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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>CkMdy and cold tonlgiit with occasional drzate; mostly cloudy and chance of rain on Tnesday.</p>
        <p>94th Year NO. 293</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>TRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTION</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE, N.C. MONDAY AFTERNOON, DECEMBER 8, 1975</p>
        <p>14 PAGES TODAY</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page Fear For Aarora Pnge i-&amp;gt;JalHioase Lawyers Page 14Obttnaries</p>
        <p>PRICE 15 CENTS</p>
        <p>THE WHITE HOUSE</p>
        <p>AAoslem Street Fighters</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>(ain Ground In Beirut</p>
        <p>By EDWARD CODY Associated PrMs Writer BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP&amp;gt;  Moslem street fighters advanced behind a hail of mwtar fire through down</p>
        <p>town Beirut today in a bloody drive to encircle their right-wing Christian oppewients.</p>
        <p>Young leftist ^nmen from the Ambushers militia occupied the St. Georges</p>
        <p>Hotel  Beiruts most prestigious  and fought around the Phoenicia and Holiday Inn, where Christian gunmen held out against the onslaught, police said.</p>
        <p>Witnesses said the Moslem left-wingers were led by Palestinian guerrillas They took control of the Wadi Al-Yahbud Jewish quarter and Parliament</p>
        <p>Face-Saving Compromise On Tax Bill Shaping Up</p>
        <p>Pitt Barbecue Gets Around</p>
        <p>A PERSONAL NOTE .  . . from</p>
        <p>President Ford is on display at Jack Cobb's Barbecue Place In Farmville. Congressman Walter B. Jones carried</p>
        <p>some of Cobbs barbecue to the President, Rudy Cobb said. (Reflector Photo)</p>
        <p>Pres. Ford Hints Middle East Trip</p>
        <p>By RANDOLPH E. SCHMID Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  President Ford turns his attention to domestic matters this week after proclaiming his Asian trip beneficial and indicating that plans are in the works for a trip to the. Mideast.</p>
        <p>Ford returned to the White House early this morning after a 27,000-mile trip that he said contained no minuses and many, many plusses. He climaxed his journey in Honolulu with a declaration of a six-point Pacific Doctrine for U.S. foreign policy and held out the possibility of future U.S. friendship with Vietnam and Cambodia.</p>
        <p>Chatting with reporters just before his jet landed at nearby Andrews Air Force Base, Ford was asked if he felt it had been</p>
        <p>necessary for him to personally make the long journey to China, he replied: The discussions we had in Peking were mandatory at my level.</p>
        <p>Ford said he felt the talks in Indonesia and the Philippines also needed to be conducted at the heads-of-govemment level.</p>
        <p>A reporter, mindful of rumors that Ford now plans to travel to the Mideast early next year, asked about any such plans.</p>
        <p>There are no definite plans, the President replied. But he added that he probably would go to the Mideast at some point.</p>
        <p>Ford said he found his talks in Peking, Jakarta and Manila were very substantively beneficial.</p>
        <p>Ford flew home from Honolulu where he chose the anni-</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>OTU nt</p>
        <p>752-1336</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done for you Call 752-1336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to HoUlne, The Daily Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Because of the large raimbers received, Hotline can answer and publish (xily those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be given, but only initials will be used. Transcribing is done once a day.</p>
        <p>DUMPING ILLEGAL</p>
        <p>1 have a complaint against some people from near Greenville, lliey dump their trash in our neighborhood on County Road 1134. We have the names and addresses of several of them and if they continue, we will turn them in to the legal authorities. Is there anything we can do about this? Mrs. E.D.</p>
        <p>Pitt County Environmental Health Director \^^ie Pate said probably the best approach would be a direct one. Call the people whose names you have and ask them to come and clean up the trash theyve left on your property. If they do not, let the Environmental Health Division oi the Health Department know. They will investigate to try to leam who is doing the dumping. Then theyll make the same requestdean it up or face indictmoit. Dumping of trash anywdiere exc^t in the county landfll is a misdemeancn* and violators can be taken to court. Your name would not be disclosed by the Health Department, Pate said, unless you did have to serve as a complainant or witness in court.</p>
        <p>Pate said th^ have had occasions in which people paid to (uck up refuse are dumping somewhere besides in the landfll. U this were found to be true, he said, the pers&amp;lt;m*s license to do business ccuild be revoked.</p>
        <p>WAKE-UP SERVICE?</p>
        <p>Are t^re any tdephone calling SMvlces around here to wake up a person in the mMnlng. Mrs. J. M.</p>
        <p>m Duckett of Carolina Telephone says the plxxie cfxnpany would inx&amp;gt;toNy be aware of any such service,^ and does not know of one in Green-ville.</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>versary of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor to reveal his Pacific Doctrine in a speech in Honolulu.</p>
        <p>The first premise of a new Pacific doctrine is that American strength is basic to any stable balance of power in the Pacific, Ford said. And, noting Japans transition from enemy to friend, the President held out the chance of U.S. friendship for Cambodia and Vietnam, saying:</p>
        <p>Our policies toward the new regimes on the (Indochinese) peninsula will be determined by their conduct toward us. We ar^ prepared to reciprocate goodwill  particularly the return of the remains of Americans killed or missing in action, or information about them. If they exhibit restraint toward their neighbors and constructive approaches to international problems, we will look to the future rather than the past.</p>
        <p>Back in the capital, Ford is facing decisions on a variety of issues and is expected to sign a bill to provide emergency assistance to help solve New Yorks fiscal crisis.</p>
