctioneering and Julian Edwards will instruct the ticket marking course.</p>
        <p>Interested persons should contact the Institute to make applica.tion for either course.</p>
        <p>OLDS70 Cutlass Supreme. 32,500 miles, factory air, power steering and brakes, AM stereo tape. Call 758-0635 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>OLDS CUTLASS, 1969. 2 door, hardtop, 6 cylinder, power, air, mag wheels, new tires. $1,295. Pitt Motor Sales across street from Parkers Barbecue. 756-2547.</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED Engine transmission, body parts. Free Darts locating service.</p>
        <p>CRISP AUTO SALVAGE</p>
        <p>Phone 752-2572 N. Greene St. (Back of Riverside Restaurant)</p>
        <p>TOYOTA STATION WAGON 1973,</p>
        <p>liklb new. Call 756-7646 or 758 4362.</p>
        <p>VEGA ESTATE WA6EN, 1973 . 5800 miles, automatic, power steering, air conditioned, M-FM, luggage rack, radial tires, a real puff. J. D. Stocks 752-7331.</p>
        <p>Having Engine Trouble? See</p>
        <p>''The Engine People"</p>
        <p>Auto Specialty Co.</p>
        <p>917 W. 5th St. 758-1131</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN 411, 1971. 4 door, automatic transmission, an economy oli</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN1973. For sale by owner. Station wagon squareback, automatic transmission, 17,000 miles. Contact Jim Jennings at 752-2713.</p>
        <p>ideal for evenings.</p>
        <p>car pooli Call 756-6174</p>
        <p>Brpwn &amp;amp; Wood Inc. 752-7111 Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>"Where volume selling at bargain oricqi benefits you.</p>
        <p>W.W. Brown Bob Brown J^my Robards</p>
        <p>Robert Tugwell</p>
        <p>Dick Green Otho Cozart Russell Cayton</p>
        <p>Boats &amp;amp; Equipment</p>
        <p>18 FOOT STARCRAFT boat, motor and traitor. Like new, used only twice. No equity, take up payments.-Call 752-5721.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>ONE DATSUN pick-up 1972. One 1972 Toyota pick-up, bbth locally owned and in excellent condition. Come see at Holt Olds-Datsun. 101 Hooker Road. Call 756 3115</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0011" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Tuesday, February 12, 1974iiFind the dependable firm that helps you repair, renovate, redecorate- and rejoice- in todays. Classified Ads.</p>
        <p>DAY NURSERY</p>
        <p>MOTHBRLAND NURSRRY... Agw 6</p>
        <p>months and up. Snacks, hot tunchas. Pre-School education. Rate $14 per week. 170$ East 4th street. Call 752-2743.</p>
        <p>Dogs A Pats</p>
        <p>PEKINONRSE, POOOLBS,</p>
        <p>Pomeranian, AKC for sale. Call 75S-24S1.</p>
        <p>PURB BRBO ORBAT Dane Pups. 3</p>
        <p>black, 2 btOes $40. Phone 794-?2S4 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>QUALITY AKC PUPPIBS-POOdles, Boston Terriers, Pomeranians. Irish Setters on special. The Pet Kindom, West End Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>AKC PEKINONBSB PUPPIES,</p>
        <p>ready for Valentine's Day. AKC stud service. Call 758-3403.</p>
        <p>FREE PUPPIES. Must have good homes. Call 758-3587.</p>
        <p>MItctllanaaut For Salo</p>
        <p>DOLLAR DAY SPECIAL. Deluxe 5 piece screw driver set with holder. $1.00. Shop Fisher's Appliance and Furniture, 752-3409. Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM MOBILE homes, furnished. Sanddunes Village. Call 752-3225.</p>
        <p>WB UPHOLSTER ANYTHIN.</p>
        <p>Thousand of yards of fabric and foam cushioning. Jackson's Cleaning 8, Upholstery, Dickinson Ave., 758-3274 day or 758-1505 night.</p>
        <p>FOR YOUR CONVBNIBNCB, Mary</p>
        <p>Kay Beauty Products are now available In Greenville. Call 752-1201.</p>
        <p>RENT A STEMEX Carpet Cleaner. Clean rinse your carpet. Delivery and</p>
        <p>pick-up. Call 752-2842.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Raw peanuts shelled or unshelled at Keel Peanut Company, Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>JUST RECEIVED: A new shipment of Kimball pianos. Home Fumiture Store, Greenville.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: 1 male Elhew pointer, 14 months old, with show on game. 1 male and 1 female setter puppy, 4 months old. All registered. 744-4239 or 744-4880.</p>
        <p>ONLY 3 LEFTI Mostly Shephered. Female. $10. Frisky and lovable. Call 752-0514.</p>
        <p>WHITE POODLE, registered, one year old, housebroken. Call 825-8171 before 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>SPANISH STYLE BEDROOM suite, chest of draweri, dresser all Included. $170. Also dinette suit with six chairs $40, living room suite $50., lamps $4 each, end tables $4. Call 754-5234  .............</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Help Wanttd</p>
        <p>PART-TIME WAITRB5S wanted at Bum's Restaurant. Apply In person Ayden, N.C.</p>
        <p>WANTED FAMILY Who could work on farm. 4 room house with bath. Call 754-1235.</p>
        <p>MECHANIC'S HELPER-^ Applicant must be mechanically Inclined. Excellent pay and working conditions. Apply in person, M.O. Bount 8, Sons, Bethel.</p>
        <p>TRAINEE FOR INSURANCE in</p>
        <p>dustry. Selling life, accident and health, retirement annuities, and loss of income plans. Call W. C. Wilkins-collect, 919-754-1133, Greenville.</p>
        <p>NURSING OPPORTUNITY for RN</p>
        <p>willing to accept responsibility in an exciting comprehensive public health program. B. S. Degree preferred. Edgecombe County Health Department, Tarboro, N.C., 919-823-2174.</p>
