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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Rain tonight, ending from the welt on Tueiday. Temperatures cool.</p>
        <p>93rd YEAR NO. 60</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C.  MONDAY  AFTERNOON,  MARCH  11,  1974</p>
        <p>16 PAGES TODAY</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 5Want" Her Dead Page 7BIkeways Plans Page 8Obituaries</p>
        <p>PRICE 10 CENTS</p>
        <p>wwii Holdout Gives UplSodot Unable Begin</p>
        <p>Oil Embargo Parley</p>
        <p>MANLA, Philippines (AP) - Hiroo Onoda, a World War II Japanese army officer who hid in the Philippine jungles for 29 years, presented his sword in surrender to President Ferdinand E. Marcos today.</p>
        <p>In a televised ceremony at the presidential palace, Marcos gave the 52-year-old Japanese a full presidential pardon "for any claims or responsibilities during the war and in the years since. The president told Onoda he was welcome to stay in the country.</p>
        <p>However, plans were being made to fly Onoda to T&amp;lt;rfiyo Tuesday for a medical checkup.</p>
        <p>Marcos also returned the sword to Onoda, who wore his old Imperial Army uniform.</p>
        <p>Marcos put his arms around the wiry Japanese and said he admired him for his bravery and courage.</p>
        <p>Onoda, facing television cameras for the first time in his life, said: "From npw on, I will try my best to contribute to the development of my country and the closer cooperation of the Philippines and Japan.</p>
        <p>A helicopter brought the former Japanese intelligence officer to the presidential palace from Lubang island, 75 miles southwest of Manila, where he surrendered Sunday to his former commanding officer, Yoshimi Taniguchi, and the Philippine air force chief, Maj. Gen. Jose Rancudo, in the presence of Japanese Ambassador Toshio Urabe. The fugitives older brother. Dr. Toshio Onoda of Tpkyo, was also present.</p>
        <p>Dr. Onoda and Philippine Air Force doctors examined Onoda and found him physically fit. Dr. Onoda said his brother apparently had been sick only twice, with the flu, in his years in the wilderness.</p>
        <p>Onoda was one of four Japanese soldiers who refused to surrender on Lubang when Japan capitulated in 1945. Several searches were made for them over the years, and twice Onoda was declared dead. One of the four surrendered, and another was killed in a clash with the Philippine army.  ^</p>
        <p>Another search for Onoda was launched last year after he and the other holdout ambushed a Philippine patrol. Onoda escaped, but his companion was killed. In February, a Japanese student, Norio Suzuki, contacted Onoda on Lubang, ami last week Taniguchi joined the search to help persuade him to give up.</p>
        <p>Onoda told newsmen he did not surrender because he had no (Mrder to do so from his superior officers.</p>
        <p>Onodas parents, both in their 80s, burst into tears when tolcf their son had been found. The Japanese government announced that he will draw k pension of $610 a year for 31 years and three months of military service.</p>
        <p>ANOTHER HOLDOUTIn January of 1972, Japanese Army Sgt 'S&amp;lt;rfchi Yokoi, left, was found in the jungles of Guam after hiding out for 28 years following Wm-ld War II. Another Japanese Army straggler from World War II, Lt. Hiroo Onoda, ri^t came out of the Phlllippine Jungles Sunday, after holding out for nearly 30 years. Onada is pkutred at a news conference Sunday on Lubang Island in the Phillippines. Onada turned 52 Sunday. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Says Legislators Respond To Pressure And 'Squeals'</p>
        <p>An AP News Special</p>
        <p>By ROBERT B. CULLEN</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (AP) When money is on the line, the North Carolina legislature responds to "the people who squeal the loudest and lean on us the heaviest, according to Sen. Russell Kirby.</p>
        <p>Kirby, a Democrat from Wilson, is hearing the squeals and feeling the pressure these days as chairman of the Senate Finance Committee.</p>
        <p>What the General Assembly, entering its finals weeks now, decides to do about taxation is likely to affect the pocketbooks of every North Carolinian.</p>
        <p>Kirby, in an interview, said that the General Assembly is prone to basing its financial decisions not on knowl^ge and research but on political expediency.</p>
        <p>Right now there are several money decisions before the legislatiure. The House has acted favorably on several bills and it will be up to the Senate, starting with the Finance Committee, to dispose of them.</p>
        <p>Among them are two which have been heavily lobbied by the banking industry.</p>
        <p>One would change the basis (Ml which banks are taxed. Currently they pay an excise tax of six per cent in lieu of the franchise, intangibles and corporate income taxes paid by all other North Carolina corporations.</p>
        <p>This is so because for years the federal banking laws forbade the states to levy the normal taxes on banks. Those laws were changed several years ago.</p>
        <p>The banking industry ever since has had two astute and influential lobbyists, John Jordan and Lindsay Warren, making its case in the legislative corridors. Both Warren and Jcirdj^n are state senatbtS Warren is still very active in the state Democratic party.</p>
        <p>Jordan, in an interview, said the banks are seeking the change no,t because they want to eva^ taxes, but because they want to avoid being singled out for tax increases in the future.</p>
        <p>If it is passed by the Senate, the banks would be paying about $28,000 more in taxes than they pay now. But they would have insurance against a reiMtiti(m (rf tl^eir 1969 experience in the legislature.</p>
        <p>In that year, the legislature increased the excise tax from</p>
        <p>4/^ to 6 per cent. The banks found that because of their unique status they had an exposed position and were vulnerable to legislators seeking to balance a budget by raising just a little more revenue.</p>
        <p>If the law goes through, anyone seeking to raise bank taxes will have to take on</p>
        <p>Board Sworn</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of Elections, which now has a Republican majority, was sworn in t&amp;lt;Nlay at 12 n&amp;lt;M&amp;gt;n at the boards new office on Second Street.</p>
        <p>Thomas C. Herndon, a Republican, was appointed recently to replace Democrat Burney W. Baker and joins GOP member James C. Lanier Jr. and J. B. SpUman, a Democrat, who were reappointed to their board seats.</p>
        <p>Following the swearing-in ceremonies, conducted by Clerk of Court H. L. Lewis, the board was having an organizational meeting to elect a new chairman from among their ranks and to appoint a new secretary.</p>
        <p>Spilman currently serves as chairman while Miss Margaret Register Is the boards executive secretary.</p>
        <p>every corporation in Northt, saying that they need higher interest rates to make a pn^t in times of tight money.</p>
        <p>Yet another House-passed mcxiey bill would phase out the inventory taxes paid to local governments by manufacturers and retailers over a five-year period by allowing them a credit on their state income taxes.</p>
        <p>That bill would be a windfall to people like its sponsor. Rep. Art Thomas, D-Cabarrus. Thomas, an auto dealer, paid about $2,500 in inventory taxes in 1972.</p>
        <p>'The bill is tied to a package that would decrease taxes for senior citizens and the very poor.</p>
        <p>In contrast, money bills backed by consumer lobbyists have made little IM-ogress.</p>
        <p>Most consumer groups are backing a proposed tax package that would delete the states three per cent sales tax on food and replace the lost revenue with increased taxes on high incomes and luxury cars and boats.</p>
        <p>Some interest in that bill has been recently expressed by backers of the House-passed inventory tax package who have found resistance from Senators who feel that voting for their bill would not be a good way to start an election-year campaign.</p>
        <p>But Kirby does not feel it</p>
        <p>will ever be passed by the current legislature.</p>
        <p>Theres no significant {Xessure brought for a bill like that. Some people (in the legislature) feel that this (the food tax) is the only tax some pe(^le pay and they want to keep it on them.</p>
        <p>Kirby, asked to define the group that is only paying the food tax, said the legislators who took that view were thinking of blacks.</p>
        <p>In sucha political situation, legislators are careful. One who knows the ropes is Sen. Gordon Allen, D-Person, the Senate majority leader.</p>
        <p>Allen sits on the boards of Central Carolina Bank and the Home Savings and Loan Association. But he has also fought the banks, particularly in 1969 when he sponsored the increase in their excise tax.</p>
        <p>Allen said he might not fight against the banks this year because to do so would be a major battle that he might not win. This year, he said, he is more interested in pushing several insurance bills, including no-fault and competitive rating.</p>
        <p>Taking on the banks would be a full time job, he said in an interview. They have had clout for years. It goes back to the old boss system when a few business</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 8)</p>
        <p>Poor</p>
        <p>More</p>
        <p>Pay Proportionally For Food They Buy</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Fig- January bill was $64.60 per ures released today by the Ag- week, up about 11.2 per cent riculture Department showed from $58.10 in April last year, poor people last year paid pro- The Nixon administration im-</p>
        <p>middle-income and richer famr- price lids tm lies.</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press President Anwar Sadat failed to get all the Arab oil ministers to a meeting in Cairo to consider his proposal to end their oil embargo against the United States.</p>
        <p>Instead, Algeria and Libya, who want to continue the embargo, forced a delay in the meeting until Wednesday and insisted TI be held in the Libyan capital of Tripoli. ' Sadats failure Sunday was considered a blow to his chances of getting the embargo lifted. The Cairo newspaper A1 Akhbar said the holdouts had agreed to discuss Sadats proposal in Tripoli. But some observers doubted the oil ministers would raise the issue unless it had been resolved at a higher level.</p>
        <p>After a week of conflicting announcements about the place and time for the meeting, six oil ministers  from Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Abu Dhabi, Bahrain, Qatar and Egypt  were in Cairo Sunday. Algeria, Libya and Syria stayed away.</p>
        <p>The six who came met for 90 minutes and announced</p>
        <p>Bulletin</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  District Atty. Joseph Busch of Los Angeles County agreed today to seek dismissal of California burglary and conspiracy charges that had been placed in the Ellsberg case against John D. Ehrlich-map. David R. Young and G. Gordon Liddy.</p>
        <p>The perjury charge leveled against Ehrlichman would remain.</p>
        <p>Busch agreed to drop the state charges as a result of the federal indictments.</p>
        <p>'Fraud'</p>
        <p>Probe?</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  Newsweek magazine says President Nixons 1969 income tax return the subject of a criminal</p>
        <p>they would go to Tripoli. An Egyptian spokesman said there had been no talk of the oil embargo.</p>
        <p>A communique said Egypt had offered to host the meeting because of a shortage of accomodations in Tripoli due to an in-trnational fair. But it said Libya had managed to provide facilities for the</p>
        <p>meeting.</p>
        <p>Sadat has championed an end to the ban in exchange for Secretary of State Henry A. Kissingers assistance in getting Israeli troops to withdraw from the Suez Canal. But Algeria, Libya and Syria are holding out for the pullback of Israeli troops facing the Syrians on the Golan Heights.  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>Tension remains high dn</p>
        <p>that front.</p>
        <p>Syria claimed its gunners shot down an Israeli recon-naisance plane on Sunday and that it crashed near Hatem, in Jordan.</p>
        <p>There was no confirmation from Israel. But the Israeli command said its bulldozers and demolition crews destroyed a section of the Quneltra-Damascus road on the Heights  ^</p>
        <p>Ponders Fate Of Grand Jury Report</p>
        <p>By DONALD M. RO-niBERG Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  A federal judge is expected to decide this week whether a sealed grand jury report on the Watergate cover-up should go to the House impeachment inquiry.</p>
        <p>U.S. District Judge John J. Sirica received innocent pleas Saturday from the seven men indicted March l by the grand jiuy. That left disposition of the report the next major development expected in the case.</p>
        <p>At a hearing lasting six minutes, innocent pleas were entered by former Atty. Gen. John N. Mitchell; former White House aides HR. Haldeman John D. Ehrlichman, Charles W. Colson and Gordon C. Stra-chan; former assistant Atty. Gen. Robert C. Mardian, and Kenneth W. Parkinson, former Nixon campaign finance com</p>
        <p>mittee lawyer.</p>
        <p>Ehrlichman and Colson also pleaded innocent to charges stemming from the break-in at the office of Daniel Ellsbergs psychiatrist.</p>
        <p>When the grand jury returned the indictments in the Watergate cover-up case, it also handed Sirica a sealed report and satchel of evidence, which sources later said dealt with President Nixons role in Watergate.</p>
        <p>James D. St. Clair, President Nixons chief Watergate lawyer, told the hearing the White House would take no position on what Sirica should do with the report. However, in a letter filed with the court, St. Clair asked for permission to review the report if Sirica decides to send it to the House Judiciary Committee.</p>
        <p>It was at Wednesdays hear</p>
        <p>ing on the report that St. Clair also announced Nixons decision to give the impeachment inquiry all the evidence he already had given special prosecutor Leon Jaworski and also to answer written questions and submit to an interview by ranking committee members.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, the senior Republican on the House committee, Rep. Robert McClory of Illinois, said he questions whether the committee is getting full cooperation from the White House.</p>
        <p>He and committee member Rep. Robert Kastenmeier, D-Wis., were interviewed Sunday on ABC televisions Issues and Answers. Both predicted that if the White House does not give the committee six tape recordings it is seeking the committee will subpoena the tapes.</p>
        <p>Dees Issue</p>
        <p>Wont</p>
        <p>Says Med School Up To Assembly;</p>
        <p>In Fights</p>
        <p>Join</p>
        <p>IS</p>
        <p>In-</p>
        <p>'The statistics, compiled by family economists in the Agricultural Research Service, showed a low-cost food plan in January cost a family of four $41.70 per week. That was up almost 14 per cent from $36.70 in April 1973.</p>
        <p>A moderate-cost plan rose less than 12.5 per coit from April to January to $53.20 per wedi. Nine months earlier it cost $47.30 per week.</p>
        <p>For a liberal plan, a four-member family  including two school children the</p>
        <p>meat in March and later extended Phase 4 curbs to all food prices. Most controls were removed in July, although beef prices remained under the freeze order until Sept. 10.</p>
        <p>A basic difference between low-cost and liberal-cost food plans as defined by USDA is an allowance for more expensive cuts of meat in the higher-cost category.</p>
        <p>Thus, the department says, a family eating a low-^t diet would have mwe potatoes, dry beans, |&amp;gt;eas, breads andcs-</p>
        <p>reals. But prices for those items have gone up, in some cases more rapidly than meat prices.</p>
        <p>fraud investigation by the temal Revenue Service.</p>
        <p>Quoting unnamed sources, the magazine said that in recent weeks, the IRS special intelligence agents, who only do criminal investigations, have interviewed Edward L. Morgan, a one-time White House aide; Arthur Blech, Mr. Nixons personal accountant, and Frank DeMarco, the Presidents former tax lawyer.</p>
        <p>The key question is whether a fraudulent deed to Mr. Nixons vice presidential papers was drawn up in the spring of 1970 to make it appear he had actually given the papers to the archives one year earlier  before congressional legislation outlawed deductions for such gifts, Newsweek said.</p>
        <p>The President claimed a $576,000 deducticMi for donating the papers to the national archives.</p>
        <p>The magazine said DeMarco has testified he had a new deed typed up and had Morgan sign it on the Presidents behalf in April 1970, but he insists that the new version was only a copy of an original he drew up the year before.</p>
        <p>The 1969 document has not been produced, however, Newsweek said.</p>
        <p>GOLDSBOROWilliam A. Dees Jr., chairman of the Board of Governors of the University of North Carolina said this morning that any decision on whether or not proposed legislation to expand the medical school at East Carolina University will be fought in the General Assembly will be left up to legislators who support the boards position.</p>
        <p>Dees indicated neither he, as chairman, nor other members of the board will lobby against the bill, approved February 26 by the Joint Appropriations Committee and scheduled to come to the floor of both the House and Senate as part of the overall budget bill late this month or in early April,</p>
        <p>Im not going to the General Assembly, Dees said. Im expecting the people who support the boards position to make that decision.</p>
        <p>We will still push our program, the board chairman said, citing board recommendations to establish a series of area health education centers (AHEC). designed to provide clinical teaching facilities as well as primary health care across the state. The recommendations we made we believe are the soundest to follow, he noted. (The board recommended establishment of several AHECs and against expanding the ECU medical school.)</p>
        <p>Dees noted that I have no</p>
        <p>idea as to the length of time that will be required to expand the ECU program from one to two years, or increase the class size, if the expansion bill is approved by the General Assembly. We have to present a plan in our 1975 budget request, Dees explained.</p>
        <p>Speaking at the Boards meeting in Chapel Hill Friday, Dees told board members, I affirm again today my personal conviction that the Board of Governors plan for medical education charts the course which North Carolina should follow.</p>
        <p>He emphasized, however, that both he and UNC President William Friday made clear our intention to carry out as best we can the laws enacted by the General Assembly... if this action taken by the Joint Appropriation Committee on February 26 should be enacted into law, all of us omthis board and the president will do our best to fulfill the requirements of such a law in good faith.</p>
        <p>Dees noted, I do not say this in response to threats of legislative reprisals. I say it becapse it is our sworn duty to do so. It is, in fact, utterly inconceivable to me that the people of this state or the majority of the members of the legislature, would want their university governed by men and women who are afraid to speak their minds or are too in</p>
        <p>timidated to offer their honest advice and recommendations. We are not that kind of board and we never shall be.</p>
        <p>Dees told the board that there are two aspects which must be dealt with in complying with any legislation to expand the ECU program.</p>
        <p>First, he noted, work must be done to resolve the serious qualitative deficiencies in the present one-year program at ECU as outlined by the April 1973 Liaison Committee on Medical Education survey team and comprehensive planning will have to be done ... to intergrate the expansion at ECU with expansion plans already approved ... for UNC-CH, and they would have to give particular attention to the provision of clinical training for the second year students at ECU.</p>
        <p>The second aspect of the task, according to Dees, is concerned with larger issues. Our plan for medical education is dependent upon a close working partnership between the university and the community hospitals. That cooperative relationship is the only alternative to the confinement of clinical medical education, both undergraduate and postgraduate, to the academic medical center.</p>
        <p>It is the alternative embodied</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 8)</p>
        <p>Economic Activity Sow January Gain</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  An increase in checkbook spending by Tar Heels was the major factor in a gain in econimiic activity in NiXth Car&amp;lt;^na in January.</p>
        <p>Wachovia Bank and Trust Co. reported this as it announced that its NoVth Carolina Business Index advanced by 1.5 per cent to a weliminary level of 139.9 during the m(xith.</p>
        <p>A 11.5 per cent increase in bank debits indicated that N(Mlh Carolina consumers spent increased amounts during January. In addition, the index of bank debits, which adjusts for the number of trading days and price increases, rse 6 per cent.</p>
        <p>Two other major economic indicators, non-agricultural employment and manufacturing man-hours</p>
        <p>remained stable during the month.</p>
        <p>TTie Wachovia economists reported a stable employment trend continued in January with slight em-{doyment increases iri both durable good and non-durable goods.</p>
        <p>But while employment was up, so was unemployment as the increase in the number employed did not offset the</p>
        <p>greater number of individuals available for work.</p>
        <p>Energy constraints and the cutbacks in producti(Mi apparently have made it more difficult for newcomers to the N(Mrth Carolina labor force to find jobs, The Wachovia economists said.</p>
        <p>The unemployment rate in-.creased from a recently revised and seasonabl]^ T</p>
        <p>adjusted level of 3.7 per cent in December to 4.1 per cent in January, about the same levels as a year ago.</p>
        <p>The volume of new car cars during January was 7.7 per cent higher than the volume a year ago. Truck sales, whicJi were 7.1 per cent higher than a year ago, increased 0.4 per cent from December to January.  ^</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0002" />
        <p>Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.~-Monday. March 11. 1V74</p>
        <p>Her Dance Classes Help Women Achieve Goal</p>
        <p>By LEW HEAD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>RUTHERFORD, N.J. (AP) </p>
        <p>Take it from Tara, women who come in all giggles and timidity to learn belly dancing at her studio here certainly dont go out that way,</p>
        <p>Ive seen changes that are very good to see, said the instructor-performer. Ive seen a woman become confident, more aware of herself, with a new interest in her appearance, moving gracefully and at ease.</p>
        <p>When she opened the studio two years ago she advertised as a teacher of Oriental dancing. The public reaction was slow, though her rate^ were low. When she changed the name to belly dancing, the studio filled up.</p>
        <p>Now she has an enthusiastic clientele of 75 to 100, housewives and career women, studying the Middle East dance that does magnificently by the</p>
        <p>abdomen, though it is far more ]y^|*g Dfl.llPlltrV than a navel ejfercise. ^    ^</p>
        <p>It is a sensuous and sensitive dance that does not lend itself to any vulgarity at all, she said.</p>
        <p>She plays a record of soft</p>
        <p>haunting music in tier bare-walled classroom, whose only fixtures are an exercise bar and a mirror, doing her thing in street clothes.</p>
        <p>See, she said, Im dancing not to stimulate you but to soothe you.</p>
        <p>The soothed mind pulses back about 5,000 years to the temple dancer of Egypt. The thought occurs: those temple priests, with one eye on the stars and one on the dancers, had more going for them than the pha-raohs.</p>
        <p>And no surprise that belly dancer Salome of the Hebrew culture so easily obtained the head of John the Baptist.</p>
        <p>Tlie dance evolved in the Middle East but had no true origin in one culture, said Tara. The Arabs used it to tell stories. They used a minimum of footwork. The Turks brought</p>
        <p>in fast and complex footwork, luted it from beauty and grace America has only been to coarseness, said Tara, awakened to this folk dance ' when Tara interprets her art since 1893 when Little Egypt for the Rutgers Cultural demonstrated it at the Chicago Society, for Prudential Life In-Worlds Fair.  surance employes, or for other</p>
        <p>Tara said her own awakening groups, she wears a rich exotic occurred when she discovered costume of gold brocade and the Middle East dance after silver chiffon, glass beads and years of ballet and other dance pearls, veils, and only a bare instruction in New York City, midriff showing.</p>
        <p>Engagement Announced</p>
        <p>EMMA JOYNER BEAMAN. . .is the daughter of Mrs. Irene F. Joyner of Rt. 1, Greenville, who announces her engagement to Glenn Mitchell Cannon of Rt. 2, Ayden, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Lin-wood Earl Cannon. The wedding date has not been set. The bride-elect is the daughter of the late Mr. Melton Earl Joyner Sr.</p>
        <p>Avoid Hurt Feelings, Tell Hostess Why</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>c If74 by Chicago Tribonc-N. Y. Ntws Synd., Inc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My husband and I have been invited to a house-warming party. The wife is a fanatic about people smoking in her home, and has stated on the invitation that guests who wish to smoke will have to go out on the patio!</p>
        <p>Both my husband and I smoke, and neither of us wants to drive 35 miles to attend a party where we will have to go out on the patio to smoke. [Its cold this time of year where we live.]</p>
        <p>Ive been wrestling with my conscience for weeks, trying to decide whether we should make up some excuse and decline at the last minute to avoid hurting the hostess feelings, or to simply decline now and tell her the truth. \^at do you say?  ,  HOOKED</p>
        <p>DEAR HOOKED: Decline now, and tell her why.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Joe is 33. I am 30. This is the second time around for both of us. Weve been married for four months, which is when all our trouble started. We lived together for a year first, and it was heavenly. There was never a problem about his ability to satisfy me, but now that were married, he has absolutely no interest in me sexually. Joe says when I was his girl friend lovemaking was exciting, but now that Im his wifenothing. [I cant understand that statement.]</p>
        <p>I have suggested counseling, but he refuses. I think about him all day, and when he comes home Im turned on by just the sight of him, but he doesnt respond. I am ready to climb the walls.</p>
        <p>I am an attractive woman and Im meticulous about my grooming, and I cant understand his total indifference.</p>
        <p>I was better off when we just lived together. What do you recommend?  LEGAL IS LOUSY</p>
        <p>DEAR LEGAL: I am NOT going to recommend that you divorce your husband in order to turn him on again. His inability to become aroused sexually now that you are legally wed indicates that for sex to he "exciting to Joe, it must be forbidden. [There are men who can perform only with women they consider to be inferior or low-down; wives are nice womenlike their mothers and sisters, and therefore not for sex.] Too bad Joe refuses counseling. He needs to change his attitudes about sex and love. And tounseling is the answer.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My wife and I were the parents of three childrentwo girls and a boy. The boy died last year [at age four] following heart surgery. When we meet new people, they inevitably ask, How many children have you?</p>
        <p>Our son was a beautiful child, and we dont want to exclude him. so how do we reply? Your answer may help others in our situation.  C.G.S.  IN  THE  SOUTHEAST</p>
        <p>DEAR C.G.S.: Tell them you have two lovely daughters and lost a beautiful four-year-old son last year following heart surgery.</p>
        <p>IIIIIIIIIILCiiP.I!L.CQUj&amp;gt;onJ</p>
        <p>Miss Copeland Is Speaker</p>
        <p>Seira Book Club members met at the home of Mrs. Harry Leslie, Tuesday afternoon, to hear Miss Elizabeth Copeland, librarian, Sheppard Memorial Library.</p>
        <p>She told of the Greenville public library systemits founding, its expansion and variety of services now offered.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Fred Baumann presided over the business meeting and welcomed Mrs. David Stevens to the club.</p>
        <p>The following slate of officers for 1974-75 was presented by Mrs. John Reynolds: President, Mrs. Gretchen Goodwin; Vice President. Mrs. William Heymann; Secretary, Mrs. Elvin Holstius; Treasurer, Mrs. J. 0. Derrick; and Librarian, Mrs. Harry Hastings.</p>
        <p>Mrs. John Lang and Mrs. James Goes assisted the hostess.'</p>
        <p>Births</p>
        <p>Honeycutt</p>
        <p>Born Qt Mr. and Mrs. Roy Lemuel Honeycutt III, 1025 W. Wright Rd., a son, John Brooks, on March 6,  1974,  in  Pitt</p>
        <p>Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Walston</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Joe Ervin Walston, Rt. 6, Greenville, a son, Tyrone ONeal,'on March 7, 1974, in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>CORREC'nON In Sundays issue of The Daily Reflector, a story was printed about the bridal shower honoring Miss Lynn Alexander. The honoree was Miss Wendy Alexander.</p>
        <p>Shoplifting cost American business millions of dollars last year. The cost passed on to customers eventually.</p>
        <p>Gives Program</p>
        <p>Mrs. Lyman Daughtry presented the program at the meeting of the Home Pride Garden Club held last week at the home of Mrs. Carl Huber.</p>
        <p>She gave information concerning conservation and recycling.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Fred Wagner, vice president, conducted the business session. Mrs. Fuller Motsinger, chairman of the ways and means committee, reported that an electric lawn mower had been purchased for the Art Center^rWorkshops are being planned for spring cleanup for the Art Center grounds.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Roger Hesdorfer completed the horticulture report and rating sheet.</p>
        <p>Members are reminded that they will make Easter baskets for the Salvation Army next month.</p>
        <p>Guests for the meeting were Mrs. Doug Caldwell, Mrs. Ed* Yancey and Mrs. Don Steika.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Larry Vacek was cohostess for the meeting.</p>
        <p>Dr. Gray To Be Welcome Wagon Speaker</p>
        <p>Dr. Wellington B. Gray will be the featured speaker at the Welcome Wagons March luncheon. He will tell of his experiences as a judge at the Miss America Pageant held in Atlantic City.</p>
        <p>The luncheon will be held Wednesday at the Greenville Golf and Country Club beginning at 11:30 a.m. Reservations can be made by phoning Mrs. George Manning, 758-2214, or Mrs. Kenneth Taylor, 756-6760.</p>
        <p>A baby sitting service is being provided at St. James Methodist Church and space can be reserved by calling Mrs. Stephen Holloway, 758-4321.</p>
        <p>A benefit bridge is being planned by the club for March 25 at 7:30 p.m. Those interested in playing should call 756-5070.</p>
        <p>Welcome Wagon President Lisa Kannen announced that a planning meeting for those</p>
        <p>where she was born and grew up as Tara OConnell. She studied under Serena, a great artist, and became one of Serenas teachers.</p>
        <p>I knew it was the dance for me. I felt there was no chance to be an individual in ballet.</p>
        <p>Taras parents mad^ one demand of their only child in indulging her fondness for the dance: she must also have a more practical calling. I became a registered nurse.</p>
        <p>She also married her childhood beau, Patrick J. Hoe^. Hes dean of students at a Newark high school and they have three children.</p>
        <p>JLittle A, Egypts commercialism of the dance through successive years di-</p>
        <p>One of the greatest things about a true performance, Tara said, is the give-and-take between the dancer and the three to five musicians who normally accompany her.</p>
        <p>It is handed-down folk music and the musicians and dancer improvise.</p>
        <p>Instruments may include the oud, which is a sort of rudimentary guitar; the dumbek drum; a kanun, which is like a zither; a clarinet, and very often a violin.</p>
        <p>The dancer herself plays zills, a small percussion instrument attached to her fingers that she clicks to the rhythm of the drum beat. In Greece' and Turkey enthusiastic spectators may have their own</p>
        <p>zills and keep time with, the performers.</p>
        <p>One of Taras students told her husband she wanted a veil and some zills. He balked, but hed been spending heavily on his own hobby, so she said to him, Just think about your motorcycle. She got the veil and the zills.</p>
        <p>A prospective student will telephon and say nervously I just want some exercise, said Tara, or that she wants to lose weight. I tell her, come on, its less boring than doing pushups in a gym.</p>
        <p>The only women without any apprehensions are those of Greek, Armenian and Tufkish background. An appreciation of the dance is passed down from mother to daughter in those countries.</p>
        <p>If a woman tells me shes fat, I say, Dont let that stop you: the more voluptuous you are the more beautifully you will dance. Youll lose weight anyway.</p>
        <p>In our culture everybody is supposed to lopk like a juvenile. In the Middle East there was</p>
        <p>never enough to eat. If you were heavy you were rich and beautiful. IV^ddle Eastern men like a lot of hip.</p>
        <p>A delighted Tara student is Mrs. Valerie Smith, 26, of Rutherford, who decided she had too much hip.</p>
        <p>Between dieting and dancing Ive lost 70 to 75 pounds, four inches off the derriere, .said Mrs. Smith.</p>
        <p>Another is Mrs. Georgia Grammer, 34, of Maywood, who said she shyly took up the dance aftw being intrigued by what she saw of it on old films. * Belly dancing has changed her life, said Mrs. Grammer, who is married to a manufacturing executive and is the mother of three daughters, i The difference is a woman plodding along the street and a woman who owns it, feeling womanly and feminine.</p>
        <p>LEMON</p>
        <p>CUSTARD</p>
        <p>PIES</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave. /</p>
        <p>DISNEY WORLD-CENTRAL FLORIDA</p>
        <p>April 22-26</p>
        <p>Winterthur, Longwood Gardens, Kennedy Center, Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>May 14-17</p>
        <p>Niagara, Toronto, Ottawa, Quebec, Montreal, N.Y.</p>
        <p>June 22-30</p>
        <p>New England, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, P.E.I. New York July 13-24</p>
        <p>Fall Foliage, Amlsh Country, New England, Boston, Cape Cod, Newport, N.Y.</p>