        <p>Congress is still struggling with lax and energy measures which could draw another pair of presidential vetoes.</p>
        <p>Federal Energy Administrator Frank G. Zarb has urged approval of the energy bill which would temporarily lower oil prices, but some conservatives oppose the measure and Fords campaign director, Howard H. Clallaway suggested Sunday that the President might be well advised politically to veto the measure.</p>
        <p>By JIM LUTHER Associated Press Writer WASHINGTON (AP)  A fight between President Ford and Congress that coitld mean higher taxes for most Americans next month may be resolved in a way that would allow both sides to save face.</p>
        <p>The answer may become evident Wednesday when the Senate Finance Committee begins work on a House-passed bill carrying $13 billion in individual tax cuts, mainly extensions of tax cuts in effect this year.</p>
        <p>Unless that bill becomes law by the end of the month, most Americans will see their take-home pay reduced starting in January.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, as Congress begins what is expected to be the next-to-last week of the 1975 session, both houses will devote time to New York Citys financial problems. The House will consider a bill to amend the bankruptcy laws to facilitiate handling of the citys debts in case of default. The Senate will consider an appropriations bill that includes $2.3 billion earmarked to pay for federal loans to New York already authorized by Congress.</p>
        <p>Later in the week, the House will vote on the final version of an energy bill. Although the measure does not go as far toward U.S. energy independence as Ford has asked. his chief energy advisOl*, Frank G. Zarb, has urged that he sign it. Zarb told the Washington Post that . he will remain in office even if Ford rejects his advice.</p>
        <p>The Senate Judiciary Committee, meanwhile, is opening hearings into the nomination of Judge John Paul Stevens of Chicago to succeed retired Supreme Court Justice William O. Douglas. No senator has indicated opposition to Stevens, who is Ford first nominee to the high court.</p>
        <p>On the issue of tax cuts, Ford and Congress agree on the need for extending the cuts that went into effect last spring. But the President says he will veto any</p>
        <p>HOSPITAL HOAXES RALEIGH (AP)  Rex Hospital was cleared of visitors twice over the weekend while searches were made after four telei^one bomb threats were received^ No bombs were found.</p>
        <p>tax cut that is not tied to a lid on government spending in the fiscal year that t&amp;gt;egins next Oct. 1.</p>
        <p>Democratic leaders insist it is not practical to set spending levels 10 months in advance. Sen. Russell B. Long, D-La.,</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>PRIMITIVE BALLOONThis 7-stry hlgl^ priozltive smke ballooB Itfled off Penit Plains of Nazca Nev. 2S earryi^ Jim Woadnwasf Miami FM. sad Jatiaa Nett af Great BriCate. The baltoM sad gondola were made eatirely of materials believed svsUsMe ts the lacas. It was pat together with technfgaes the lacas are kaewa to have pass eased. It was a faataatlc flighr*.</p>
        <p>said Nott, s Britkh haDeoo pilot AP Wlrephetel</p>
        <p>chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, has indicated he may go along with a plan that would extend the tax cuts for only three or four months, rather than for the full year. Then, at the end of that period. Congress conceivably could agree</p>
        <p>to the spending limitation and renew the tax cut for the rest of the year.</p>
        <p>Such a compromise might be acceptable to Ford and thus avert another veto confrontation with the Democratic-controlled Congress.</p>
        <p>Ford Compromise To Head Off Kissinger Contempt Vote Fails</p>
        <p>By JIM ADAMS Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP)  A compromise offer from President Ford to head off contempt action against  Secretary of</p>
        <p>State Henry A. Kissinger was rejected today by the chairman of the House intelligence committee.</p>
        <p>Rep. Otis G. Pike, D-N.Y., said the House might vote on contempt resolutions against Kissinger as early as this week if the committee agreed with him Tuesday that Fords new offer is unacceptable.</p>
        <p>In a compromise from the administrations position Nov. 20. Fords counsel offered to identify all U.S. covert operations abroad since 1961 that had been requested by the State Department.</p>
        <p>Pike said the committee had subpoenaed all State Department requests for covert operations ~ not just a list of the ones that were approved.</p>
        <p>He said the committee originally was told the State Department requested five covert operations during the 14 years since 1961, but that the number has now grown to 25.</p>
        <p>Pike said he was filing the committees three contempt citations against Kissinger with the full House today.</p>
        <p>He said he will ask for a full House vote only if the committee decides he should.</p>
        <p>In a letter sent to all House members last week, Pike said approval of contempt action against Kissinger would not cause the earth to tremble nor the sun to stop in its tracks.</p>
        <p>No one is seeking to place Mr. Kissinger in jail, Pike said. And the worst that can happen to him is that he might have to provide the documents subpoenaed to Congress.</p>
        <p>Thornton Wilder Dies Suddenly</p>
        <p>HAMDEN, Conn  (AP) </p>
        <p>Thornton Wilder, who wrote the theater classic Our Town and collected three Pulitzer prizes for his novels and plays, is dead of a heart attack at age 78.</p>
        <p>The playwright,  novelist,</p>
        <p>teacher and traveler died in his sleep Sunday while napping at the Hamden. Conn., house he shared with his sister. Isabel, a family spokesman said.</p>
        <p>Wilder, who wrote numerous plays and eight novels in his half-century career, was broi^ht to the Hospital of St. Raphael in nearby New Haven about 7:25 p.m. where he was pronounced dead.</p>
        <p>Amos Tappan Wilder, a nephew. said Wilder had been in poor health for several years but had continued to travel occasionally.</p>