        <p>NEED MONEY? LIKE people? Flexible hours, good earnings. You'll enloy working for Vanda Beauty Counselor Cosmetics. No age limit. Call 754-3908.</p>
        <p>DELIVERYMAN, PREFERABLY</p>
        <p>full time. Call 752-3311, John's Flowers.</p>
        <p>SERVICE STATION ATTENDANT.</p>
        <p>Good starting salary and benefits. Write "Service Station Attendant", P. O. Box 1947, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>SALES REPRESENTATIVE</p>
        <p>WANTED. Immediate opening for (XJalified person. Selling audio visual programs to educational market. Eastern N.C. territory. Salary plus commission. Write Box 2090, Raleigh, N.C. or call Mrs. Moore 832-3901.</p>
        <p>DESK CLERK:  Experience</p>
        <p>preferred, but will train. Write P.O. Box 854, Wilson, N.C. 27893 giving employment qualifications.</p>
        <p>MANAGER TRAINEE. Management position can be yours after 4 months specialized training.' Earn $15,000 to $35,000 a year In Management. We will send you to school for 2 weeks. Expenses paid, train you in the field, selling and servicing established accounts. 21 or over, have car, bondable, ambitious and sports minded. Hospitalization, Pension Plan. Call for appointment. B. W. Avery 919-833-5789. Long Distance call collect.</p>
        <p>WANTED COMPUTER Operator with experience on small systems. Prefer familiar with shipping procedures. Apply in person U.S.I., Farmville.</p>
        <p>INDIVIDUAL TO WORK 2nd shift in payroll office on permanent fulltime basis. Apply Prep-Shirt, GreenS' St. Ext., Greenville from 9 a.m.-12p.m. on or after Monday, February 11. An Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>DISCOUNT OFFICE FURNITURE,</p>
        <p>scratched or scarred in shipping, at discount prices. HoweH's Fumiture, corner of Blount and Heritage Streets, Kinston, N.C.</p>
        <p>CONNstellatlen Trombone.</p>
        <p>Easy slide. Beautiful chrome bell...Why not buy the best for only $185. Call 758-259Q.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD FOR SALE, $18 soft, $23 hardwood, stacked, prompt delivery, also trees trimmed. Call 752-7323.</p>
        <p>BOAT BUILDERS fiberglass, Columbia Yacht, World's largest fiberglass sailboat builder Is looking for experienced people; chopper gun operators, rollers, touch up, towling, supervision operators. Liberal benefits, 4 day week, moving allowance. Please call collect Ed Norman, Portsmouth, Va., area code 804-393-1051.</p>
        <p>AVON</p>
        <p>WE'-LL HELP YOU Start your own beauty businessi You can sell famous Avon products to your neighbors in your spare time. And</p>
        <p>we'll help you turn those hours into profits. For complete details, call:</p>
        <p>758-2444</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>DO YOU NEED HOUSE repairs, remodeling or mobile home repairs. Call Jennis WaInwright 758-3394, if no answer call after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>INCOME TAX RETURN preparation by qualified accountant. Fee reasonable. Call 752-5419 after 4 p.m. weekdays.</p>
        <p>ALL TYPE MASONRY work. Chimneys, waiks, patios, steps, etc. Call 754-427j^ after 4.</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>FARM MACHINERY Auction Sale, Tuesday, February 19 at 10 a.m. ISO Farm Tractorv 400 Implements. Wayne Implement Auction Corporation, Goldsboro, N.C., South on Highway 117, Phone 734-4234.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE WOOD for sale. Cali 754-3155.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Fill dirt, top soil and sand. Large or small loads. Call 744-3441.</p>
        <p>f 3,000 OLD HANDMADE bricks for  sale. Call 753-3503.</p>
        <p>ALL SHOTGUN SHELLS and ammo 10 percent off on cash sales. H.L. Hodges and Co. 752-4154.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ADMINISTRATION ALLAREAS</p>
        <p>Career opportunities with top salary and fringe benefits. Experienced or we'll train, if you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative at: 752-4824.</p>
        <p>TECHNICAL SKILLS many AREAS OPEN</p>
        <p>Top salary and frinae benefits plus accelerated promotions H you're experienced. If you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative'at: 752-4824.</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>(IS) SMOKING STANDS. Regular $38., now only $12. Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center. Call 752-4851.</p>
        <p>DINNETE SUITE. Regular $289.95, now only $88. Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center. Cail 752-4851.</p>
        <p>(5) 4PIECE BEDROOM suites. Eariy American and French Provincial Regular $489.95, now only $198. Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center. Call 752-4851.</p>
        <p>NORGE REFRIGERATOR, $275; Zenith portable T.V., with stand, $50; stereo tape recorder, $50, encyclopedia set, $250, '42 Plymouth Station Wagon, $50. Call 754-4132.</p>
        <p>(3) BEAUTIFUL LIVING room suites. Regular $389.95, now only $128. Freight Liquidators, West End Shopping Center. Call 752-4851.</p>
        <p>LADIES AND MENS bicycles for sale. Schwinn racers. Call 758-3324.</p>
        <p>THE PERFECT VALENTINE gift for that special girl In your life. Beautiful decoupauge purses done in several different styles and colors. Holly Hobbies girls, Dutch Deist, mushroom, old world prints; that different gift you have been looking for. Call 754-1249.</p>