        <p>Write or Call</p>
        <p>BULLOCK TOURS</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 3383 Kinston, N.C. 28501-Ph. 523-3934</p>
        <p>Special Programs</p>
        <p>HOME SECURITYSpecial interest meetings have been scheduled for Tuesday night at 7:30 and Wednesday at 2:30 p.m. on home security. Bill Forrest, of Forrest Lock and Key Service and a former law enforcement officer, will conduct the programs, which will be held at the Agricultural Extension Office, located on the corner of Third and Greene Streets. Interested persons are asked to pre-register by tele{4ioning 758-1196. Forrest is pictured with Mrs. Evelyn Spangler, associated home economics agent for Pitt County.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>Is Your</p>
        <p>Shoe Headquarters</p>
        <p>OES Officers Are Named</p>
        <p>At a stated meeting Tuesday evening, Greenville Chapter No. 149 Order of the Eastern Star, elected officers for 1974-75.</p>
        <p>Those elected were: Mrs. Nancy Willard, Worthy Matron; Clifton Perry, Worthy Patron; Mrs. Jean Tharp, Associate Matron; Bryce W. Tharp, Associate Patron; Miss Alya Ray Taylor, secretary; Mrs. Eida Mae Cannon, treasurer; Mrs. Lillian Hendrix, conductress; and Mrs. Mayo Rogers, associate conductress. The open installation of of-</p>
        <p>NO DOWN PAYMENT ON MVOLVING CHARGE ACCOUNTS Five Convenieni Wyt To Buy Revolving Chge. Cu*u&amp;gt;m durge. BnnkAmencard. M..ter OUrge L.yi*y</p>
        <p>JEWEL BOX</p>
        <p>DIAMOND SPECIALISTS FOR OVER 50 YEARS</p>
        <p>410 S. EVANS ST. OREENVILLE75-21W OTHER LOCATIONS INCLUDE ROCKY MOUNT, WILSON, GOLDSBORO, KINSTON, ELIZABETH CITY.</p>
        <p>!llll|llllllc</p>
        <p>lip This Coupon</p>
        <p>Downtown</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0003" />
        <p>Patricia Hearst Claims</p>
        <p>The FBI Wants Her Dead</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Patricia Hearst says in the latest tape recording released by her kidnapers that its the FBI who wants to murder me. Her abductors charged the FBI with suppressing their communications.</p>
        <p>The tape, received by a Berkeley, Calif., radio station Sunday night, was a duplicate of a recording received Saturday from Miss Hearst and the Symbionese Liberation Army, which claims it has held her since the newspaper heiress was kidnaped five weeks ago. But the tape was clearer and contained a new message from the SLA.</p>
        <p>The tapes were the first communication from the kidnapers in 17 days.</p>
        <p>Miss Hearsts mother, Catherine. said, I know that while Patty is captive that shell Ijfave to mutter all the words that^re dictated by her raptors. Miss Hearst, 20, is the daughter of Randolph A. Hearst, editor and president of the San Francisco Examiner.</p>
        <p>Sundays tape included the SLA charge that, The FBI intercepted and suppressed one of two tapes it put out Saturday. It said the FBI thought the first one was the only one sent out, said a woman who described herself as being from an SLA information intelligence unit. She said the FBI was foiled by a double-decoy system.</p>
        <p>Sunday nights tape was addressed to KPFA-FM, Berkeley, where a woman telephoned that the new tape could be found in the fifth row of a San Francisco theater.</p>
        <p>The FBI said it would not comment on the tape at least until Monday morning.</p>
        <p>In the tapes. Miss Hearst says she had the feeling she had been written off. She said I dont believe youre doing everything you-can, everything in your power. I dont believe youre doing anything at all.</p>
        <p>In other kidnaping developments over the weekend:</p>
        <p>The wife of a Decatur, Ga., K-Mart store manager was released unharmed after her husband paid about $20,000 in ransom from the office safe. It</p>
        <p>was the fourth similar incident since Christmas involving K-Mart employes in three states.</p>
        <p>In Hackensack, N.J., authorities continued their search for additional suspects in the kidnaping of 8-year-old John Calzadilla and their attempts to locate the $50,000 ransom paid for his release. Five persons have beeft arrested. The boy was released unharmed early last Friday.</p>
        <p>In Los Angeles, the FBI said it will present an affidavit detailing a plot to free a convicted skyjacker and another jailed man by kidnaping a foreign consul general. One woman was arrested Saturday in connection with the reported plot. She and the two jailed men were to be arraigned today.</p>
        <p>In the Hearst case, the latest recording by the coed included this request: I really want to lgetrtmHJf-here:-FaSi you hot to* aid the FBI.</p>
        <p>In Sundays recording, a woman said the SLA sent tapes to radio stations KDfA in Oakland and KSAN in San Francisco. KSAN released its tape, but KDIA said it did not receive ^ copy.</p>
        <p>Either KDIA, without telling the public or the Hearst family, turned it over to the FBI, who in turn supressed it, keeping it from the Hearst family, or the FBI intercepted it before KDIA got it and supressed it from getting to the Hearst family and the public, the women said.</p>
        <p>The latest tape was received by radio station KPFA in Berkeley.</p>
        <p>Patricia Hearst called a $2 million food distribution plan for the poor and paid for by her father and the William Randolph Hearst Foundation a real disaster. The SLA originally demanded $70 worth of food for every poor person in California.</p>
        <p>Miss Hearsts father said we were glad to hear her voice and to know that Pattys alive. But well be have to study it before we make any reply.</p>
        <p>Preceeding Miss Hearsts voice on the tape was one of an SLA member who identified herself as General Genina.</p>
        <p>The prayers of the police</p>
        <p>KIDNAPING SUSPECTS-Eligio R. Fernandez. 19, top left; Norberto Fernandez, 17, top ri^t; Wilfredo Alvarez. 18, bottom left, and Ricardo R. Tuero, 17, are shown at their arraignment in Hackensack, N.J. Sunday, on charges of kidnaping 8-year-&amp;lt;dd John Calzadilia of Dix Hiils, N.Y. The four men pleaded innocent. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>AT</p>
        <p>SHELMERDINE BAPTIST CHURCH</p>
        <p>Chicod, North Carolina 9V2 miles east of Greenville, Hwy. 43</p>
        <p>John H. Long, Visiting Evongolist</p>
        <p>from Ramseur, N.C. Services</p>
        <p>begin ^night at 7.30 p.m. and</p>
        <p>will continue thru Saturday,</p>
        <p>^ March 1^.  ^</p>
        <p>Public is invited by Travis Smith, pastor.</p>
        <p>state agency are to see to it that Patricia Hearst is killed and then use her death to further rally middle America in support of the Nixon-represented corporate dictatorship and against all revolutionary forces, she said.</p>
        <p>In New Jersey, the^ fifth arrest in the Calzadilla case was made late Saturday when FBI agents took into custody Maria Margaret Marida, 17, at her home at Jersey City. Four teen-aged youths are also being held in the case.</p>
        <p>Asst. U.S. Atty. Jonathan L. Goldstein said the young woman would be arraigned today before U.S. Magistrate Bruce F. Banta, charged with conspiring to violate federal kidnaping statutes.</p>
        <p>Goldstein said there were still other suspects in the kidnaping.</p>
        <p>In Decatur, Ga., authorities were searching for the kidnapers of Patricia Daniel, 30, who was abducted Saturday by three men who demanded and got about $20,000 from her husband, William. Mrs. Daniel was found unharmed.</p>
        <p>The previous three such incidents involving K-Mart store employes occurred in different states, two in Michigan and one in Tennessee. In one, the kidnaped wife escaped, in another a man was arrested and in the third the kidnapers escaped with $91,000.</p>
        <p>In Los Angeles, the three named in a federal warrant charging conspiracy to kidnap are Maria Theresa Alonzo, 22, a former follower of Charles Manson, who was convicted in the cult killing of actress Sharon Tate; Garrett Brock Trap-nell, 36, the convicted skyjacker, who was already jailed; and Robert Bernard Hedberg Jr. 37, already jailed on charges of unlawful flight and assaulting a policeman.</p>
        <p>Eight Died</p>
        <p>In Traffic</p>
        <p>J. H. Brewer Is Stricken</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (AP) -James H. Brewer, professor of history and co-director of the black studies program at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, died at his home in Durham Saturday.</p>
        <p>Brewer, 64, apparently suffered a heart attack. Funeral services were scheduled for this afternoon at the Duke Auditorium on the North Carolina Central University campus at Durham.</p>
        <p>He joined the UNC faculty here last year after teaching at North Carolina Central, Duke University, the State of New York University System, Fayetteville State University and Virginia State in Petersburg.</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Literary and Historical Society awarded him its Mayflower Cup in 1970 for outstanding contributions to black history. He was author of two books and numerous articles for scholarly magazines.</p>
        <p>A native of Pittsburgh, Brewer earned his PH.D. degree at the University of Pittsburgh.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, two daughters and a son.</p>
        <p>Smoke Fatal To</p>
        <p>Two In Blaze</p>
        <p>HENDERSON, N.C. (AP)-A mother and daughter died of smoke inhalation early today as a fire destroyed their two-story frame house in Henderson.</p>
        <p>Fire Chief Ranger Wilkerson identified the victims as Mrs. Florence Teace Bullock, 64, and her daughter Florence Elizabeth Bullock, 33. Wilkerson said 66-year-old Willie Bullock, the husband and father to the two women, escaped from the house, but has been hospitalized.</p>
        <p>Is Your Home</p>
        <p>Polluted?</p>
        <p>Insect pollution can be a serious problem. Our qualified technicians are ready to rid your home of bothersome pests.</p>
        <p>For Free estimates Call</p>
        <p>752-5175</p>
        <p>COACH</p>
        <p>ATHLETIC</p>
        <p>SHOES</p>
        <p>Special</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>Anti-Inflation Sale</p>
        <p>*</p>
        <p>Harrp's! Carpetlanii</p>
        <p>Wheat Shortages</p>
        <p>fo</p>
        <p>a/ iro</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>SiriVce o</p>
        <p>Kill Inflation With Deflation! Door Buster Give-Aways!</p>
        <p>Closeouts on Hoover!</p>
        <p>6 New Hoover Sweepalls</p>
        <p>Only 300 Ea.</p>
        <p>Wera 12.</p>
        <p>All OtheF Hoover</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>The North Carolina Highway Patrol said at least eight persons died in traffic accidents across the state last weekend, raising the toll for the year to 245 compared to 297 for the same period in 1973.</p>
        <p>Nine-year-old Gray Hutchins of Yadkinville was killed when a car struck his bicycle on a rural Yadkin County road.</p>
        <p>Danny L. Smith of Pikeville, 15, was a victim of a two-car collision on a rural road near Goldsboro in Wayne County. Three persons were injured.</p>
        <p>Two Washington men, Glen Dewey Edwards, 27, and Allen Ray Hardison, 40, died when their car overturned on a rural road eight miles northwest of the Beaufort County town.</p>
        <p>Doris Jarrett Garner of Burlington, 48, was fatally injured when she was struck by a car on N.C. 49 just outside Burlington.</p>
        <p>Richard Lee Harris Jr. of Pantego died after he was hit by a car on a rural road near his home town.</p>
        <p>The collision of a car and a motorcycle on N.C. 18, seven miles north of North Wilkes-boro, was responsible for the death of McArthur Laws of McGrady, 26.</p>
        <p>Thomas Redwine Wolfe of Albemarle, 44, was killed when his car struck a bridge abutment in Salisbury.</p>
        <p>ihtfm Acicessories</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>2 New Hoover Rug Shampooers Buffers</p>
        <p>&amp;amp; Scrubbers</p>
        <p>Were</p>
        <p>49.95</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>15</p>
        <p>Ea.</p>
        <p>2 Used Hoover Rug Shampooers Buffers &amp;amp;</p>
        <p>Were</p>
        <p>M9.95</p>
        <p>Scrubbers</p>
        <p>*10</p>
        <p>Only</p>
        <p>Ea.</p>
        <p>Hoover</p>
        <p>Floor-A-Matic</p>
        <p>Vi Gallon Solution Tank Automatically dispenses solution. Wet pick up!</p>
        <p>This machine shampoos carpets, waxes, polishes and buffs and power scrubs.</p>
        <p>Rea. For</p>
        <p>eg.</p>
        <p>*79.95 Only</p>
        <p>No Dealers or Phone Orders Please</p>
        <p>25</p>
        <p>Have you heard enough about shortages and high prices? Weil, at Larry's Carpetland we have good news for Crisis Tired Ears and Beautiful Colors and Textures that will sooth the sorest of eyesThere is NO and we Repeat NO Shortage of Carpet at Larry's Carpetlandso for the next 2 Weeks we are going to save you DOLLARS With Reductions on INSTOCK CARPET UP TO 50%</p>
        <p>There is no Gimmick We ARE overstocked on REMNANTS &amp;amp; ROLL BALANCES and have more rolls coming...so, we have got to make room.</p>
        <p>This meons. Great Reductions On All Our In Stock Carpet.</p>
        <p>1/1</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>One Group of Rugs &amp;amp; Remnants</p>
        <p>Over 500 Sq. Yds. To Choose From</p>
        <p>100%</p>
        <p>le Bell</p>
        <p>Reg</p>
        <p>LEES Sun</p>
        <p>Sun King business color tti Stiyli</p>
        <p>$13 Values</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>Discontinued Colors</p>
        <p>loys Sizes 2 2 to 6. Men's Sizes - 6^ 2 to 13</p>
        <p>OR^   Quality</p>
        <p>wVul ' 'sLc</p>
        <p>larrp'i Carpetlanb</p>
        <p>3010 E. 10th St. Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>- '  ;  i</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0004" />
        <p>4The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Mmiday. March 11, 1974</p>
        <p>Put Everybody In Lock-Step?</p>
        <p>The University Board of Governors last week apparently ordered a policy study aimed at the freedom of its chancellors to speak out.</p>
        <p>The boards governance committee is to produce recommendations for new guidelines controlling the relationship between the board and its administrative officers, the president and employees of the board.</p>
        <p>Some writers called the proposals a muzzle and saw it as aimed at Dr. Leo Jenkins, ECU chancellor.</p>
        <p>Robert Jordan of Mt. Gilead, a member of the board called for the study. He said that Jenkins has been quoted as saying East Carolina will continue to seek a four-year degree granting medical school, despite the board of governors stand.</p>
        <p>Chairman William Dees, Jr. of Goldsboro favored the study. He was quoted as saying it seems to me it would be appropriate to give the president some guidelines on dealing withNchan-cellors.  /  I</p>
        <p>It may be well to point that Dr.! Jenkins Was remarkably quiet on the medial school issue uhtil</p>
        <p>N.C. Farmers Plan For Boom</p>
        <p>By BILL NOBLITT</p>
        <p>RALEIGH-Tar Heel farmers are breaking new ground this spring, ready for a boom year in crops.</p>
        <p>A statewide survey covering all 100 counties shows more than a quarter of a million new cropland is being put back into production this year.</p>
        <p>acres in 1972. The new quarter of a million acres put back into production will push the 1974 total back past the four million acre mark.</p>
        <p>Of the total 257,453 acres that will be converted to row crops, some 200,484 acres fall in the category of formerly set aside acreage which hadbeen diverted from production over the years. Some of that land was retired and has been idle since the 1950s when the national Soil Bank legislation took effect.</p>
        <p>Of the total in new cropland opened up, about 31,949 acres will be converted from pasture and grasslands back into crop production; about 25,000 acres will be woodland cleared for farming.</p>
        <p>North Carolina Agriculture Commissioner Jim Graham is not all that enthusiastic about the increased cropland expected for the coming season.</p>
        <p>He says Tar Heel farmers are being asked to plant from fenee row to fence row without any guarantees that fuel and fertilizer and seed will be available to tend and harvest the crops.</p>
        <p>The statewide survey has just been completed by the U. S. Soil Conservation Service on a county-by-county basis, drawing on local federal conservationists, local boards and farm agents.</p>
        <p>Wetland Care</p>
        <p>State Conservationist Jesse L. Hicks said the survey shows that about 104,000 acres of the new land to be planted is listed as wetlands, which can present difficulties in cultivation, and urged farmers to work through local soil and water conservation advisors to get help with problems from excessive water.</p>
        <p>Hicks said North Carolina farmers have been careful in the past in practicing conservation methods in such areas, and is optimistic accepted conservation methods will be used.</p>
        <p>Such sensible things as grassed waterways, terraces, field borders and other conservation practices and plantings can do a lot to help curb erosion and reduce the threat of sedimentation in streams, Hicks said.</p>
        <p>The opening of the new land for crop production reverses the historic trend downward in North Carolina, the figures show.</p>
        <p>The steady decline in production shows 4.2 million acres of cropland harvested in 1971, down to 3.9 million</p>
        <p>Corn, Soybeans</p>
        <p>The federal conservationists said they have no firm indications on what will be planted on the bulk of existing cropland and the new land being plowed, but expect corn and soybeanswhich are climbing to record prices and sales in the world marketto make up the bulk of the crop.</p>
        <p>Graham, who has predicted lines of housewives waiting for food in the grocery stores unless the fuel and farm supplies are made available, is pushing for some guarantees of those supplies and of some assurances of a profit.</p>
        <p>Farmers work and grow things, he said, to make money so their families can livfe a good life. . .1 am hopeful the law of supply and demand will provide sufficient price levels to enable them to made a profit if they decide to take a chance on fertilizer and fuel and increase crops this year.</p>
        <p>Another form of new land is being broken in North Caro^jna this year, in the face of rising food prices and predicted shortages.</p>
        <p>Interest in home gardening is booming, and Dr. George Hyatt Jr. of the states Agricultural Extension Service said the explosion of interest in home gardening. . .is probably the highest since World War II.</p>
        <p>He said virtually any Tar Heel can produce some food, even city apartment dwellers with a window box, and that every county extension agent is ready to give advice and printed information on how to prepare the soil, what to plant, and how to care for it.</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N.C. 27834 ,  EsUblished  1882</p>
        <p>Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Mm-ning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>ASSOCIATED PRESS ^</p>
        <p>Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly 12.50</p>
        <p>Ry Mail</p>
        <p>One Year Six Months Three Months</p>
        <p>130.00</p>
        <p>15.00</p>
        <p>7.50</p>
        <p>The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this |iaper and also the local news published herein. Ail rights of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
        <p>Advertising rates and deadlines available upon request. '  Memb^  Audit  Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>after the Joint Appropriations Committee cast its decisive vote in favor of the schools expansion. Most observers viewed this as a decisive vote and it certainly \vas not illogical for Dr. Jenkins to comment after the Legislative committee ahd acted so decisively.  </p>
        <p>We live in a land where we like to think of ourselves as treasuring the freedoni to express our ideas and thoughts. Certainly there is no where that this cherished freedom should be more protected and nurtured than in the academic world. Yet, here we are with the University Board of Governors attempting to come up with^R way to stifle its own chancellors.</p>
        <p>We sincerely hope that the UNC administration is not so fragile that it can not withstand the advancement of a fresh idea every now and then by the chancellors of its universities or anyone else. If it is, then we might as well forget about academic freedom in North Carolina and put everyone connected with higher education in lock step with the administration.</p>
        <p>^^ow The Public Inflation</p>
        <p>By GEORGE GALLUP (Copyright 1974, Field Enterprises, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication in whole or part strictly prohibited, except with the written consent of the copyright holders.)</p>
        <p>PRINCETON, N. J.The history of inflation in America is dramatically revealed by a comparison of the publics current estimate of living costs with their estimate in 1937, the year the Gallup Poll started this periodic index.</p>
        <p>The publics current estimate of the minimum amount a family of four needs per week to make ends meet is $152. This is five times the figur recorded in 1937, which was $30 per week.</p>
        <p>These dollar estimates, based on samples of the U. S. nonfarm population, come in response to the survey question: What is the smallest amount of money a family of four (husband, wife, and two children) needs each week to get along in this community?</p>
        <p>This cost of living index provides a realistic measurement of family needs since it is based on the respondents own estimates of family expenditures. The federal governments cost of living statistics are based on retail prices and price changes.</p>
        <p>As found in earlier surveys, living costs are considerably less in the South and Midwest than in the East or Far West. The East is again found to be the most expensive region of the country, as determined by the publics own estimates of family needs.</p>
        <p>The following table shows the 37-year trend:</p>
        <p>Minimum Amount Needed By Family Of Four (Nonfarm Families)</p>
        <p>Median</p>
        <p>Averages</p>
        <p>1937  $ 30</p>
        <p>1947  $ 43</p>
        <p>1957  $ 72</p>
        <p>1967  $101</p>
        <p>LATEST  $152</p>
        <p>The table above shows the rapid rate of growth of the publics cost-of-living estimates. In the decade 1937 to 1947, the amount increased by $13. In the next decade, 1947 to 1957, the figure went up by a greater amount, $29. In the 1957 to 1967 decade, the amount again increased by $29. And, in the seven years between 1967 and the latest (1974) survey, the amount has shot up $51, or 50 per cent over the 1967 figure.</p>
        <p>In the last 12 months, the percentage of Americans who say the amount needed is more than $150 per week has increased from 35 per cent to 47 per cent. The percentage saying $150 or less has decreased from 65 per cent in 1973 to 53 per cent in the current year.,</p>
        <p>A key item in family budgets is the cost of food. Thursday the Gallup Poll will report how much Americans are spending for fobd in the United States at this time.</p>
        <p>For the latest survey, a total of 1,444 nonfarm respondents were interviewed in person in more than 300 localities across the nation during the periods Feb. 8-11 and Feb. 15-18. Farm families were excluded from the survey since many farmers raise their own food.</p>
        <p>HANDICAP AFFAIR!</p>
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        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>The Watergate Crimes</p>
        <p>WASHINGTONWe have been warned by everyone that all the people indicted in the Watergate affair must be presumed innocent until proved guilty, and we concur.</p>
        <p>But there are crimes they have committed for which they must be presumed guilty until proved innocent.</p>
        <p>Here is a short list: PURCHASING CHEAP RECORDING EQUIPMENT FOR THE PRESIDENT</p>
        <p>This not only has caused Mr. Nixon embarrassment but could be responsible for his downfall. By trying to save a few bucks on tape machines, the former aides to the President must take the blame not only for tapes that do not exist but also for the erased ones that do.</p>
        <p>SLOPPY FILING METHODS No Administration has had such messy files since</p>
        <p>Ulysses S. Grant. Every time the special prosecutor or the House Judiciary Committee lawyers ask for a relevant paper, no one seems to know where it is. This is even more tragic when you consider that everyone around the President looked so neat and clean you just assumed they would keep neat files.</p>
        <p>Other Editors Say Dangerous Proviso</p>
        <p>ART</p>
        <p>(Greensboro Daily News)</p>
        <p>The fuel shortage has moved the White House to draft a bill that might indeed increase the countrys energy supplies for a time but at the expense of the environment in the long run. It would authorize the Secretary of the Interior to tell states where to build power plants, refineries, supertanker ports and the like.</p>
        <p>Its ostensible purpose is to encourage and stimulate the construction of energy producing plants and installations in those states that fail within the next five years to start such program on their own. Its effect could be to empower the federal government to override state laws placing restrictions on the siting and construction of energy-producing plants.</p>
        <p>If the White House proposal, for example, it could result in the federal governments disregarding Delawares 1971 law banning refineries and heavy industry along its coastal zone. Further, imposing this particular federal authority on a state would give industries, such as oil and power companies, a chance to by-pass and ignore local resistance to a proposed site.</p>
        <p>Some of the disclosures about the 1971-72 operations of the Committee to Reelect the President make one wonder what might have happened if such a law had been in effect then and a constorium of oil companies had decided to build a tanker port and a string of refineries on the Delaware Coast. Hindsight compels us to bet the oil companies would have prevailed with the aid of a fat campaign contribution in laundered dollars.</p>
        <p>Mr. Nixons own two main environmental advisers, Russell Train, director of the Environmental Protection Agency, and Russell W. Peterson, chairman of the Presidents Council on Environmental Quality, both disagree with this provision of the proposed law. The bill should be rewritten, as Mr. Peterson has suggested, to help stimulate state planning on energy sources, but without dictating to the state governments.</p>
        <p>The state I^islatures may have been slow about enacting environmental jM-otection laws, but they are generally moving in that direction now and, in many cases, faster than the federal government. Oregon, to name one, is ahead o^the federal government in this field.  ^</p>
        <p>BAD BOOKKEEPING Before the Watergate scandal, everyone assumed that President Nixon was surrounded by bookkeepers. It now turns out that no one had any experience in finance, and large sums of money kept getting lost and being put in the wrong ledgers. Probably the biggest problem was that everyone was dealing in cash which is harder to keep track of than checks.</p>
        <p>KEEPING SECRETS This is one of the most serious charges. As far as we know everyone kept secrets from everybody else in the White House. No one knew what the other person was doing. President Nixon, if we are to believe him, knew nothing at all. By keeping secrets from each other, it was impossible for the staff to stick to the same story when Watergate was uncovered.</p>
        <p>HAVING A FALSE SENSE OF SECURITY ABOUT THE FBI AND THE CIA One of the Many crimes ex-Administration officials are guilty of is believing that the FBI and CIA would follow orders of the White House without questioning them. 'This false faith in these two (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Party's</p>
        <p>Tide</p>
        <p>Divides</p>
        <p>By CARL P. LEUB8D0RF AP PolUlcal Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  Democratic prospects In many of the nations largest states are being threatened by potentially divisive primary battles as candidates try to take advantage of seeming Republican vulnerability.</p>
        <p>Party leaders are concerned that hopes to make major gains in the wake of Watergate, including capturing the New York and California governorships, may fall victim to factionalism.</p>
        <p>Republican-held states in which Democratic primary fights for governor seem likely include New York, Cajifor^a, Connecticut, Michigan ^i^d Massachusetts.  \</p>
        <p>As for Senate ^seats, D@m^ cratic hopes of swelling th^lr current 58-42 majority could be hampered by primary battles in Florida, Ohio, Ck&amp;gt;lorado, Utah and Pennsylvania.</p>
        <p>In New York, Democrats have been counting on the alleged weakness of Gov. Malcolm Wilson, successor to Nelson A. Rockefeller, to recapture, the states government for the first time in 16 years.</p>
        <p>But there are signs that Wilson may be stronger than x-pected, especially among organized labor, while the Democrats are headed for at least a three-way primary battle less than two months before the November election.</p>
        <p>Though industrialist Howard J. Samuels is considered the Democratic front-nmner. Reps. Ogden R. Reid, a former Republican with strong Jewish backing, and Hugh Carey, supported by some New York City organizations, believe Samuels is vulnerable.</p>
        <p>In California, many Democrats still consider Secretary of State Edmund G. Brown Jr., the front-runner in the polls, a weak candidate running mainly on the name of his father, who was governor before the retiring Ronald Reagan.</p>
        <p>As a result, the Democratic field still is large, including San Francisco Mayor Joseph Alioto, Assembly Speaker Bob Moretti, Rep. Jerome Waldie and businessman William Roth.</p>
        <p>Among the Republicans, Comptroller Houston I. Flournoy, a moderate, has emerged as the favorite over conservative Lt. Gov. Ed Rei-necke.</p>
        <p>In Connecticut, Democrats are heading for their first gubernatorial primary. Their leading contenders are Rep. Ella T. Grasso and Atty. Gen. Robert Killian.</p>
        <p>In Massachusetts, a primary between former state Rep. Michael Dukakis and Atty. Gen. Robert Quinn could damage chances of defeating Gov. Francis W. Sargent.</p>
        <p>In Michigan, a primary battle could hurt Democratic hopes to oust GOP Gov. William G. Mil-liken.</p>
        <p>As for Senate races, the most notable case of Democratic over-eagerness appears to be in Florida, where a half-dozen Democrats are seeking the seat of Republican Edward J, Gurney, whose former top aide has accused him of involvement in a kickback scandal. Gumey has denied it.</p>
        <p>In Ohio, a May 7 rerun of the bitter 1970 primary between Howard Metzenbaum, now the state's appointed U.S. senator, and former astronaut John Glenn could hurt Democratic chances. The Republican candidate is Cleveland Mayor Ralph Perk.</p>
        <p>Blues Of A Traveling Salesman</p>
        <p>By DIERDRE DONNELLY AP Business Writer</p>
        <p>strict Scottish sect known as Sandamanians. One of their requirements was that if a man could stand on his feet he must go to church on Sunday.</p>
        <p>On a certain Sunday Faraday missed church because Queen Victofia had invitedthat is to say commanded-4iim to lunch with her at Balmoral Castle. On the following week the Sandamanians excommunicated Faraday because he had obeyed the command of an earthy sovereign to take lunch" rather than the com-</p>
        <p>excommunication without a word of protest. He did ask, however, that he be reinstated after he had made amends in the form of works meet for repentence. Only after doing this penance was the great scientist accepted back into the church,</p>
        <p>Some successful men feel that they are entitled by high position to ignore earlier,' simplicities of faith; but the truly great always stand reverently before their r^igion.</p>
        <p>By Elisha Douglass</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)  The traveling salesman in the United States has seen his income crimped by shrinking rcommissfon rates, nsrag tr&amp;lt;aval. costs and shortages of products to sell.</p>
        <p>Mike Gale, who sells for cos-tiune jewelry firms, has cut some working days in half to find enough gasoline on the Connecticut Turnpike for his return to New York City.</p>
        <p>Now theres the problem with gasoline. And whatever its future, its forcing new changes on salesmen, and some say they could be driven off the road if it continues.</p>
        <p>Nick Adams, a traveling sales representative for several auto parts makers, was stranded in Granville, Wash., for two days when service stations ran out of gas. Now he makes fewer trips and asks customers to guarantee him a tank of gas for the retiRn trip.</p>
        <p>Salesmens Organizations represents wme 70,000 of the nations 250,000 independent traveling sales representatives those who live entirely by commissions on whatever sales they can drum up. The gasoline shortage, it says, is the most critical, immediate problem ever to face such salesmen.</p>
        <p>Its a lot more than an inconvenience, says Gale. Its an economic loss.</p>
        <p>If we dont see customers, we dont sell merchandise. If mis continues throm^the summer wh^ a lot m^ gas is'</p>
        <p>used for vacations and weekend traveling, I think a lot of traveling salesmen will begin thinking about leaving the business.</p>
        <p>Some independent salesmen already have lost their jobs as (li4 tcfej phoning customers sometimes can accomplish almost as much as selling face to face. Costs as well as fuel problems are factors.</p>
        <p>Its about as efficient as traveling right now, and it cuts down overhead since we dont have commissions to pay, says a spokesman for American Gypsum Co., a small gypsum board maker in Albuquerque, N.M., which halved its sales force and doubled its phoning.</p>
        <p>The national salesmens group estimates the average</p>
        <p>cost of a salesmans visit was about $50 in 1971. It cost about $60 last year and has gone up eight to 10 per cent since last fall.</p>
        <p>Commission rates, meanwhile, have drifted down. The 7- American' ation says that, on industrial goods, the rate slipped from -7.5 per cent in 1967 to 7.4 per cent last year. On consumer goods, it went from 6.9 per cent to 5.7 per cent.</p>
        <p>The salesmens group estimates the average salesman uses 4,000 gallons of goline a year, driving 40,000 miles and averaging 10 miles a gallon between city and country driving. At 20 cents more a gallonless of a hike than some New York salesmen say theyre paying thats $800 more a year in gas bills.</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0005" />
        <p>Cancels Pitt Burning Permits</p>
        <p>Burning permits have been cancelled until rain says Mark Webb, County Ranger for the N. C. Forestry Service.</p>
        <p>The announcement came this morning after 13 fires were experienced in Pitt County over the windy, dry weekend. Pitt County Fire Marshal Bobby Joyner reported the following</p>
        <p>fires:</p>