        <p>Wilder won his first Pulitzer in 1928 for the novel The Bridge of San Luis Rey. The others were for the plays "Our Town in 1938 and The Skin of Our Teeth in 1943.</p>
        <p>He also wrote The Matchmaker which was turned into Hello Dolly, the longest running broadway musical.</p>
        <p>Wjlder received in 1963 the Presidential Medal of Freedom, the nations highest civilian citation, and  was the frst</p>
        <p>recipient of the National Book Clommittee's National Medal for Literature, which was presented at the White House in 1967. The latter honor was for his novel, The Eighth Day.</p>
        <p>Wilder  completed his last book Theophilus North in Gc-tc^r 1973. It was the story of a young man's adventures in the 1920s in the seacoast rescxl of Newport, R.I.</p>
        <p>TlKxnUxt Niven Wilder was bom April 17. 1887 in Madison. Wis.. the second oi five children oi Amos Wilder, editor of a newspaper. When be was 9. his father was named consul general in Hong Kpng and later</p>
        <p>THORNTON WILDER</p>
        <p>Shanghai, and Wilder attended German and English schools in China. He later went to schools in California. His first literry effort was scribbled in an algebra book:  The Russian</p>
        <p>Princess, an Extravaganza  Wilder studied at Oberlin College and spent a year in the Coast Guard before graduating from Yale in 1920. He taught French for several years before obtaining masters degree from Princeton in 1926.</p>
        <p>He studied archeology in Rome and wrote his first novel. The Cabala, about the city. It was published in 1926. the same year his first play, The Trumpet Shall Sound. was fx-oduced.</p>
        <p>In addition to his sister and nephew. Wilder is survived by a brother. Rev. Amos Niven Wilder. HoUis Professor of Divinity Emeritus at Harvard, three sisters. Charlotte of Brattleboro. Vt.; and Janet Wilder Dankin of Amherst. Mass.; and a niece. Katharine IXx Wilder oi New Haven.</p>
        <p>A memorial service will be announced later. Burial wiU be private.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>Expand Control In Timor</p>
        <p>JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP)  Pro-Indonesian forces in Portuguese Timor were reported expanding their control of the former colony today with the supr ptort of Indonesian troops.</p>
        <p>Foreign Minister Adam Malik announced Sunday that factions friendly to Indonesia had captured Dili, the capital of Portuguese Timor, from Fretilin, the leftist Revolutionary Front for the Independence of East Timor. and declared the territory part of Indonesia.</p>
        <p>Information Minister Mashur said Indonesian volunteers supported the attack on Dili, and a Fretilin broadcast said the Indonesians were pursuing the independence fighters in the hills.</p>
        <p>Timor is an island the size of Connecticut and Massachusetts in the south central part of the Indonesian archipelago. The western half of the island is Indonesian.</p>
        <p>The Portuguese government planned to give its half independence in 1978, but on Aug. 10 the UDT (the Timorese Democratic Union) attempted a coup against the Portuguese. Fretilin forces opposed the UDT and took over Dili, and the Portuguese colonial administration fled to an offshore island.</p>
        <p>After weeks of sporadic fighting, the UDT and Apodcti (the Popular Democratic Association of Timor) joined forces. Fretilin declared the territory independent, and Malik in -speech last week in Indonesian Timor called on the UDT and Apodeti for an all-out war against Fretilin.</p>
        <p>It's all over. The area is now in the hands of the UDT and the Apodeti party. a senior Indonesian officer. Col. Su-gito. said today</p>
        <p>Square. forcing House Speaker Kamal Assad to postpone indefinitely a parliament meeting scheduled for Tuesday.</p>
        <p>A police spokesman said scores of the street fighters were killed in the combat and their bodies virhially littered scenes of the fighting. He said ambulances were unable to enter the area.</p>
        <p>If the Moslem forces gain mastery of the seaside hotel area, that would effectively divide Beirut into clearly defined Christian and Moslem enclaves, with the Phalange Christian militia shoved into their Ashrafiya and Ein Rumanneh strongholds and Moslems controlling the remaining two-thirds of the city.</p>
        <p>Jeeps with loudspeakers toured Moslem areas in western Beirut appealing for blood to aid hard-pressed hospitals handling the wounded.</p>
        <p>Premier Rashid Karami, a Moslem, announced after a cabinet meeting that he would not order army intervention because this will aggravate the civil war, not quell it Most of the army &amp;lt;rfficers are Christians.</p>
        <p>He said the cabinet also rejected a demand for declaration of martial law, which would open the way for inte^ vention by the 18,000-man army for the first time since hostilities erupted last April The security situation is worsening daily, Karami told newsmen. The government has done everything it can, but it failed to re-establish law and order because all parties insist on continuing to fight</p>
        <p>Moslem militiamen also reoccupied the 40-story Mour Tower, an unfinished office building that was their deadliest redoubt in the last big round of Lebanons eight-month civil war, and fired rockets and mortars from it Security forces that had been occupying downtown buildings under a cease-fire agreement pulled out, leaving the way clear for another major struggle.</p>
        <p>Possibly Dug Own Graves</p>
        <p>LAKE CITY, S.C. (AP) - A State Law Enforcement Division spokesman said today some of the six persons whose bodies were unearthed last week may have been killed in execution style.</p>
        <p>It seemed to be the general opinion of one or two of the officers on the scene that it looked like the victims were made stand in the grave and then (hey were shot, SLED spokesman Hugh Munn said.</p>
        <p>We don't know if they were forced to dig their graves or what. We dont really know how they were killed. Theres just no way to know right now, Munn said He said state investigators are just dropping back and taking a look at the case today, Munn said he knew of no plans to continue the search for more bodies in either Florence or Williamsburg counties today.</p>
        <p>Spokesmen for both sheriffs .departments confirmed that no search was under way today.</p>