        <p>GOOD PEANUT HAY, 400 bales for sale. 754-3373.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OAK pallets good for storing fertilizer $4.00 each. Call 754-2208.</p>
        <p>PIANO LESSONS, have a few openings. Call Mrs. Dixie Ray, 754-1773.</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE REPAIRS, 27</p>
        <p>years experience. Call 752-2083.</p>
        <p>GARBAGE CAN'RACKS for sale. Call 758-2301 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>HAVE YOUR WEDDING invitations preserved forever by having it decoupauged on a beautiful wood plaque. And these also make a beautiful gift for the bride and groom. Call 754-1249.</p>
        <p>A GAS DRYER in good condition. Call 752-5708.</p>
        <p>I HAVE 4 1973 Model RCA and GE Console stereo systems (some with 8 track tape player. I am going to sell these sets at UNBELIEVABLEY LOW PRICES. If you have been wanting a fine stereo system BUTI At a fantastic price! Call for Van Braxton at 752-4417.</p>
        <p>NEW 1973 MODEL Westinghouse Automatic WasherTwo speed, permanent press, with water saver. Suggested retail price $249.95. Only 5 to sell at $147.40 WHILE THEY LAST. Call Van Braxton at 752-4417. P.S. matching dryer only $137.40,2 to sell!</p>
        <p>SALE ON CARPET at Sears. Call for free estimate. Big savings on shag and Sculptured. .Sears Roebuck, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>72 PROWLER 19* travel trailer, like new, sleeps4, fully equipped and self contained, separate shower and bathroom. All extras included. Call 758-1405 after 5 p.m. or anytime on weekends.</p>
        <p>LOST &amp;amp; FOUND</p>
        <p>AT MCDONALD'S. Young white female cat. Call 754-3130 weekdays 8:30 to 5.</p>
        <p>MoMIo Homos For Ront</p>
        <p>MOBILE FOR RENT. 12x50, also 10x55. Call 754-7289.</p>
        <p>2 and 9 BEDROOM, mobile homes, central heat and air. Call 752-3284, nights 825-5391.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME for rent In Oakwood, Greenville, 2 bedroom, 71 model, like new. Oill 744-4892.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME for rent in Hicks Dali Trailer Court in Ayden. Call 744-4892.</p>
        <p>12 WIDE, 3 BEDROOM, Storage house, washer, air. 12 wide, 2 bedrooms, air. 754-4974.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homos For Solo</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, }Vt BATHS, no equity, just take up payments. Call 752-2574.</p>
        <p>RITZCRAFT 12x45. 3 bedroom, 1&amp;lt;/&amp;gt; baths, excellent condition. Take up payments. 752-2170 between 4 and 9 pm.</p>
        <p>1945 PARKWOOD 10x50,  2</p>
        <p>bedroom, center kitchen, fully furnished with automatic washer ami window air conditioner. Call 752-5374 day, 752-7474 night.</p>
        <p>Houses For Sale</p>
        <p>L HAVE SEVERAL houses In Greenville and Bethel area for sale to be moved on your lot. Call 758-2854.</p>
        <p>FOR SALS BY owner,&amp;gt;lardee Acres, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, ^living, dining, family rooms, spacious kitchen, 2 car garage, ample storage, carpeted, central air, loan assumption possible. Low $30's. By appointment nights or weekend. Call 752-1778.</p>
        <p>NO CITY TAXES, split level 4 bedrooms, 2*/&amp;gt; baths, den, living room, carpet, large lot with fenced yard, $38,500. Call Dees Whitley at Stallworth Realty, 758-1183, nights 754-0574.</p>
        <p>MINUTES TO ALL CON-VENIENCES. Beautifully landscaped, fenced in back yard. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, den, air conditioned brick home. $35,000. Lily Richardson Agency, 754-4535.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL WOODED LOT, new</p>
        <p>listing 4 bedroom% formal dining, central air and,heat, large patio, and single garage. You will love this 4 bedroom for $41,000 that's isolated from the heavy traffic and the city hustle bustle. Call C4rl Darden at Bowen Realty 752-7194, nights and weekends 758-1983.</p>
        <p>HARVEY'S MOBILE HOMES in</p>
        <p>Kinston announces the best mobile home sale around, discounts in excess of $2,000. A full line of Havelock, Richwood double wide homes. 2 lots to serve you. Harvey's of Kinston, 103 years of community service, 527-7041.</p>
        <p>1949-13x40 KNOX, 2 bedrooms, bath, carpeted, raised kitchen and dining area, will have most furniture and appliances. Cail 754-4491 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>1971 LIKE NEW 12x40 mobile home for sale. New carpet, 2 bedroom, 2 full baths. Call 754-0074.</p>
        <p>RITZ CRAFT 12x40, 1972. Great addition, air condition, fumiture optional, located* in Shady Knoll. Equity and assume loan balance. Call 758-0475 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>A HOUSE IS NOT complete without a fireplace. For free estimate on cost and installation. Call 758-3575 or 754-4442. Terms available.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>BY OWNER3 bedroom colonial style house on a beautiful comer lot. Den, living room, kitchen, 2 full baths, 2 car garage and central air. Owner will pay closing cost. Call 754-5254 for appointment after 5 p.m. week days and anytime on Saturday and Sunday.</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>LOT FOR SALE Washington, N.C. 72,422 square foot lot with 315 foot frontage on 3rd St., swimming pool, club house and laundromat facilities, has approval of builders permit for  apartments. Blount and Ball Realty 752-4143 or 754-2957.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL BUILDING, 3400 square feet, 213 W. 9th Street. Call Jack Edwards, 758-2414 or 754-5024.</p>