        <p>Friday, 12:02 p.m.Eastern Pines went to a grsM fire in Brook Valley subdivision at the comer of King George and Oxford Roads.</p>
        <p>Friday, 1:12 p.m.Staton House and the Forestry Service fought a grass and woods blaze behind the Sheltered Workshop,</p>
        <p>which Jumped a four4^e highway and set afire woods adjacent to the Burrough-Wellcome plant.</p>
        <p>Friday, 1:20 p.m.Farmville fought a fire at the town landfill.</p>
        <p>Friday, 2:52 p.m.Fountain went to a grass fire at the James Miller residence in Fountain.</p>
        <p>Friday, 2:59 p.m.Eastern</p>
        <p>Streaking Frowned On, But A 'Hopeful' Outlet</p>
        <p>Pines and the Forestry Service fought a woods fire on the Ed Garris farm.</p>
        <p>Friday, 3:35 p.m.Black Jack was called to assist the Forestry Service in extinguishing a woods fire near Shelmdine.</p>
        <p>Friday, 4:48 p.m.Grifton false alarm.</p>
        <p>Friday, 6:26 p.m.Pactolus went to a tobacco barn fire on the Jesse Water farm. The extent of damage is being determined, Joyner said.</p>
        <p>Friday, 10:42 p.m.Staton</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press The newest objects of interest for the spectator sportsman, streakers, generaUy leave a trail of strong if varied opinions on the merits of their performances in their wake.</p>
        <p>A Medical University of South Carolina psychiatrist. Dr. Benjamin Riggs, views the _ -era^ as a hopeful sign among college students.</p>
        <p>The dominant feeling I get Is the tremendous cmtrast between this kind of very funny performance and some of the previous kinds of outlets, he commented. "This gives a lot of hope for the future.</p>
        <p>Dr. Riggs and a psychiatrist at North Carolina Memorial Hospital at Chapel Hill agree that streaking is a fad, but Dr. Seymour HaUeck attributes less psychological importance to it.</p>
        <p>I think it is a fad, Dr. Hal-leck said. It will come and it will go. I dont think it has any great significance.</p>
        <p>Sure its a fad, Dr. Riggs agreed. But I think fads mean ~ something. I would not take a phenomenon like that and give it all sorts of deep, juicy background. But I get the feeling that it is a very healthy form of mixed humor and rebellion _vdiich, unlike activist violence,</p>
        <p>Buchwald Col.</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) institutions might have been the beginning of their undoing. The tragedy of Watergate is that the FBI and CIA could not be counted on to cover up goofs in the Administration.</p>
        <p>BELIEF IN THE MANDATE</p>
        <p>This is not a felony, but a misdemeanor. Everyone around the President believed the election results in 1972 would guarantee that no one would be interested in how he won his mandate. Had Nixon aides not been interested in winning a mandate, there might never have been a Watergate.</p>
        <p>OVERACHIEVING AT FUND RAISING</p>
        <p>The success of the Nixon fundraising drive was one of the main reasons everything went wrong. Had the Committee for the Re-Election of the President been short of money, it never would have had the finances to get them in so much trouble. When youre broke you have no choice but to put funds into billboards and TV commercials. When youre flush you have a tendency to hire si^es and private ctetectives to do dirty work for you.</p>
        <p>PLAYING TENNIS WITH EACH OTHER</p>
        <p>The Nixon people only played tennis with each other, which kept them from knowing what the rest of the country was thinking. Had they let outsiders into their game they might have realized that what they were plotting for the President was wrong.</p>
        <p>WEARING THE AMERICAN FLAG IN THEIR LAPELS</p>
        <p>It is no crime to wear an American Flag in your lapel. But it is a crime to believe that by wearing one everything that you teU a grand jury automatically will be believed.</p>
        <p>Rent An Organ</p>
        <p>*20 ri</p>
        <p>752-5110</p>
        <p>o</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN'GREENVILLE $|-JOP M7 i. Fiftti Stp</p>
        <p>goes in the exact opposite direction and, as a nde, stirs up everybodys smiles.</p>
        <p>Most college and university professors in North and South Carolina havp tAken a tolerant attitude towards their unclothed undergraduates.</p>
        <p>For instance, Sig Hewitt, the director of Information Services at the University S^uth Carolina said, The administration and faculty here do not condone it. Exhibitionism should not be encouraged. We really feel like we have to face the facts of life. Every spring, as the weather turns warm, students come up with a way to blow off steam. This year, the vogue's been streaking.</p>
        <p>On the other hand, Appalachian State University is one institution that has set a hardline policy.</p>
        <p>Dr. Braxton Harris, . vice chancellor for student aHairs, said further nocturnal nudity is unacceptable and warned that students identified as streakers</p>
        <p>No Injuries In Collisions</p>
        <p>An estimated $1,200 property damage resulted yesterday from two collisions investigated by Greenville police.</p>
        <p>Officers reported heaviest damage resulted from an 11 a.m. mishap at the intersection of Elm Street and North Overlook Drive involving cars driven by Herbert Raymond Carlton Jr. of 1735 Beaumont Dr. and Betty</p>
        <p>will be subject to immediate suspension by the chancellor pending a hearing.</p>
        <p>The attorney general for the institutions Student Government Association, Douglas B. Little, echoed the policy. He announced that, In^viduals participating will be prosecuted to the full extent of the law|;</p>
        <p>One South Canfina t^islator does not share the opinion that streaking fever will ^e a natural death in due course.</p>
        <p>Rep. John Miles, D-Sumter, has introduced legislation in the General Assembly that would set a penalty of 90 days imprisonment and expulsion from public schools upon a conviction of streaking.</p>
        <p>Dr. Riggs disagreed with setting so harsh a punishment for streakers.</p>
        <p>Im sorry to hear there are some tight-lipped, narrow-minded characters who would liketo pass some precipitate, punitive legislation on streaking as immoral, he said.</p>
        <p>I think its no worse than panty raids, he added. Its probably better because nothing gets stolen.</p>
        <p>N.C. Sees End To Unseasonable Heat</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>The National Weather Service says North Carolina has seen an end to record-breaking temperatures for a while and some much-needed rain is expected to cross the state today.</p>
        <p>Cooler temperatures will take over for the next few days. Rain will releive the high danger of forest and brush fires. It will spread into the western counties today and over the state tonight. It should end from the west tomorrow.</p>
        <p>State Forester Ralph C. Win-kworth cancelled burning permits in all 100 counties across the state Sunday because of the</p>
        <p>Alford Will Join Studies</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL-Ott Alford, superintendent of Pitt County Schools, will attend a special study institute on the Right to Education Mandate at the University of North Carolina here beginning March 18.</p>
        <p>Coriette Pair of 102 Lord Ashley  two-day institute will brief</p>
        <p>Dr.</p>
        <p>Investigators, who estimate damage at $300 to the Clarlton car and $450 to the Pair vehicle charged Carlton with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety.</p>
        <p>Cynthia Katham of 301 Library St. was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety foUowing investigation of a 4:15 p.m. collision on Cotanch Street 51 feet South of the Fifth Street intersection.</p>
        <p>Police reported the Latham car collided with a vehicle driven by Annie Belle Snuggs of 1703 South Greene St. causing an estimated $300 damage to the Latham car and about $200 damage to the Snuggs car.</p>
        <p>No injuries were reported in either collision.</p>
        <p>about 200 North Carolina local school officials on the pasible effects of recent demands for full educational services for handicapped children.</p>
        <p>Andrew Vance of the N. C. Attorney (Jenerals office will review the progress of a suit brought against the State by the N. C. Association for retarded children. The suit seeks to obtain free public education for all handicapped children.</p>
        <p>Rep. Patricia Hunt will outline the N.C. Legilative Outlook in the area of special education. Other speakers will discuss probable impact of new laws requiring more special education services from local schools in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The Institute is sponsored by the Special Education Program of the UNC School of Education.</p>
        <p>Seeks Form Singles Unit</p>
        <p>FOUNTAIN-Miss Elsie Dunn, who lives here, is seeking to organize a chapter of BASIC International Inc.</p>
        <p>This is an organization of single persons who are interested in having Christian fellowship with others who have experienced the heartbreak of losing a loved one, either by death or divorce, or who are alone by choice or circumstance, she said.</p>
        <p>BASIC holds meetings, social gatherings, and educational adventures and is active in local Christian outreach program and three foreign mission projects. The name means Bom Again Singles in CJhrist, and as the name implies, members must be bom again and single. Men and women of all ages and faiths are invited to join, she explained.</p>
        <p>All that is needed to organize a chapter are seven single adult (Thristians, Miss Dunn said. She asks interested persons to write her in case of BASIC, Rt. 1, Box 161, Fountain, N.C. 27829.</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>Fair Wednesday through Friday. Highs in the 50s on Wednesday warming to the 60s by Friday.</p>
        <p>Iikeacarpo&amp;lt;4</p>
        <p>inthesl^.</p>
        <p>One of the obvious solutions to the energy crisis is mass transit. People are being requested to travel in buses, commuter trains or car pools. When you travel between cities, flying offers the same opportunity to get tc^etheri and save fuel. Piedmonts wide-comfort 737 fanjets, for . . . example, seat 90 passengers.. ^</p>
        <p>because ive 3fer r^onai semce  cities toth large and small. Piedmonts schedules, more than ever before, can fit your travel plans.</p>
        <p>To compjiy with the Presidents request for fuel conservation, some Piedmont flights have been rescheduled to assure continued service among all cities along our system.</p>
        <p>Weve got a place for you. See your travel agent or call Piedmontseats are available on most flights.</p>
        <p>Just like a car pool in the sky.</p>
        <p>Ihkeiisup.</p>
        <p>Piedmont</p>
        <p>New Hearing Over Galley</p>
        <p>COLUMBUS, Ga. (AP) - A federal judge here says he will schedule a hearing soon on a suit asking him to reconsider his decision to free Lt. William L. Calley Jr. on bond.</p>
        <p>U.S. District Court Judge J. Robert Elliott refused Sunday to comment further on the lawsuit, filed here Friday by Asst. U.S. Atty. Charles T. Erion on behalf of U.S. Army officials.</p>
        <p>On Feb. 27, Elliott freed Calley on $1,000 bond which Calley did not have to pay in cash. Calley had been under house arrest for nearly three years, since he was convicted by a military court in March, 1971, of killing Vietnamese civilians at My Lai.</p>
        <p>Erion argued in the suit that Calley had little hope of winning his appeal to a civilian court for a reversal of the convictions. The U.S. attorney said in jhe suit that all of the points raised in Calleys appeal have been found lacking in, merit by to consume  dry  woodlands  and^^he Court of MaitW Review</p>
        <p>brush  in a major  wildfire  in the  and the civilian Court of Mili-</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Monday. March 11, 1974S</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, MARCH 12, 1974</p>
        <p>House went to a grass fire behind Greenfield Terrace.</p>
        <p>Saturday, 2:36 p.m.Eastern Pines went to a woods fire on the Annie Porter farm.</p>
        <p>Saturday. 3:53 p.m.Red Oak went to a grass fire behind Oakdale Subdivision.</p>
        <p>Sunday, 12:58 a.m.Pactolus wit to a grass fire on the Henry Briley farm.</p>
        <p>Sunday, 2:27 p.m.Simpson answered a grass fire call at the Summerell residence in Simpson.</p>
        <p>danger from fires. The State Forest Service says fires are prohibited day and night excpet for within 100 feet of an occupied dwelling.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, flames continued</p>
        <p>northeast section of Pender County. Winkworth said the fire was seven miles in circumference and was burning out of control in the remote Holly Shelter section.</p>
        <p>It began Saturday as a control burn by the Wallace Hunt Club on land owned by the club. The Forest Service said by early Sunday, it had destroyed about 1,500 acres.</p>
        <p>The fire has been listed as a project burn, that is, one which will take days to extinguish and will require more personnel to combat it than the Forest Service has in one area.</p>
        <p>Winkworth said since March 1, about 13,600 acres of state forests have been burned by 955 wildfires.</p>
        <p>Temperatures today will be noticeably cooler because of mostly cloudy skies and northeasterly winds, high readings will generally be in the 50s with 60s in a few places.</p>
        <p>Twelve Earned Dean's List</p>
        <p>GREENSBORO-Twelve students from Greenville have been named to the Deans List for the fall semester at A &amp;amp; T State University here.</p>
        <p>They are: Sutton Austin, Julius R. Carney, Marilyn D. Jones, Alma M. Marsh, Beulah W. Mebane, Cora E. Perkins, Larry Pierce Jr., Elfreda L. Smith, Norma J. Sutton, Sheila C. Teel, Elnora Vines and Charles L. Whitaker.</p>
        <p>tary Appeals.</p>
        <p>Erion also argued that Calley was convicted of one of the most serious crimes in the history of military justice.</p>
        <p>In granting bail, Elliott said that Calley had been a model prisoner and had not tried to escape while held in minimum security at his bachelor quarters at nearby Ft. Benning.</p>
        <p>The suit was filed on behalf of U.S. Army Secretary Howard Callway, Judge Advocate Genei-al Maj. Gen. George Prugh aind Ft. Benning Commander Maj, Gen. Thomas M. Tarpley.</p>
        <p>Two Escaped Raleigh Center</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)Two inmates escaped from the North-central Correctional Center in Raleigh early today by climbing through a window and scaling the fence.</p>
        <p>Prison Lt. J. C. Moore said the men were David Lee Bittle, 19, of Independence, Mo., and Cody Neal Cook, 20, of Durham. Moore said a guard on tbe tower saw the men going over the fence and sounded the alarm.</p>
        <p>Since the center houses misdemeanor prisoners, guards cannot fire at an escaping inmate. Some felons are also in the center.</p>
        <p>Cook was serving 16 years for breaking and entering and fel-</p>
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        <p>The Stars impel, they do not compel  What you make of your life is largely up to YOU!</p>
        <p>onious larceny. He was sentenced in Durham in September, 1972. Bittle was serving two years for unauthorized use of an auto in Onslow county. He was convicted last Sept. 24 and also serving six months for escape.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092173_0006" />
        <p>The Dail^ Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Monday, March 11, lf74New York Draff Evader Came 'Back From The Dead'</p>
        <p>By DAVID COHEN</p>
        <p>HAMILTON, Ont. (UPI) -You cant go home againor can you? Or do you want to?</p>
        <p>Steven Wayne Trimm, 25, an anti-war draft evader from Chatham, N. Y., who found sanctuary in Canada, doesnt know for sure. He was officially dead from the time he drowned off Rhode Island in 1909 until he reemerged here last fall to register with Canadian immigration and</p>
        <p>apply for landed immigrant status. </p>
        <p>Trimms  fears that the</p>
        <p>United States will press for his extradition are somewhat abated, although FBI officials reportedly are studying his case. And while amnesty for draft evaders and conscientious objectors has been widely debated in the United Sttes, there has been no official federal action establishing leniency.</p>
        <p>Deportation is still a pos</p>
        <p>sibility, but Trimm ^ is now aware of appeal i^ocedures that can delay it for years. In the meantime he is awaiting the Canadian governments decision on his application.</p>
        <p>I dont have landed immigrant status yetits still up in the air, said the short, stocky, blue-eyed man at his rooming-house near downtown Hamilton. Until I am landed I dont have enough of a future to plan. Its still day to day, week to week. I cant go beyond that now.</p>
        <p>Four Year Seatonce Timms ordeal began in 1907 Vhen, as a follower of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., and Mahatma Gandhi, he applied for conscientious objector status and was denied. After he refused to be drafted, he was soitenced to four yers in prison for failure to comply with the Selective Service Law. An appeal failed on Oct. 10, 1909.</p>
        <p>On the following day, Trimm fled tp Montreal. On the day</p>
        <p>after that, a note signed by Trimm and some clothes were found on a Rhode Island beach, planted there by a friend. His apparent suicide was accepted by officials, his parents and brother.</p>
        <p>Trimm said the main reason for staging a suicide was that his parents had put up their home in lieu of $5,000 bail so he could remain free virhile awaiting outcome of his appeal.</p>
        <p>No Secrets , No Gimmicks In Kissinger's Supply Of Energy</p>
        <p>When I went underground, I knew the house could be seized, he said. I thought, perhaps, that if the authorities did not know my status, whether 1 was alive or dead, they could not legally move against the house. (Hie house never was seized).</p>
        <p>scared.</p>
        <p>He didnt consult lawyers or draft counsellors in Canada. When he finally applied for landed immigration status, he had waited until the last days of a 90-day Immigration Department grace period during which illegal immigrants were invited to come forward with the promise of lenient treatment.</p>
        <p>Reunion With Parents After his registration, Trimm</p>
        <p>informed his parents of his whereabouts and. they were reunited in Hamiltcm last Christmas. He said his parents had been in touch with UJS. federal authorities who told them their son probably could serve udiatever setnence he eventually gets, if he returns to the United States, by doing hospital work.</p>
        <p> Trimm said his isolation in Canada was very difficult to come through intact but one</p>
        <p>good thing has come out of his conviction as a draft evader my family is a lot closer to each other than they were before.</p>
        <p>While in the States, I was under so much pressureI couldnt rationalize or evaluate a hell of a lot that was going on around me, Trimm said. Now I have had time to get a better understanding of whats going on in the States. Its just been healthier up here.</p>
        <p>By JOHN BARTON WASHINGTON (UPI) - Anyone hoping to make a fortune^ by discovering and marketing the source of the incredible energy of Secretary of State Henry A. Kissinger may as well forget it. There are no secrets and no gimmicks, according to the people who know him best.</p>
        <p>There are no special foods or diets or exercises, said a high-ranking confidant of the Secretary. The only physical exercise he does that I know of is coming to work.</p>
        <p>He is simply a man of extraordinary energy. He has the greatest built-in energy system I have ever seen. Hes a dynamo.</p>
        <p>Kissinger never ceases to amaze his colleagues* whether he is hopscotching around the world seeking solutions to such complex problems as peace in the Mideast, detente with the Soviet Union and (Tiina, or simply receiving an endless stream of foreign and U.S. leaders at his White House or State Department office.</p>
        <p>He works 18 to 20 hours a day, seven days a week. If anything, his pace speeds up on weekends, sometimes to the dismay of foreign service officers who complain they almost never see their fmilies anymore, except perhaps for a -quick meal before rushing back _</p>
        <p>to the office.</p>
        <p>Compulsive Need One associate ascribes Kissingers drive to a compulsive need to get things done.</p>
        <p>You know, if you really want to get ahead in this world, you have to move faster and work longer than others, the associate said. Henry moves faster and works longer than anyone else.</p>
        <p>He doesnt even suffer from jet lag. In fact, he doesnt seem to suffer from any kind of lag. Hes more than just a selfstarter. He just never seems to run down.</p>
        <p>But occasionally even Kissinger gets the message that not everyone has as unlimited supply of energy as he does. A case in point was the recent visit to Washington of Egyptian Foreign Minister Ismail Fahmi and Saudi Arabian Foreign Minister Omar Sakkaf.</p>
        <p>the weekend in question, Kissinger made a 24-hour roundtrip to Key Biscayne, Fla., to discuss the energy crisis with President Nixon before returning for the Fahmi-Sakkaf meetings. On impulse, he included a four-hour meeting with Chairman J. William Fulbright of the Senate Foreign Relations Committee in Little Rock, Ark., hardly on a direct line between Washington and Florida.</p>
        <p>Wears Out Arabs</p>
        <p>On his return, the Secretary ordered the presidential jet he was using to land at nearby Dulles Airport instead of Andrews Air Force base, the usual practice, and rushed to meet the  arriving Arab diplomats and inform them he had planned a working dinner within the hour.</p>
        <p> Fahmi and Sakkaf thanked him for his hospitality but told him it was the equivalent of 2 a.m. EDT when they began their day. They said they were exhausted from their transatlantic flight and would see him the following morning.</p>
        <p>Kissinger, who is not used to being stood up, took it well. Instead, he invited several senior State Deprtment officials to join him at dinner, which was just being removed from the ovens in the departments kitchen. The result was an unceremonious exodus.</p>
        <p>I mean no disrespect, sir, said one of the departing, foreign service officers, but this is the first night in several months I will be able to spend at home with my wife and in time to see my children.</p>
        <p>No Rancor</p>
        <p>While Kissingers seven-day work week has inconvenienced top aides, it has produced</p>
        <p>surprisingly little rancor.</p>
        <p>You cant criticize a man who is more demanding of himself than he is of others, one official said. He is hard on us, but he is harder on himself.</p>
        <p>Some critics contend Kissinger works so fast he is disorganized. That simply is not true, a confidant said. He is well organized and he knows how to tell people what to do.</p>
        <p>Occasionally as he zips across the time zones trying to solve a rainbow of the worlds problems on an itinerary that would be a travel agents Tiightmare, Kissinger will catnap in the bed on his big jet.</p>
        <p>But only after instructing his staff what reports he wants when he awakens, the official said. He might sleep then, but rarely. His staff never does. And he has instantaneous pickup. He will wake up and ask immediately for the reports, digest them and bound out of the plane ready for full-scale negotiations wherever he</p>
        <p>The second reason I went along with the suicide thing was that, as terrible as it would be for my parents to think I was dead, it would be much kinder actually. Having them live from day to day fearing for me would just eat them up alive. I just thought it would be better if they thought I was dead, and theyd get over the "blow after awhile.</p>
        <p>First Six Months Trimm became Jim Bridger in Canada, found work and made friends, none of whom knew his true circumstances. He now teaches at a free school.</p>
        <p>I never got close to anybody, real tight, you know, he explained. Because if I did, then inevitably I would confide in them, and that would start the old grapevine growing.</p>
        <p>STEVEN WAYNE- TRIMM, is seen arriving at Federal Court in December</p>
        <p>of 1968 where he was sentenced to four years in Prison. (UPI Telephoto)</p>
        <p>Two Injured In Auto Accident</p>
        <p>Two persons were reported injured and an estimated $1,800 property damage set in a 8:15 p.m. Saturday collision at the intersection of Fifth and Greene Streets.</p>
        <p>Police reported Butch Chavis of Route 1, Bethel and James Ray Reid of 803A Ward St.the drivers of the two cars involved-received minor injuries in the mishap that caused an estimated $6()0 damage to the Chavis car and about $1,200 damage to the Reid auto.</p>
        <p>Both Chavis and Reid were charged by police with failing to stop for a stop light.</p>
        <p>Seven out of every 10 bottles of wine consumed in the United States contains California wine, according to the Wine Institute of San Francisco.</p>
        <p>Watches Weight</p>
        <p>Kissinger does have to watch his weight. When I get into difficult negotiations, I tend to overeat, the Secretary told^ reporters on a recent Middle East trip, patting a rotund stomach to underscore hisi remark. He said he also consumes a lot of soft drinks under such circumstances.</p>
        <p>When he is not traveling, Kissingers normal day begins with breakfast at the State Department, never later than 8 a.m. An official said it invariably is a working breakfast, either with some visiting official or with some senior staff members.</p>
        <p>Then he is off to the White House, where Kissinger says he has daily meetings with the President. Later he returns to the State Department where he either has lunch on a tray in his office or presides over a working lunch for visiting dignitaries. Dinner is held in late evening under similar circumstnces.</p>
        <p>Most of us eat our meals in order to refuel our bodies and give us time to ponder over the events of the day and our lives, an aide said. Not him. Henry doesnt need a diversionary meal.</p>
        <p>The first six months in Canada were his most difficult, Trimm said. Once a policeman appeared at his door and he thought the game was up, but the policeman only was inquiring about a parking violation. Later when he was in Ottawa on business, the capital was swarming with police due to FLQ terrorism and 'Trimm was</p>
        <p>Charge Three In Conspiracy</p>
        <p>Sen. Jackson In N.C. Saturday</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) - U.S. Sen. Henry Jackson, D-Wash., will meet with Democratic members of the North Carolina General Assembly in the Legislative building here Saturday.</p>
        <p>Jackson will be in Raleigh to make the principal speech at the Democratic Partys annual Jefferson-Jackson Day fundraising dinner.</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP)  Three persons, including a former follower of the Charles Manson family and a convicted skyjacker, have been charged in an alleged plot to kidnap a foreign consul general.</p>
        <p>The FBI said it planned to file a 22-page affidavit with a U.S. magistrate detailing an attempt to kidnap a consul general from one of eight foreign nations to bargain for the release of a convicted airline hijacker .and another jailed man.</p>
        <p>Jailed pending arfm^B{nent today on a federal warrant charging conspiracy to kidnap was Maria Theresa Alonzo, 22, a former follower of Manson. Manson was convicted in the cult killing of actress Sharon Tate.</p>
        <p>courthouse during his murder trial.</p>
        <p>Trapnell and Hedberg were in the Los Angeles County Jail at the time of Miss Alonzos arrest.</p>
        <p>FBI sp(Aesman John Barron said agents first learned of the kidnap attempt through the cooperation of an individual who was to act as a coconspirator in the plot.</p>
        <p>He said the alleged conspirators planned to kidnap the consul general from one of the following nations:  Estonia,</p>
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        <p>Eyesore 'Cured' By Developers</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY (AP)  The developers of Crown Center, a 50-building urban redevelopment project, cured this citys worst eyesore  a monstrosity known as Signboard Hill  by draping an elegant hotel on the slope where a forest of billboards once flourished. The hill is now considered one of Kansas Citys best tourist sights.</p>
        <p>Also charged in the conspiracy case were Garrett Brock Trapnell, 36, the convicted skyjacker, already jiled; and Robert Bernard Hedberg Jr., 37, already jailed on charges of unlawful flight and assaulting a policeman.</p>
        <p>The FBI said it broke up the plot Saturday afternoon with the arrest of Miss Alonzo at a Hollywood apartment. Sheriffs officers said her forehead still bore an X, the symbol used by followers of Manson who performed a vigil outside the</p>
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        <p>WHEN YOURE PARKED. YOURE PARKEDA small dog waits patiently for his master outside a downtown store yesterday. The owner went inside a store to shop, leaving the dog tied to a parking meter, and of course one with time. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)  "</p>
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        <pb facs="00092173_0007" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Monday, March 11, 19747</p>
        <p>'Open To Suggestions' On Bikeway Plans For City</p>
        <p>NEW BANK BRANCH OPENS-Southern Bank &amp;amp; Trust Co. of Robersonville opened a new branch in Stokes with a formal ribbon cutting Friday. Cutting the ribbon is left to right, R. A. Gurganus, vice-president, of the Robersonville</p>
        <p>branch; Stokes Citzen Mrs. Cora Page, who is 93; Mrs. Pages daughter, Mrs. Eiizabeth James; and the new bank manager, Mrs. Betsy Briley of Stokes. (Reflector Staff Photo)</p>
        <p>Speaking Of Shortages: Singapore Has Them All</p>
        <p>By PETER OLOUGHLIN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>SINGAPORE (AP) - Oil shortages? Inflation? Making do with ground beef instead of filet?</p>
        <p>If you think youve got problems, spare a thought for the citizens of Singapore  they cant get housemaids.</p>
        <p>The domestic crisis is so grave a local newspaper devoted a two-part series to the problem and headlined it: Where have all the maids gone?</p>
        <p>To the factories that have sprung up as a result of Singapores rapid industrialization seems to be the answer.</p>
        <p>The burgeoning industries have lured away thousands of</p>
        <p>women to do jobs which they find more rewarding and dignified, said the Nation, assessing the servant shortage. Being a servant has become a social stigma.</p>
        <p>The maid shortage has forced Cihinese and European housewives in this hot and humid city, 77 miles from the equator, to bear the unbearable  washing, ironing, cooking and minding the children.</p>
        <p>Some households which used to boast a cook, wash amah, baby amah, driver and two gardeners are down to one servant or worse, no servants at all.</p>
        <p>There are still some hopefuls who advertise for help, like this one in the Straits Times:</p>
        <p>Wanted a couple, an amah or two amahs and a male domestic, must be fond of dogs, large family house Those who know say ads like that are hopeless.</p>
        <p>The more realistic advertise like this: (Itook amah live in small family. No washing (laundry). Attractive quarters.</p>
        <p>The more appealing the employer can make the job sound, the better the chance of getting a maid.</p>
        <p>British and Chinese bemoan the arrival of large numbers of American oil men and their families in Singapore. They say theyve ruined the market.</p>
        <p>Americans pay $250 a month (US$100), give them a television set, nights off, provide a</p>
        <p>AT NIGHTThe canopy thafeiwlU cover the United States Pavilion at Expo 74 is shown at night in Spokane. The canopy is made of vinyl</p>
        <p>and Is some 150 feet above the pavilion. The Wwlds Fair is scheduled to begin in May. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>FREE EISENHOWER DOLLAR</p>
        <p>with every $4.00 worth of dry cleaning brought to our store on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday. No limit.</p>
        <p>**!</p>
        <p>CLOSET CLUTTERED?</p>
        <p>We gladly accept used coat</p>
        <p>ha ngers. Bring a II you have!</p>
        <p>Gleaner</p>
        <p>OARMKNT CARK CRNTRR</p>
        <p>622 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>Telephone</p>
        <p>756-5544</p>
        <p>By TOM BAINES Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>City Planner John Schofield says his office is open to suggestions and recommendations from the general public concerning the citys proposed bikeway plan.</p>
        <p>Schofield discussed the plan, prepared by his office, with the City Council at Thursday nights session.</p>
        <p>The city planner noted that several months ago a request was made to the Council that the idea of establishing bike paths in the city be studied. A study showed that in 1973, there were some 2,250 registered bikes in the city and at the end of the 1972-73 school year, there were 1,700 bikes registered at East (Carolina.</p>
        <p>Schofield said that the proposed system of bikeways is being offered in an effort to provide the bike rider with an element of safety and to insure efficient'ilM^ment of both bikes and automobiles. The bikeway</p>
        <p>system is roughly 31 miles in length, he reported, and would cost between $29,000 and $32,000 to put into effect.</p>
        <p>in the design of a bicycleway, Schofield told the Council, there are three possible alternatives available. A Class One bikeway, he contended, would be one that is completely separated from both motor vehicle and predestrian travelways and would be reserved solely for the use of bicycles. Class Two bikeways utilize semi-exclusive rights of way for bikes and motor vehicular or pedestrian crossover traffic is permitted for access to adjoining property. He said that Class Three systems, through the use of shared rights of way, allow all types of vehicular traffic to use the same facilities with the bike route designated only by signs.</p>
        <p>Schofield said that with the major purpose of any bicycleway being to provide the maximum amount of safety to</p>
        <p>Tradition Seen Major Barrier</p>
        <p>By ANDREW TORCHIA Associated Press Writer ADDIS ABABA, Ethiopia (AP)  A two-week upheaval has given the Ethiopians the tools to transform their feudal state into a modem democracy, if they want to.</p>
        <p>But despite major gains by the reformers, many observers question whether Emperor Haile Selassies kingdom is ready to shake off the traditions that have built up over 2,-500 years.</p>
        <p>TTiese reformist tendencies have a way of dying, one longtime Western resident said. Ethiopians prefer gradual</p>
        <p>change, and that mens slow.</p>
        <p>About 120,000 workers were returning to their jobs today after a four-day general strike that demonstrated the strength of organized labor for the first time in the country.</p>
        <p>The unions won from government negotiatiors promises of a minimum wage, the right to</p>