        <p>Earlier, police said the deaths may have been linked to a car theft ring. However. Munn indicated that theory may have been incorrect.</p>
        <p>Police sources said th^t four of the six victims were shot and two others may have had their throats cut.</p>
        <p>Munn said it appeared that the victims were either related or acquainted with one another He also said officers had dug between 40 and 60 boles in sev-rral tota n&amp;gt;ns before uncoving the three graves last week</p>
        <p>Search operations were suspended Simday after a second fruitless day of looking in Florence County. Officers used metal detectm^ and a special vapor sniffing device borrowed from the Florida SUte Police in searching for nMxe</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0002" />
        <p>V.</p>
        <p>It</p>
        <p>V</p>
        <p>Series Of 7 Accidents Poarl Boiloy SoyS HotO SpGWed</p>
        <p>Reported Here Sunday</p>
        <p>More than $6,200 property damage resulted from a series of seven collisions investigated by Greenville Police yesterday.</p>
        <p>Officers said heaviest damage resulted from a 5:31 p.m. collision on Street 75 feet West of the Willow Street intersection.</p>
        <p>Acceding to Police, a car driven by Rebecca Lynn White of 101 Deerwood Dr. collided with a parked car owned by Richard Chapman Gilman of 108 North Ash St. resulting in an estimated $1,575 damage to the Gilman car and $1,450 damage to Um White auto.</p>
        <p>No charges were made.</p>
        <p>Teresa Susan Adams of Hayes was charged with failing to stop for a  light  following in</p>
        <p>vestigation of a 1 p.m. mishap at the intersection of Fifth and Washington Streets.</p>
        <p>Officers reported the Adams car collided with an auto driven by Lena Howell Brown of 1303 Powell St. causing an estimated $500 damage to the Brown car and $400 damage to the Adams auto.</p>
        <p>Cars driven by Linda Gark Wallace of Route 4, Greenville and Ira Lee B aker of Greenville collided about 1 p.m. at the intersection of Memorial and South Village Drives.</p>
        <p>Baker was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety by police who estimated damage at $350 to the Wallace car and $170 to the Baker auto.</p>
        <p>Alumni Organized A New Association</p>
        <p>Alumni of the East Carolina University Department of Library Science met and formed the ECU Library Science Department Alumni Association during the biennial conference of the N.C. Library Association in Winston-Salem last week.</p>
        <p>Elected president of the association was Anne Shelton Briley, serials librarian at ECUs Joyner Library. Vice president is Neal Hardison of Sampson County Technical Institute; and secretary-treasurer is Scottie Cox of Wayne County Community CoU^e.</p>
        <p>Lee McLaughlin of New River Air Station, Jacksonville; Mark McGrath of Beaufort County Technical Institute; and Bill Snyder of the Sampson County Library comprise the associations constitution and by-laws committee.</p>
        <p>The new organization plans to help with recruitment of</p>
        <p>Reports</p>
        <p>Holdup</p>
        <p>Jeffrey Wilkins of Route 6, Greenville, reported he was robbed at gunpoint by three men here early today.</p>
        <p>Chief Glenn Cannon said Wilkins told police he went from a service station on North Greene Street where he is employed, to Glendale Drive with a man offering to sell him a shotgun. When they arrived, two other men appeared. a gun was drawn, and the three made off with Wilkins' $25 watch, a $50 pistol and $270 in cash.</p>
        <p>After the property was taken from Wilkins, the chief said, he was told to run, and several shots were fired.</p>
        <p>'The incident, reported at 12:35 a.m.. is under investigation.</p>
        <p>students, (K-ovide support for the ECU Department of Library Science, and sponsor social gatherings for ECU library science alumni at professional librarians meetings.</p>
        <p>Alumni not present at the organizational meeting or those who did not receive a copy of the recent departmental questionaire are urged to send their names and current addresses to one of the officers.</p>
        <p>Motel Robbed By Four Men</p>
        <p>Greenville Police are continuing their investigation into an armed robbery at the Camelot Inn on Memorial Drive here Saturday night.</p>
        <p>According to Chief Glenn Cannon, the desk clerk at the motel said four men wearing ski masks entered the office, pulled a pistol and ordered him to lie face down on the floor. The robbers then took an undetermined amount of money from the cash register, then fled.</p>
        <p>Officers, using bloodhounds from the N.C. Department of Corrections, tracked the four to the parking lot of a nearby motel where they apparently left in a car.</p>
        <p>The incident occured about 11:15 p.m. Cannon noted.</p>
        <p>PTA Meeting Set Thursday</p>
        <p>The Eastern Elementary School PTA will meet Thureday at 7:30 p.m. in the all purpose room of the school.</p>
        <p>There will be a business meeting followed by a short musical program by the fifth and sixth grade chorus, under the direction of Mrs. Zenora Hopkins.</p>
        <p>FOR HIM</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS SPECIAL BEHIND THE CAB UTILITY TOOL BOX</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>FARMERSHUNTERS FISHERMEN CARPENTERS ANYONE WITH A PICK-UP</p>
        <p>ll</p>
        <p>Tlie Box Or listalleil</p>
        <p>Craft Steel And Machine Works</p>
        <p>s. FIELDS ST. EXT. FARMViLLE, N.C.753-3152</p>
        <p>Rita Reaves of 412 East 'Third St. was charged with failing to see her intended movement could be made in safety and with having no operators license following investigation of a 1:25 p.m. mishap in the 400 block of E^st Third St.</p>
        <p>Investigators reported the Reaves car. allegedly backing from a driveway collided with an auto operated by Judy Carol Moore of 105-A Rotary Ave. causing an estimated $400 damage to the Moore car and $50 damage to the Reaves auto.</p>
        <p>A 7 p.m. collision at the intersection of Pitt and Arthur Streets involved cars driven by Melvin Curtis Langley of IISF Lakeview Terr, and Harold Terince Little of 706 West Fourth St.</p>
        <p>Police, who made no charges, estimated damage at $225 to the Langley car and $550 to the Little auto.</p>