        <p>RETAIL SHOP OR Office space in Georgetown Shoppes. Call 758-5131.</p>
        <p>Apartment For Rent</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS LOOKI</p>
        <p>Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check with us First I 752-5700.</p>
        <p>CALL THE ED TIPTON Agency for all your real estate needs. We are dedicated to community growth. 754-0911.</p>
        <p>JEANNETTE COX AGENCY,</p>
        <p>Realtor, Exclusive agents of&amp;gt; Beautiful Cherry Oaks. Call 752-7807.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER: 4 bedroom brick, central air, and oil heat, formal dining room, large living room, family room with fireplace and wall to wall panelled bookcases. 2 baths, carport, lots of trees and shrubs. Immediate possession $34,000. Ridgewood, Washington. Call 944-8898.</p>
        <p>For Better Buys</p>
        <p>US  Real Estate</p>
        <p>realtor  Call or See</p>
        <p>E. h; WILLIFORD</p>
        <p>List Your Property With Us 313CotanchePL8-3911 Night PL 2-4409</p>
        <p>Farms For Lease</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE 24,404 pounds tobacco to be moved at 22 cents a pound. Call 752-7877 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>TOBACCO FOR LEASE. Call Charles McLawhom 754-2017, Win-tervllle, N.C.</p>
        <p>9998-POUNDS OF tobacco to be moved at 22 cents a pound. Call 758-2873.</p>
        <p>TOBACCO FOR LEASE. 18,000 pounds to be moved at 21 cents. Call 752-3230.</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE 2282 pounds of tobacco at 20 cents. Call 752-4373.</p>
        <p>7984 POUNDS OF tobacco to be moved at 21 cents. Call 825-1144.</p>
        <p>House For Sale</p>
        <p>BELVEDERE3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace $30,750 firm. Call 754-4329.</p>
        <p>lake GLENWOOD 3 bedrooms, 2 oaths, den with fireplace, fully carpeted $42,500. Ollie Harrington Real Estate, 752-1737.</p>
        <p>1401 RAGSDALR.' 3 bedrooms, V/t baths, large family room with fireplace, carport and garage on a corner lot, central air. Bill Williams Real Estate 752-2415.</p>
        <p>AYDEN: 3 BEDROOMS, living room, kitchen, bath and storage, garage. $13,500. Blount and Ball Realty, 752-4143 or 754-2957.</p>
        <p>$35 REWARD FOR return of undipped Doberman Pinscher. Black and rust in color. Answers,to name of Herman. Last seen near Darwin Waters. If found or seen please contact 752-0345 or go to 201 Mumford Road.</p>
        <p>LOST S BLACK and tan beagles.</p>
        <p>Jumped deer in Gum Swamp area. Reward for information leading to their recovery. 752-4445.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobil* Hom*s For Ront</p>
        <p>12 X 57 2 BEDROOM, air condition, washer, dryer, carpet. Azalea Gardens. Call 752-7784.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED TRAILER for rent. Air conditioned. 758-3274, nights 758-1505.</p>
        <p>10' AND 12' WIDE mobile homes for rent. Also spaces. Call 758-3444.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>HEATING AND COOLING EQUIPMENT REPAIRMAN</p>
        <p>Excellent salary and fringe benefits. Experienced or we'll train. If you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative at: 752-4824.FREE" 24,000 mils or</p>
        <p>24 mofitht. Factory WorrontyMazda</p>
        <p>Of Greenvll</p>
        <p>Call 754-7231 Grotnvlllo, NXv</p>
        <p>AYDEN, N.C. North Hills Estates. New homes, 3 bedrooms, 2 bathv with central heat and air conditioning and carpet. Cail Chester Stox, 744-4114 day, 744-3308 night.</p>
        <p>HIGH SCHOOL SENIORS</p>
        <p>we have openings In TV Repair, Administration, Medical and Dental, Electronics, Mechanics and many other fields. Choose the iob you want now, and go to work after you graduate. Excellent salary and fringe benefits. Call your Army Representative at 752-4826 and ask him about the Delayed Entry Program.</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS: Inquire at the Olde London Inn, 2710 Memorial Drive. Most reasonable rates in town, daily, weekly or monthly.</p>
        <p>PLUSH COUNTRY CLUB</p>
        <p>apartments. Two bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, draperies, kitchen appliances and water. Rent furnished or unfurnished. Call 754-5234.</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA 208 South Elm Street. One bedroom apartment, completely furnished, carpeted, central heat, air and utilities. Call 752-3374.</p>
        <p>FOR FAMILY: 3 bedroom apartment near college. $145 mo. Call 752-7808 or 758-3941, or 754-0741.</p>
        <p>d) real estate</p>
        <p>/lour Malghborhood Brokar'*</p>
        <p>General  Estate sales,</p>
        <p>rentals, and property management. The finest In apartments, homes, business, and farms.</p>
        <p>Exclusive rental agent for the famous Stratford Arms Apartments featuring 1,2, and 3 bedroom luxury apartments at moderate rates.</p>
        <p>CaliJ. Diaz 756-4800</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MACHINIST</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Apply at B &amp;amp; J Machine</p>
        <p>Works. Located 4V^ miles west of Ayden, N.C. on highway 102. For more information cail 744-4022.</p>
        <p>MECHANICSGAS ANDDIESELREPAIR</p>
        <p>Experienced or we'll train. Good salary and fringe benefits. If you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative at: 752-4824.</p>
        <p>CRAFTED SERVICES</p>
        <p>Quality Furniture Refinishing and Repairs* Superior Caning for all type chairs, larger Selection of Custom Picture Framing, Survey Stakes  Any length, all types of pallets, Hand-crafted rope hammocks, selected framed reproductions.</p>