        <p>the riders. Class One facilities are by far the safest and Class Three offers the least amount of security for cyclists.</p>
        <p>The city planner reported that in 1971, there were 2,955 bicycle licenses issued. The figure, he said, represents the high mark for city registration because of the campus bicycle registration program which began in late 1971. He pointed out that the campus police department estimates that only 50 per cent of the campus operated bicycles are licensed.</p>
        <p>Schofield said that it would not be unreasonble to assume that approximately half "of the bicycles operated in Greenville are not licensed.</p>
        <p>The official told the Council that an analysis of both city and campus bicycle registrations was performed in an attempt to estimate the location and potential demand of Greenvilles biciycle riders. The newer residential subdivisions were the areas with the highest bicycle registration figures, he said.</p>
        <p>During the January of 1972 through December of 1973 period, it was noted, there were 32 bicycle accidents, with nine of those occurring on Fifth Street, four in the downtown area, and six on 14th Street.</p>
        <p>Schofield said that in proposing a system of bikeways for the city, all types of bikeway classes were incorporated due to the citys street pattern. The major difficulties in presenting a single unified system were variations in street widths, poor road conditions and on-street parking.</p>
        <p>He ponted out that existing and anticipated land uses presented no real problems.</p>
        <p>up with the best possible plan.</p>
        <p>TTie proposed plan, rather than being a single continuous system, is composed of four components totaling 31 miles. A major consideration was the connection of all major school and recreational areas.</p>
        <p>There are several gaps, he noted within the system, including; no direct bicycle connection between Agnes Fullilove School and South Greenville School; only one connection point between West Greenville and the Central Business District; no provisions in the plan for Southwest Greenville; and no provisions for the neighborhoods north of the Tar River. Southwest Greenville was not included since it is not felt that any of the major streets in the area could provide for safe bicycle travel, Schofield said. The area north of the river was excluded since only 44 bicycles were registered from the area and since the only access to the main part of Greenville is by two bridges not suitable for bike traffic.</p>
        <p>By breakdown, according to class, the bikeway would include .85 miles of Class One (bikepath) facilities; 2.18 miles of class Two (bike lanes-sidewalks); 15.95 miles of Class Two (bike lanes-painted lanes) ; and 11.97 miles of Class Three (bike routes).</p>
        <p>The overall bikeway plan is broken down into four parts, Schofield said. They are the West Greenville Bikeway, the College View Bikeway, the South Eastern Bikeway, and the Central Greenville Bikeway.</p>
        <p>Schofieid said that East Carolina is currently investigating the use of bikeways</p>
        <p>as a means of improving intracampus circulation. These bikeways would presumably become part of an overall transportation plan, he said, and would hopefully be coordinated with the city plan. He cautioned that two separate and distinct bicycleways should not be developed since it would lead to more traffic problems than currently exist without bike facilities.</p>
        <p>The city planner said that the uniqueness of a bikeway is that it can be used for a variety of purposes. At an initial cost of over $1,000 per mile, he noted, it may seem to be an expensive facility. However, when considered as a means of recreation and as a possible replacement for the automobiles, the initial cost seems to be reasonable.</p>
        <p>Council members indicated their support for the development of a bike system and encouraged continued study of the proposal.</p>
        <p>LOSE WEIGHT</p>
        <p>COMFORTABLY</p>
        <p>Thousands upon thousands of women from coast to coast have lost weight successfully with ODRINEX -so can you ! ODRINEX contains the most effective reducing aid available without a prescription !</p>
        <p>One tiny ODRINEX tablet before meals controls your appetite  you eat less - down goes your caloric intake -DOWN GOES YOUR WEIGHT ! If you want to lose even more weight and faster, follow the Helpful Eating Hints provided.</p>
        <p>No starving ! No special exercises ! Get rid of ugly fat and live longer. ODRINEX must satisfy or your money will be refunded. No questions asked. Sold with this guarantee by</p>
        <p>ECKERO'SDRUG</p>
        <p>STORE</p>
        <p>strike for public utility employ- although some residential areas es, nationwide price controls were not included in the plan due and abolition for poor children to their isolation is terms of of $2.5p-a-term school fees. distance to safe facilities.</p>
        <p>The 82-year-old emperor told He said that it would be officials of the Confederation of possible to have bike systems Ethiopian Labor Unions he was within a subdivision and not be pleased with the peaceful set- tied in with the city plan. A tlement. International flights number of persons questioned</p>
        <p>(gartinrr Carpets</p>
        <p>;</p>
        <p>washing machine and pay them $10 (US$4) to mind the kids at night. The next thing theyll be supplying air conditioned quarters, said a maidless Australian naval officer. \ Housewives who have advertised report that applicants reverse the interviewers role.</p>
        <p>My dear. SHE interviewed ME! said a distressed American woman who has been in Asia for 10 years. She wanted to know how many children, how many rooms, did we have a washing machine, were there any pets? She inspected the house as if she was buying it. Gone for good are the days of the loyal and faithful servants</p>
        <p>into Addis Ababa resumed, and a quick return to normal was expected in the ports, on the railroads and in basic industries.</p>
        <p>Premier Endalkachew Ma-konnens pledges of quick legislative action to accomplish the labor reform apparently closed out the crisis that also included a military mutiny for higher</p>
        <p>why the proposed system did not include particular areas and Schofield said that he welcomes responses from citizens with suggestions in an effort to come</p>
        <p>1211 W. 14th St. Greenville</p>
        <p>ON ARCH Carpet Headquarters</p>
        <p>Quality Carpet At Discount Prices Expert Installation Service</p>
        <p>OPEN:</p>
        <p>MON. FRI. 10 A.M.-8 P.M. SAT. 9 A.M.-5 P.M.</p>
        <p>752-4735</p>
        <p>indio mixed the masters pink</p>
        <p>pay and a government cleanup.</p>
        <p>The mutinous soldiers became an effective force for social change. A government that represented the interests of the aristocratic, land-owning clique was replaced by a cabinet of younger, skilled moderates. The military leadership also was purged. The emperor was pressured into promising constitutional amendments that could severely limit his own powers.</p>
        <p>gin, wiped the babys nose, prepared dinner for 14 on two hours notice.</p>
        <p>The days of the stem mah chias, who ruled generations of households in Hong Kong and Singapore, are also numbered. These formidable ladies, the so-called black and white amahs, wore short white coats with Chinese collars, long black baggy trousers and wore their hair drawn severely back in a bun.</p>
        <p>Abrupt, even downright rude, they worked with the efficiency of a computer and disciplined the kids like a boot camp sergeant.</p>
        <p>Many wives admit they are terrified of their servants, particularly these old mah chias, whose English could have been learned from an old Charlie C!han movie.</p>
        <p>A Grocery For</p>
        <p>The Community</p>
        <p>CHAPIN, Ohio (UPI)  The residents of this small unincorporated community of 150 persons have been without a grocery for three years.</p>
        <p>But shortly after the first of the year, the Rev. James Davidson and his congregation at the Salem United Methodist Church decided to do something about it. They are going into the grocery business.</p>
        <p>Davidson said the store will hire low-income Chapin residents to operate the store and equipment for the venture has been donated by church groups.</p>
        <p>7 A.M. TO 6:30 P.M. OPEN TUES. THRU SAT. CLOSED MONDAYS.</p>
        <p>/Q/01/HUE</p>
        <p>Public Notice!</p>
        <p>The official meeting place of the Greenville Utilities Commission has been changed from the City Hall to the Greenville Utilities Building, located at 200 W. Fifth St., in the board room located on the third floor.</p>
        <p>The regular meeting date of the Commission is the second Tuesday evening of each month, beginning at</p>
        <p>Commission meetings are open to the public.</p>
        <p>For entrance to the building and board room, visitors should use the Fifth Street entrance and the elevator or stairs to the third floor.</p>
        <p>Greenville Utilities</p>
        <p>Electric  Oas  Watar  Sawaraga</p>
        <p>Greenbax Stamps TUESDAY ONLY!</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>GREEN STAMPS</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN BISCUIT</p>
        <p>FLOUR</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>ORANGE JUICE i79</p>
        <p>HALF</p>
        <p>GAL</p>
        <p>JAR</p>
        <p>STOKELY</p>
        <p>CATSUP 32: 59</p>
        <p>FIRST CUT</p>
        <p>PORK CHOPS 79</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>GREEN SUMPS</p>
        <p>OPEN FRIDAY NITES</p>
        <p>UNTIL 8:30 PM</p>
        <p>&amp;amp; SAT. TIL 8:00 PM</p>
        <p>SAVE</p>
        <p>GREEN STAMPS</p>
        <p>SUPER MARKETS, INC.</p>
        <p>Where Shopping Is A Pleasure</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0008" />
        <p>S-Tlic Daily Reflector. GreenvUle, .C.Monday. March 11, 1174</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Obituaries Cheeking Up On Thornsby</p>
        <p>Miners' Plainf</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)(NCDA)-North Carolina hogs were mostly steady today. Tops of 37.75-38.75 at Kinston, Benson and Lumberton; 37.00-37.50 Rocky Mount; 35.00-37.00 Wilson and High Falls; 35.00-35.50 Tarboro and Bethel; 38.00 Salisbury. Poultry '</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-(NCDA)-North Carolina f.o.b. dock broilers: Market steady for this week at 39.30 cents per pound. Supplies adequate, demand good and weights trending light. Estimated slaughter today 1,110,000 head.</p>
        <p>North Carolina hens: Market stonger today. Supplies about in balance with a good demand. Heavies, at farm, 17-18 cents, mostly 17 cents per pound; f.o.b. plants 21 cents.</p>
        <p>Delta Air Dow Chem Duke Power do Pont EasKod Eas Airlin Esmark Exxon Firestone Flo Pow Fla PwL Ford M Ford McK Gen Oynam Gen Elec Gen Foods Gen Mills Gen Mot Gen Tel El Ga Pac Goodrich Goodyear Greyhd Gulf Oil Hercule Honywell IBM</p>
        <p>Int Harv Int Pap KaisAlm Kayser R Kraft Co Kroger</p>
        <p>52^ SW&amp;gt; S2i 1H 61/^ 1H VV, 17% 17% 1M 1M 1M 107 10% 106% 7%  7%  7%</p>
        <p>31% 31% 31% 86% 86% 86% 16% 16% 16% 27% 27% 27% 24  23% 24</p>
        <p>50  49% 49%</p>
        <p>12% 12% 12% 25% 25% 25% 55% 55% 55% 27% 27% 27% 54  53% 53%</p>
        <p>52  51% 51%</p>
        <p>25% 25% 25% 43V&amp;gt; 43  43</p>
        <p>17  17  17</p>
        <p>16% 16% 16% 17% 16% 16% 23% 23% 23% 33  32% 33</p>
        <p>74% 74% 74% 236% 236/} 236%</p>
        <p>28%  28%  28/i</p>
        <p>50  49'/} 49'/j</p>
        <p>23'/i 22% 22% 16 16 45% 45% 23% 23%</p>
        <p>Boyd</p>
        <p>Miss Rosetta Boyd died at her home on Rt. 5, Greenville, Sunday night. Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>Mr. Nathaniel Brown, formerly of Greenville, died Sunday morning in Washington, D.</p>
        <p>C.</p>
        <p>He was the son of the late Mrs. Katherine Wiggins.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Home</p>
        <p>AYDEaMMr. James Edward Horne drowned Saturday. Funeral arrangemoits are iin-complete at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.</p>
        <p>ty, based in Charlotte, N.C.</p>
        <p>The Brookside min has beeiir</p>
        <p>By MARIA BRADEN Associated Press Writer EVARTS, Ky. (AP)  A citi- shut down since last July over sens inquiry into the strike at the companys refusal to accept Eastover Mining Co.s Brook- a contract with the United Mine</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>45%</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market steadied today after an early wave of selling amid disappointment over a lack of progress toward an end to the Arab oil embargo.</p>
        <p>The 11:30 a.m. Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was off 3.91 at 874.4, recovering from a drop of more than 8 points in the first half-hour. Losers maintained an edge of close to 2 to 1 over gainers on the New York Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>Brokers said the markets weakness  at the outset</p>
        <p>stemmed from investors disappointment that three nations had sent no representatives to a meeting of Arab oil ministers Sunday to discuss the future of the embargo.</p>
        <p>Some analysts said they believed the market was performing well in the face of such negative news.</p>
        <p>I think the market is recognizing that the embargo is going to come off, said Jack Trachtman at Steiner, Rouse &amp;amp; Co. Its just a question of when.</p>
        <p>Stocks of companies with a direct stake in oil supplies were conspicuous among the early losers. Walt Disney Productions slipped l*/8 to 503/4, Ramada Inns was down s at 7%, and Howard Johnson was off % at 11*8.</p>
        <p>Simplicity Pattern, down Vs It 14%, was the Big Board volume leader. Trading in the issue included a 119,900-share block at 14.</p>
        <p>VCA Corp. rose 1% to 16%. A Dutch company which previously had offered to buy some VCA stock said it would purchase all of the companys outstanding shares at $16.50 apiece if a minimum of 1,175,000 shares were tendered to it.</p>
        <p>First Wisconsin Bankshares slumped 2% to 26%. North American Mortgage Investors sued First Wisconsin National Bank of Milwaukee, alleging negligence in dealings with Walter Kassuba, a Florida land developer who has filed a petition under the federal bankruptcy laws.</p>
        <p>North American, a Boston-based real estate investment trust, was trading at 21%, up</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;4.</p>
        <p>At the American Stock Exchange, the volume leader was Financial General Bankshares, down Vr at 9. A 49,300-share block was traded at 9.</p>
        <p>'The Amexs 11 a.m. market-value index was down .18 at 99.06. The NYSEs composite index of all its listed common stocks dropped .31 to 52.07.</p>
        <p>LiggMy</p>
        <p>CocKHdAir</p>
        <p>Loews</p>
        <p>Marcor</p>
        <p>MeadCp</p>
        <p>MinnMM</p>
        <p>MobilO</p>
        <p>Monsan</p>
        <p>NabislTo Jk</p>
        <p>NatDistill</p>
        <p>Penney</p>
        <p>PepsiCo</p>
        <p>PhllMor</p>
        <p>PhillPef</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>ProcIGm</p>
        <p>RalsfonP</p>
        <p>RCA</p>
        <p>RepStI</p>
        <p>Revlon</p>
        <p>Reynind</p>
        <p>RoyCCola</p>
        <p>StRegisP</p>
        <p>Rockwll</p>
        <p>ScottPap</p>
        <p>SeaCstLin</p>
        <p>SearR</p>
        <p>SoothCo</p>
        <p>SouRy</p>
        <p>SperryR</p>
        <p>StdBrds</p>
        <p>StOilCal</p>
        <p>SrOillnd</p>
        <p>Stevens</p>
        <p>Texaco</p>
        <p>TexETr</p>
        <p>TexasGIf</p>
        <p>UMC Ind</p>
        <p>UnCarbide</p>
        <p>UnOilCal</p>
        <p>Uniroyal</p>
        <p>USSteel</p>
        <p>Wachovia</p>
        <p>WestgEI</p>
        <p>Weyerhs</p>
        <p>WinnOx</p>
        <p>Woolwth</p>
        <p>XeroxCp</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>5'/%</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>23%</p>
        <p>17%</p>
        <p>75</p>
        <p>46%</p>
        <p>59'4</p>
        <p>34</p>
        <p>13%</p>
        <p>74%</p>
        <p>64</p>
        <p>31% 31% 5'/li  5'/4</p>
        <p>21% 21% 23% 23% 17/j 17% 74% 74% 46'/&amp;lt;  46% S8/&amp;gt; 59'/4 33% 34 13% 13% 74'/t 74% 63'/j 63'/i 104% 104'/4 104'/y 55'/j S5'/t 55'/8 83/h 81% 83'/8 89% 89'/j 89% 42'/4 41% 42'/4 20% 20 20% 26'/4 25% 25% 57  56% 56%</p>
        <p>49  48'j 48'/i</p>
        <p>16  16  16</p>
        <p>31'/I 30% 31</p>
        <p>26%  26'/j  26%</p>
        <p>17% 17'/4  17%</p>
        <p>32%  31  31'/a</p>
        <p>87% 87'/i B7&amp;lt;/t 16% 16/a 16'/a 48'/4  48  48'/4</p>
        <p>41'/a 42 53'/4 53/a 30% 31% 93'/a 28/4 28'/i 43'/i 35 14'/4 36%</p>
        <p>44%</p>
        <p>8%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>42</p>
        <p>53'a 31% 93% 28'/a 28% 43'^ 35'/4 14'/a 37 45&amp;gt;/4 9</p>
        <p>42H</p>
        <p>33%</p>
        <p>23'/4</p>
        <p>39%</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>33&amp;lt;/4</p>
        <p>23</p>
        <p>39'a</p>
        <p>41%</p>
        <p>18%</p>
        <p>93'/a 28'/a 28'/a 43'/8 35 14'/8 37 44% 9 42 33% 23'/4 39'.'a 41% 19</p>
        <p>Carraway</p>
        <p>FAYETVILLE-Carlos M. Carraway, 67, former school principal died Saturday.;</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted Friday at 4 p.m. at the First Baptist Church here.</p>
        <p>, Burial will be in Rock Fish ' Memorial Gardens.</p>
        <p>Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Irene W. Carraway; one daughter, Mrs. Sallye Streeter of Greenville; a stepson, Garence Jr. apd ^to Carraway, both of Greensboro, Erouomy of Durham, and Joseph Smith of La Plata, Md.; a sister, Mrs. Geveland Love of Statesboro, Gal; a stepsister, Mrs. Archie B. Logan of Reidsville; three brothers, E. B. T. Carraway of Greensboro,  Charles  A.</p>
        <p>Carraway of Geveland, Ohio, and J. H. Carraway of Bethel; three grandchildren; and two stepgrandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will be at Stej^en Rogers Funeral Home here Thursday from 8 to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Hopkins</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mr. WiUie Mack Hopkins, who died Monday in Philadelphia, Pa., will be conducted Tuesday at 4 p.m. at Riddick Chapel Baptist Church, Bethel, with the Rev. J. H. Carney officiating. Burial will follow in the Jenkins Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mr. Hopkins was a native of Pitt County and spent his early life in the Bethel Community. He was a veteran of the Korean War.</p>
        <p>Surviving are two sisters, Mrs. Helen Brown of Bethel, Rt. 1, and Miss Margaret Hopkins of New Haven, Conn.; five brothers, Henry Jr. of Portsmouth, Va., John T. Bullock and David H&amp;lt;^ns, both of Philadelphia, Pa., Isaac and Johnny Lm Hopkins, both of New Haven," Conn.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home until taken to the church one hour prior to the service. Family visitation will be tonight from 8 p.m. to 9 p.m. at the funeral chapel.</p>
        <p>118% 116% 118'/4</p>
        <p>Green</p>
        <p>Mr. Heber Green died early this morning in Pitt Memorial Hospital. He was the husband of Mrs. Jessie Green. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.</p>
        <p>Smith</p>
        <p>Mrs. Geraldine Dawson Smith died in Pitt Memorial Hospital Sunday evening. She was the wife of Mr. Luby Smith of Rt. 3, Greenville. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Phillips Brothers Mortuary.</p>
        <p>Following are selected market quotations:</p>
        <p>Burroughs</p>
        <p>United Telecommunications Pfd</p>
        <p>Heublein</p>
        <p>Jeff-Pilot</p>
        <p>Tri South</p>
        <p>Wickes</p>
        <p>Wachovia Realty</p>
        <p>Eckerds</p>
        <p>Central Soya</p>
        <p>Hardees</p>
        <p>Integon</p>
        <p>Fieldcrest</p>
        <p>Halteras Income</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTERS</p>
        <p>Combined Insurance</p>
        <p>Franklin Life</p>
        <p>NCNB</p>
        <p>Piedmont Air Little Mint Conner Homes Guardian Care Planters National Bank Daniel International Corp.</p>
        <p>11 a.m. stock</p>
        <p>209%</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>32'/a 25% 14% 19 15% 21% 7'/ 9% 17'/a 18/a</p>
        <p>Legislators,</p>
        <p>11'A 24%-25'/k 33%-34'/4 6-'/a 1%-% 1%-2'/9 3%-% 26% BIO 29'/4-30</p>
        <p>First Lady To Caracas</p>
        <p>NEW YORK &amp;lt;AP) Midday stocks</p>
        <p>High Low Last</p>
        <p>Akzona Allis Chal Alcoa Am Airlin Am^ Bds Am* Can Am Cyan Am Motors Am T8.T Babck W Best Fd Beth sti Boeing Borden Burl Ind Caro Pw Celanese Chmp Int Chrysler Coca Col Comw Ed Cont Can</p>
        <p>22'/4</p>
        <p>10%</p>
        <p>46</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>25% 29 23% 10% 51'a 31'4 22% 34'a 14% 25' 24'a 21'a 31'a 19'a 18%</p>
        <p>22'/4  22'/4</p>
        <p>10's 10% 45aa,45a 11% 11% 25'a 25' a 28% 28% 23'/4  23'/4</p>
        <p>10% 10% 52S 52'S 31  31</p>
        <p>22'4 22% 34% 34% 14%  14%</p>
        <p>25  25</p>
        <p>24'4 24' a 21a 21'a 31'-4 31'/4 19a 19'a 18% 18%</p>
        <p>113% 113% 113% 30's X't 30' 25% 75', 75'a</p>
        <p>By FRANCES LEWINE Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>KEY BISCAYNE, Fla. (AP)  Pat Nixon returns to Caracas, Venezuela, today on a good will mission to a country where she and President Nixon were spat upon and threatened by angry mobs 16 years ago.</p>
        <p>There will be tight security for the First Ladys three-day stay in Caracas, but a friendly welcome is anticipated. And Mrs. Nixon has no fears about returning, according to her press secretary, Helen Smith.</p>
        <p>The First Lady heads a U.S. delegation to Venezuela for the inauguration of its new president. Carlos Andres Perez, who won a landslide election victory in December.</p>
        <p>A presidential jet will pick Mrs. Nixon up in Florida, where she relaxed over the weekend. Nixon was to be on hand to see her off at noon EDT from Homestead Air Force Base there.</p>
        <p>After Venezuela, she will fly to Brazil for the inauguration Friday of its new president, retired Army (Jen. Ernesto Gei-sel.</p>
        <p>President Nixon said he was sending his wife to the inaugurations as evidence of his continued interest in promoting close and cooperative relations with the nations of Latin America and the Caribbean.</p>
        <p>The Nixons visited Caracas in 1958 during a vice presidential tour of South America. Venezuela, the last stop on their trip, had just emerged froni 10 years of dictatorship under Perez Himenez. Anti-American sentiment was high because Himenez had been given asylum in the United States.</p>
        <p>(Continued from Page 1)</p>
        <p>leaders could select a governor.</p>
        <p>Nowadays, Allen said, the banks have a well-oiled lobbying machine. Within eight hours, he said, they can have local bankers across contact legislators from their. district and tell them how the banks would like them to vote.</p>
        <p>People like to maintain friendly relationships with their bankers, Allen said. They never know when they might need a loan to expand' their business or something like that</p>
        <p>Consumer groups, he said, are not as well organized or effective. They have never demonstrated that they can insure reprisal at the polls against a legislator.</p>
        <p>People in groups like that are very individualistic and defy organization because they dont have the pr&amp;lt;rfit motive, Allen said.</p>
        <p>Tyson</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE-Funeral services for Mrs. Beatrice T. Tyson of 103-A David Street here will be conducted Tuesday at 3 p.m. at Arthur Chapel Free Will Baptist Giurch in Bell Arthur by the Rev. J. N. Gilbert. Burial will be in the Baker Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Tyson attended the Pitt County Schools and was a member of Arthur Chapel. Surviving her are her husband, Lannie Tyson II of the home; four daughters, Mrs. Beatrice 'Tripp of Brooklyn, N.Y., Miss Joyce Ann Tyson, Miss Michelle Tyson, and Miss Cynthia Yvette Tyson, all of the home; three sons, Gerald Lee Tyson of Cherokee, Lonnie Tyson III and James Earl Tyson, both of the home; three grandchildren; her  mother, Mrs. Daisy Bynum of Farmville; two sisters, Mrs. Inez Williams of Flint, Mich, and Mrs. Esther Ree Dixon of Washington, D.C.; three brothers, George Phillips Jr. of Rosenboro, Morris Phillips and Eddie Lee Phillips, both of the home.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Hemby Memorial Funeral Chapel in Fountain after 6 p.m. today and until one hour before the funeral Tuesday. Visitation will be tonight from 8 to 9 oclock at the Ohapel.</p>
        <p>Gave Senior Citizen Program</p>
        <p>Mrs. Linda OConnor presented a program on terrariums at the meeting of the Elm Street Senior Citizens Club Thursday.</p>
        <p>She told the origin of terrariums. She discussed the preparation of the containers, soil, and plants for a terrarium.</p>
        <p>Mrs. OConnor pointed out that the terrarium was discovered by accident in 1800 in London, England.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Elizabeth Savage conducted the business session.</p>
        <p>Refreshments were served by Mrs. Flora Howard, Mrs. Marie Clark, Mrs. Jessie B. Little, Mrs. Verna Graber, and Mr. and Mrs. J. B. (Jutchin.</p>
        <p>DEACONS RALLY A deacons rally will be held at the St. Luke Fi^ Will Baptist Church Wednesday night at eight oclock.</p>
        <p>'The Rev. Hattie Mae Ck&amp;gt;bb is pastor of the church.</p>
        <p>Wayne</p>
        <p>Mrs. Saddie Fillingame Wayne, 84, died in Beaufort County Hospital in Washington Sunday night.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at three oclock Tuesday afternoon at Juniper Giapel Free Will Baptist (Jhurch by the pastor, the Rev. Eddie Edwards, assisted by the Rev. Willie Stilley, a former pastor. Burial will be in the Church Cemetery. The body will be taken from the Wilkerson Funeral Home to the Church one hour prior to the time of services.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Wayne spent all her life in the Piney Neck Community near Vanceboro and was a member of the Juniper Chapel Free Will Baptist (Jhurch.</p>
        <p>Surviving are four daughters, Mrs. Ginton Brinkley, Mrs. Earl Lewis, Mrs. John R. Waters, and Mrs. Marvin Smith, all of Vanceboro; two sons, Hebrew Wayne of Dover and Areybrew Wayne of Vanceboro; 23 grandchildren; and seven great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The family will be at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Marvin Smith in the Piney Neck Community.</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>6:30 p.m.Rotary Club meets 6:30 p.m.Greenville TOPS Club meets at Planters Bank 6:45,p.m.Optimist Club meets at Tom'* Restaurartt 7.00 p.m.Lions Club meets at Moose Lodge</p>
        <p>7:p.m Order of the Rainbow for Girls meets at Masonic Temple 8:30 p.m.Lodge No 885, Loyal Order of the Moose</p>
        <p>TUESDAY 9.M a.m.A6rs. H. R. Billica will be hostess to members of the Lakewood Pines Garden Club 7:30 p.m.-r-The Patient Circle of The King's Daughters and Sons mteTs with Mrs. T. L. Hannaford. Assisting hostesses wilt be Miss Mary Wells, Miss Mary Forbes and Mrs. T. T. Hollingsworth 8:00 p.m.Withia Council, Degree of i Pocahontas meets at Rotary Club 8:00 p.m.Pitt County Alcoholics Anonymous meets art AA BIdg. on Farm-ville Mwy.</p>
        <p>Revival Series</p>
        <p>At</p>
        <p>Now Underway</p>
        <p>The Rev. Joe Ingram is holding revival services through Thursday at Sweet Gum Grove Free Will Baptist Giurch nightly at 7:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>A former pastor of Stoney Oeek FWB Church, Ck&amp;gt;ldsboro, Rev. Ingram now holds the position of director treasury of The Free Will Baptist Mission Board.</p>
        <p>The public is invited t% attend each service.</p>
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        <p>side mine was scheduled to start here today at the site of the 1931 Battle of Evarts.</p>
        <p>The inquiry is patterned after the hearings held by author 'Theodore Dreiser and a group of writers on the bloody struggle to organize Harlan County some 40 years ago. The Battle of Evarts was a gun fight between coal company guards and union coal miners in which five men were killed and several wounded.</p>
        <p>The citizens panel, chaired by Dan Pollitt, University of North Carolina law professor, planned to take testimony from miners, union organizers and company officials for two full days and then publish aVeport of its findings.</p>
        <p>Among the topics will be the history of the nine-month-old effort to organize the Eastover mine-seen as a key to organizing the East Kentucky coal fields. Eastover is a subsidiary of the Duke Power Co., the nations sixth-largest public utili-</p>
        <p>Workers.</p>
        <p>The panelists were scheduled to hear testimony on UMW contract issues, safety and health in the mine, charges of violence against strikers and the effect of the strike on the community.</p>
        <p>We want to examine as many of the problems as possible raised by the Brookside strike, Pollitt said. We want to find (Nit its causes, whats keepigg the parties apart and the consequences for the workers and their children, the community and the nation when a major coal mine lies idle for over seven months at a time of national energy shortage.</p>
        <p>The panelists were to include Kentucky author Harry Caudill of Whitesburg; former Secretary of Labor Willard Wirtz; Harvard psychiatrist Robert Coles, author of Children of (Msis; former Sen. Fred Harris, D-Okla., and several university professors.</p>
        <p>'Neither rain, nor snov/, nor gloom of night ^re-  vents him from running around like an idiot I "</p>
        <p>Dees...</p>
        <p>(ConUnuedTrom page 1) in the Area Health Education Centers which is critical to our efforts to achieve a better distribution of physicians, both geographically and by specialty.</p>
        <p>Candidate Will Speaks Against Speak At ECU Updated Bomber</p>
        <p>Leslie Turner of the American Friends Service Committee and Sou^eastem C^rdinator of the B-1 Bomber Campaign will speak on this subject at the Methodist Student Center Tuesday at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>'The B-1 Bomber has been proposed by the U.S. Air Force to take the place of the present B-52 manned bomber fleet. Miss Turner heads a campaign to oppose the construction of a new manned bomber fleet. Unmanned missiles and the present B-52 bomber fleet are more than adequate to meet defense needs, she believes.</p>
        <p>The Methodist Student Center is located at 501 E. Fifth St. The talk is sponored by the Greenville Peach (Committee. The public is invited.</p>
        <p>UNC president Friday said from his Giapel Hill office this morning that he, too, has no idea how long it would take to expand the ECU program if the General Assembly approves the bill The ECTJ College Republicans  before it. will meet in room 203 of the ECU Student Union at 7:30</p>
        <p>on</p>
        <p>Tuesday. The First District Chairman of the Republican Party, Herb Lee will be present and the First District Republican Congressional candidate, Harry McMullan, III will speak to the gathering.</p>
        <p>Also, the club will be organizing a campaign committee for the 1974 elections.</p>
        <p>All interested individuals are invited to attend.</p>
        <p>The first thing weve got to do, Friday explained, is to ...</p>
        <p>see what authorization will "be granted to increase the size... as a next stbp ... by the Liaison Committee on Medical Education.</p>
        <p>When we know what that group says, then well know what weve got to do beyond that point ... that will be where we start, Friday explained.</p>
        <p>The UNC president noted, too, that he will appear at a Legislative hearing Thursday to ask for restitution of budget cuts... including some $5 million chopped from a $25 million request for funding for AHECs recommended by the UNC Board.</p>
        <p>WHILE BAND PLAYED</p>
        <p>COLUMBIA (AP)  An estimated 200 youths streaked en mass late Sunday at the University of South Carolina as the school pep band played.</p>
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        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR Classified</p>
        <p>BURLESON GETS 2 OF HIS 38 POINTS-Tom Burleson, 7-foot 4-inch center for NwUi Carolina State, releases a push shot at the basket as he catches Marylands Len Elmore (41) unable to get up to stop the shot during their championship game at the Atlatntic Coast conference Tournament Saturday night. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Lost Decision By Terp Teom;:</p>
        <p>No NIT Ploy</p>
        <p>By FRED FARRAR Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>BALTIMORE (AP) -Marylands fourth-ranked basketball team has made its last decision as a group. It has unanimously turned down a bid to play in the National Invitation Tournament.</p>
        <p>With that out of the way, its time for individual thoughts.</p>
        <p>Tom McMillen, the 6-11 forward who owns all of Marylands career scoring records, has to decide whether to delay a pro basketball career while he accepts a Rhodes Scholarship.</p>
        <p>And the teams defensive leader, 6-9 center Len Elmore, wilPprobably have to decide between lucrative offers from the rival National and American Basketball Associations.</p>
        <p>But the Terrapins, who finished 23-5, will spend some of their future moments thinking about 25 crucial seconds of playing time in the 67,500 seconds of this near-miss season.</p>
        <p>In Saturdays 103-100 overtime loss to North Carolina State in the Atlantic Coast (inference tournament finals, they were unable to get a decent shot off in the final nine seconds. The sequence was eerily reminiscent of their first game of the year, when trailing by one point, they lost the ball to UCLA in the games dying moments.</p>
        <p>Just think where we would be now if we had just made those two shots, McMillen mused. Victories over two number-one ranked teams in the same year-that would have been something.</p>
        <p>The Terrapin losses all came to teams ranked in the top six. They dropped three games to NC State, one to sixth-rated</p>
        <p>North Carolina, and one to then top-ranked UCLA.</p>
        <p>Maryland officials say they put no pressure on the players to accept the bid, which would have let Maryland return to the site of its fijrst major national prominence. It won the NIT with a rousing 100-69 victory over Niagara in 1972.</p>
        <p>But the players apparently agreed with Elmore, the teams all-time leading rebounder.</p>
        <p>Its a second-rate tournament for runners-up, he said. Weve been playing with nui-ners-up too long.</p>
        <p>Coach Lefty Driesell said in a telephone interview that he knew the players wanted to reject the bid immediately after the loss to NC State. During a long and emotional stay in the locker room, he asked them to think about it over night.</p>
        <p>I told them I wanted them all to be able to say later on that they had made the right decision, Driesell said. I said they probably wouldnt be getting much sleep that night anyway, so they could sit up and talk about it among themselves.</p>
        <p>Sunday morning they told Driesell the decision remained.</p>
        <p>They said they had just lost to the nations best team in overtime, Driesell said, and had proved they had a great basketball team. They felt there was nothing else to prove.</p>