        <p>An estimated $150 damage resulted to each of two vehicles involved in a 2:45 p.m. mishap at the intersection of Perkins and Cozart Streets, police reported.</p>
        <p>Investigators identified the drivers involved as David Lee Baker Jr. of Route l, Winterville and Joyce Purvis Williams of Tarboro.</p>
        <p>Baker was charged by officers with failing to yield the right of way.</p>
        <p>Thomas Lewis Horton of Raleigh was charged with failing to see his intended movement could be made in safety following investigation of a 3 p.m. mishap on Charles Street, 102 feet South of the Greenville Boulevard intersection.</p>
        <p>Officers reported the Horton car collided with an auto driven by Robert Samuel Mosley of 209 Hardee Cir. causing an estimated $100 damage to the Mosley car and $200 damage to the Horton auto.</p>
        <p>No injuries were reported in the series of mishaps.</p>
        <p>Field Day</p>
        <p>By GENE KRAMER Associated Press Writer UNITED NATIONS, N.Y. (AP)  U.S. Ambassador Daniel Patrick Moynihan says his blunt U.N. speeches may be a new American style at the world organization but this is the way other nations normally behave.</p>
        <p>We think the United Nations matters ... We think that the only way to stay there is to stay there and fight ... Harsh attack ... is the order of the day over there, he said Sunday in a joint appearance with singer-actress Pearl Bailey, a special adviser to his U.N. delegation, on ABC-TVs Issues and Answers.</p>
        <p>It has been, perhaps, an Am^dcan hope that if we didnt respond to attacks upon us, maybe they wouldnt be made, said Moynihan. "... It may perhaps unnerve some people that we are doing this because its new.</p>
        <p>What we have said is ... we will respond to untrue charges against us. We will, when attacked, defend the good name of this democracy. Everybody is blunt in there, said Miss Bailey. I would like to walk down the aisle sometimes and edit some of the speeches. The first time they say what they're going to say, and then they spew hatred</p>
        <p>for the next 45 minutes ... I do wish the American people and people of all nations could come and listen to how this world is getting tom asunder."</p>
        <p>Miss Bailey, who is starring in a Broadway revival of production Hello, Dolly!* said she had received^ batches and batches" of letters from Puerto Ricans praising her defeme of the islands  U.S.  Com</p>
        <p>monwealth status after the Cuban ambassador said it was an oppressed colonial possession of the United States.</p>
        <p>Parficipated In Chicago Forum</p>
        <p>SNOW HILLJimmy Blizzard, a Snow Hill farmer and his son Carl, recently went to Chicago, 111., to participate in an International Harvester Farm Forum panel discussion on the future of young people in farming.</p>
        <p>Blizzard farms about 300 acres of tobacco, corn and soybeans.</p>
        <p>LITTLES NURSERY</p>
        <p>Pansy plants, living and cut Christmas trees, poinsettias, bulbs, blooming camelias and sasanquas.</p>
        <p>Phone 7SA-MU 4 miles from Oreenviiie en 2M By.Peis West.</p>
        <p>COMMEMORATIVE DESIGN ACCEPTED . . . ECU art student Debra J. Morrison of Kenilworth. N.J. holds an enlarged reproduction of the Battle of Springfield, N.J. design she created and which was accepted for postal use. Greenville postmaster Lloyd Mills (right)</p>
        <p>presented Ms. Morrison the framed reproduction. At left is Floyd D. (Dan) Gooding, superintendent of the ECU Branch of the Greenville post office. Below Is a photograph of the commemorative design as used in conjunction with the town's circular postmark.</p>
        <p>Receives Postal Honor In Cancellation Design</p>
        <p>The N.C. Forest Service, along with the Agricultural Extension Service and Weyerhauser Corporation, sponsored a forestry field day for county landowners Friday.</p>
        <p>A morning session was held in Greenville discussing the importance of forestry in Pitt County. Special emphasis was put on the landowner and his woodland. It was stressed that by the year 2000, demand for wood products will double and forest land value may triple.</p>
        <p>A bus tour to four sites in the county was conducted during the afternoon. Each landowner was shown how he can create a more productive situation in his woodland.</p>
        <p>Forester Mark Webb said he is available to others who may have missed the tour to advise them on how he can help them understand their particular woodland tract.</p>
        <p>Workshop^/For School Board</p>
        <p>A workshop meeting on elementary school redistricting in Greenville will be held by the Greenville City School Board tonight at 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>The meeting will take place in the multi-purpose room at Sadie Saulter Elementary School.</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>(^nerally fair and continual warming Wednesday through Friday, Overnight lows mostly in the 30s, warming to 40s by Friday. Daytime highs in the low 60s. warming during the week.</p>
        <p>A student majoring in art education at the School of Art. East Carolina University, has been honored by the U.S. Post Office in having a pictorial cancellation she designed used to commemorate a historic event.</p>
        <p>Debra J. Morrison of Kenilworth, New Jersey, entered a design to mark the June 23, 1780 Battle of Springfield (New Jersey) which was chosen by postal authorities for use on mail postmarked at the Springfield post office. Ms. Morrisons father, Owen E. Morrison, is postmaster of Springfield.</p>
        <p>In recognition of her contribution, the U.S. Post Office recently forwarded to Greenville postmaster Lloyd Mills a</p>
        <p>Possession Of Hashish Charged</p>
        <p>Alwin R. Dixon, 19 of Chapel Hill was charged with trespassing and possession of hashish following a 10:18 a.m. incident Sunday at 707 West Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>Chief Glenn Cannon said officers were called to investigate someone attempting to force their way into a mobile home owned by Alton Ray Harris of 707 West Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>When they arrived, police found Dixon leaving the trailer. During a search of Dixon, officers found a small package containing hashishextracted resin of marijuana.</p>