        <p>Eastern Carolina Sheltered Workshop</p>
        <p>Industrial Park Hwy. 13</p>
        <p>758-4188  8  .  4:30  p.</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.SERVICE MAN FOR SET UP AND DELIVERY WILL TRAIN RIGHT PERSONA.B.C. MOBILE HOMES264 Bypass Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Quick Dependable Service</p>
        <p>ntodroom hom* b*ine mv*4 in Eiiz. Oty. Approx. 35 ton 2T xBarfield Housomovors</p>
        <p>Hmne Groonvillo 7S4-M14Offlc* Farmvillo 753-3013Insured</p>
        <p>We move brick or frame structures of any size. Wb raise, and underpin buihiines.</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>il</p>
        <p>Apartment For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO bedroom fumlshad student apartmants, 304 Pitt St. Apply In parson at The Black Horsa Inn. &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Besides being the best looking apartments in town. Cherry Court brings you a new dimension in apartment iiving. Aliow us the pieasure of exposing you to a iuxury community:</p>
        <p>-Chandelier over dining area</p>
        <p>-All GE kitchens (even a trash</p>
        <p>compactor!)</p>
        <p>-Washer-dryer hook-ups (use yours or rent them!)</p>
        <p>-Master bath and kitchen</p>
        <p>wallpapered</p>
        <p>-Dressing room</p>
        <p>-Attic for storage</p>
        <p>-Private patio</p>
        <p>-Sauna baths, pool, tennis, basketball, volleyball, badminton -Enormous clubhouse with bar and fireplace</p>
        <p>General</p>
        <p>Electric</p>
        <p>Appliances</p>
        <p>CHERRY COURT 752-1557</p>
        <p>Off 264 Bypass</p>
        <p>Managed by MANAGEAAENT CONTROL, INC.</p>
        <p>2 ROOM FURNISHED efficiency apartment (1 bedroom) V* block from college and downtown. $90 per month including utilities. Phone 752-6175 days or 756-3415 nights.</p>
        <p>(D</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1, 2 and 3 bedrooms,^ washer - dryer hookups,'* pool, club house. Only 5 blocks from East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Check everywhere else first, then call</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES</p>
        <p>1401 Willow St. 752-4225</p>
        <p>FfATURINO</p>
        <p>--FfATURINO   ^</p>
        <p>i lol^puorLrkJb ]</p>
        <p>KITCHEN APPLIANCES y</p>
        <p>Aparimentt For Rent</p>
        <p>ONE 2 BEDROOM duplex. Refrigerator and stove furnished. $45 month. Call 756-1900.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 112-B North Meade Street, range, refrigerator, central heat and air. Married couple, one child only. AAarch 1st. 754-3373.</p>
        <p>NICE COUNTRY, 4 room apartment. Total electric. Stove and refrigerator furnished. Call 744-6740 or 744-4457.</p>
        <p>BETHEL: DUPLEX beautiful 1 bedroom furnished apartment, central heat, near Burroughs Wellcome. Reasonable $90. 752-3376.</p>
        <p>AYDEN2 bedroom, central heat and air, ceramic bath stove and rafrigerator, duplex. Call 744-4549 office, 746-3541 house.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2 bedrooms</p>
        <p>6 closets, fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher</p>
        <p>Near Shopping Center, schools, churches and university.</p>
        <p>1212 Redbanks Rd. Tel.; 756-4151</p>
        <p>House For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR LEASE OR rent, 3 bedroom home in Stratford subdivision. 105 Avon Lane. Rent $225 per month. Call 754-4012.</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>OFFICES FOR RENT, 1000 square feet, wall to wall carpet and draperies, a complete kitchen, all water furnished free. SlSO^per month. 754-5234.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$200-Week</p>
        <p>SALARY</p>
        <p>Immtdiat* opaning - woman ovar )S, advartisfng fiald, fraa to travol, tran-iportation paid, no axparianca naadad. Wa train you, unusual opportunity, guarantood salary and commission. Call Collect person to person only. Carl Wilson, 834-5170, Ralaigh, N.C. _</p>
        <p>CONSTRUCTION HEAVY EQUIPMENT ALL AREAS</p>
        <p>Experienced or we'll train. Good salary and fringe benefits. If you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative at: 752-4824.</p>
        <p>CLASSIF^^ DISPLAY</p>
        <p>MEDICALX-RAY LAB TECH-DENTAL</p>
        <p>Fast promotions if you're experienced or we'll train. Good salary and fringe benefits. If you're between 17 and 35-years-old, call your Army Representative at: 752-4824.</p>
        <p>MAMkl tlAINt tilR CONSUMER FINANCE BUSINESS</p>
        <p>Good opportunity and quick advancement for the right man. Must have high school education or equivalent. Benefits include: paid vacation, sick pay, profit-sharing plan, and major medical life insurance. Must be willing to relocate. Send resume and photograph to:</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1944 Greenville, N.C. 27834</p>
        <p>NEW BUSINESS</p>
        <p>Mobile Home Ports and Service</p>
        <p>S &amp;amp; D ENePRISES</p>
        <p>Highway 11 South</p>
        <p>1 mile outside of Greenville 756-4530</p>
        <p>COLONIAL PARK</p>
        <p>HWY. 13 NORTH (Across from Burroughs-</p>
        <p>Wellcome)</p>
        <p>Spaces Now Available</p>
        <p>Featuring the best in country living with city conveniences, including paved streets. OH street parking and patio, recreational area, swimming pool, underground utilities. Rental units available.</p>