        <p>You go to the NIT to prove you have a good team, he added. They felt they had proven they were a great team Saturday night.</p>
        <p>But the emptiness the seniors all feel comes from knowing they will never be able to demonstrate it once and for all in the NCAA finals.</p>
        <p>IfHeedn^f Come to This</p>
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        <p>Burleson Had Something To Prove</p>
        <p>By KEN ALYTA AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>GREENSBOROi N.C. (AP) The mi who shunted 7-foot-4 Tommy Burleson to a second team berth on the Atlantic Coast Conference All-Star basketball team announced by the Atlantic Coast Sports Writers Association three days before the start of the championship tournament last week unwittingly may have helped him and his North Carolina State teammates win the ACC title.</p>
        <p>Burleson, the quiet man from the mountain-country of western North Carolina, played against Maryland like a man mIio had something to prove.</p>
        <p>He scored 38 points, equalling his career high output against Virginia two years ago as a sophomore, to lead the Wolf-pack to a heart-pumping 103-100 overtime victory over Maryland.</p>
        <p>The classic struggle between two fired-up, running teams _ produced the greatest numbei-of points in 21 years of ACC tournament history.</p>
        <p>It propelled N. C. State, the nations No. l team, into the NCAA Eastern Regionals against Providence opening Thursday night at, of all places, States home court in , Raleigh, Reynolds Coliseum.</p>
        <p>Furman and Pitt are the other Eastern teams. The two winners will meet for the regional title Saturday afternoon, then join three other regional champs in the last two rounds of the national event, March 23 and 25, back at the Greensboro Coliseum.</p>
        <p>Burlesons regular season statistics were 17.3 points and 11.7 rebounds, each a fraction below his junior year figures.</p>
        <p>He played on the 1972 U. S.</p>
        <p>Olympic team and on the 1973 victorious U.S. team in the 1973 World University Games in Russia.</p>
        <p>But, somehow, he seemed to be low man on the totem pole, hard as that may be to visualize for a 7-foot-4 man. All-America super-star David Thompson and 5-foot-7 back-court pepperpot Monte Towe usually grabbed the headlines as N. C. State bounced back from its only loss, to UCLA, to claim the No. 1 spot in the national poll.  *'</p>
        <p>For example, in the heroic Super Sunday struggle at Raleigh last Jan. 13, Thompson contributed 41 points in a stirring 80-74 victory over Maryland. Burleson, hitting only three of 19 shots, was limited to</p>
        <p>13. His opponent at center, Len Elmore, matched his 13 points and his defense contributed to Burlesons troubles.</p>
        <p>Ill remember this one a long time, Burleson said later.</p>
        <p>When the writers all-star team was announced, his name was listed with the second team.</p>
        <p>A week earlier, Burleson had played one of his finest games, scoring 22 points, grabbing 11 rebounds and blocking three shots, to lead an 83-72 victory over the archest of arch rivals, nationally ranked North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Coach Norman Sloan, in a rare gesture, gave his big man the game ball in the dressing room. Sloan told newsmen, I get darned tired of people say</p>
        <p>ing the things they do about Tommy. Hes the dominating center in the ACC and in any game hes inj</p>
        <p>Maryland, ranked No. 4, raced to an early 13-point lead Saturday night and was on top at the half 55-50 with its third straight half of better than 60 per cent shooting and aggressive man-to-man defense.</p>
        <p>Thompsons 21 points in the half kept State from being blown out and gave him 101 in 100 minutes against Maryland this season.</p>
        <p>Byrleson scored 22 points in the last half to lead the charge that produced a 97-all regulation tie and walked off with the outstanding tournament player award in a vote of coaches.</p>
        <p>He matched Elmores 13 rebounds and hit 18 of 25 shots as his hook shot was working.</p>
        <p>Phil Spence dropped in a layup with 2:04 left in overtime to give the Wolfpack a one-point lead and Towe cemented it with two freethrows with six seconds left.</p>
        <p>The victory gave State a 26-1 record and was the 24th in a row since a December loss to UCLA and the 32nd straight over ACC teams. Now the Wolf-pack returns t^ its home court, where it has won 26 in a row.</p>
        <p>Maryland, its 11-game winning streak shattered, finished 23-5. Coach Lefty Driesell and his Terrapins, bitterly disappointed at finishing in the runnerup spot for the third yer in a row, had no taste for fur</p>
        <p>ther competition.</p>
        <p>They turned down a bid to the National Invitation Tournament opening next Saturday in New York. Sixth-ranked North Carolina, 20-poiftt victim of Maryland in the semifinals, accepted an NIT berth.</p>
        <p>Maryland, three-time loser to N.C. State this year, has a73-17 record for three years. The Terps are 43-2 against outside teams and 30-15 against conference rivals.</p>
        <p>Marylands 290 points in three games bettered the tourney record of 273 set in 1955 by N.C. State and matched by the 1965 Wolfpack. Four Maryland starters went all the way in the overtime sizzler. Mo Howard and Tom McMillen each scoring 22 points.</p>
        <p>'Fed Up, So Mayes Cut Loose</p>
        <p>NIT Field Completed</p>
        <p>Briefs</p>
        <p>By IHE ASSOCIATED PRESS LIMOGES, France (AP)  The French Boxing Federation lifted a two-year ban on middleweight Max Cohen Saturday but ordered that he pay a $1,000 fine for statements he made last month after losing a fight to former French middleweight champion Fabio Bettini.</p>
        <p>CHICAGO (AP)  The Chicago Bears said Saturday they have withdrawn an offer to Jack Ettinger, wide receiver from Arkansas, because he insisted on a no-cut contract.</p>
        <p>The National Football League club said no-cut contracts are against its policy.</p>
        <p>Ettinger, a seventh round draft choice of the Bears, also was drafted by Toronto of the World Football League. The Bears said their salary offer to Ettinger was the same he received from Toronto.</p>
        <p>LAKELAND, Fla. (AP)  Detroit Tiger pitchers threw for 12 minutes Saturday on the second day of their conditioning drills at siN*ing training camp.</p>
        <p>While opening daysactivities at the Detroit American League camp were limited to battery-men, a couple of Tiger veteransoutfielder Willie Horton and utility man Ike Brown worked out on their own with the pitching machines.</p>
        <p>-NEW YORK (AP) - North Carolina, Purdue and Memphis State have joined the National Invitation Tournament, completing the 16-team field for the nations oldest postseason basketball tourney.</p>
        <p>Were delighted with the news, said Purdue C^ch Fred Schaus after learning of the invitation from the NIT selection committee. Ive talked with some of the players and theyre really excited.</p>
        <p>I hope our fans and student body will be backing us the way they have all year.</p>
        <p>The three new entries were invited while another team Marylandsnubbed the NIT. During the course of Sundays activities, the Terps were invited but declined to play in the 37th NIT.</p>
        <p>They felt we had nothing to prove, said Maryland coach Lefty Driesell, and to tell you the truth, I kind of agree with them.</p>
        <p>Driesell referred to Marylands tough, 103-100 overtime loss to North Carolina State in Saturday nights Atlantic Coast Conference playoffs.</p>
        <p>TTiis will be the fourth NIT appearance for North Carolina, an ACC colleague of Marylands who lost earlier in the playoffs. The Tar Heels, 22-5, won the NIT in 1971 and finished third last year.</p>
        <p>Purdue, of the Big Ten, will be making its second appearance in the New York tourney. The Boilermakers fashioned a 17-9 record this season.</p>
        <p>Memphis State, which lost to UCLA in last years NCAA championship game, will make its seventh NIT appearance. The Tigers, 18-10, are coached by (3ene Bartow, who will be leaving after the season to become head coach at Illinois.</p>
        <p>Bobby Jones leads North Carolina, Frank Kendrick and John Garrett are the stars at Purdue and Dexter. Reed and Bill Cook lead Memphis State.</p>
        <p>The pairings for the NIT, which starts next Saturday, March 16, and ends March 24, were to be announced today.</p>
        <p>PHILADELPHIA (AP.)  -</p>
        <p>Clyde Mayes says he got fed up in the second half of Furmans NCAA Eastern Regional playoff opener with cross-state rival South Carolina.</p>
        <p>The 6-foot-9 senior scored seven points during a four-minute span of the second half Saturday night as the Southern Conference champion Paladins rallied from a 12-point deficit to upset 11th ranked South Carolina 75-67.</p>
        <p>I felt we were just as good as they were, said Mayes, who tallied 21 and grabbed 16 rebounds to pace Furman, 22-7. The Paladins advanced to next Thursdays second round against Pitt at Raleigh, N.C.</p>
        <p>Freshman Bruce Grimm added another 19 points for Furman, but more importantly he harassed the Gamecocks All-American guard Bruce Winters. Winters topped SC with 22 points, but was only 11 for 27 from the field and got few down the stretch.</p>
        <p>I practiced my defense in</p>
        <p>the summer in Indianapolis against Rick Mount, Grimm said. He likes to take the 30-footers from the outside like Winters, so 1 picked up a few things.</p>
        <p>Furman shored up its defense after falling behind 53-41 with 14:43 to play, following a 15-2 Gamecock blitz at the start of the half.</p>
        <p>The Paladins roared back with a 15-4 rip, closing to a 57-56 deficit and Grimm and</p>
        <p>Late Today?</p>
        <p>An annoUncenK^nt concerning the naming of East Carolina Universitys new basketball  coach  will</p>
        <p>probably be made late this afternoon,  the  Daily</p>
        <p>Reflector learned this morning.</p>
        <p>A reliable source told the Reflector that ECU assistant coach Dave Patton is expected to be the universitys choice to succeed Tom Quinn, who was fired Friday.</p>
        <p>Mayes were everywhere.</p>
        <p>You look at your defense to sustain you in the playoffs, but we werent playing much for a while, said Furman Coach Joe Williams. We were missing easy shots and the ball was falling out of our hands.</p>
        <p>But after calling a second timeout, Williams said, we started playing good D (defense). We stopped giving them the easy shots. Our game is to play strong inside. And that pulled the rest of our game together.</p>
        <p>Craig Lynchs two foul shots gave the Paladins the lead for good, 60-59^, at the 7:06 mark. Grimm sank two field goals from the right and the Gamecocks were heaaed for their fifth loss against 22 wins.</p>
        <p>The closest they got after that was 65-63 with 3:55 remaining. Grimm and Myes teamed to sniff out any further South Carolina threat.</p>
        <p>We couldnt buy a basket the last nine minutes, said Carolina Coach Frank McGuire. We had made those shots all year.</p>
        <p>Nothing they did surprised me ... we just didnt play a good game, he continued. If wed play like that against Creighton, Marquette, Houston, wed have won.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092173_0010" />
        <p>Unser Affair: California 500</p>
        <p>HER SON IS THE WINNERMrs. Mary Unser kisses her son Bobby in the victory circle jjust after^^e won the California 500 at OntarioiE^f.T'</p>
        <p>Sunday. He beat his brother Al by less than a second. In the background is Dan Furney builder of the winning car. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Doral Victory Wasn't Expected By Bud Allin</p>
        <p>By BOB GREEN AP Golf Writer</p>
        <p>MIAMI (AP) - It was an unexpected pleasure, Buddy Allin said.</p>
        <p>I was just trying to hang in there and make a good check. I didnt think I had any chance of winning. There were just too many good players up there and I was just trying to hang on.</p>
        <p>But, one by one. some of pro golfs great players fell victim to the waters, woods and woes that make up the 7,065-yard Blue Monster course at the Doral Country Club, and the tough little Allin emerged as the winner of the Doral-Eastern</p>
        <p>Open Sunday.</p>
        <p>Allin, who won numerous decorations as an artillery officer in Vietnam, had a final round 67 and his 272 total was 16-un-der-par and a record for the course that gobbled up the challenges of Tom Weiskopf, Jerry Heard, Australian Bruce Devlin and Bobby Nichols.</p>
        <p>Heard, a winner a week ago, finished second with a 68-273. He lost his last chance for victory when he sliced his drive into the gallery on the 18th fairway, hit a woman spectator in the head and bogeyed the hole.</p>
        <p>Devlin, tied for the lead a couple of times in the scramble dovTi the stretch, fell back with</p>
        <p>Scoreboard</p>
        <p>Pro Basketball At A Glance By The Associated Press NBA</p>
        <p>Eastern Conference Atlantic Division</p>
        <p>W..L . Pct. G.B.</p>
        <p>Boston  48  22  .686  </p>
        <p>New York  46 28  .622  4</p>
        <p>Buffalo  39  35  .527  11</p>
        <p>Philadelphia  22 49  .310  26'^</p>
        <p>Central Division Capital  42  31  .575  </p>
        <p>Atlanta  31  43  .419  IV/^</p>
        <p>Houston  29  44  .397  13</p>
        <p>Cleveland  24  50  .324  18i^</p>
        <p>Western Conference</p>
        <p>Midwest Division Milwaukee  53  21  .716  </p>
        <p>Chicago  49  25  .662  4</p>
        <p>Detroit  47  27  .635  6</p>
        <p>K.C.-Omaha  28 47  .373  25^</p>
        <p>Pacific Division Golden St.  40 30  . 571  </p>
        <p>Los Angeles  41 32  .562</p>
        <p>Seattle  32  42  .432  10</p>
        <p>Phoenix  27  46  .370  14^</p>
        <p>Portland  23  49  .31918</p>
        <p>Saturdays Games New York 88, Milwaukee 75 Atlanta 106, Chicago 99 Capital 106, Portland 103 Kansas Gity-Omaha 106, Seattle 96 Phoenix 109, Cleveland 100</p>
        <p>Sunday's Games Philadelphia 109, New York 108</p>
        <p>Boston 94. Los Angeles 82 Capital 117, Golden State 107 Buffalo 122, Portland 112 Detroit 116, Atlanta 111 Houston 113, Cleveland 108</p>
        <p>Mondays Girmes Phoenix at Milwaukee Golden State at Detroit Tuesdays Games Phoenix at Buffalo Los Angeles at New York Atlanta at Cleveland Kansas City-Omaha at Chicago</p>
        <p>Golden State at Detroit Philadelphia at Capital Portland vs. Boston at Providence _</p>
        <p>ABA East Division</p>
        <p>W..L...Pct..G.B. Kentucky  45 27  .625  </p>
        <p>New York  46  28  .622  </p>
        <p>Carolina  45 31  .592  2</p>
        <p>Virginia  24 49  .329  2V/z</p>
        <p>Memphis  18 55  .247  27/^</p>
        <p>West Division Utah  48 26  .649  </p>
        <p>Safi Antonio  39  35  .527  9</p>
        <p>Indiana  40  36  .526  9</p>
        <p>Denver  33  41  .446  16</p>
        <p>San Diego  32  42  .432  17</p>
        <p>Saturdays Games Kentucky 113, Indiana 108, overtime San Diego 100, Denver 96 Utah 109, Virginia 103 Sundays Games New York 114, Virginia 76 Carolina 54, Kentucky 91 Indiana 126, Utah 103 San Antonio 99, Memphis 94 San Diego 114, Denver 99 Mondays Games San Antonio vs. Virginia at Hampton Indiana at New York Tuesdays Game Kentucky at Memphis</p>
        <p>a bogey from a bunker on the 17th, had a 71 and tied for third with countryman Bruce Cramp-ton at 274. Crampton made a par-saving putt on the 18th hole for a 68.</p>
        <p>Next came Bert Yancey, who closed with a 65, and Weiskopf tied at 275. Weiskopf, tied for the lead as late as the 16th hole of the final round, finished bogey-double bogey and had a 72. He drove into the woods on the 17th and put one in the water on the 18th.</p>
        <p>Tom Kite, whose 29 on the front side marked the best nine holes of the year on the pro tour, had a 65 and tied Nichols at 2V6. Nichols had a 70 with a double bogey six on the 16th that killed his chances.</p>
        <p>Lee Trevino, who scored his last victory in this tournament a year ago, closed with a 69 but was too far back to catch up. His 277 total was two strokes better than Jack Nicklaus, who had a 70.</p>
        <p>The victory was Allins third in his four years on the pro tour and was worth $30,000 from the total purse of $150,000.</p>
        <p>$100,000 Offer For April Fight</p>
        <p>BOSTON (AP)  Boxing promoter Sam Silverman has offered middleweight Benny Briscoe of Philadelphia $100,000 to fight unbeaten Tony Licata of New Orleans in April in Boston Garden.</p>
        <p>Silverman said Tuesday he wired the offer after Briscoe knocked out Tony Mundine of Australia in Paris Monday night. Licata, who has a 40-0-3 pro record, claimed the U.S. middleweight title by outpointing Emile Griffith early this month.</p>
        <p>Former Michigan State football coach Duffy Daugherty received the Walter Camp Football Foundation Award in 1973.</p>
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        <p>Carol Mann Hoped For 2nd Place</p>
        <p>HOUSTON (AP)  Carol Mann failed in what she set out to accomplish Sunday even if she did win the $20,000 first prize in the $100,000 LPGA tournament.</p>
        <p>Ill admit I was just shooting for second place, the 6-foot-3 Miss Mann said after she shot a 4-under-par final round 69 to knock Kathy Whitworth out of the title by two shots.</p>
        <p>I didnt think anybody could catch Kathy the way she plays, Miss Mann said. Miss Whitworth had a one-shot lead going into the final round of the event but ballooned to a 76 and finished secofid.</p>
        <p>Miss Mann also failed to fulfill a Saturday night vow she made with Sandra Post and Gail Denenbergthat the winner would streak through the press room.</p>
        <p>We all were talking about it last night, Miss Mann said. We agreed if any of us won the tournament, they would streak through the press room. I thought about that today and I thought Oh, no, what if I win.</p>
        <p>Miss Mann started the day five strokes off the pace but after a birdie on No. 10 she was in the lead and she never let up. Miss Mann had four birdies and no bogies.</p>
        <p>Miss Whitworth had to scramble to get the second place finish and the $12,000 second prize that made her the lady tours first $500,000 winner. A string of four straight bogies put Miss Whitworth out of the lead.</p>
        <p>Miss Post held the lead briefly after the fifth hole but staggered home with a 76 and finished in a tie for third with Debbie Austin and Bonnie Bryant.</p>
        <p>ZONAL TITLE BOGOTA, Columbia (AP)  South Africa won the South American Davis Cup title as Frew McMillan and Bob Hewlitt rallied for a 7-9, 4-6, 6-2, 6-4, 6-4 victory over Cliiles Patricio Cornejo and Jaime- Fillol.</p>
        <p>SKATING -nTLE MUNICH, Germany (AP) -Christine Errath of East Berlin won the womens figure skating title at the 1974 World Championships here Sunday.</p>
        <p>NEW POST CHAMPAIGN, 111. (AP) -Gene Bartow has been named head coach at the University of Illinois after resigning as head coach at Memphis State University.</p>
        <p>WON 71. LOST 77 NEW YORK (AP) - In his 11 years as football coach of the New York Jets, Weeb Ew-banks teams won 71 games, lost 77 and tied 6. His 20-year coaching record is 134 wins, 129 setbacks and 6 ties. Prior to coaching the Jets, Ewbank coached the Baltimore Colts for nine seasons.</p>
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        <p>By RON ROACH AP Sports Writer ONTARIO, Calif. (AP) -Bobby Unser has a secret .and he wont even tell his brother how he was fast enough to nip him by fifty-eight hundredths of a second in the closest 500-mile race climax in U.S. Auto Club history.</p>
        <p>Bobby Unser, 40, and 34-year-old Al^nser made the fifth annual California 500 a farhily affair for the last 275 miles Sunday at Ontario Motor Speedway.</p>
        <p>"He just played a cat-and-mouse game with me, said Al. My car started popping at the end when I kicked up the turbocharger boost trying to catch him.</p>
        <p>Bobby Unser, who earned $70,250 of the $300,000 purse, said he didnt have the same cockpit device that Al and some other drivers use to turn up turbocharger boost. He would only say :</p>
        <p>.-9.^I did have a little trick that amounted to a little more speed ... but I really dont care to</p>
        <p>Scores</p>
        <p>Exhibition Baseball At A Glance By The Associated Press Sundays Games Los Angeles 10, Atlanta 1 Cincinnati 2, Pittsburgh 0 Houston 5, Montreal 1 St. Louis 6, New York (N) 5 Philadelphia 9, Boston 2 Texas 13, Atlanta (B Tm.) 7 Milwaukee 14, Chicago (N) 8 California 1, San Diego 0, 12 innings</p>
        <p>San Francisco 5, Cleveland 4 Baltimore 4, New York (A) 2 Kansas City 6, Chicago (A) 1 Detroit 4, Minnesota 2</p>
        <p>elaborate.</p>
        <p>Bobby Unser, who averaged 157.017 miles per hour in a race slowed for 30 laps by se^en yellow flags, won the closest Cal 500 since Jim McElreaths three-fourths of a second victory over the late Art Pollard in the inaugural 1970 race.</p>
        <p>Bobby, 1968 Indianapolis 500 winner, tied two-time Indy winner Al for highest number of 500 milers won in a family. But they said theyve run just as closely in the past in shorter races.</p>
        <p>Al drives for Vals-Parnelli Jones team while Bobby works for Dan Gurneys All-American Racers.</p>
        <p>Al Unser, who changed leads with his brother nine times, earned $58,800, including $250 per lap for leading 106 laps.</p>
        <p>Bobby led 66 laps and quipped, I followed Al all day. He won all the lap money ... A.J. Foyt, the fastest qualifier by five miles per hour, led until a broken oil line forced him out after only 21 turtis aroimd the 2.5-mile course. A piece of debris from the car of David "Salt Walther lodged in Foyts suspension and broke the oil line.</p>
        <p>Walther finished 22nd and earned $1,600 making his first</p>
        <p>Scores</p>
        <p>Sundays College Basketball Results By The Associated Press ^ TOURNAMENTS Mercy Invitational Championship Mercy, N.Y. 85, Cathedral, N.Y. 75  .</p>
        <p>Consolation St. Thomas Aquinas 117, Concordia, N.Y. 104</p>
        <p>itart since a pile-up at Indianapolis almost took his life.</p>
        <p>Joe Leonard, 1971 Cal 500 winner, was responsible for an 11-lap caution period Sunday when he suffered a compound fracture of his left ankle as his Pamelli-Offy hit the pit wall and careened down the track after 152 laps. It was the worst injury accident in Cal 500 history.</p>
        <p>Sixteen of the 33-car field were running &amp;lt;at the end but onlji the Unsers were moving on the final lap. Jerry Grant was a distant third in USACs first race nm under a 280-gal-ion limit per car of methanol fuel.</p>
        <p>Gurney said his driver averaged 1.9 miles per gallon and Ozzie Olson, Bobbys sponsor, said there were 4.7 gallons left.</p>
        <p>Field Meet</p>
        <p>DURHAMA USA-USSR Internationl Track and Field Meet will be held at Duke Universitys Wallace Wade Stadium July 5 and 6.</p>
        <p>According to James C. Hutchens of Charlotte, fundraising co-director of the Event, the meet is the most important dual sporting event in which the Jwo countries particpate. Hutchens and Ted Shay of North Wiikesboro are soliciting corporate sponsorship for the meet and related events, including a Summer Arts Festival.</p>
        <p>4il  ......</p>
        <p>Al Unser said he didnt check how much he had left. Grant reported he had nearly 15 gallons remaining.</p>
        <p>Although the race had an exciting finish, Bobby said fuel restrictions made it less of a competition and urged that more fuel be aloted in the future. Methanol fuel is not derived from petroleum, so the energy crisis isnt involved. USAC reduced fuel to cut speeds for safer racing.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092173_0011" />
        <p>Farm Scene</p>
        <p>By EDWIN L. YANCEY Chemical soil treatment is considered a valuable method of control for several tobacco diseases, according to N. C. State University Extension Plant Pathologists. Fifteen materials are available including five multi-purpose treatments, seven fumigant nematicides, two contacts, and one that provides additional protection when used as a piggy-back treatment. (Piggy-back treatment is available for the first time in 1974. Tests show that the treatment could add $100 to $150 value per acre at a materials cost of about $5.)</p>
        <p>A multi-purpose treatment might be defined as one that provides reduction of several diseases including root-knot, black shank, Granville wilt, Purarium wilt and black root rot. Available materials include Terr-O-Cide 15D, DD-PIC, Telone C, Terr-O-Cide 15, and Terr-O-Cide 30. Evaluation tests for these materials were located in black shank and root-knot, black root rot and Granville wilt problem fields.</p>
        <p>Application Methods Some chemical soil treatments are alike in method of kill and application while others are quite different and might be classified as fumigants, non-</p>
        <p>BRINGING UP THE REARA Southern Railroad brakeman stands on the rear porch of the caboose and watches the scenery drift past. The freight passed through Greenville late Saturday afternoon on its way east. The railroads stiil play a vital part in the economy of this region. (Reflector photo by Chip Lambeth)</p>
        <p>fumigants or contacts and transplant water (piggy back) treatments.</p>
        <p>Fumigants include all multipurpose materials and certain nematicides. These materials are applied as liquids which change to a gas following application that rapidly moves through the soil. The kill is by vapor action. These materials can be applied as row or broadcast treatment. The row treatment involves application 8 inches below the soil level or 14 inches below the top of the high wide bed. For the broadcast method, the chemical is applied to a depth of 8 inches behind shank spaced 10 to no more than 12 inches apart and sealed immediately by heavy log or drag. A waiting period of 3 weeks should be allowed between time of application and transplanting for all fumigant materials.</p>
        <p>Non-fumigants include certain nematicides that kill by contact rather than fumigant action. Best control is obtained when material is spread evnly over the soil surface, thoroughly mixed with top 3 or 4 inches of soil by disking followed by pi^eparation (immediately) of a high wide bed. A waiting period of 5 days is suggested for these materials.</p>
        <p>Piggy-back treatments are applied in transplant water. First, determine discharge of transplanter (amount of water per acre). Second, add correct amount of chemical to each barrel and stir. For example, the suggested rate of Vydate is 1 quart per acre. If the transplanter is discharging 100 gallons per acre, then Vi pint of Vydate should be added to each 50 gallon barrel.</p>
        <p>For detailed information on tobacco disease control, ask for Tobacco Information 74. It is available at the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Office.</p>
        <p>Researchers Improve Shrimp</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - An unlikely exchange of skills between federal fishery biologists and University of Arizona researchers in greenhouse environments for desert areas may lead to improvements in the culture of shrimp.</p>
        <p>Most efforts to raise shrimp under seminatural conditions have been only moderately successful. Now experts from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration feel that I the new greenhouse techniques may eliminate predators, competitors and adverse weather.</p>
        <p>Farm Ups</p>
        <p>By Dr. J. W. Pou Agricultural Spacialiat Wachovia Bank A Trust Co., NJ^.</p>
        <p>New scientific advances are urgently needed to help farmers meet the almost insatiable demand for food and fiber, says the Dean of Agriculture and Life Sciences at North Carolina State University.</p>
        <p>Dr. J. E. Legates said that both food reserves and the reserve of unused agricultural knowledge are dangerously low.</p>
        <p>Legates described the following list of new circumstances which he said are pushing agricultural resources to the breaking point:  ^</p>
        <p> The near full use of our productive acres, pillions of acres of cropland once held in reserve are now being put into production. In addition, over two million ^res of rural land are being taken each year for urban-typeyuevelopmeht. Thus, farmers are being aske'^dlo produce more on less land.</p>
        <p> Dangerously low food res^es. SuppUes of soybeans and corn at the beginning of the 1^3, harvest season were sufficient for just a few weeks. Grain slq|pks are down in other major exporting countries. Reserves now on hand could be wiped out in just one year by a drought or early freeze.</p>
        <p> A dwindling reserve of unused scientific knowledge and technology. Farmers are agressive. Effective work by agricultural extension has reduced the time lag between scientific discovery and farm application. At the same time, the sSentific and technological'problems in agriculture have become more complex. They require more time and effort to solve. Yet, support for agricultural research and extension has actually declined in terms of non-inflated dollars.</p>
        <p>Dean Legates said these new circumstances are more than just temporary or short-run problems. The U. S. population and the world demand for food both continue to increase.</p>
        <p>Increases in funds to support agricultural research and extension must be forthcoming if farmers are to meet these new circumstances, he continued.</p>
        <p>Examples of needed scientific advances cited by Dr. Legates include;</p>
        <p> The urgent need for a significant breakthrough in per-acre soybean yields. The soaring demand for soybeans has been met mainly by increasing acres.</p>
        <p> The need to increase the reproductive rates of beef and swine herds as a means of adding to the nations meat supply; and</p>
        <p> The need to broaden the genetic base of major crops to make them less vulnerable to diseases, such as the</p>
        <p>Revere Enjoyed Many Talents</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - The names of more than 150 silversmiths were recorded in Boston before 1800. One of them, Paul Revere, was not only an accomplished craftsman but a good horseman. Re-veres silver works are now collectors items. A teapot stand and creamer fashioned by* the famous patriot recently sold for $70,000 at auction, according to the National Geographic Society.</p>
        <p>.i t</p>
        <p>it</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Monday. Mirch 11, 197411</p>
        <p>Vampire Bat A Threat To Mexico's Livestock</p>
        <p>MEXICO aTY (AP) - Mexican animal health authorities, now in full charge of the national vampire bat control program, are carrying on a campaign In five states to eliminate the flying pest as a threat to the livestock industry.</p>
        <p>Dr. Pedro Solana Martagn, director general of the National Institute of Livestock Research (INIP) here, estimated that the tiny vampires, three inches in length and weighing less than two ounces, cause the death of ibO.OOO head of cattle a year in Mexico as carriers Of bovine paralytic rabies. ^</p>
        <p>In addition, he declared, they cause other deaths from loss of blood, malnutrition and myiasis, and animals which do not die often produce less meat and milk and are subject to infection by other diseases. They also are suspected of carrying Venezuelan equine encephalomyelitis, which killed thoij-sands of horses in Mexico an Central America in 1970-71 and spread across the border into southwestern United States. Until late last year the antivampire bat campaign in Mexi</p>
        <p>co was a cooperative program carried on by INIP, the Agency for International Development and the Department of the Interior of the United States.</p>
        <p>Basic research was conducted at Interiors Fish and Wildlife Research Center at Denver, Colo., and field tests were carried on by Mexican and AID scientists in bat-infested areas of Mexico.</p>
        <p>Approximately $800,000 has been spent since 1968 on an intensive study of the bats colonizing habits, flight patterns, feeding behavior, reproductive period and anatomical and physiological characteristics.</p>
        <p>The vampires range from central Mexico into northern Argentina and (Tiile and, according to estimates of the United Nations Food and Agriculture Organization, cause the deaths of more than one million head of cattle a year throughout Latin America. Methods used in the past to' destroy them have been complete failures, Dr. Solana said.</p>
        <p>In addition, he added, attempts to reduce the vampire population caused severe harm</p>
        <p>southern corn leaf blight. </p>
        <p>Such challenges," Dean Legates said, require substantial, long-term research commitments. But they can provide high payoffs. By increasing our investment in agricultural research and extension education we can help to lower food costs, contribute to a favorable balance of trade, and provide an essential food reserve."</p>
        <p>He pointed out that such investments have paid off in the past. For example, within the past 15 years per-acre peanut yields have doubled, per-cow milk yields have increased 50 percent, and the per-hog yields of red meat have increased 11 percent. The real beneficiaries ,K)f this increased efficiency are American citizens who spend less than 16 percent of their disposable income for food, and this is less than in any other country in the world.</p>
        <p>to such beneficial species as fruit-and insect-eating bats which roost in the same areas.</p>
        <p>U.S. and Mexican scientists, after discarding such crude and ineffective control measures as dynamiting of roosts, screening of caves, use of flame-throwers and smoke, shooting, traps and nets, lights, poison sprays, and strychnine and arsenic salves smeared on livestock, hit on the use of a blood anticoagulant, diphenadione, which is employed in the treatment of human heart patients.</p>
        <p>The control methods are ingeniously dovetailed with the peculiar and specialized physiological and behavioral characteristics of the vampire bats, which roost in tight clusters in caves and trees and like to preen themselves and each other.</p>
        <p>One procedure is to inject a solution of the drug into the stomachs of cows; bats drinking their bl^ will die of internal hemorrhaging within a'^w hours. Dr. Solana explained. The other method is to trap some of the vampires, smear their backs with a diphenadione salve and release them. Returning to their roosts, they lick themselves and contaminate their companions, he said, and within two weeks they will all die.</p>
        <p>Dr. Solana said that antivampire campaigns are now being.carried on by government and private veterinarians in the states of Oaxaca, Veracruz, Yucatan, Sinaloa and Ck)-lima under the direction of Dr. Luis Manriquez Mandujano.</p>
        <p>i  A    '</p>
        <p>NEW BICENTENNIAL COIN DESIGNSfILi left, a Colonial drummer boy. Independence Hall and the Liberty Bell overlapping the moon are the Bicentinnial reverse coin designs chosen to</p>
        <p>appear on the quarter dollar, half dollar and dollar, respectively. Secretary of Treasury George Shultz and Mary Brooks, director of the Mint, have announced. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Are termites destroying your valuable property?</p>
        <p>Termites could be working on your home right now without your being aware of their presence!</p>
        <p>For Free Inspection Estimate Call</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>752-5175</p>