        <p>framed, enlarged reproduction of the commemorative design coupled with a circular Springfield, N.J. postmark, to present to Ms. Morrison.</p>
        <p>Mills presented the reproduction, dated September 14. 1975 to Ms. Morrison in an informal ceremony last Friday in the presence of Floyd D. (Dan) Gooding, superintendent of the ECU Post Office branch in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Earlier, Ms. Morrison was also presented a copy of the Bicentennial Philatelic Passport covering the Original Thirteen States. Designed in the format of a U.S. passport, the Philatelic Passport is for collecting commemorative philatelic postmarks of especially designated heritage sites for</p>
        <p>each state represented in the passport.</p>
        <p>The passports are taken to an appropriate postoffice where postal personnel will place a stamp and hand-cancel the page for the collector. These are also available in three forms other than for the original 13 coloniesTen Southern States; Twelve Central States; and Thirteen Western States. Price of each passport is $2 each. Information on their purchase is available at local post offices.</p>
        <p>Christmas Cookies Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>IS Dickinson Av.</p>
        <p>FIASHERi</p>
        <p>THEUFES/VER.</p>
        <p>Stride Rite*s new Flasher hoot protects your children after dark with Scotchlite reflective tape that flashes back car headlights, warns drivers 500 feet away!</p>
        <p>StrideRite'</p>
        <p>FIT FOR A KID</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>Open Monday thru Thursday 10:00-5:30, Friday tilt p.m. "Home Owned &amp;amp; Operated Pbr Ovar 50 Years"</p>
        <p>0siner</p>
        <p>nibrtd</p>
        <p>Full Size Garments ^1,90 SIf libur list Is Long And mre A Little Short</p>
        <p>Suits (2 Pcs.)-Dresses (Regular)-Overcoats And Other Full Size Garments.</p>
        <p>Half Size Garments ^ .95</p>
        <p>Trousers. Sweaters. Skirts And Other Half-Size Garments.</p>
        <p>With Each *4 Worth Of Dry Cleaning Brought In Tuesday, Wednesday Or Thursday, You Will Receive One Free Eisenhower Dollar. No limit. With ^8 Worth You Get 2 Elsenhower Dollprs, With 12 You Get 3 Eisenhower Dollars.</p>
        <p>VST</p>
        <p>^four usual list isRent...  Mom...Walty...</p>
        <p>Telephone... Car.. ..' But about  If your Christmas list is long,</p>
        <p>this time of year, other names  arxl you're a little short, we can help</p>
        <p>get on the list. Billy.. Carol...  vyith a Christmas Shopping Loan.</p>
        <p>412 Evans St. Greenvdle</p>
        <p>3M1 S. Memorial Dr.. Grenviiia</p>
        <p>121 S. Main St, FarmyWe</p>
        <p>4er622 Oreenviiie Blvd.</p>
        <p>Telephone 756-55447:00 AJA. To 6dOO PJA. Open Tues. Thru Sat. CLOSED MONDAYS</p>
        <p>"  f"""</p>
        <p>^MLner</p>
        <p>'e</p>
        <p>CAMCOMTM</p>
        <p>r</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0003" />
        <p>MRS. GEORGE ALFRED MUISE JR.</p>
        <p>Couple JVeds On Saturday</p>
        <p>VIRGINIA BEACH, VaAll Saints Episcopal Church was the scene of a candlelight ceremony Saturday uniting Virginia Hall Brooks and George Alfred Muise Jr.</p>
        <p>The double ring ceremony was performed by the Rev. James King.</p>
        <p>The parents of the couple are the late Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Hall of Greenville, N.C. and Mrs. N. E. Hyland and the late Mr. George Alfred Muise Sr. of Norwalk, Conn.</p>
        <p>The couple entered the church together. Richard Muise served as his fathers best man and Mrs. Richard Muise was matron of honor.</p>
        <p>The bride wore a formal long sleeve gown of nile green crepe. The empire waist was accented with a darker green set with seed pearls and sequins. The back had a cowl drape also</p>
        <p>Chapter Members Hear Program</p>
        <p>Highlighting the Gamma Delta Sorority Christmas meeting Thursday night was a program on a self&amp;lt;ontained EMR class.</p>
        <p>The meeting was held at the home of Frances Cassick. Mrs. Cassick is instructor of the EMR class.</p>
        <p>Ruth Cox, president, and members made plans fw a Christmas party to be given the three TMR classes in Greenville Dec. 19. A Christmas dinner pmrty for the members will be held Dec. 14 at the Candlewick Inn.</p>
        <p>The house was decorated with a holiday motif and refreshments were served.</p>
        <p>Holiday Hours</p>
        <p>Mon.-Fri. 10 a.m. to 9 p.m. Saturday 10 a.m. to 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>331 Arlington Blvd.</p>
        <p>Miss Stark Makes Official Visit To White Shrine</p>
        <p>The Daily</p>
        <p>Reflecior. Greenville. N.C.-Moody.</p>
        <p>Abby Agrees With Hostess</p>
        <p>accented in darker green set with seed pearls and sequins. The headdress was a matching shoulder length veil adorned with pale green petals. She carried a white prayerbook with an orchild, babys breath and white sweetheart roses bouquet.</p>
        <p>The matron of honor wore a formal length beige, pink and multicolor blue silk gown. She carried a sheaf of pink sweetheart roses interpersed with fern and long streamers.</p>
        <p>The bride attended Greenvile City Schools and has been affiliated with the state in vocational rehabilitation work for the past several years.</p>
        <p>The bridegroom was an executive with Chrysler Corp. for 20 years before his retirement. He is now owner of Cycle Mart, Inc. of Virginia Beach.</p>
        <p>After the ceremony, there was a reception given by Mr. and Mrs. Richard Muise and Mr. and Mrs. N. E. Hyland at the home of the Muises.</p>
        <p>After the reception, the couple left for a wedding trip to unannounced points and after Jan. 2, they will reside in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Womans Club Holds Meeting</p>
        <p>Father Maurice Spillane expressed his gratitude to the members of the Saint Peters Womans Club Wednesday evening, for the numerous accomplishments they achieved while he was moderator for the past 13 years.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Roy Thompson presided over a short meeting. Thank you cards were received from Mrs. F. Close, Mrs. Davenport and the Right to Life Greenville Chapter.</p>
        <p>Committees were formed to work on Sundays coffee and doughnut time after both Masses. The gifts for the special children at Waht-Coates School were presented to Mrs. F. Trotta.</p>