        <p>Most Modern Park in Pitt Co. FHA approved.</p>
        <p>Contact Earl Rayfleld 'at 758-4413 or 758-2799.</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>DRIVER EDUCATION AND EXECUTIVE CARS</p>
        <p>74 98 Regency Sedan</p>
        <p>74 Delta Royale 4 door hardtop</p>
        <p>74 Cutlass Supreme Coupe</p>
        <p>74 Cutlass 4 door sedan</p>
        <p>VERY FEW MILES AND FACTORY WARRANTY TERRIFIC SAVINGS</p>
        <p>HOLT OLDSMOBILE INC.</p>
        <p>101 HOOKER ROAD 756-31 1 5</p>
        <p>- Dca Icr No. 2827Insurance Management Opportunity Of A Life Time</p>
        <p>If you are tired of a monotonous and humdrum fob with no hopes for advancement then you owe it to yourself to answer this ad.</p>
        <p>We are a 67 year old firmly established company which is expanding through out the whole northern region. We need men who are interested in management to open our new offices in North Carolina, South Carolina, Virginia, and West Virginia Our training program will teach you to become a top notch salesman in our field.</p>
        <p>Write toRegional Manager</p>
        <p>atP.O. Box 6368, Greensboro, N.C. 27405</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>POR LB ASI BBAUTIFUL 5,000 quart foot building situated on 100 x 250 foot lot. Completely fenced and lighted. 4 luxurious offices with storage or manufacturing space. One block from 244 By-Pass. Call 754-5144.</p>
        <p>NBW DOWNTOWN OFFICBS for</p>
        <p>rent. Available at Georgetown Shops next to ECU. Heat, air condition, fully carpeted. Janitor service available on request. 758-2525.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>AVON</p>
        <p>NEVER WORKED BEFORE? IT DOESN'T MATTER. . .With Avon's help you can becdme a successful Representative. Make the money you need and still have time for yourself and family by selling quality products in your spare hours.</p>
        <p>For more information, call: 758-2444</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>WantodToBuy</p>
        <p>WANTED TO BUY, small farm or small acreage near Greenville, Call 756-5249.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>YOUNG DEPENDABLE FAMILY</p>
        <p>moving into community wants to rent 3 or 4 bedroom unfurnished home or apartment, good location. Option to buy desirable. References. Richard Timmer, 2211 '/ Sooth Philo Road, Urbana, Illinois 41801.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>REGISTEREDNURSES WITH DEGREE</p>
        <p>$10,000-812,0()0 starting salary depending on degree and experience. Excellent fringe benefits and opportunity to travel. Call your Army Nurse Corps Representative collect at 919-755-4379 in Raleigh.</p>
        <p>A New Direction For Finer Living'</p>
        <p>Immediate Occupancy</p>
        <p>Two bedroom luxury apartments with optional dens and all the new amenities including wail to wall carpeting, draperies, dishwashers, individual air conditioning and heating AND MORE.</p>
        <p>RECREATION? YES!</p>
        <p>Pool,Clubhouse, Tennis Courts. Model Open</p>
        <p>Daily 9-12,1-5:30 Saturday &amp;amp; Sunday 1:00-5:30</p>
        <p>Utilities Included</p>
        <p>201 Eastbrook Drive  Off Greenville Boulevard (US 244 Bypass) just south of Tenth Street, convenient to ECU and</p>
        <p>everything.</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>DRUCKER &amp;amp; FALK 758-4012</p>
        <p>AN ACCREDITED MANAGEMENT DROANIZATION</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>MANY PEOPLE THINK</p>
        <p>We offer</p>
        <p>THE MOST REMARKABLE SALES CAREERS IN THE WORLD</p>
        <p>Because.. .typical FIRST YEAR earnings are $10,000 to $18,000 guaranteed immediate earnings, $800 a month. Dozens and dozens of our people advance rapidly to'earn annually $20,000 to $35,000.</p>
        <p>CAN YOU QUALIFY * BONDAGE</p>
        <p>w HIGH SCHOOL OR BETTER</p>
        <p>AMBITIOUS FOR A CARRER, NOT JUST A JOB</p>
        <p> HAVE A CAR Work regular business hours. Sell mainly</p>
        <p>professional and business people, farmers and ranchers for a large company. TOP RATED in its industry. Sell what people NEED and WANT and are happy to buy?</p>
        <p>Opening now call for Interview</p>
        <p>J. Williams 758-3401</p>
        <p>Monday 9 AM to 7 PM Tuesday 9 AM to 7 PM</p>
        <p>AN EQUAL OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Real</p>
        <p>Estate</p>
        <p>Corner</p>
        <p>Moving To The Greenville, N.C. Afea?</p>
        <p>Do your research before you come. Write or call for free relocation kit containing information on taxes, school, government structure, city facilities, plus maps of the Greenville area.</p>
        <p>The Louis Clark</p>
        <p>hgmi, Ik., Rtailors</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 6085 Greenville, N.C. 752-4173</p>
        <p>Members of Inter-City Relocation Service andHOUSES FOR SALENORTH HILLS ESTATES IN AYDEN. N.C.</p>
        <p>Brick homes with 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, iiving room, kitchen and den combinations, garage, central air and heat, carpeted throughout. Prices rang* from $25,000 to $30,000. 95 percent loans available at  percent interest.</p>
        <p>Lots availabls with a small downpaymsnt. Bsgin now by purchasing a lot .on monthly farms. For fiirthar information call Chastar Stox at746-6116, Day 746-3308 After 6</p>
        <p>PM</p>
        <p>Mi</p>
        <pb facs="00092150_0012" />
        <p>DaUy Reflector. Oreenvi|fe, N.C.Tuetday, February 12, 1174FBI Agent Predicts Word Today From Kidnapers</p>