        <p>. V</p>
        <p>w-WV,-</p>
        <p>. r&amp;gt;r. .</p>
        <p>.-IS-*!</p>
        <p>//</p>
        <p>' '</p>
        <p>|;#WHEN YOUTIE FACED WITH A ^ FERTIUZER SHORTAGE. ITS TIME</p>
        <p>I..* . _</p>
        <p>\ . i &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>^ f</p>
        <p>\ ,</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>. </p>
        <p>Right now, the world demand for farm products is higher than ever. And this year more acres will be planted than any year since 1956.</p>
        <p>But the results you get in yields and profits depend on how carefully you manage your farm. Particularly your fertilizer supply.</p>
        <p>So its^more important now thn ever to get back to the basics of sound farm management. And to consider some new techniques and alternatives if you can't get all the fertilizer you want. In quantity or grades</p>
        <p>\A/b'II try every way we know to meet yoLir requirements. Our plants are producing to capacity. But it's also our responsibility to help you get the most out of the money you spend on fertilizer. As a starting point, consider these suggestions.</p>
        <p>Soil test every field It will determine your actual plant nutrient needs. Soil testing IS the way to make sure you apply only what's needed. Our complete soil test gives you requirements for calcium and magnesium as well as phosphate, potash and lime. The amounts you apply can be adjusted to the levels in your soil. This assures the right balance of plant nutrients.</p>
        <p>Be sure you lime according to your needs, it increases the efficiency of available fertilizer.</p>
        <p>Carefully plan every field you have.</p>
        <p>Think about past performance and which crops yield best in which fields. Use your best fields for your highest value crops.</p>
        <p>In case you can't get all the fertilizer you want, you're better off to fertilize your best fields to optimum. Cut back on your less productive soils and consider banding rather</p>
        <p>If It's practical, plant crops that require less of the plant foods that are short.</p>
        <p>This usage chart gives you a general rating, with the highest use crops at the tc^</p>
        <p>and the lowest use crops at the bottom</p>
        <p>PLANT NUTRIENT UPTAKE</p>
        <p>Nitrogen</p>
        <p>Phosphate</p>
        <p>Ftotash</p>
        <p>Coastal Bermuda</p>
        <p>Coastal Bermuda</p>
        <p>Coastal Be</p>
        <p>Com</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>Alfalfa</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>Cotton</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>Cotton</p>
        <p>Com</p>
        <p>CkJtton</p>
        <p>Wheat</p>
        <p>Wheat</p>
        <p>Com</p>
        <p>Rganuts</p>
        <p>F^anuts</p>
        <p>Fteanuts</p>
        <p>Soybeans</p>
        <p>Soybeans</p>
        <p>Soybeans</p>
        <p>Alfalfa</p>
        <p>Alfalfa</p>
        <p>Wheat</p>
        <p>If you are</p>
        <p>double-cropping, lime and</p>
        <p>fertilize for the major crop For instance, if you are growing soybeans and wheat, lime and fertilize with the soybeans in mind.</p>
        <p>Be sure to inoculate the soybeans</p>
        <p>Frequently, a crop following a high value crop that has been fertilized heavily will not require additional fertilization. You can get by on less fertilizer this year if your soil tests are high But remember that the dram on your soil reserves will decrease future yield potential</p>
        <p>Be sure your crops get the micro-nutrients needed for proper growth and maturity. This table lists major crops and their response to micronutrients</p>
        <p>Micronutrient Response</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>Crop</p>
        <p>Boron</p>
        <p>Cotjper</p>
        <p>Iron</p>
        <p>Manganese</p>
        <p>Zinc j</p>
        <p>Alfalfa</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium |</p>
        <p>Com</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>High 1</p>
        <p>Cotton</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium </p>
        <p>Fteanuts</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium 1</p>
        <p>Soybeans</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Medium ;</p>
        <p>Tobacco</p>
        <p>High</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium !</p>
        <p>\AAieat</p>
        <p>Low</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium</p>
        <p>Medium </p>
        <p>Maybe there is a chance you'll have less fertilizer to work with this year But it's our job to make sure you get all the help you wantjn using your fertilizer efficiently The suggestions here are simply some principles of sound farm management When you use them, your chances for optimum yields</p>
        <p>get better .   M</p>
        <p>If the fertilizer shortage is SLJaL telling us to get back down to earth, we've all got to listen</p>
        <p>ICompargfl</p>
        <p>J</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0012" />
        <p>' X-  ^  S'-?!,^l4Pfc  -XAbove, John Anderson sets out on skunk hunt with dogs. Upper right, a pair of raccoons hes caught.</p>
        <p>Rare sorrel skunk kitten may bring as much as $50.</p>
        <p>A good catch: little skunks will make fine pets.</p>
        <p>'T^he usual reaction to skunks is to get out of range, * fast. Not so John Anderson of Forestburg, Tex. In fact, its his business and his pleasure to seek them out  raccoons and possums, too. He hunts, catches, breeds and de-scents the varmints, then sells them as pets and to zoos over much of the U.S., sometimes shipping them as far away as Europe.</p>
        <p>John is 71, and lives with his wife, Dorthy, and his dogs in their isolated community in north central Texas. He doesnt use guns or traps to catch animals just his hands, once the dogs have tracked them down and cornered them. He wouldnt trade what hes doing for any other work, and says hell carry on his business as long as hes able to follow the dogs across the fields and through</p>
        <p>the woods.</p>
        <p>Photographed by Harold Waters.</p>
        <p>AP Newsfeatures.</p>
        <p>John and Dorthy, his wife, at home in Forestburg.</p>
        <p>^ I?</p>
        <p>John and4)orthy art getting possume used to being handled.</p>
        <p>1,</p>
        <p>A handful of bright*eyed raccoon: John ships catch all over the U.S., even to Europ#.I  .&amp;lt;</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0013" />
        <p>Th* Worry Clinic</p>
        <p>Humor Helps Teach Lesson</p>
        <p>Note how Hal sold" his son on taking a foreign language! See how Sen. Randolph wins his audiences via the wholesome ,humor appearing in QUOTE magazine every week. Then imitate Dr. Hortons superb public speaking techinique!</p>
        <p>; ByGEORGE W. CRANE Ph.D.. M.D.</p>
        <p>CASE Z-572: Hal T., aged 36, is a popular radio announcer.</p>
        <p>Dr. Crane," he began, I was very much impressed by your recent column in which you</p>
        <p>This weekly QUOTE magazine (Anderson, S. C.) contains 3 pages in each issue of rollicking jokes and anecdotes.</p>
        <p>Moreover, they are clean, wholesome types of humor, quite appropriate for use by pastors in their sermons, as well as by other speakers.</p>
        <p>For example, heres a dandy anecdote, that you can adapt to help illustrate the value of foresight and intelligent planning.</p>
        <p>QUOTE magazine attributes it</p>
        <p>urged clergymen to use more to Sen. Jennings Randoli^, of humor.  West Virginia:</p>
        <p>For I do a lot of speaking In the War Between the States, before luncheon clubs, PTA, etc. there was a general (I wUl not And I appreciate your say in which Army) who massed recommendation of the weekly his troops to repel the enemy, magazine called QUOTE.  He  called  his  feUow  officers</p>
        <p>For I find more useful jokes about him, and said: therein than in any other  We cannot hold against  the</p>
        <p>medium.  forces of the enemy ; they are too</p>
        <p>It helped me last week in a strong, and I shaU, in 15 minutes,  family argument, too.  k the bugler to sound retreat.</p>
        <p>' "For my high school son was "You all know I have a bad ' objecting to taking a foreign  leg, so I shall start now."</p>
        <p>language, saying it had no  In this urban age, all literate</p>
        <p>practical value.  people should be able to make an</p>
        <p>So I recited the foUowing interesting talk, little story from QUOTE  Floridas noted pastor,  Dr.</p>
        <p>magazine."  Paul Hortin, of St. Petersburg,</p>
        <p>From QUOTE  uses QUOTE magazine and</p>
        <p>A mother mouse and her little mixes its humor, as well as ones were suddenly confronted curroit epigrams from famous</p>
        <p>by a cat.</p>
        <p>The mother mouse braced herself and said Bow wow! The cat turned tail and fled. The mother mouse turned to her children and said:</p>
        <p>Now you see how important it is to know a second language."</p>
        <p>You language teachers in high school can employ that anecdote to good effect.</p>
        <p>people, into his superb sermon formula:</p>
        <p>(1) Start out with a challenging text;</p>
        <p>(2) Advance your theme via relevant stories (like Christs parables);</p>
        <p>(3) Make the audience laugh a few times;</p>
        <p>(4) Work up their righteous 'ndignation (anger);</p>
        <p>fcl</p>
        <p>GOREN ON BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN</p>
        <p>SP m, TSa CMCM TMSM</p>
        <p>BRIDGE QUIZ ANSWERS Q. 1Your partner, vulnerable, has opened the bidding with one spiule and you hold: *2 &amp;lt;;?tS 0KJMS4S KJI What is your response?</p>
        <p>A.On* no trump. With aalr S hlgh-card polnU, the hand la not suit* food anough to roapond at tho two-laval. It U trua that, at a diamond contract, jreur hand la worth 10 poinU, but It la wlaar not to make a forcing bid at tha two*lvel with rawer than  or 10 HCP.</p>
        <p>next bid. since you have already ahown a atrong hand, thla bid la forcing.</p>
        <p>as</p>
        <p>Q. 2Both vulnerable. South you hold:</p>
        <p>4IA43 ^AK87 0AQ42 82</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: SMth West  Neilli  East</p>
        <p>1  Pass  2 ^  Pass</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.^Three diamonda. Your band la worth IS polnta at haarta and 17 at no trump, ao you ahould make one effort to gat to game. Should partner merely return to three hearta. you paaa. However, he might find a Md of four hearta or three no trump, either of which you ahould accept aa the rinaf contract.</p>
        <p>Q. 3East-West vulnerable, as South you hold.</p>
        <p>*A873 &amp;lt;;?Jl8f 22 01882 4^</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: East  South  West  North</p>
        <p>Pass  Past  1 *  14</p>
        <p>Pass  2 4  2 4  Dble.</p>
        <p>Past  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Dcfenalvely, your hand la practically worthleia. Your only feature la length In partner'a ault, and that detracta from the defenaive potential of hta hand. It la moat Improbable that you can defeat three cluba, and we recommend a return to three apadea In aelMefenae.</p>
        <p>Q. 8Neither vulneraUe, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4Q8 &amp;lt;7AK8S4 082 4AKJ4 Hie Udding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1  Pass  1 4  Ps&amp;gt;s</p>
        <p>2 4  Pass  2 ^  Pass</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Three hearU. Partnera bidding haa done nothing to Indl-caU aubaUnUal values, but you have a Hne hand that merlU at least another move towards game.</p>
        <p>Q. 8As Souta, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>4A7 &amp;lt;;?KQJ18 785 03 4AJ2</p>
        <p>East, your right-hand opponent, has opened the bidding with one diamond. What is your bid?</p>
        <p>A.Double. Some years ago. you would have described thU hand with a Jump overcall of two hearts, but that bid Is now used preeinptlvely. Since a mere overcall would grossly understate your values, you must first double and then bid an approprt-ate number of hearta at your next turn.</p>
        <p>Q. 4Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>44 ^A7 OKQ887 4AK7S4</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: Soath  West  North  East</p>
        <p>10  14  2 ^  Pass</p>
        <p>3 4  Pass  3 0  Pass</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Three hearU. Partner made a free bid at the two-level, so he. must have a fair hand and a good heart suit. Prom the fact that you failed to ralae him laa-medlately, partner ahould be able</p>
        <p>to deduce that you are ahowIM a doubletoB honor, ao be In a betUr position to Juc the hands potential</p>
        <p>after his</p>
        <p>(Monday thru Friday)</p>
        <p>Shrimp</p>
        <p>Creole</p>
        <p>* &amp;amp;hu</p>
        <p>includes slaw hushpuppies</p>
        <p>HOURS MON. THRU SAT. 11:NA.M.T02P.M. 4:N P.M. TO9 P.M.</p>
        <p>SUNDAYS 11:30 A.M. TO 3 P.M. 4:30 P.M. TO 0 P.M. U.S. 304 By.Pasi At Rem Hiway</p>
        <p>lN("WA|IWt.TUr-TII$ IS 0</p>
        <p>1IK STWT!"</p>
        <p>lAL mCMO -BCRPICO*</p>
        <p>(NOMINATED FOR SEST ACTOR) ADULT EXCITEMENT *^3.</p>
        <p>COES RIGHT TO THE OUTS OF POLICE LAW AND ORDER.</p>
        <p>SHOWS DAILY AT</p>
        <p>DOORS OPE N 1:1 P.M._</p>
        <p>(5) Make them cry, as you fade out in your peroration with a touching; relevant story or appropriate stanza of a suitable poem.</p>
        <p>And if you beginners tremble, dont fret, for all speakers, even the professionals, are nervous at the start.</p>
        <p>So' hold your hands firmly behind your back or clasp the edges of the lectern till you relieve you tension via your vocal cords.</p>
        <p>After a couple of minutes of talking, you become more poised and can then use your hands more gracefully in gestering.</p>
        <p>Beware of early, stilted gestures. And to relieve tremors of the hands as you hold your notes or sheet music, seize them with both hands and gently pull in opposite directions.</p>
        <p>This stops the rattling of the paper!</p>
        <p>Send for my bo&amp;lt;Met Public Platform Psychology, enclosing a long stamped, return envelope, plus 25 cents.</p>
        <p>(Always write to Dr. Crane in care of this newspaper, enclosing a long stamped, addressed envelope and 25 cents to cover typing and prithig casts when you senjl for one of his Ixwklets.)</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV Ch. 9</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Truth or 7.30 MAke A Deal: 8:00 Gunsmoke ?:00 Lucy 9:30 van Dyke 10:00 Med.  Center</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>6:00 Arthur Smith 6:30 Meditations 6:35 Caroiina 8:00 News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Joker's Wild 10:30 Pyramid 11:00 Gambit 11:30 Love of Life 11:55 Timeiy Tips</p>
        <p>WITN-TV Ch. 7</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Fun Races 7:30 Trea Hunt 8:00 Magician 9:00 Movie 11 00 News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>6:25 Your Future 6.55 News 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7 :30 Today 8:25 News 8:30 TdBay 9:00 Mike Dougias 10:00 Dinah's Place 10:30 Jeopardy 11:00 Wizard Odds 11:30 Hollywood Sq.</p>
        <p>Sq</p>
        <p>11:00 News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Andy Griffith</p>
        <p>Cti.</p>
        <p>7:30 Goldsboro 8:00 Mario Thomas 9:00 John Denver 10:00 Truman 11:00 News 12 11:30 Entertainment 1:00 Morning News 1:10 Sign Off TUESDAY 7:00 Builwinkle 7:30 Underdog 8:00 New Zoo 8 :30 Montage 9:30 Movie</p>
        <p>WUNK-TV Ch. 25</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Gardener 8:00 Spec of Week 9:30 Br Cancer 10:00 Str. Talk</p>
        <p>Q. 7As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>48 &amp;lt;;?KJ187 2 0AQ1884QJ18 The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 ^  Pass  3 ^  Pass</p>
        <p>8 ^  Pass  7</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.six hcarU. Partner U worried about the  quality  of the</p>
        <p>trump aultIf he were only interested  In controla, he  would</p>
        <p>have bid Blackwood or launched a cue-bldding sequence. You have a trump holding that will set partner's mind at rest.</p>
        <p>Q. 8Etast-West vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>4Q188 (7884 OK8782 4Q18 The bidding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass 1 &amp;lt;7  14</p>
        <p>e</p>
        <p>* What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.Pass. Despite the fact that you are a passed hand and that you have a stopper In the opponents suit, you do not haw sufficient values for a free bid.</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>8:40 Ready Set Go 9:15 Math 9:30 To Think 10:00 Sesame St. 11:00 Cultures 11:30 Americans 11:50 Fiction 12:10 Man's World 12:30 Electric Co. 1:00 Images</p>
        <p>Martha Scott Is Again A Mother</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Monday, March 11. 187413</p>
        <p>By JERRY BUCK Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) -Amid the revival of interest in former President Harry S. Truman, ABC tonight offers a Portrait special that deals with an incident when he was a judge in Missouri.</p>
        <p>The show is concered with his</p>
        <p>integrity and the Missouri-mule stubbomess that brought him to the presidency 16 years later.</p>
        <p>Robert Vaughan stars in Portrait: The Man From Independence." Arthur Kennedy is Tom Pendergast, and Martha Scott is Mama Truman.</p>
        <p>As Trumans mother. Miss Scottherself a native of that</p>
        <p>area of Missouriportrays a wise and witty woman who was a strong influence in his life.</p>
        <p>Because I was from that area, I read the script with a certain nostalgia. A pain in a way, said Miss Scott, a film and stage actress for 30 years. I recognized my own graqd-</p>
        <p>Won Honors With Skills</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>1. Ohio college town 4. Goal</p>
        <p>7. Denomination 11. Equity 13 Olive genus</p>
        <p>14. Parsley camphor</p>
        <p>15. Fat</p>
        <p>16. Harvest</p>
        <p>17. Check ledgers 19. BoyS'WittiOut</p>
        <p>dates 22. Arrest</p>
        <p>26. Chinese</p>
        <p>rndgpiuiid</p>
        <p>27. Goddess of healing</p>
        <p>28 Lacuna 30. Morning reception</p>
        <p>32. Certainly not ___________ ______</p>
        <p>33. Edible seaweed SOLUTION OF stJrdaY'S PUZZLE</p>
        <p>34. Harpoon</p>
        <p>46. Neckwear</p>
        <p>47. Generation</p>
        <p>48. Shoe Size</p>
        <p>35. Hebrew law 37. Catamaran</p>
        <p>41. Rivet bank</p>
        <p>42. Oriental laborar</p>
        <p>44. Sole</p>
        <p>12:00 News 12:30 Search For 1 00 The Young 1:30 World Turns 2:00 Guiding Light 2:30 Edge Night 3:00 Price Right 3:30 Match Game 4.00 Tattletales</p>
        <p>4 :30 Lucy Show</p>
        <p>5 :00 Mod Squad 6:00 News</p>
        <p>6 30 CBS Neyys 7:00 Truth or 7:30 Tell Truth 8:00 Maude 8:30 Special</p>
        <p>9:30 GE Theatre 11:00 Final Report 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>lO</p>
        <p>II</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>iq</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>16</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>26</p>
        <p>21</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>35</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>27</p>
        <p>28</p>
        <p>29</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>3D</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>32</p>
        <p>Hi</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>9</p>
        <p>qo</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>H2</p>
        <p>M3</p>
        <p>MH</p>
        <p>mV</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>M8</p>
        <p>Par lime 25 min.</p>
        <p>AP Nawifeotoref</p>
        <p>2. Cats paw</p>
        <p>3. Largest continent</p>
        <p>4. Afflict^,</p>
        <p>5. frost</p>
        <p>6. Pine Tree State: abbr.</p>
        <p>7. Marketed</p>
        <p>8. Arthurian lady</p>
        <p>9. Confident</p>
        <p>10. Youngster 12. Eva's friend</p>
        <p>17. Century plant</p>
        <p>18. Tree moss</p>
        <p>20. Oklahoma city</p>
        <p>21. Hebrew letter</p>
        <p>23. Brother</p>
        <p>24. Past</p>
        <p>25. Cocktail 29. Nation 31. Faux pas 36. Moonbeams</p>
        <p>38. Wings</p>
        <p>39. Amerce</p>
        <p>40. Head: Fr.</p>
        <p>41. Twaddle</p>
        <p>42. Limousine</p>
        <p>43. Italian daybreeze</p>
        <p>.45. Editorial</p>
        <p>Three Pitt County high schools were involved in the annual high school vocational Olympic Carpentry and Brick Contest, held by Farmville Central High School, host for the event.</p>
        <p>The three were Rose High, Ayden-Grifton, and D. H. Conley.</p>
        <p>For the area IB Olympic Skills Contest, Rose High students took first place in both carpentry and masonry (brick work).</p>
        <p>Michael Stevenson was top winner in carpentry work and Gregory Moore took first place in masonry.</p>
        <p>Other winners were: Car-^ntry. seooiW through fourth placesGray Hacker, Ayden-Grifton; Max Langley, J. H. Rose; and Linwood Bracket, D. H. Clonley. Van Tucker of Ayden-Grifton and James Perkins of D. H. Conley tied for fifth place. In addition to first place in masonry, Robert Waldrop, placed sixth in that category.</p>
        <p>First and second place winners will compete in Raleigh on March 30 in the statewide vocational Olympics.</p>
        <p>mother in the role of Mrs.'Truman and my own father sounded, like Truman. He had that twang."</p>
        <p>The role of mother is a familiar one for Miss ScotL She was CTiarlton Hestons mother in Ben Hur and The Ten Commandments. She&amp;gt; Bob New-harts mother on his series. She played Julie Sommars mother in a recent pilot film. Last week she was a housemother in an ABC late-night mystery, Sorority-Kill. This Tuesday night shes Earl Hollimans mother on NBCs Police Story.</p>
        <p>I dont mind playing mothers, she said, not if the parts are good. Ive been playing character parts since I was 27. I love a good character part. Its fine with me because its meant a longer acting career. Id hate to still be doing ingenues.</p>
        <p>On Broadway, beginning with Our Town, Miss Scott always had starring roles. She made the film version of Thornton Wilders Our Town and received an Academy Award nomination as best actress. Her plays included Soldiers Wife, The Voice of the Turtle, The Male Animal and The Subject Was Roses,</p>
        <p>Miss Scott helped found the Plumstead Playhouse to bring more stage plays to Los Angeles. The playhouse, of which she is president, was the first to revive Front Page, which is now iri vogue and is being made into a motion picture again.'</p>
        <p>Miss Scott does have some ties to the Trumans. In 1956 she appeared with Margaret Truman on an NBC talk show series.</p>
        <p>JAWBONE IS DISCOVERED SVETOZZREVO, Yugoslovaia (AP)  A giant jawbone of dy-noteflurh^ giganttlbimus, the predecessor of the mammoth, was unearthed near this Serbian industrial city.</p>
        <p>264 PLAYHOUSE THEATRE</p>
        <p>Farmville Hwy. Phone 756 04A. Miles West of Greenville on 264.</p>
        <p>NOW</p>
        <p>SHOWING</p>
        <p>12:00 News 12:30 Baffle 12:55 Noon News nn lurk Pot</p>
        <p>A Match</p>
        <p>2.00 Our Lives 2:30 Doctors</p>
        <p>3.00 Another World 3:30 Marriage</p>
        <p>4 :00 Somerset 4:30 Bewitched 5:00 Wild West 6:00 News 6:30 NBC News 7:00 Dragnet 7:30 Hollywood 8:00 Adam 12 8:30 Movie 10:00 Police Story</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>1:30 Make Deal 2:00 Newlyweds 2:30 In My Lite 3:00 Gen Hospital 3 30 One Life 4:00 Gilligan 4:30 Gomer Pyle 5:00 Bev. Hillbillies 5:30 Total News 6:00 ABC News 6:30 Beat Clock 7:00 Andy GriHith 7:30 Dusty's Trail 8:00 Happy Days 8:30 Movie 10:00 Marcus Welby</p>
        <p>11'30 Brady Bunch 11:00 News 12 12:00 Passowrd  11:30  Entertainment</p>
        <p>12 30 Split Second 1 00 Morning News 1 00 My Children 1:10 Sign Oft</p>
        <p>1:20 Ready Set Go 1:40 Cover to Cover 2:00 Your Future 2:30 Cultures 3:00 Film 3:30 Cultures 4:00 Mr. Rogers 4:30 Sesame St.</p>
        <p>5:30 Electric Co. 6:00 Observ. Eye _6:M E)icep. Child. ~:O Your Future 7:30 Gov't Dev 8 .00 NC News Cont. 8:30 The Arts , 9:00 Symposium 10:00 Gen Assembly</p>
        <p>GIVE NOW, PAY LATER SPOKANE, Wash. (AP) -Give now, pay later plans made possible by credit cards are helping colleges make ends meet.</p>
        <p>OIK oT lli&amp;lt; iiiosl |)()|nil;ir pii'liiivs (&amp;gt;r our limo</p>
        <p>BILLY</p>
        <p>JACK</p>
        <p>MFXT, "BOOTLEGGERS'</p>
        <p>HELD OVER THRU IDE.</p>
        <p>DOURLff MIGHTY MUSCLf MARATHON I RUNG FU-KARATE WOULD NOT STOP THE</p>
        <p>GIANT HERCULESI</p>
        <p>IT TOOK TWO COLOSSAL MOVIES TO TELL THE WHOLE INCREDIBLE STORY I</p>
        <p> o-zz AMAZII</p>
        <p>I SHOWS</p>
        <p>Lhbbb</p>
        <p>NEXT: "m-LY JACK</p>
        <p>STARTS WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>ONE WEEK ONLY</p>
        <p>PARK THEATER</p>
        <p>TOM tAUGHUN  DELORES TAYLOR .c^atnma</p>
        <p>Hew* WlW*</p>
        <p>AMttNiMlhiinlRtwCNUfWMPNiixlNn-TECtHHCOLOH*  [pQ</p>
        <p>Ahoskie- EARL THEATER New Bern-SOUTHGATE II THEATER Washington TU R N AG E TH EATE R</p>
        <p>Starts Thursday One Week Only</p>
        <p>Kinston-PARK THEATERjri</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0014" />
        <p>14The DUy Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Monday, March 11, i#74Hunt 3Gunmen In Kidnaping Of Mother; $25,000 Ransom</p>
        <p>DECATUR, Ga. (AP)  The FBI and local police were searching today for three gunmen who abducted the wife of a department store manager in the latest in a series of similar incidents involving employes of the K-Mart chain of discount stores.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Patricia Daniel, 30, was released unharmed early Sunday after her husband, William Daniel, paid a ransom of about $20,000 which he took from the vault of the K-Mart store he manages in nearby Atlanta.</p>
        <p>The slim-dark-haired mother of three was abducted late Saturday and held only about three hours before her captors directed Daniel to a lonely lovers lane south of Atlanta where he found his wife bound and gagged in the back of her car.</p>
        <p>It was the fourth time in less than three nionths that mcm ,bers of a K-Mart employes family had been held hostage by armed men who demanded a ransom from the saf of a K-Mart store. In addition, there was a fifth incident in January in which the wife of a Tennessee K-Mart manager was attacked.</p>
        <p>In Detroit, a spokesman for K-Mart said the company had held meetings about the kidnap-ings but did not think this is an organized effort. We think this was a case of one person reading about what another person did and deciding to try it.</p>
        <p>He said he knew of no plans to beef up security at the K-Mart stores, which generally are large discount stores.</p>
        <p>E. C. Andrews, Atlanta regional manager for K-Mart, said Sunday that he had not circulated any plan telling store managers what to do in such circumstances.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Daniel was safely home Sunday but her husband turned away inquiring reporters saying, Were just glad that its over, but thats all I can say. The FBI would say only that the matter was under investigation. DeKalb County Police Sgt. James T. Miller said, We have several leads we are checking out.</p>
        <p>A DeKalb County officer estimated the ransom at $20,000. But authorities said the exact amount had not been determined immediately.</p>
        <p>Miller provided this account of Mrs. Daniels abduction:</p>
        <p>She answered the door at around 11 p.m. Saturday, while her husband still was at work, to find a young man who said he apcidentally had knocked over the family mailbox and wanted to'come in to pa^ for it.</p>
        <p>She said he couldnt feme in while her husband -was ^out. But. as she was turning away, he broke the glass on the front door and forced his way in.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Daniel was bound and tape placed over her eyes and mouth. One of her children told police two other men then entered the house wearing masks and carrying rifles and a pistol.</p>
        <p>Minutes later, Daniel arrived home. As he walked in the front door he was hit on the' head with a gun barrel and knocked to the floor.</p>
        <p>Someone pointed a pistol to his head and told him they had his wife and that he was going to go back to the store and get aU the money from the safe, Miller said. The kidnapers said they would call him there.</p>
        <p>Daniel was allowed to take his three children with him and when he arrived at the store he found an assistant manager still working.</p>
        <p>Daniel briefly explained the</p>
        <p>situation and took the days receipts out of the safe. The abductors called and Daniel was told to go to a nearby phone booth. As he left the store, he yelled to his assistant, Take care of my kids and call the police.</p>
        <p>Miller said Daniel was called at the i^one booth and told to go to another, a procedure which was repeated several times, before he finally was di-'rected to a quiet road near Hartsfield International Airport in Clayton County, south of Atlanta.</p>
        <p>There, Daniel handed over the money and was directed by the abductors to his wifes car which was 50 feet down the road. He found Mrs. Daniel still bound and taped in the back of her car. It was about 2 a.m., some three hours after the first contact&amp;gt;v,^</p>
        <p>Two of the previous abdu^ tions involving K-Mart employes took place in Michigan. The other was in Tennessee.</p>
        <p>The first occurred last Christ-'mas Day when Frank Meaney, manager of a K-Mart in the Detroit suburb of Southfield, was held hostage at his home along with his wife and two sons by two armed men. One held the family at gunpoint, while the other took Meaneys keys and the combination to the safe and stole $91,000 from Meaneys store.</p>
        <p>No arrests have been made.</p>
        <p>On Feb. 12, Jack Nuckols, manager of a K-Mart in Romeo, another Detroit suburn, wfis ordered to pay a ransom out of the K-Mart safe by a man who held Nuckols 14-year-old daughter, Terri, as a hostage.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Nuckols notified the police who arrested Raymond Wyngaard, 36, of Warren and charged him with kidnaping,</p>
        <p>extortion and felonious assault. ' Terri was found handcuffed but unharmed in a car parked at a motel.</p>
        <p>Ten days later, James D. Ez-zell, 36, assistant manager of a K-Mart in Nashville, Tenn. was accosted by two gunmen in his home. They held 32-year-old Betty Ezzell while her husband went to the K-Mart store with orders to deliver $9,000 in ran-jsom at a highway rendezvous I point.</p>
        <p>' Ezzell tried unsuccessfully to I make the payoff. Meanwhile, police found Mrs. Ezzell unhurt, locked in the trunk of her car. There have been no arrests.  *  I</p>
        <p>The wife of another K-Mart I manager in Tennessee was at-! tacked Jan. 10 by a man who tried without success to pour drain cleaner down her throat. There was no ransom demand made in that case.</p>
        <p>Ex-Legislator Dies in Florida</p>
        <p>FORT LAUDERDALE, Fla. (AP)A former state legislator and chairman of the Mecklenburg County alcoholic beverage control system, Frank. K. Sims Jr., died Sunday at his home in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., after a long illness,</p>
        <p>, Sims helped bring the Mecklenburg County ABC system [into existence in 1947 and served as its chairman until 1965. He gave up a political career in the General Assembly to work with the countys ABC system.</p>
        <p>Sims, who was an attorney, had also served as a city court judge in Charlotte.</p>
        <p>Funeral plans were incomplete.</p>
        <p>esults</p>
        <p>Thafs what really counts in our business!</p>
        <p>Reflector Classified Ads get results because most of the</p>
        <p>thousands of people who read them every day want to buy something ... the outgrown baby furniture youve been keeping, the camping gear no one uses, the no longer enjoyed sports equipment, bikes, furniture or appliances.</p>
        <p>People are looking in Classified right now for these things and much more. And, these people pay cash for the things they buy.</p>
        <p>Put Reflector Classified Ads to work getting results for you . . . it's so easy. Just go through your home and make a list of the good things you find that arent being used or^ enjoyed any more. Then dial 752-6166 The friendly Advisor who answers helps you word your ad to bring fastest results. The cost Is low, too. A three line ad is only 68* a day on the special 7 day plan.</p>
        <p>PHONE 752-6166</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>"Pitt County's Home Newspaper"</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED ADSTHE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified Advertising Rates752-6166</p>
        <p>Place your Classified ad for 7 days. The cost is less.Rates</p>
        <p>3 Line Minimum</p>
        <p>1 Day30c Per printed line 4 Days27c Per printed line 7 Days or more25c per printed line.</p>
        <p>Contract Rates Availabie CLASSIFIED DISPLAY $1.70 Per Column Inch Contract rates availabjc^^^^</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>LEGAL NOTICE</p>
        <p>General Motors Acceptance Corporation will sell for cash on Friday, March 15, 1974, at 2:00 p.m., at Phelps ChevroleL Incorporated, Greenville, N. C., a 1973 Pontiac, Serial No. 2P45S3D103118.</p>
        <p>Seller reserves the right to bid. March 11, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of Frank E. Brooks, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 1st day of March, 1974. Blanch C. Brooks 2615 Memorial Drive Greenville, N. C.  </p>
        <p>Executrix of the Estate of Frank E Brooks, Deceased March 4, 11, IB, 25, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estate of Esther D. Evans, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executor within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 7th day of March, 1974.</p>
        <p>/ Guy E. Evans P.O. Box 56 Grimesland,N.C.</p>
        <p>Executor of the Estate of Esther O. Evans, Deceased.' March 11,18,25; April 1, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>The Undersigned, having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Noah Lawrence BarbeT, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said Estate to present them to the Undersioned on or before tne 5th day of September, 1974, or this Notice will be pleaded In bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said Estate will please make immediate payment to the Undersigned Executrix.</p>
        <p>This the 26th day of February, 1974. LYDA O'NEAL BARBER, EXECUTRIX</p>
        <p>Harrell &amp;amp; Mattox,</p>
        <p>Attys.</p>
        <p>March 4, 11, 18, 25, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>The Division of Health Services has received an application from the Town of Winterville in Pitt County for a State grant under the North Carolina Clean Water Bond Act of 1971. The application seeks a grant of $56,625.00 from funds allocated for use in Pitt County. This grant would be applied as a portion of the construction cost of a water supply system project. The project consists of constructing a 500,000 gallon elevated water storage tank and necessary fittings to connect to an existing 8 inch water main. -Also planned is a 500 gallon per minute well with necessary fittings to connect into a 6 inch water main. March n 1974</p>