        <p>The refreshment table was adorned with Christmas decorations surrounding a hurricane lamp. Co^iostesses for the evening were Mrs. Marietta Keeping, Mrs. Sharon Davenport, Mrs. Peggy Anteenovich, Dina Massey, Mrs. Kathy Frelke and Mrs. Carolyn Malloy.</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p> im fcr Chkagq Tri&amp;gt;ww^.Y. Hmn fn*.. *c.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: This past yw, my husbnd and I have entertained three couples for dinnw in our home. Upon leaving, all have saia, We will have to have you over soon.</p>
        <p>Well, soon never came with any of them.</p>
        <p>When we accidentally run into them somewhere, they say. Weve been meaning to call you...</p>
        <p>Abby. these three couples get together often. We know because we see their cars parked in front of the homes of one or the other. However, none of than has made an effort to include us.</p>
        <p>My husband says that I am foolish to stand on ceremoniesthat as long as we enjoy their company (and we doi I should invite them back.</p>
        <p>I think three invitations without being invited back is enough. I'd like your opinion.</p>
        <p>ALWAYS THE HOSTESS</p>
        <p>DEAR ALWAYS: I'm with you. One for one is the proper ratio, but two for none should be the absolute limit.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Our 24-year-old daughter, Phyllis, is getting married, and her plans are unbelievable.</p>
        <p>in the first place, Phyllis and Rick have been living together for two years and they have a 4-month-old baby. Phyllis wants to walk down the aisle with the baby in her arms and Rick by her side!</p>
        <p>Phyllis' father and I have been divorced for 14 years, but Phyllis wants us to walk down the aisle together. Then shes got my present husband and her fathers present wife teamed up as a couple to walk down the aisle together. (Have you ever heard of anything so asinine?)</p>
        <p>The wedding will be held in church and the kids are paying for everything. Phyllis and Rick wrote their own vows, and they claim the pastor approved all these plans. Can you believe it?</p>
        <p>This wedding should take place in a zoonot a church. I am happy that Phyllis is finally going to marry Rick, but do you think I should take part in this farce, or should I stay home with a migraine headache?  _</p>
        <p>MOTHER OF THE BRIDE</p>
        <p>DEAR MOTHER: Unconventional as the wedding may seem, it's the bride's day, and she may do things her way. Please don't get a migrsine. Your daughter needs you, and you'd be missing one of the most unorthodox weddings of all time.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Eleven yeam ago, when my son was 6-years-old, I was financially unable to care for him so I placed him in a home where I knew he would be properly provided for. 1 had no choice, Abby.</p>
        <p>Now he is 16, and when he visits me, he makes demands, uses abusive language and treats me in a most cruel and insulting manner.</p>
        <p>I feel that this is his way of punishing me for having put him in a home.</p>
        <p>What is the best way to cope with this situation? I dont appreciate this type of treatment from my own son. Thank you.</p>
        <p>ABUSED</p>
        <p>DEAR ABUSED: If you cant make him understand that you placed him in a home because you thought it would be best for him, perhaps a clergyman or counsekw can. Your son desperately needs to be assured that he was lovednot abandoned.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: My husband is a mail carrier, and Im sure very few people know what their mailmen have to contend with. For example: With the crime rate so high, many people keep mean dogs to protect their property. Thats fine, but these dogs should be tied up so they cant attack deliverymen.</p>
        <p>My husband averages about one bite a week from dogs whose owners claim they never bite anyone, but like to make a lot of noise.</p>
        <p>Another problem: The mail carrier is charged for all postage due on mail on his route, and if the customer doesnt reimburse him. the money comes out of the mailmans pocket.</p>
        <p>You may say, Two or 3 cents isn't all that much, but my husband has over 300 stops to make some days, and it all adds up.</p>
        <p>Care to comment?</p>
        <p>PHOENIX WIFE</p>
        <p>DEAR WIFE: 1 am informed that mail carriers are not obligated to deliver mail at homes where watchdogs are allowed to run loose.</p>
        <p>As for postage-due mail; True, the carrier is charged for all postage-due mcdl on his route. He leaves the mail and an envelope stating the amount doe, and if the customer doesnt reimburse him, hes out of luck.</p>
        <p>For Abbys booklet, How to Have a Lovely Wedding," send $1 to Abigail Van Buren, 132 Lasky Dr., Beverly Hills. Calif. 90212. Please enclose a long, self-addressed, stamped (20i) envelope.</p>
        <p>Patient Circle Meet Planned</p>
        <p>On Tuesday at 7:30 p.m., the Patient Circle of The Kings Daughters will meet at the home of Mrs. lAither Moore.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Sherrill High of Durham, president of The N.C. Branch of The Kings Daughters, will install the 1976 officers. Miss Eunice McGee will present the pr&amp;lt;^am on Christmas.</p>
        <p>Hostesses for the evening will be Mrs. Moore, Mrs. L. L. Rives and Miss Mary Wells.</p>
        <p>Miss Mary E. Stark, of Birmingham, Ala., Supreme Deputy Worthy High Priestess, made an official visit to Greenville Serine No. 7, Order Of The White Shrine Of Jerusalem, Wednesday eviing at a meeting co-hosted by Coastal Shrine No. 9 of New Bern.</p>
        <p>Members meet at the Holiday Inn for a banquet at which guests were greeted by Mrs. Lilliam Hendrix and Mrs. Ruby Scott. Miss Annie Turner and Mrs. Blanche Jackson Registered guests as they arrived.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Betty Lupton of New Bern acted as mistress of ceremonies, introducting J. W. Heuay, Watchman Of Shepherds Of Greenville Shrine No. 7, who gave the invocation and Mrs. Clara Heuay, Worthy High Priestess Of Greenville Shrine No 7 who extended the welcome.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Betty Johnson, Worthy High Priestras Of Coastal Shrine No. 9, responded to the welcome, after which Miss Stark and other distinguished guests were introduced by Mrs. Lupton. The benediction was given by Oscar Aldridge, Watchman Of Shepherds Of Coastal Shrine No. 9.</p>