        <p>MODERN WINDMILLA w&amp;lt;n*kman inspects a Verticle Axis Windmill at the NASAs Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va. (AP Wirephoto)New Windmill To Give Energy</p>
        <p>By FRANK CAREY AP Science Writer WASHINGTON (AP)  Shades of the Netherlands!</p>
        <p>A federal agency is developing a windmill for placement atop homes to provide electricity that will help out in the energy shortage.</p>
        <p>Changes In</p>
        <p>AP Staff</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) Roger Jolley, 28, Associated Press Carolinas news editor for the last 2&amp;gt;/i years, has been named to head the news agencys office in St. Louis.</p>
        <p>He will take his new post as correspondent on March 3.</p>
        <p>Before joining the AP in May of 1970, the native of Cliffside in Rutherford County, N.C., was with the Durham, N.C., Morning Herald.</p>
        <p>He is being succeeded as news editor in the Charlotte office by Melvin Lang, 39, correspondent in the Raleigh office for the iit three years. Lang joined the AP in Charlotte 11 years ago and has worked for the news agency in Miami, Albany, N.Y., and Tulsa.</p>
        <p>Before joining the AP, he worked for the Roanoke, Va., Times; the Durham, N.C., Herald, and the Greenville, N.C., Reflector.</p>
        <p>Robert B. CXillen, 25, a native of Newark, N.J., will succeed Lang in Raleigh. He joined the AP in Charlotte in June of 1971 from the Newark News, and was transferred to the Raleigh staff in 1972.</p>
        <p>No Injuries In Cor-Train Crash</p>
        <p>No injuries were reported and only minor damage resulted when a car and train engine collided about 6 p.m. yesterday at the Seaboard Coast Line Railroad crossing on Airport Road.</p>
        <p>Officers said a car driven by Gary Lee Runnings of 1415 Broad St. collided with the SCL engine operated by Bernard Wingate Joyner of Kinston.</p>
        <p>Damage to the car was set at $40 while no damage resulted to the train.</p>
        <p>Neighborhood Meeting Set</p>
        <p>A community^ meeting is acheduled for dto residents of the Newtown area Wednesday at 7 p.m., according-to Rick Cagan of the local VISTA office.</p>
        <p>Cagan said that the purpose of the meeting, to be held in the Cornerstone Educational Building, is to come together as a neighborhood action group to have a voice iti pkuming what can ^ be done to improve economic and social ^conditions.</p>
        <p>Perscms with questions concerning the meeting should call Cagan at 75(703.  '</p>
        <p>This windmill would not look like the ones scattered across the Dutch landscape. Instead, it would look something like a glorified egg-beater.</p>
        <p>The National Aeronautics and Space Administration says the windmill, estimated to cost $5(X) to $1,000, would provide inexpensive and non-polluting electricity for home use.</p>
        <p>The first full-scale experimental model already has been erected atop a two-story building at NASAs Langley Research Center in Hampton, Va., and initial tests are being planned, the agency said.</p>
        <p>If tests pan out well, NASA says, such devices might someday be used initially as aux-illiary power sources for average homes.</p>
        <p>Eventually, says the agency, such housetop windmills, in conjunction with other envisioned developments, might furnish a complete power system for an individual home.</p>
        <p>If, for example, the windmill could produce hydrogen gas from river water, and the gas could be compressed and stored for use during windless periods, an extremely efficient and economical power source could be provided for home use, NASA said.</p>
        <p>Edmisten Will Also Speak At Courthouse</p>
        <p>Rufus L. Edmisten, deputy counsel to the U. S. Senate Watergate Committee who will be in town Wednesday to speak to journalism students at East Carolina University, will also speak Wednesday evening at the courthouse, according to Carl Darden of the Pitt Young Democratic Club.</p>
        <p>Darden said that the general public is invited to attend the session at the courthouse, scheduled to begin at 7:30 p.m. Edmisten, he noted will speak on the subject, How To Restore &amp;lt;3ood Government.</p>
        <p>Darden pointed out that the session will be held in the District Court Room and will last approximately one half hour.</p>
        <p>Edmistens visit is being sponsored by the Pitt YDC and college federation of the YDC.</p>
        <p>Wine Token As Store Entered</p>
        <p>An estimated $5.20 in mef-chandise was reported taken in a break-in reported at 12:45 a.m. today at Earlys Grocery at 1900 South Pitt St,</p>
        <p>cWf Glenn Cannon said thieves broke a glass door to gain entrance to the store and took four bottles of wine.</p>
        <p>Damage to the door was set at $50.</p>
        <p>Investigation of the incident is cohtinuing.</p>
        <p>The Arkansas River flows approximately 1,450 miles tp tha Mississippi River.</p>
        <p>By WILLIAM HELTON Astociatod Press Writer</p>
        <p>BERKELEY, Calif. (AP) -A FBI official predicts that the family of kidnaped newspaper heiress Patricia Hearst will hear from her abductors by tonight.</p>
        <p>Charles Bates, special agent in charge of the FBIs San Francisco office, predicted about 9 p.m. Monday that word would be received within 24 hours. But thats just a guess, he said.</p>
        <p>Im just assuming that from the fact that they sent a letter last Thursday and if they are going to send another like they indicated they would, then it should be about time for it.</p>