        <p>North Carolina County of Pitt</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having quaiified as Co-Administrators of the estate of Louise H. Rogers, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Co-Administrators, P. O. Box 2551, Greenville, North Carolina, on or before August 20, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned Co-Administrators.</p>
        <p>This 12th day of February, 1974.</p>
        <p>R E. ROGERS, JR.</p>
        <p>CHARLES H. ROGERS CO ADMIN ISTRATORS OF THE ESTATE OF LOUISE H. ROGERS, DECEASED P. O. Box 2551 Greenville, N. C. 27835 Gaylord &amp;amp; Singleton P. O. Box 545 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Feb. 18, 25; March 4, 11, 1974</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of J. C. Crisp, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons Indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 1st day of March, 1974.</p>
        <p>Edna Faye Crisp Rowe 2612 S. Wright Road Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>Executrix of the Estate of J.C. Crisp, Deceased. March 11,18,25; April 1, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS</p>
        <p>The undersigned, after having qualified as Administrator, C.T.A. of the estate of James Ficklen Arthur, Sr., deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate, to present them to the undersigned on or before the 11th day of August, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to the said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned.</p>
        <p>This the nth day of February, 1974.</p>
        <p>Louis C. Arthur, III</p>
        <p>Administrator, C.T.A. of the estate</p>
        <p>Of James Ficklen Arthur, Sr.</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 382, Wake Forest, N. C. 27587</p>
        <p>James, Hite, Cavendisn 8, Blount, Attorneys</p>
        <p>Greenville, N. C. 17834 Feb. 18, 25; March 4, 11, 1974</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE North Carolina County of Pitt</p>
        <p>The undersigned, having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of ERNEST T. FORBES, deceased, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against said estate to present them to the undersigned Administratrix, 1602 Myrtle Avenue, Greenville, North Carolina 27834, on or before September 3, 1974, or this notice will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate will please make immediate payment to the undersigned Administratrix.</p>
        <p>This 26th day of February, 1974. ROSA LEE FORBES Administratrix of the Estate Of Ernest T. Forbes Deceased</p>
        <p>1602 Myrtle Avenue Greenville, N. C. 27834 Gaylord and Singleton Attorneys #t L^w Greenville, N. C.</p>
        <p>AAarch 4, 11. 18. 25, 1974 A</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>OF TRUSTEE'S SALE State of North Carolina County of Pitt</p>
        <p>WHEREAS, the undersigned, acting as Substitute Trustee in Deeds of Trust herein after specifically identified, having been duly substituted as Trustee in the same Deed of Trust by instrument recorded in the office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North. Carolina on the 18th day of February 1974 in Book 142, page 539.</p>
        <p>Said Deed of Trust referred to above being dated November 1, 1971 executed by Coleman W. Ward, President of C. W. WARD 8. COMPANY and delivered to Hugh R. Anderson, Trustee and The First National Bank of Asheboro, North Carolina, filed in office of the Register of Deeds of Pitt County, North Carolina in Book K40, page 218, given to secure that certain promissory Note dated April 26, 1971 in the amount of $150,000 and executed by C. W Ward Company, Inc.,. payable to The First National Bank, Asheboro, North Carolina which said Note and indebtedness due thereon were assigned by said First National Bank on September 6, 1973 to Small Business Ad ministration, an Agency of the United States pursuant to 15 United States Code, Section 631 et seq..</p>
        <p>Pursuant to the express terms of said Note and Deed of Trust hereinafter indentified and as authorized by Chapter 45 of the General Statutes of North Carolina and default having been made in the payment of the indebtedness secured in said Deed of Trust and demand for foreclosure having been made by Small Business Administration, the holder and owner of said Note,</p>
        <p>NOW. THEREFORE, the un dersigned Substitute Trustee will offer for sale before the door of the Pitt County Courthouse, Greenville, North Carlina, where public sales are usually held, within the legal hours of sale, at or about 10:00 A. M. on the 3rd day of April, 1974, the real property hereinafter specifically set forth as follows:  </p>
        <p>TRACT NO. l:*COMMENCING at an iron stake in Contentnea Creek, being the agreed line between W. I. Bissette and Sam McLawhorn et al. and from a point so fixed and being identified as letter "A" and running thence North 62 degrees 30' East (shown on map as North 62 degrees 30' West) to letter "B", an iron stake, labrum or branch; thence running along and with the branch in the following courses: South 33 degrees West 183 ft; thence South 12 degrees West 133.6 ft; thence South 25 degrees East 139.5 feet; South 72 degrees 30' East 119.4 ft; thence South 20 degrees East 70.3 ft; South 18 degrees West 202 ft; thence South 60 degrees 30' East 180 ft; thence South 19 degrees East 106.5 ft; thence South 200 ft; thence South 19 degrees East 89.4 ft; thence South 25 degrees East 231.4 ft; thence South 17 degrees 30' East 216.5 ft. to the letter "H", a stake, a corner. The hereinabove calls from Letter "B" to letter "H" are reciprocal as shown on map hereinafter referred to; thence running' South 40 degrees West 1155 ft to an iron stake on the bank of the Contentnea Creek; thence up the northeast bank of Contentnea Creek with its various courses and distances to the small gut where iron stake is located and being the point of Beginning, as shown on a map entitled "PLAN OF LAND SURVEYED FOR SAM MCLAWHORN", by W. B. Duke, R. S., dated June 22, 1966, to which map reference is hereby made and incorporated. And further being 98 acres of wooded low ground as shown on said map. See deed in Book Y37, Page 552, Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>TRACT NO. 2: COMMENCING AT the right-of-way of the new North Carolina Highway No. 11 at its southernmost point at a stake; and from a point so fixed thence running South 85 degrees 0' West 1,837.5 ft to the bank of the Contentnea Creek; and thence along and with the various courses of Contentnea Creek as it runs North 6 degrees 0' West 437 ft to a stake; thence North 53 degrees 0' East 742.5 ft. to a stake; thence North 22 degrees 30' East 165 ft to a stake; thence North 15 degrees 0' West 495 ft to a stake; thence North 31 degrees 30' West 264 ft to a stake, a corner; thence running North 17 degrees 30' East 650 ft to a stake; thence running North 74 degrees East 462, ft to a stake, a corner, thence running North 30 degrees 0' East 297 ft to a stake a corner; (the last eight calls are running parallel with Contentnea Creek) thence running North 89 degrees 43' East 849.4 ft to the right of way of the new North Carolina Highway No. 11, a corner; thence running along and with the right of way of the new North Carolina Highway No. 11 South 25 degrees 58' West 207.8 ft to a stake; thence South 27 degrees 42' West 103.6 ft to a stake; thence South 25 degrees 17' West 202.8 ft to a stake; thence South 23 degrees 15' West 199 ft to a stake; thence South 22 degrees 43' West 1,776.85 ft to a stake, being the point of beginning and containing</p>
        <p>90.3 acres as shown on a map entitled, COLEMAN WARD as surveyed by Kinston Engineering Associates, Inc., dated October 18, 1968, to which reference is hereby made and incorporated. See deed in Book E38, Page 653, Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>The undersigned, in accordance with the directions of the beneficiary,</p>
        <p>provements thereon, described as dforesaid.</p>
        <p>The sale will be made for the purpose of applying the proceeds to the expenses of sale and then to the secured debts according to the relative priority of each, and the balance, if any, will be paid to such parties as by law are entitled thereto. The property will be sold subject to the following:</p>
        <p>1. Validly liened ad valorem taxes against same.</p>
        <p>2. Prior to liens or encumbrances of record against the said property.</p>
        <p>3. Provisions for upset bids stated in General Statutes of North Carolina, Section 45 21.27.</p>
        <p>The highest bidder will be required to make a cash deposit of TO per cent of the amount of the bid up to and including $1,000, plus5 per cent of any excess over $1,000.</p>
        <p>This 26th day of February, 1974.</p>
        <p>J. EDGAR MOORE, Trustee Post Office Box 2546 Rocky Mount, North Carolina 27801 March 11, 18, 25; April 1, 1974</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF SALE North Carolina County of Pitt</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of the power of sale contained In a certain deed of trust executed by JOHN R. TAYLOR and wife, ANNIE W. TAYLOR, and MAY SMITH TAYLOR, widow, to W. O. McGibony, Trustee, dated the 24th day of December, 1969, and recorded in Book X-38, Page 572, Pitt County Registry; and under and by virtue of the authority vested In the un dersigned as Substituted Trustee by an instrument In writing dated the 14th day of February, 1974, and recorded in Book I 42, P^ge 537, Pitt County Registry, default having been made in the payment of the Indebtedness thereby secured and the said deed of trust being by terms thereof subject to foreclosure, and the holder of the indebtedness thereby secured having demanded a foreclosure thereof for the puspose of satisfying said indebtedness, the undersigned Substituted Trustee will offer for sale at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, at the Courthouse door in Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, at Twelve O'clock, f^n, on the 27th day of March, 1974, the tract or parcel of land conveyed in said deed of trust, the same lying and being in Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows;</p>
        <p>That certain tract of land con talning a net acreage of 297.62 acres, more or less, (after deduction of acreage in exception hereinafter described) located In Ayden Town ship, Pitt County, North Carolina, and bounded, now or formerly, as follows: North by lands of Mary Alice S. Johnson, East by lands of the Luther Dail heirs. South by lands of Heber Cannon (the Ed Humbles property) and Caleb Cannon, and West by the run of Contentnea Creek; said tract being transected In a Northerly to Southerly manner by N. C. Paved Road No. 1114, and being shown and designated as all of Lots 1 and 2 on that certain map prepared by Robert Worthington, Surveyor, of the Paul R. Taylor Property, dated March 18, 1930 and recorded in Map Book 19, at pages 38 and 38-A with the exception of that eastern 44.01 acre portion designated on said plat as having been sold to Luther Dail; said tract being more specifically described by metes and bounds as follows:</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at a stake, common corner with Luther Dail and Heber Cannon (now the Bd Humbles property) and running thence with the Dail line North 11 degrees East 2,125 feet to a stake, common corner with Dail in the line of Mary Alice S. Johnson; thence cornering and running with the Johnson line, crossing N. C. Paved Road No. 1114, South 79 degrees 28 minutes West</p>
        <p>412.3 poles to an iron stake, on Contentnea Creek, another corner with Johnson; thence cornering and running with the run of Contentnea Creek as It meanders in a southerly direction 2661 feet to a point on said Creek, common corner with Caleb Cannon; thence cornering and running South 84 degrees 30 minutes East 74.4 poles to a sweet gum; thence continuing South 40 degrees East and one-third poles to a point; thence cornering and continuing North 73 degrees 40 minutes East 104.5 poles, to a point evidenced by a fallen oak; thence continuing North 74 degrees 30 minutes East 73.4 poles to a sweet gum; thence continuing, crossing N. C. Paved Road No. 1114, North 82 degrees 45 minutes East 139.7 poles to the point and place of beginning.</p>
        <p>SAVING AND EXCEPTING from said tract, however, that certain parcel of land which is more specifically described as follows; Beginning at a point in the center line of N. C. Paved Road No. 1114, said beginning point being located North 4 degrees 30 minutes West 10.5 feet from a 24" concrete culvert passing under said road, and runs thence from said point North 4 degrees 30 minutes West, with said center line, 262 feet to a point in said center line (said point being located South 4 degrees 30 minutes East 317 feet from the northern boundary of the tract above described); thence cornering and running North 85 degrees ^30 minutes East 30 feet to an iron stake on the eastern right of way of said road; thence continuing North 85 degrees 30 minutes East 300 feet to an iron; thence cornering and running South 4 degrees 30 minutes East 262 feet to an iron stake; thence cornering and running South 85 degrees X minutes West 330 feet, passing an iron on the eastern margin of said N. C. Paved Road No. 1114 at 300 feet, to the point and place of beginning.</p>
        <p>This sale wl be made subject to ail ad valorem taxes or other assessments now doe or which constitute a hen on the above-oescribed lot or parcel of land and the highest bidder at said sale will be required to deposit with said Substituted Trustee 10 per cent of the amount of his bid to show his good faith.</p>
        <p>This 20th day of February, 1974.</p>
        <p>ROBERT J. JONES SUBSTITUTED TRUSTEE Gaylord &amp;amp; Singleton Attorneys P. O. Box 545 Greenville, N. C. 27834 March 4. 11, 18, 25, 1974  "</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>CAMARO 1969i Power steering and brakes, automatic transmission. Call after 6 p.m. 758-4944.</p>
        <p>CHEVY IMPALA Super Sport, 63. 2 door hard-top. Must see to appreciate. Call 756-3783.</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET, 1972. 4 door hard-top, full power, low mileage. Only $2395. Pitt Motor Sales 756-2547.</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 758-0114.</p>
        <p>OLDSIntermediate Cutlass, station wagon 1968. Small motor, air condition. $900. Call 758-2300 between 9 and 5:30.</p>
        <p>OLDS 442,68. Red with white Interior. Clean with extras. Call Carl Harris 752-2844.Having  Trouble?</p>
        <p>'The Engine People"Alto Specialty Co.</p>
        <p>*17 W. 5th St. 758-1131</p>
        <p>OPEL KADETT RALLYE, 70.</p>
        <p>Chrome rims, new tires and engine. Only $995. Call 758-1147.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC LEMANS, 68. Reasonably</p>
        <p>Autos For Solo</p>
        <p>TOYOTA COROLLA 1600, 1973. Call 756-4480</p>
        <p>VEGA GT 72. Automatic with air. Low mileage, excellent condition. Come see at Holt Olds, 101 Hooker Road. Phone 756-3115.</p>
        <p>Touaranteed e^iu#</p>
        <p>transmission, body parts, Fraa P*rts iocating sarvica.CRISP AUTO salvage'</p>
        <p>Phwe 752-2572 N. Greene St,' (Back of Riverside Restaurant)</p>
        <p>Cycios For Saia</p>
        <p>HONDA CB 100,71. Call 752-5171 after</p>
        <p>HONDA 750, 1971 Chopper. Lots of chrome. $1850. Call 758-2288.</p>
        <p>72 SUZUKI TS 125. 5000 miles. $425 Call 756 7610.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: 1972 SL 70 Honda, needs repair. Make Offer. Call 756-3889 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>YAMAHA 125, 72. Can be seen at 300 North Oak, Apartment 14. 752-0012 after 6 p.m.  /</p>
        <p>HONDA 350 SL, 1973. Excellent condition. Call 752-58^1 between 4:30 p.m. and 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>BICYCLE INSURANCEall risk policy on your bike. See Bill Clifton. South Memorial, 756-2220.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Saia</p>
        <p>FORD TRUCK, 1972. Take over payments. CaH 756-1410.</p>
        <p>69 CHEVY VAN, low mileage, fur nished nicely for a trip. Economical to drive. Call 756-2471.</p>
        <p>1969 TANDEM DUMP. 1970 Chevrolet, excellent condition, $950. 1973 Chevrolet Vj ton $2500. 1972 Ford % ton, $2150. 1971 Chevrolet Dump Body, single axle, $2750.  1972</p>
        <p>Chevrolet Carry-all, $1850. Call 756-3925 or 756-1876.</p>
        <p>FORD PICK-UP truck, 1974, with cover on back. Good condition. Call 756-2219 after 6.</p>
        <p>Dogs A Pats</p>
        <p>GENTLE PONY for sale, saddle included. $100. Call 758-1742 after 6.</p>
        <p>QUALITY AKC PUPPIES Poodles, Bostpn Terriers, Pomeranians. Irish Setters on special. The Pet Kindom, West End Shopping Center.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE AKC miniature Schnauzers. Excellent blood line. Cute-intelligent. Call 758-0962 after 2:30.</p>
        <p>ADORABLE BLUE POINT, Siamese kittens; just 3 weeks old. Call after 5 o'clock, 752-0761.</p>
        <p>AKC GERMAN SHEPPARD pup</p>
        <p>pies, truly beautiful, excellent background, championship line. For appointment call Elizabeth Ann's German Sheppards, 758-5071.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>TRAINEE FOR INSURANCE In</p>
        <p>dustry. Selling life, accident an-health, retirement annuities, and loss of income plans. Call W. C. Wilkins collect, 919-756-1133, Greenville.</p>
        <p>MECHANIC'S HELPER Applicant must be mechanically inclined. Excellent pay and working conditions. Apply In person, M.O. Bount &amp;amp; Sons, Bethel.</p>
        <p>LEADING TOY PARTY Plan has openings for Managers in area. Once in a lifetime vopportunityl No Investment-Highest commission plus over-ride. Selling experience helpful. Call collect to Carol Day, A.C. 518-489-4571 or write Friendly Home Parties, 20 Railroad Ave. Albany, N.Y.</p>
        <p>LLOYD'S ROOFING COMPANY</p>
        <p>needs a good man with drivers license and at least 3 years experience for foreman job. Call after 5 p.m. 758-3423.</p>
        <p>SECRETARYSMALL  OFFICE,</p>
        <p>experience in bookkeeping helpful, 5Vj day week. Call for appointment 756-2792, Mr. Richardson.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Lady for old, established insurance debit. $200 potential within 6 months. Great benefits, car necessary. Call 746-3711 from 8:30-9:30 a.m., nights 758-5786.</p>
        <p>WANTED: LADY FOR full time bookkeeper and general office duties. Phone 758-2164 for appointment.</p>
        <p>OUTSIDE SALES representative. Ambitious, aggressive, responsible person for outside sales work. Salary, commission, company car with expenses for successful applicant. Apply in person only 9 a.m. to 12 noon Monday through Friday. Singer Company, Pitt Plaza.</p>
        <p>RADIO ANNOUNCER for Marion, N.C. Prefer Carolina School of Broadcasting Graduate, first class ticket required. If trained or experienced contact WBRM or Carolina School of Broadcasting, 3205 South Memorial Drive, Greenville. Phone 756 4832.</p>
        <p>RADIO SALESMAN or manager for New Bern. Prefer Carolina School of Broadcasting Graduate. If trained or experienced contact WHIT or Carolina School of Broadcasting, 3205 South Memorial Drive, Greenville. Phone 756 4832.</p>
        <p>WANTED: Full time secretary for general office work in Bethel. Send resume to Box 786, Bethel, N.C.</p>
        <p>MATURE INDIVIDUAL for evening and weekends. Apply Central News, 321 Evans Street.</p>
        <p>EARN $15,000 per year and more Driving Tractor Trailers. No experience necessary. For information write. Tractor Trailers, P. O. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>RADIO ANNOUNCER for Wilson, N.C. Prefer Carolina School of Broadcasting Graduate with 3rd ticket. If trained or experienced contact WVOT or Caroiina Schooi of Broadcasting, 3205 South Memorial Drive, Greenville. Phone 756-4832.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE CHROME Slotted disk mag wheel, 14x7. Chevrolet with tires. $125. call 752-7636.BOBaTHE CAR FOR ALL REASONSHow does Fiat do It for the price?</p>
        <p>See'Broimi Wood, lie.'Dickinson Ave. 752-7111Salesman Wanted</p>
        <p>We need a salesman 1o sell one of the leading automobile in this wea. (tood working conditions. Atore items to sell, more ways to make money. Contact</p>
        <p>Cliff FrelkeSmith Waldrop Motors</p>
        <p>756-4267 Work Wanted</p>
        <p>00 YOU NIRO house repairs, remodeling or mobile home repairs? Caii Jennis Wainwright 758 3394, if no enswer cairafter 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>INCOME TAX RETURN preparation</p>
        <p>by qualified accountant. Fee reasonable. Call 752 5619 evenings and weekends.</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0015" />
        <p>Tile Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Monday. March 11. 197415Waiting For You Now In The Classified Section</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>ALL TYPE MASONRY work. Chimneys, walks, patios, steps, etc Call 756 6275 after 6.</p>
        <p>BAND FOR HIRE. Entertainment is our purpose. Call L. E Coggins, Jr. Phone 752 6139,</p>
        <p>BAR MAID AND HOSTESS (or hire, private club. Salary open. Phone 753 5473 1 30 to 2 30 or after 11 p. m. 753 5275 anytime.</p>
        <p>WOULD 1.IKE TO keep children in my home Monday thru Friday, Hot meals and snacks. S15 per week. Call 756-1540 anytime. 112 Flow Street, Colonial Park.</p>
        <p>STORM DOORS AND WINDOWS.</p>
        <p>Custom built wood cabinets, doors, windows, front entrance frames, outside doors frames and all types special wood work. Wingates Mill Work, 2017 Chestnut St. 758 4546</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>1-7 FOOT KINO DISK. 1 year old. 2 row Bush Hog. Phone 758 1566.</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL 424 Diesel</p>
        <p>tractor. 1300 hours, $3200. Call 756-3967</p>
        <p>FOR SALE; Super A Tractor and Equipment $1475. Call 823 2842.</p>
        <p>1964 FORD 4000 tractor with 2 row cultivators and 3 bottom spring trip turning plow. Excellent condition. Call 758 1706 or 758 0520.</p>
        <p>493-A TRAILER TYPE, 4 row John Deere corn planter. Good condition. Call 753 3078 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Sporting Goods</p>
        <p>73-26 FOOT ARGOSY travel trailer, by Airstream. Used 3 times, fully equipped. S6500. Call 758-2072 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>Livestock</p>
        <p>BAY, PLEASURE and show mare, for sale. English tack also to be sold. For more information call 752-3218 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED QUARTER Horse-Chestnut Gelding, 7 years old. Has been shown successfully. Call 746-4616 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous For Sale</p>
        <p>GE 14 CUBIC FOOT, gold refrigerator. 6 months old, just like new. $175. 758-1742.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE: Raw peanuts shelled or unshelled at Keel Peanut Company, Memorial Drive.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD FOR SALE $25 per load. Stacked, prompt delivery. Call 752 7323.</p>
        <p>FOR YOUR ROOFING needs, call Bateman Roofing Company at 752-5307.</p>
        <p>FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE, Mary Kay Beauty Products are now available in Greenville. Call 752-1201.</p>
        <p>WE UPHOLSTER ANYTHING.</p>
        <p>Thousand of yards of fabric and foam cushioning. Jacksons Cleaning 8&amp;lt; Upholstery, Dickinson Ave., 758-3276 day or 758 1505 riight.</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, TOP soil and sand for sale. Call 746-3461.</p>
        <p>WHEELCHAIRS, walkers, crutches for sale or rent. Also other convalescent aids. Call 752-2136.</p>
        <p>RENT A STEAMEX Carpet Cleaner. Clean, rinse your carpet. Caremaster Cleaning Service. Call 752 2862.</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE WOOD for sale. 756 3155.</p>
        <p>Call</p>
        <p>JUST RECEIVED: A new shipment of Kimball pianos. Home Furniture Store, Greenville.</p>
        <p>CARPET SAMPLES for sale. 2 samples $1.50. Larry's Carpetland. 3010 East 10th Street.</p>
        <p>MILK CANS UNFINISHED. $11.50. Primed ready to finish $12.50. Painted with de cal $20.00. Call 758-2979 after 6 p.m. Bill Kitrell.</p>
        <p>NT A STEAMEX carpet cleaner. Deep clean your carpet with steam. Larry's Carpetland, 310 E. 10th St., Greenville.</p>
        <p>CANNON T.V. service. Used color sets. Zenith, RCA and other models. New pictures tubes, 12 months, warranty. Open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Call 756 2555.</p>
        <p>SURPLUS FURNITURE for sale. We need the room. Living room suites $50 each, 6 chair dinette suite $40 each, Hardrock maple bedroom suites $190 each, Spanish bedroom suites $170 each, end tables $4 each, lamps $4 each. Call 756-5234.</p>
        <p>SEWING MACHINE repairs, 27 years experience. Free pick-up and delivery. Call 752 2083.</p>
        <p>BROYHILL BEDROOM suite with night stand regular price $900 on sale $400. Only one to sell. Fisher Ap pliance &amp;amp; Furniture.  _</p>
        <p>SPRING IS JUST AROUND THE CORNERSee the selection of fishing tackle arriving daily. H. L. Hodges Hardware. 752 4156.</p>
        <p>BOOTLEG PRICESMen's slacks $9.60, Lady's $5.99, Sportcoats Average price $27.83 huge selection. Mill Outlet Clothing, Peddler's Village, Hwy 301 South, Rocky Mount. Open 7 days.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE 7-1970 Console stereos with 8 speakers, AM-FM, built in 8 track tape, BSR turn table. Regular $329.95 now only $97. Freight Liquidators 756-4851, West End Shopping Center, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL BERKLINE RECLINER. Regular $199.95, now only $77. Freight Liquidators 756 4851, West End Shopping Center, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>(4) BEAUTIFUL 100 percent Her culon living room suites. Regular $369, now only $137. Freight End</p>
        <p>.C.</p>
        <p>V90T, nuw umy  ^^</p>
        <p>Liquidators 756-4851, West Shopping Center, Greenville, N.&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>LOSTA FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST RED DACHSHUND,male, answers to name Governor. Reward. Call 752 7740.</p>
        <p>I MONTHS BRITTANY Spanlal. White with brown spots, Nb collar. Call 752 4029. Reward.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>10' AND 12' WIDE mobile homes for rent. Also spaces. Call 758-3644.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM MOBILE home with washer and air condition. Shady Knoll. Available March 12. 756-7340.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME for rent in Hicks -  -  -  Call </p>
        <p>Dail Trailer Court in Ayden 6892,</p>
        <p>746-</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM MOBILE homes, furnished. Sanddunes Village. Call 752 3225.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM, 12 WIDE, tilt out washer, air, storage house, brick patio, large 4ot. Call 756-4974.</p>
        <p>12 WIDE, 2 BEDROOMS, air, Sher. Call 752-4891 or 756 0792.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM WITH AIR and washer. A nice corner lot. $80 per month. Call 756-3491.</p>
        <p>12x60, 3 BEDROOMS,!3 baths, 7 months old. $120 per month. Call 756-3043.</p>
        <p>TRAILER FOR RENT, Winterville, N.C. Nicely furnished, carpeted, air conditioned, oatio. Married couoles only, no children or pets. Call 756-7066 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM MOBILE home. Completely furnished with washer. Located at Shady Knolls. 758-3931.</p>
        <p>2 and 3 BEDROOM, mobile homes, central heat and air. Call 752-3286, nights 825-5391.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME for rent in Oakwood, Greenville, 2 bedroom, 71 model, like new. Call 746-6892.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sale</p>
        <p>RITZCRAFT 12x60,1972. 2 bedrooms, furnished, air small equity and assume balance. 758-0675 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>HOLIDAY, 73. 12x65. Central air and heat, wall to wall carpet, washer, dryer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Call 752-7164 after 6. Must sell, moving.</p>
        <p>1970 CONNER 12x50, 2 bedroom. Home includes carpet, new washer and air conditioner. Day 756-3711, night 752-7803, ask for Jim.</p>
        <p>HOMETTE 71, 12x60. 2 bedroom, assume payments, already set-up. Lot rent $18 per month, payments $87 per month. See J. M. Brown or Bob Lane at Bob's Mobile Homes, 756-0544 or 756-6370.</p>
        <p>12 X 60 1969. Very clean, central air, washer, fully carpeted, 2 porches, concrete steps. Picket fence underpinning, double lavoratory in bath. Large living room and master bedroom. 756-1062 after five.</p>
        <p>12x50 2 BEDROOM mobile home for sale, washer, air conditioned. 9x6 shed metal stair. Call 756-5777.</p>
        <p>12 WIDE WITH air and washer, 2 bedroom. Call 758-3931.</p>
        <p>12x50 GREAT LAKES, New living room suite,Red Shag Carpet, new bed, new dinette set. Set up available. Call 756 2663,</p>
        <p>FOR SALE MAPLE, Early American coffee table, storage chest, brass fern stand, large flowered picture all in good condition 756-3242 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>OWNER MUST MOVE, has a small business for sale. $20,000. Call 753-3395, Farmville, after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>CALL THE ED TIPTON Agency for all your real estate needs. We are dedicated to community growth. 756-0911.</p>
        <p>JEANNETTE COX AGENCY,</p>
        <p>Realtor, Exclusive agents of Beautiful Cherry Oaks. Call 752 7807.</p>
        <p>PARTY BEVERAGE Store for sale. Cost of inventory only approximately $3,000. Call 756 7273 between 9 and 5.</p>
        <p>52 ACRES OF CUT-OVER wood sland. Less than 4 miles from Greenville. $27,000. Louis Clark Agency,, 752 4173 nights 756-7872.</p>
        <p>Farms Wanted</p>
        <p>Acreage, farms and wodVstand. Any Size</p>
        <p>APPRAISALS NEEDED?</p>
        <p>Carl Darden Bowen Realty</p>
        <p>752-7194, or 758-1983 eve.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>S TOR r/ W I N D( DOORS 'S. -wro</p>
        <p>C. L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>Position for resident manager. Salary plus fringe benefits. Good community involvement. Telephone 919 724-2124 Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>Send resume to: P.O. Box 1001 Winston Salem, N.C. 27102</p>
        <p>fejg.l</p>
        <p>Manager needed for local fast food restaurant. Excellent opportunity for right person or couple. Experience desired. Call (803) 772-8037 between 9 AM to 5 PM Monday thru Friday for an appointment.</p>
        <p>CEDRIC'S FISH</p>
        <p>AND CHIPS</p>
        <p>Opening Soon 264 By-Pass</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS &amp;lt;n real estate, see or call E. H. Wilirford, Realtor, '313 Cotanche Street, 758 3911. List your property with us.</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>Ed Tipton Agency</p>
        <p>756-0911</p>
        <p>Land</p>
        <p>Real Estate</p>
        <p>264 By-Pass Tipton Annex Greenville's Only Professional Real Estate Broker</p>
        <p>Farms For Sale</p>
        <p>FARM 5 MILES SOUTH of Ayden. 9000 pounds tobacco, 70 acres cleared, 110 acres woodland. $650 and acre, owner would finance. Call 524-5384.</p>
        <p>Farms For Loast</p>
        <p>39,500 POUNDS OF tobacco to be leased at 22 cents. To be moved. Call 752 1007 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>House For Sale</p>
        <p>BELVEDERE3 bedrooms, 2 baths, family room with fireplace $30,750 firm. Call 756-4329.</p>
        <p>A HOME THAT needs loving care. 3 bedrooms, I'/j baths, carport, garage, corner lot, central air and large family room with fireplace. 1401 Ragsdale. Reduced $31,900. Bill Williams Real Estate 752-2615.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE TO be moved. 5 room house on corner of Jarvis and 2nd Street. Contact Vance Overton, Overton's Super Market, 752-5025.</p>
        <p>LIVING SPACE WHERE you need it! Large family room with fireplace, large master bedroom with bath. 3 bedroom home in Brook Valley - By owner. S48,000. Golf course lot, 756-0060.</p>
        <p>2 RANCH STYLE HOMES, Hardee Acres Subdivision, 1100 square feet of living area. 3 bedrooms, 1/a baths, family room, kitchen with dining area, electric heat and fully carpeted. Paved streets. V. A. and Conventional financing available. No city taxes. S19,500. Call Better Homes and Realty, 752-6457 , 758-3677, 752 3032, or 758-5995.</p>
        <p>ONLY SIX MONTHS OLD-three bedroom home in Winterville, on large lotcentral air, dishwasher, 1 car garage$24,100; possible loan assumption. Estate Realty Company. 752 5058; Joyce Shackleford, 752-1978.</p>
        <p>EXCELLENT 7 PERCENT LOAN</p>
        <p>Assumption on this 3 bedroom brick home. Spacious living room, kitchen-breakfast  area  combination.</p>
        <p>Payments only $119.88. Call Greenville Development and Realty Company 752 2814. Winnie Evans 752 4224 or Faye Bowen 756-5258.</p>
        <p>HOUSE FOR SALE BY BUILDER.</p>
        <p>Must be seen to appreciate. Located at 202 St. Andrews Dr. Electric furnace, central air, den with fireplace and built-ins, living room, formal dining room, kitchen with breakfast and utility area, foyer, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths with separate dressing area, with one walk-in closet in master bedroom, also double carport and storage, fully carpeted with dishwasher and range. $46,500. Call 758-4546.</p>
        <p>LOOK AT THIS! An attractive house in one of Greenville's most beautiful neighborhoods. This five room house has an extra large living room with a handsome stone fireplace, two bedrooms and two full bathrooms, a den or library with sliding thermopane doors opening on a large lovely landscaped yard full of dogwood and azeleas. Kitchen and carport. Central air and central heat. Call Margaret Capwell, Fleming and Associates. 756-6234 or Home 752-5801.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Housr For Salt</p>
        <p>MINUTES TO ALL CONVENIENCES. Beautifully landscaped, fenced in back yard. Featuring 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, den, air conditioned brick home. S35,000. Lily Richardson Agency, 756-6535.</p>
        <p>Lots For Salo</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 30 apartments. Blount and Balt Realty 752-6163 or 756-2957.</p>
        <p>Apartment For Ront</p>
        <p>GreeneWay Apartments Adjacent Greenville Golf and Country Club. Phone 756-6869 Apt. No. 76, Clubwa^ Drive.</p>
        <p>tj'</p>
        <p>Drucker &amp;amp; Falk, Management</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM DUPLEX, 1l2 B Noith Meade Street, range, refrigerator, central heat and air. Married couple, one child only. March 8th, 756-3373</p>
        <p>Stratford Arms</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>1900 S. Charles St.</p>
        <p>An exclusive cofYimunity designed to provide the ultimate in gracious living. Featuring modern 1, 2, and 3 bedroom garden apartments and 2 bedroom Townhouses at reasonable rates. Furnished or unfurnished.</p>
        <p>756-4800</p>
        <p>ONE AND TWO bedroom furnished student apartments, 206 Pitt St. Apply in person at The Black Horse</p>
        <p>Inn.</p>
        <p>APARTMENT HUNTERS LOOK!</p>
        <p>Grier Rental Agency has a listing of the best in Greenville. Check with us First! 752-5700.</p>
        <p>(T&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1, _2 and 3 bedrooms, washer - dryer hookups.i 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.</p>
        <p>752-4225</p>
        <p>FEATURING</p>
        <p>C  FEATURING</p>
        <p>I l o tlfX jcxxxiJr</p>
        <p>KITCHEN APPLIANCES</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>$200-Week</p>
        <p>SALARY</p>
        <p>Immediate opening - women over 3S, advertising field, free to travel, transportation paid, no experience needed. We train you, unusual opportunity, guaranteed salary and commission. Call Collect person to person only. Carl Wilson, 834-5170, Raleigh, N.C.__</p>
        <p>ACTION</p>
        <p>With The Peace Corps And Vista</p>
        <p>Make the move now that will add a new dimension to your life!</p>
        <p>We have openings now in this country and overseas for qualified persons who want to help others in a meaningful way. There are 700 programs in 50 states and 69 countries around the world where your skills and experience are earnestly needed. Living allowance, medical care, transportation costs are provided. Your reward will be doing something that makes sense today. Women and minorities are encourages to apply. We need:</p>
        <p>LAW</p>
        <p>ENGINEERING BUSINESS KNOWLEDGE OF</p>
        <p>FRENCH OR SPANISH</p>
        <p>EDUCATION LIBERAL ARTS MATH-SCIENCE MANY, MANY OTHERS</p>
        <p>To learn if you qualify, call VISTA or PEACE CORPS. You will be contacted by a former volunteer who will explain in personal terms his own experience as a colunteer. Recruiters will be in East Carolina Student Union, March 11-14, 9am - 4:30 pm</p>
        <p>AN UNEQUALED OPPORTUNITY EMPLOYER</p>
        <p>APPLIANCE DEPARTMENT SALESMAN WANTED</p>
        <p>Good working conditions inciuding many fringe benefits, company insurance, company discounts plus paid vacations. Guaranteed 48 hour work week.</p>
        <p>If interested, call Mr. Potter</p>
        <p>NICHOLS DISCOUNT CITY</p>
        <p>for appointment</p>
        <p>756-2841</p>
        <p>Now leasing</p>
        <p>Apartments</p>
        <p>One and two bedroom garden type apartments with wall-to-wall shag carpet, drapes, color-coordinated appliances, dishwasher, garbage disposal, decorator selected wall coverings.</p>
        <p>Ilk..........</p>
        <p>wa Ik in closets, totally electric.</p>
        <p>Located just off East 10 fh St -</p>
        <p>Turn af Hardees 752-3519</p>
        <p>Apartmtnt For Rent</p>
        <p>BETHEL: DUPLEX beautiful 1 bedroom furnished apartment, central heat, near Burroughs Wellcome. Reasonable *90. 752 3376.</p>
        <p>OAKMONT SQUARE APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>2 bedroom townhouses furnished or unfurnished 6 closets, .fully carpeted, disposal, dishwasher, range, refrigerator, air Near Pitt Plaza Shopping Center, schools. Churches, and university</p>
        <p>1212Redbanks Rd. Tel.: 756-4151</p>
        <p>FOR FAMILY: 3 bedroom apartment near college. $145 mo. Call 752-7808 or 758 3961, or 756 0741.</p>
        <p>PLUSH COUNTRY CLUB</p>
        <p>apartments. Two bedrooms, wall-to-wall carpet, draperies, kitchen appliances and water. Rent furnished or unfurnished. Call 756-5234.</p>
        <p>"A New Direction For Finer Living"</p>
        <p>Eas+bpook</p>
        <p>APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>Immediate</p>
        <p>Occupancy</p>
        <p>Two bedroom luxury apartments with optional dens and all the new amenities including wall to wall carpeting, draperies, dishwashers, individual air conditioning and heating AND MORE.</p>
        <p>RECREATION? YES! Pool, Clubhouse. Tennis Courts. Model Open Daily? 12,1 5:30 Saturday &amp;amp; Sunday 1:00 5:30 Utilities Included</p>
        <p>201 Eastbrook Drive. Off Green ville Boulevard. (US 264 By-Pass) just south of Tenth Street, convenient to ECU and everything.</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>DRUCKER &amp;amp; FALK 758-4012</p>
        <p>AN ACCREDITED MANAGEMENT ORGANIZATION</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ApartmBiits Fr Itoflt</p>
        <p>ELM VILLA 208 Sooth Elm Street. One bedroom apartment, completely furnished, carpeted, central heat, air and utilities. Call 752 3376.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, FURNISHED and</p>
        <p>unfurnished apartments. Call M.E. Sutton or C. L. Thigpen, Jr. 752-6121</p>
        <p>Besides being the best looking apartments in town, Cherry Court brings you a new dimension in apartment living. Allow us the pleasure of exposing you to a luxury community:</p>
        <p> Chandelier over dining area All GE kitchens (even a trash compactor!)</p>
        <p>Washer dryer hook ups (use yours or rent them!)</p>
        <p>Master bath wallpapered  Dressing room Attic for storage Private patio Sauna baths.</p>
        <p>and kitchen</p>
        <p>pool, tennjs.</p>
        <p>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 MANAGEMENT CONTROL, iNC.</p>
        <p>House For Rent</p>
        <p>HOUSE FOR RENT IN Ayden, 510 Park Avenue. $75 per month. Call 752-3373.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Garden Spaces For Rent</p>
        <p>Large lots conveniently located in Greenville. Call 752-5775 or 756-1018.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL PARK</p>
        <p>HWY. 13 NORTH</p>
        <p>(Across from Burroughs-Wellcome)</p>
        <p>Spaces Now Available</p>
        <p>Featuring the best in country living with city conveniences, including paved streets. Off street parking and patio, recreational area, swimming pool, underground utilities. Rental units availabte.</p>
        <p>Most Modern Park in Pin FHA approved.</p>
        <p>Contact Earl Rayfield  'at 758-4413 or 75S-2799.</p>
        <p>Co .</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Landlords and families having rooms to rent to students. Pitt Technical Institute prepares a roster of places that its out-of-town students may rent. If you would like to rent a room for the 1974-75 school year, please call G.S. McRorie at 756-3130, extension 23 and we shall add your name to our list.</p>
        <p>SALESMAN WANTED</p>
        <p>Representative to seek out prospects and sell Shell Homes in Eastern North Carolina. Excellent opportunity for advancement with well established reiiabie company. Salary or commission with car allowance. Home every night. If you have the initiative we furnish the rest at company expense. Experience not necessary. Will train the right man for this position. Write:</p>
        <p>Salesman Carolina Model Homes P.O. Box 469 Greenville, North Carolina 27834</p>
        <p>MALE OR FEMALE</p>
        <p>I am looking a sharp aggressive salesperson who is motivated by $ $ $. $125 week guarantee and commission for the right person. Fastest growing safes market in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Contact: MANAGER</p>
        <p>The Mobile Home Center</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C. 756-1362 .</p>
        <p>For lady to work in payroll office. Hours: Monday thru Thursday 4-12 P.M. Friday 11 A.M. to 7 P.M. Paid vacations and holidays. Excellent salary and many other fringe benefits including life and hospitalization insurance. Prefer experience but will train suitable person.</p>
        <p>Iff</p>
        <p>Payroll</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 1125,  ^</p>
        <p>Washington, N.C. 27889.</p>
        <p>House For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR RENT 4 room house, 6 miles from Pitt Plaza on the County home Road. Wall to wall carpeting, central air conditioning. $100 per month. Call 756-2649 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>FURNISHED 2 BEDROOM house in Greenville. $100 per month. Apply in person at Factory Outlet Store, 513 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>11 ROOM, 3 BATH HOME. Can be</p>
        <p>seen by appointment only. Call 756 1427.</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. $150 per month. 756 5234.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Office Space For Rent</p>
        <p>NEW DOWNTOWN OFFICES 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>Room For Rent</p>
        <p>TO STUDENT OR working girl near college and downtown. Furnished bedroom, limited kitchen privileges Call 752 3271.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICES</p>
        <p>LOSE WEIGHT WITH New Shape Tablets and Hydrex Water Pills at Beddingfield Pharmacy.</p>
        <p>REDUCE SAFE AND fast with Gobese tablets and E Vap "water pills" Big Value Discount Drug.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>The Real</p>
        <p>Estate Corner</p>
        <p>buying or Selling, For Best Results Try Our "Personal Service"</p>
        <p>D. 6. Niciiols fgenc</p>
        <p>REAl^C.-. .742-4012 Anytime</p>
        <p>Stallworth Realty</p>
        <p>Pick your colors ^ . .</p>
        <p>Almost completed, 3 bedro&amp;lt;|iis, 2 baths, den</p>
        <p>with fireplace, carpet, pati#, '$38,500.</p>
        <p>Room to</p>
        <p>On a large w living and diif $46,500.</p>
        <p>ooms, 2 baths, garage, carpet.</p>
        <p>Eastwood . . .</p>
        <p>New 3 bedroom, 2 baths, living room, dining room, den with fireplace, carpet, $42,500.</p>
        <p>No City Taxes . . .</p>
        <p>Split level, 4 bedrooms, 2V2 baths, den, living</p>
        <p>room, large lot with fruit trees, fenced yard, $38,500.</p>
        <p>Country Living . . .</p>
        <p>Under Construction, 2 story, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths dining room, den with fireplace, V2 acre wooded lot, $45,000.</p>
        <p>Wooded Lots . . .</p>
        <p>V2 Acre at Candlewick Estates, $3750 to $4500.</p>
        <p>As a MLS Member, We have many other homes to show</p>
        <p>IB A.B. Stallworth Realty</p>
        <p>758-1 183</p>
        <p>REALTOP</p>
        <p>Dees Whitley 756-0574  Ed Hice 756-6408</p>
        <p>Don Southerland 752-2385 Betty Bland 758-2342</p>
        <p>TAKE YOUR PICK</p>
        <p>3 bedroom, IV2 bath homes located just outside the city limits. There're now under construction which means you can still pick yor colors. We have arranged the best possible financing on these houses which enables you to get into them with low down payments and monthly payments.</p>
        <p>SO EASY TO OWN Is this 3 bedroom home located in Greenbriar. This house has large living room spacious kitchen and eating area and lots of closets and storage area. Priced to sell at $21,500.00</p>
        <p>RACE FOR SPACE</p>
        <p>Not in this large three bedroom bngalo with modern kitchen, dining room, living room and family room with fireplace. This brand new home can be yours for just $34,000.00</p>
        <p>HAPPINESS LIVES HERE</p>
        <p>In this lovely 3 bedroom, two bath colonial house is perfect for the young family with children. Among the extras are a formal living and dining room, a panelled den with fireplace and garage with plenty of storage, $34,900.00</p>
        <p>EXTRA LIVING SPACE</p>
        <p>Is what you get with these new 3 and 4 bedroom homes located in Oakdale. Fully carpeted.and ready for occupancy. Price Mid $20,000.00</p>
        <p>MORE SPACE FOR-$$$</p>
        <p>Describes this 4 bedroom house located within walking distance of all schools. This house has large living and dining room with fireplace and kitchen with breakfast room adjoining nice family room. Price mid 30's.</p>
        <p>LOOK AT THIS</p>
        <p>An attractive house in one of Greenvilles most beautiful neighborhoods. This five room house has an extra large living room with handsome stone fireplace. Two bedrooms and two full baths. A den or library with sliding thermopane doors opening on a large lovely landscaped yard full of dogwood trees and azaleas. Priced low 30's.</p>
        <p>IT'S PLUSH</p>
        <p>This lovely 4 bedroom home located in Brook Valley has all the extras. Large living room and dining room, large kitchen and eating area with large family room with fireplace. You still have time to pick your colors and carpet. Call today.</p>
        <p>STAR AMONG STARS</p>
        <p>Describes this IV2 story Williamsburg home. This house is loaded with all the extras including 4 large bedrooms, 2 full baths, living room, dining room, large family room and double garBge located in Brook Valley.  </p>
        <p>ERNUL STREET</p>
        <p>Living room with fireplace. Large dining room and kitchen, breakfast room accentuated with pine paneling. Two large bedrooms and IV2 baths. Over 1600 square feet of living area.</p>
        <p>Priced at $32,000.00. Call for an appointment.</p>
        <p>MARGARET CAPWELL MIKE ALDf^lDGE VAN C. FLEMING RUS5ELL FLEMING</p>
        <p>752-5801 </p>
        <p>752-3743  752-0546 I 758-0390 I</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>FLEMING &amp;amp; ASSOCIATES</p>
        <p>3101 S. Evans Street 756-6234</p>
        <pb facs="00092173_0016" />
        <p>1The Daily ReHector, GreenvUle, N.C.Monday, March 11, 1974</p>
        <p>DO NOT DELAY-FILL OUT AND UAHs'APPUCATION FORM TODAY!</p>
        <p> /</p>
        <p>NowLet Us Enroll You In The Doctors Hospital Flan</p>
        <p>To Help You Safeguard Your Income And Savings If A</p>
        <p>Ck&amp;gt;vered Sickness Or Accident Puts You In The Hoiq&amp;gt;ital</p>
        <p>PLAN PAYS CASH BENEFITS DIRECT TO YOU UNLESS YOU TELL US OTHERWISE. CASH BENEFITS IN ADDITION TO ANY OTHER COMPANY OR GOVERNMENT INSURANCE-EVEN MEDICARE... CASH BENEFITS TO USE AS YOU PLEASE!Pays ^19.04 Daily Example: ^571.20 for 30 Days</p>
        <p>When you are hospitalized (See all plans below)Pays *14.28 Daily ' ' Example: *428.40 for 30 Days</p>
        <p>When your Insured wife Is hospitalized (See All-Family and Husband-Wife plans below)Pays *9.52 Daily Example: *285.60 for 30 Days</p>
        <p>When an insured child is hospitalized (See All-Family and One-Parent Family plans below)</p>
        <p>INCREASED CASH BENEFITS FOR CANCER OR" HEART AHACK</p>
        <p>REGARDLESS OF YOUR AGE OR THE SIZE OF YOUR FAMILY, YOU CAN ENROLL NOW - RIGHT FROM THIS PAGE</p>
        <p>No Salesman Will Call.</p>
        <p>You can enroll yourself and all eligible  members of your family simply by mailing the Application Form below with your first month's premium. There's nothing else to dobut accidents and sickness strike without warning ... so act today.</p>
        <p>Think of it. Now, with a stroke of your pen, you can have cash benefits paid direct to you (unless you tell us otherwise) when a sudden accident or unexpected illness hospitalizes you or an insured member of your family! And you may enroll now without having to sec a company salesman. All you need do is mail the Application Form below together with your first months premium. Its that easy!</p>
        <p>Why You Need This Protection In Addition To Ordinary Hospital Insurance</p>
        <p>Anyone who has been in the hospital recently knows ordinary hospital insuranceeven Medicaresimply may not cover everything. You may have to pay many extras out of your own pocket-and it can add up to hundreds of dollars in a frighteningly short time.</p>
        <p>But even if your ordinary hospital insurance covers most of your medical and hospital bills, what about the bills that keep piling up at home?</p>
        <p>If you, as husband, father and breadwinner are suddenly hospitalized, your income stops, your expenses go up. Even if you have some kind of salary insurance it probably wont come close to replacing your full-time pay.</p>
        <p>If your wife is suddenly hospitalized. Who will look after the family, do the laundry, the marketing, the cleaning? You may have to take time off from your jobor hire full-time domestic helpto take care of things at home.</p>
        <p>If one of your children is suddenly hospitalized, you will certainly spare no expense. You wouldnt even think of the cost.</p>
        <p>If you're over 65 and are suddenly hospitalized. Medicare, fine as it is, wont pay all of your, hospital expenses Or any household expenses. Most Senior Citizens wont want to use u|&amp;gt; savings it may have taken a lifetime to accumulate... they want to retain their independence and not become a Iburden to their children or community.</p>
        <p>Without enough protection, a hospital emergency nihy leave you with savings gone, debts you cant pay, peace of mind shatteredeven your recovery can be seriously delayed by money worries!</p>
        <p>How The Plan Helps Protect You And Your Family Now, with the protection of The Doctors Hospital Plan you can avoid these worries because you can be assured of cash benefits when you or any insured member of your family are hospitalized. No matter how large your family, no matter what your age or occupation and without any qualifications whatsoever, you can choose any of the four low-cost plans shown at right to meet your familys special needs.</p>
        <p>In addition to the hospital benefits, you get all these valuable extra features:</p>
        <p>Your Maximum Cash Benefits Actually Grow Each Month</p>
        <p>Heres a wonderful plus benefit you enjoy, no mat</p>
        <p>ter which plan you choose: When your policy is issued, your insurance provides from $6,666.66 to *$13,333.33, depending upon the plan you select. This is known as the Aggregate of Benefit in insurance languagewhat we call your maximum cash benefits.</p>
        <p>Then, every month your policy is in force, a sum equal to your regular monthly premium (including your first monthly premium) is actually added to your maximumyour maximum grows each month! Similarly, when you have claims, your benefits arc subtracted from the maximum.</p>
        <p>Enjoy Life-Long Security</p>
        <p>Your policy is Guaranteed Renewable for as long as you live and pay your premiums when due. We cannot refuse to renew your policy simply because youre another year older, theres been a change in your health or youve had a number of claims. Furthermore, the premium for your policy cannot be changed unless we do the same on all policies of this type in your entire state.</p>
        <p>You Get Valuable Cash Benefits That Are Yours To Use As You Wish</p>
        <p>The cash benefits you receive from The Doctors Hospital Plan are all in addition to any other company or government insurance benefits you receive hospital, major medical, or even Medicare. Every cent is paid direct to you unless you tell its otherwise. Spend it, use it any way you please, without having to account for this cash to anyone. Of course, you may have only one like policy with Physicians Mutual.</p>
        <p>You Can Enroll Now, Right From This Page</p>
        <p>Regardless of your age, the size of your family, or the plan you select, you can enroll now, right from this page! If you choose the All-Family or the One-Parent Family plan, ail your eligible children including future additionsare also covered. (See chart at right for low rates.)</p>
        <p>How Can A Plan Offer So Much For So Little?</p>
        <p>The answer is simple: We have lower total costsi The Doctors Hospital Plan is a mass application plan. All business is conducted directly between you and the company by mail. It all adds up to real savings we share with you by giving you high quality protection at low cost</p>
        <p>Your Policy Is Backed By Physicians Mutual</p>
        <p>Your policy is backed by the resources, integrity and reputation of Physicians Mutual Insurance Company. From its inception in 1902 until 1962, the company specialized in health insurance for physicians, surgeons and dentists exclusively. (Its Board of Directors is still composed entirely of respected members of the medical and insurance professions.) Today the companys policies protect over 1,000,000 Americans from all walks of life direct-by-mail. In fact, last year alone the company paid policyholders of various plans some $44 million in benefits. Incorporated in Nebraska, with headquarters in Omaha, Physicians Mutual is licensed to do business in your state.</p>
        <p>Easy To Enroll. No Salesman Will Call</p>
        <p>You can enroll now with no qualifications other than</p>
        <p>Choose the plan that suits you best</p>
        <p>Your monthly rates, if under 65, are:$5.25 for the INDIVIDUAL PLAN</p>
        <p>PAYS YOU $19.04 a day cashthat*s^S571.20 for 30 dayswhen you are hospitalized. Maximum total benefit for all losses due to accidents and sickness under this |dan$6,666.66.</p>
        <p>The perfect plan if you live alone or wish to insure just one member of your family.$10.95 for the ALL-FAMILY PLAN</p>
        <p>PAYS YOU $19.04 a day cash-thats $571 o for 30 dayswhen you are hospitalized; $14.28 a day thats $428.40 for 30 dayswhen your wife is hospitalized; and $9.52 a daythats $285.60 for 30 daysfor each insured child hospitalized. Maximum total benefit for all losses due to accidents and sickness under this plan$13,333.33.</p>
        <p>If yours is a young, growing family, this is for you. Covers you, your wife and all your dependent children (including future additions) between 3 months and 21 years of age who are unmarried and live at home.$8.95 for the HUSBAND-WIFE PUN</p>
        <p>PAYS YOU $19.04 a day cashthats $571.20 for 30 dayswhen you are hospitalized; $14.28 a day thats $428.40 for 30 dayswhen your wife is hos-pitalizd. Maximum total benefit'-for all losses due to accidents and sickness (inder this plan $10,000.00.</p>
        <p>If you have no children, or if they are grown and no longer dependent on you. pick this plan.$7.95 for the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PUN</p>
        <p>PAYS YOU $19.04 a day cashthats $571.20 for 30 dayswhen you are hospitalized; $9.52 a day thats $285.60 for 30 daysfor each insured child hospitalized. Maximum total benefit for all losses due to accidents and sickness under this plan $10,000.00.</p>
        <p>The ideal plan if you are the only parent living with your children. Covers you and all your dependent children between 3 months and 21 years of age who are unmarried and live at home.Whichever plan you choose, you get:</p>
        <p>Accident protection from the very same day we receive your Enrollment Form. From that day on, you are covered for accidents 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, anywhere in the world.</p>
        <p>Sickness protection, which does not begin until your policy is 30 days old. Thereafter, new sicknesses which begin from then on will be covered also. This is a one-time-only waiting period. Whats more, you collect for every day you spend in the hospital for a covered sickness or accident. We dont make you wait 3 or 4 days after you enter the hospital before you can begin getting benefits. And youll collect for as long and for as many times as you are hospitalized, up to the maximum (Aggregate of Benefits) of the plan you select!</p>
        <p>Benefits for confinement in any lawfully operated hospital of your own choice. Confinement in nursing homes, convalescent or extended-care or self-care units of hospitals, is not included in your coverage under this policy.</p>
        <p>Partial benefits. Mental diswder, and job-related conditions for which you receive Workmens Compensation or Employers Liability Law benefits are covered, too. You will receive one-half the applicable weekly benefits for up to 4 full weeks for any one hospital stay. If the same condition puts you back in the hospital after you have resumed your normal activities for 6 months, you are eligible to collect benefits again.</p>
        <p>Confinement in Federal hospitals is also covered. You will receive one-half the applicable weekly benefits for up to 4 full weeks for any one sickness or accident which puts you in a</p>
        <p>Federal hospital. And if the same condition puts you back in the hospital after you have re* sumed your normal activities for 6 months, you are eligible to collect again.</p>
        <p>50^ increase in benefits ... if any insured member of your family is hospitalized for cancer (including Leukemia and Hodgkins bisease) or heart attack (acute myocardial infarction, coronary thrombosis and coronary occlusion). Double benefits under All-Family or Husband-Wife plans. If both you and your wife are injured and hospitalized at the same time due to accidents only, you get double the regular bene-fits-$66.64 a day.</p>
        <p>Maternity benefits under the All-Family and Husband-Wife plans. The policy pays $14.28 a day when your insured wife is hospitalized for pregnancy or any consequence thereof, providing your policy has been in force for 10 months.These are the exclusions:</p>
        <p>1. Sickness for the first 30 days your policy is in force. 2. Pre-existing conditions (old health problems) for one year from the date your policy has been issued. 3. Alcoholism or drug addiction. 4. Pregnancy or any consequence ot pregnancy under Individual or One-Parent Family plans.Even people 65 and older can be covered!</p>
        <p>Not only will The Doctors Hospital Plan accept you regardless of your age, it pays you the same benefits younger folks get There is no reduction in your benefits. When you become 65or if you are over 65 nowSenior Citizen rates apply. To find your monthly premium, see rates below.</p>
        <p>If you are 65 or over when you enroll, you will be able to collect for most sicknesses youve had before or have now after your policy is in force for 30 days. You will be covered for cancer, heart attack, stroke, disease or disorders of the prostate, tuberculosis, cataracts, emphysema, cirrhosis or diabetes after your policy has been in force for 6 months.</p>
        <p>If you contact one of the conditions listed above before the policy is 6 months old, that condition will be covered one year from the effective date of the policy.</p>
        <p>YewAgs</p>
        <p>iMrividHal</p>
        <p>naa</p>
        <p>NesSaiid-Wife</p>
        <p>Plaa</p>
        <p>All-Faeilly</p>
        <p>naa</p>
        <p>Oaa-Partat</p>
        <p>PlM</p>
        <p>WamaeSS er Older</p>
        <p>$10.00</p>
        <p>$12.25</p>
        <p>$14.25</p>
        <p>$12.70</p>
        <p>ManSS ar Older</p>
        <p>$10.00</p>
        <p>$13.70</p>
        <p>$15.70</p>
        <p>$12.70</p>
        <p>Hutkand-Wifa Beth OS</p>
        <p>r Over</p>
        <p>$17.00</p>
        <p>$19.00</p>
        <p>to complete and mail the Application Form below. We will issue your Doctors Hospital Policy (Form P327 Series) immediatelythe same day we receive your Form. This automatically puts your policy in force. Along with your policy you will receive a simple easy-to-use Claim Form, which you send directly to the company when you want to claim your cash benefits.</p>
        <p>Protect Your FamilyEnroll Now. if Not Satisfied Your Money Will Be Refunded</p>
        <p>Take a moment now to fill out your Application Form and mail it with your first months premium.</p>
        <p>When you receive your policy, youll see that it is honest and easy to understand. But if for any reason whatsoever you change your mind you may return your policy within 10 days and we will</p>
        <p>promptly refund your money.</p>
        <p>IMPORTANT: Accidents and sicknesses strike without warning . . . and unless, you are covered, you can lose hundreds of dollars in cash benefits. Thats why we urge you to act today. The sooner you mail your Application Form, the sooner The Doctors Hospital Plan will protect you. Mail your Application Form today.</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>-..... 17  Important  Questions  Answered</p>
        <p>ABOUT THE DOCTORS HOSPITAL PUN WITH INCREASED BENEFITS</p>
        <p>1. Can I collect even If I carry other health insurance? $10,000.00  $19.04 daily when you are hospitalized; covered. You will receive one-half the applicable weekly Yes. The Doctors Hospital Plan pays you in addition $14.28 daily when your wife is hospitalized.  benefits  for up to 4 full weeks for any job-related con-</p>
        <p>to any other company or government health insurance Under the ALL-FAMILY PLAN, the maximum is dition that piits you in the hospital. And after you you carry-individual, group-even Medicare! Of course, $13,333.33  $19.04 daily when you are hospitalized; resume your normal activities for 6 months, you become you may have only one like policy with Physicians $14.28 daily when your wife is hospitalized; $9.52 daily eligible to collect again if the same condition puts you Mutual  for  each  insured  child  hospitalized.  back  in  the hospital.</p>
        <p>Under the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN, the maximum is $10j000.00$19.04 daily when you are hospitalized; $9.32 dally for each insured child hospitalized.</p>
        <p>2. How do I qualify?</p>
        <p>Your only qualification is to complete and mail your Enrollment Form with your first months premium.</p>
        <p>6. Ara any additional banafits indudad in Tha Doctors Hospital Plan?</p>
        <p>Yes. You receive a 50% increase in cash benefits if you or any insured family member is hospitalized for cancer (including Leukemia and Hodgkins Disease), or heart attack (acute myocardial infarction, coronary thrombosis and coronary occlusion).</p>
        <p>7. What ara tha doubla cash banafits?</p>
        <p>If you and your wife are both injured and hospitalized at the same time and are covered by the ALL-FAMILY or HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN, you get double cash benefits. You get twice the amount  $66.64 daily!</p>
        <p>8. Doas this plan pay in any hospital?</p>
        <p>3. Which plan should I choosa?</p>
        <p>You many choose any of four low-cost plans-you can actually select the exact plan that suits you best!</p>
        <p>If yours is a young, growing family, we recommend the ALL-FAMILY PLAN. Covers you, your, wife and all your dependent children (including future additions) between 3 months and 21 years of age who are unmarried and live at home.</p>
        <p>If you are the only parent living with your children, we suggest the ONE-PARENT FAMILY PLAN. Covers you and all your dependent children between 3 months and 21 years who are unmarried and live at home.</p>
        <p>If you have no children as yet, or if you have children  ^  _____________________ __________________</p>
        <p>who are grown and no longer dependent on you, you will  You  will  collect  cash benefiu for confinement in any  we cannot change your monthly'premium  for  this  pro^</p>
        <p>Or, if you are living by yourself, choose the INDI-  finement  in nursing homes, convalescent or extended-  in your entire state:  You, of course,  can  drop your  pol-</p>
        <p>VIDUAL PLAN.  care  or self-care  units of hospiuls, is hot included in  icy on any renewal</p>
        <p>12. Will I collect benefits for mental disorder?</p>
        <p>Yes. You will receive one-half the applicable weekly benefits for up to 4 full weeks for mental disorder that puts you or any insured family member in the hospital. And, after you return to your normal activities for 6 months, if the same condition puts you back in the hospital, you are eligible to collect again.</p>
        <p>13. What conditions arent covered?</p>
        <p>Pregnancy or any consequence thereof (unless you have the ALL-FAMILY or the HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN), alcoholism or drug addiction.</p>
        <p>14. Can I drop out any time? Can you drop me?</p>
        <p>We guarantee to renew your policy for as long as you live and pay your premiums ... regardless of your age, your health or how many claims you have. Whats more.</p>
        <p>your coverage under this poli^.</p>
        <p>9. Do I collect even if I fo to a Federal hospital?</p>
        <p>4. When does my policy go into force?</p>
        <p>Your policy is issued immediately, just as soon as we receive your Application Form. From that day on, you are covered for accidents 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, anywhere in the world. Coverage for new sickness does not begin until your policy is 30 days old. This is a one-time-only waiting period. Whats more, you coUect moi;yo7are Vlibkrt''collwVadm for every day you spend in the hospital for a covered sickness or accident. We dont make you wait 3 or 4 days after you enter the hospital befiM-e you can begin getting benefits.</p>
        <p>Yes. You will receive one-half the applicable weel3y benefits for up to 4 full weeks for any one sickness or accident that puts you in a Federal hospital. And, if the same condition puts you back in the hospital after you have resumed your normal activities for 6</p>
        <p>15. How do I daim my caah benefits?</p>
        <p>With your policy, you will receive a simple, easy-to-use Claim Form, whic^ you send directly to the company when you want to claim your cash benefits.</p>
        <p>16. How much does my protection cost?</p>
        <p>If you are under 65, you pay: $5.25 a month for the INDIVIDUAL PLAN; $8.95 a month for the HUS-</p>
        <p>5. How much cgn I be paid?</p>
        <p>Each plan has its own Aggregate of Benefits, what we in force for one year, call the maximum.</p>
        <p>For examp^, under the INDIVIDUAL PLAN, the maximum is $6,666.66  $19.04 daily_when you are hosjMtalized.</p>
        <p>Under the HUSBAND-WIFE PLAN, the maximum is</p>
        <p>10. What if someone in my family has had a health BAND-WIFE PLAN; $10.95 a month for the ALU problem that may occur again?  FAMILY PLAN; $7.95 a month for the ONE-PARENT</p>
        <p>Even if one of your insured famUy members under 65 FAMH-Y PLAN. (Wh you b^me 65, w if y^ arc has suffered from chronic amento in the past, pre- over 65 now, premiums increase. See rates m box above.) existing conditions are covered after the policy has bom</p>
        <p>11. Will I collect for Job-related conditions even though I may receive Workmens Compensation?</p>
        <p>Yes. Even conditions for which you receive Workmens Compensation or Employers liitlity Law benefits are</p>
        <p> r......</p>
        <p>17. Why should I enroll right now?</p>
        <p>Because an unexpected sickness or accident could strike without warningand you will not be covered until your policy is in force. Remember, if for any reason you cban^ your mind, you may return your policy within 10 diys and your money will be tefaaded immediately.</p>
        <p>PHYSICIAINS MtlTUAL IISSURAIVCE COMPANY</p>
        <p>The Insurance Company Run by Doctors Since 1902 115 South 42nd Street</p>
        <p>Oma^laa; Nebra.ska 68131 Licensed in the State of North Corolina</p>
        <p>THE DOCTORS HOSPITAL PLAN</p>
        <p>APPUCATION FORM NO. 5900</p>
        <p>INSUREDS NAME (F/ease Print)</p>
        <p>Mr. Mrs.. Miss</p>
        <p>First</p>
        <p>Mtddls Initial</p>
        <p>Ust</p>
        <p>ADDRESS.</p>
        <p>Street or RO#</p>
        <p>CITY.</p>
        <p>.STATE.</p>
        <p>AGE.</p>
        <p>.DATE OF BIRTH.</p>
        <p>-ZIP.</p>
        <p>Month Date Year give lollowing information on wife:</p>
        <p>SEX:  MALE    FEMALE  </p>
        <p>PLAN OCam^</p>
        <p>Check one only</p>
        <p> Individual-Plan 4</p>
        <p> Husband-Wife-Plan3</p>
        <p> All Family-Plani</p>
        <p> One Parent Family-Plan 2</p>
        <p>I have enclosed my first months premium and hereby apply to Physicians Mutual Insurance Company, Omaha, Nebraska, for the Doctora Hospital Policy, Form P327 Series. I understand the policy Is not in force until actually issued.</p>
        <p>Wife's First Name</p>
        <p>Middle Initiel</p>
        <p>DATE OF</p>
        <p>Month</p>
        <p>Day</p>
        <p>Year</p>
        <p>WIFE'S BIRTH:</p>
        <p>I,.,.....................</p>
        <p>Signedi^  _ </p>
        <p>Insured's Signature. Please SIQN-Do Not Print Licensed Resident AgenW_</p>
        <p>Date.</p>
        <p>Mn AppOeation Fonn with first month's premium to:</p>
        <p>Mr. J. L Hutton, Jr., P.O. Box 2257, AahvRio. North Carolina 28802 Ptoaaa maka choqlt or money ordar payable to: PHYSICIANS MUTUAL.</p>
        <p>FORM ES27-A4S.X(NC) Rev. 1/21/74  ^  B</p>
        <p>ACT NOW</p>
        <p>You cannot be covered unW we receive this FormI</p>
        <p>327-1031</p>
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