        <p>Bates made the comment after spending some two hours at the Hearst family home with</p>
        <p>Closed Monday</p>
        <p>The Greenville Post Office and East Carolina University Station will be closed Monday in observance of George Washingtons birthday.</p>
        <p>No deliveries will be made by either rural or city carriers and no window service will be provided. Mail will be delivered to post office boxes and special delivery mail will be delivered within the city. Collections will be made from all street letter boxes bearing a star.</p>
        <p>All outgoing mail will be dispatched at 6:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>the parents of the l9-year-old Miss Hearst.</p>
        <p>I just wanted tell them were doing everything we can, he said of the meeting with Mr. and Mrs. Randolph A. Hearst.</p>
        <p>We are not going to do anything at the moment that might cause anything serious to happen to Patty Hearst. Were not going to go in and hassle people because we want her t&amp;gt;ack and we want her back safely.</p>
        <p>Earlier, Bates told newsmen, I dont think she is dead. I have no problem with that.</p>
        <p>I dont attach any significance yet to the delay (in hearing from the abductors), but if it goes on a few more days it might be a different ball game.</p>
        <p>Hearst said, however, that the silence from the kidnapers has frightened the Hearst family, even though he said he has to believe that his daughter is still alive.</p>
        <p>Two armed men broke into Miss Hearsts apartment Feb. 4, beat her fiance with a wine bottle and then threw her screaming into the trUnk of a car as they fired shots toward witnesses.</p>
        <p>On Feb. 7 Berkeley radio sta-</p>
        <p>ACTRESS DIES AIKEN, S.C; (AP(Baroness Fern Andra, a noted European stage and screen actress, died at an Aiken nursing home after a long illness. She was 80.</p>
        <p>tion KPFA received a letter from a group called the Sym-bionese Liberation Army, which claimed that it had kidnaped Miss Hearst and was holding , her in protective custody. i For authentication, the group I enclosed a gasoline credit card belonging to Hearst, editor and 'Board Is In New Offices</p>
        <p>Miss Margaret Register, executive secretary of the Pitt Board of Elections, advised area residents that the board has completed its move to new offices at 201 E. Second Street.</p>
        <p>Miss Register said that she* understood a number of people had gone to the old Elections office at the courthouse thinking the office was still located there.</p>
        <p>- The new office, located in the recently completed addition to the building occupied by Cknmty ABC Store No. 1, is much more convenient for Pitt voters, she added.</p>
        <p>The Boards telephone number remains the same (758-4683) at the new location, it was pointed out.</p>
        <p>Miss Register reminded voters that the registration deadline is April 8 at 5 p.m. and candidates who wish to be on the ballot^ for the May primary have until Feb. 25 at 12 noon to file.</p>
        <p>president of the San Francisco Examiner and board chairman of the Hearst Corp.</p>
        <p>No ransom demand was made. Since then th% has been no further word from the abductors.</p>
        <p>Hearst told newsmen Monday at the familys mansion in Hillsborough, 15 miles south of San Francisco^ that he was fTi^tened but believes his daughter is still alive.</p>
        <p>The only other possibility is an absolutely crazy person has taken her off and killed her, and I dont want to believe</p>
        <p>that. Hearst said.</p>
        <p>Hearst denied that his daughter was captured by the radical left.</p>
        <p>The movoi they (the radical left) make are against either individuals or institutions that they oansider their enemies; this has been made against a child, he said.</p>
        <p>'ilie FBI and police have said it is logical that the SLA might demand ii return for Miss Hearsts freedom the release of Russell Little, 24, and Joseph Remiro, 27.</p>
        <p>The two alleged SLA mem</p>
        <p>bers are being held without bail in ^n Quentin Prison on charges they murdered Oakland Schools Supt. Marcus Foster last November, a slaying fhe SLA claimed it engineered.</p>
        <p>The FBI and police said they were searching for seven persons  five alleged kidnapers and a couple that was seen parked outside Miss Hearsts apartment for more than an hour the nig^t she was abducted.</p>
        <p>Bates said the FBI had 100-^ 125 agents working on the cas over the weekend.</p>
        <p>FREIGHTER ABANDONEIV-A Royal Navy helicq&amp;gt;ter hovers near the Lutria, a 2,000-ton Panamanian frieghter near the Scilly Isles about 100 miles off Falmouth, England. The 28</p>
        <p>crewmen of the stricken ship were rescued by helicqi&amp;gt;ters after abandoning it for lifeboats in a heavy Atlantic storm. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>The dollar sign.</p>
        <p>the people of the Atlantic Credit and the Atlantic Discount companies. W^Ve been lending money to people for nearly fifty years. Quickly. Confidentially. W^Ve grown over the years because/ when people needed US/we were always there.</p>
        <p>AHonlk CredX'flHoinlic Dircounl</p>
        <p>CpAAimer Locmi/</p>
        <p>\Nest End Circle, Greenville</p>
        <p>AmIoLocmi/</p>
        <p>412 Evans St, Greenville V</p>
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