        <p>Following the banquet, guests reassembled for the eight oclock meeting at the masonic temple, where they were greeted by Mrs. Eva Corbett and Mrs. Alma Paramore. Mrs. Pattie Mizell, Mrs. Verna Dare Avery, and Mrs. Sarah Caprell presided over the guest register.</p>
        <p>The assembly was held in the shrine room which was decorated in the theme of The Supreme Worthy High Priestess. The meeting was called to order by J. W. Heuay. W.O.S., and presided over by Mrs. Clara Heuay, W.H.P.</p>
        <p>Distinguished guests presented and introduced were: Miss Mary Stark, Supreme Deputy Worthy High Priestess; District Deputies, Mrs. Nancy Willard of Greenville Shrine No.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Genevieve Johnson of North State Shrine, Raleigh; Mrs. Burnese Cobb of Columbia Shrine, Columbia, S.C.; Mrs. Vera Stegner of Onslow Shrine,</p>
        <p>Jacksonville; Deputy Supreme Watchman of ^ei^rds Bill Cobb of Columbia Shrine, Columbia. S.C.; District Chairmm of Material Objectives, Mrs. Betty Lupton of Coastal Shrine No. 9 in New Bern and Mrs. Sadie McClellan of Palmetta Shrine in Columbia, S.C.; Mrs. Lillian Hendrix, Supreme Honorary Officer; and several Worthy High Priestesses and Watchmen of Shepherds, as well as past Worthy High Priestesses and past Watchmen of Shepherds of the local shrine and visiting shrines.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Heuay turned the meeting over to Mrs. Johnson, who presented the Supreme Deputy Worthy High Priestess, Miss Stark, and invited her to preside.</p>
        <p>Miss Stark expressed her appreciation for all courtesies and gave instruction on the work of the order, after which she was honored with a program and a gift presented by Mrs. Nancy Williard, Mrs. Jean Tharp, Mrs. Thelma Maxwell, Mrs. Lillian Hendrix, Mrs. Ethel Ricks, Mrs. Blanche Jackson, and Mrs. Ethel Allen. Honorary memberships were presented to her by Bryce W, Tharp and Mrs. Betty Lupton.</p>
        <p>At the close of the meeting guests retired to the dining room, where refreshments were served from a table covered in white organdy and gold net, draped with gold tinsel, red roses, and golden hawks, and centered with a floral arrangement in red, white and blue.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN,</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>Christmas</p>
        <p>STORE SERVICES</p>
        <p>1. Free Telephone Use</p>
        <p>Come in and use our many telaphones installed In every department. Free for local calls only.</p>
        <p>2. Free Wrap for Out-Of-Town Mailing</p>
        <p>We will be glad to wrap for mailing any Christmas package for you. Postage charges extra.</p>
        <p>3. Gift Certificates</p>
        <p>We have gift certificates for gift giving. Each certificate beautifully wrapped.</p>
        <p>4. Shop By Phone</p>
        <p>Dial 758-1137 or 758-1138 and you will be connected to any department in our store. Our friendly safes personnel will be happy to assist you. Also phone 754-3140 tor our Pitt Plaza store.</p>
        <p>5. Exchange-Refunds</p>
        <p>All Christmas gifts cheerfully exchanged or refunds made.</p>
        <p>6. Quick Service-</p>
        <p>If you come in and everyone is busy, call for the floor manager Mrs. Ruth Cannon, Downtown and Mrs. Phyllis Daniels, Pitt Plaza. They will exp^ite any service for you. Floor manager is Brody's new way of giving you better service.</p>
        <p>7. Charge Accounts</p>
        <p>Enfoy the convenience of a Brody Charge Account.</p>
        <p>8. Gift Wrapping</p>
        <p>Free Christmas deluxe gift wrapping on every package.</p>
        <p>9. Convenient Parking</p>
        <p>Back of Brody's downtown Store and rear of Pitt Plaza Store.</p>
        <p>10. Gifts For Groups</p>
        <p>We have large selection of gifts that we can suggest for female groups. Call for personal shopper.</p>
        <p>11. Both Stores Are Open Until 9 P.M., Now 'til Christmas</p>
        <p>Give a Gift that Says / Care</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0004" />
        <p>T</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;Tke Daily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.Monday, December 8. 1875</p>
        <p>Nearby Fire Hydrant A 'Must'</p>
        <p>WHILE DIGGING AN ARCHEOLOGICAL PRIZE!</p>
        <p>A Daily Reflector Hotline item last week discussed the fire hydrant situation on Greenville ^ BcHilevard.</p>
        <p>Hie question was about the long distance that firemen had to lay hose in order to fight the fire at McDonalds Restaurant last week.</p>
        <p>Firemen reportedly had to pull a hose some 1,200 feet down the highway from the nearest hydrant.</p>
        <p>Fire Chief Ray Smith said he agreed that more hydrants were needed in the area and said that recommoidations for the installation of three more have been approved and they will be installed by</p>
        <p>Greenville Utilities crews in December. More are to be installed as funds are available.</p>
        <p>We hope there are not other areas of the city where fire hydrants are located such great distances from businesses and other property. Time can be an important factor in fighting a fire and obviously it takes some time to lay a hose 1,200 feet to the nearest hydrant.</p>
        <p>We hope that all sections of the city will be surveyed to make certain that there are not areas where the fire hydrants are too sparse to protect the property in the area. If there are any such situations, then immediate steps should be taken to correct them.</p>
        <p>Which Fish Is Doing The Swallowing?</p>
        <p>The Oty of Fayetteville is said to be moving in the direction of annexing the huge Ft. Bragg military base and possibly Pope Air Force Base.</p>
        <p>If the annexation is completed the citys population would be almost doubled to around 100,000people. The military bases would continue to</p>
        <p>THIS AFTERNOON</p>
        <p>provide their own services, and the benefit to Fayetteville would be a boost in income from federal and state revenue sharing.</p>
        <p>The move suits us all right, but the question has to arisegiven the size of Ft. Braggof jiist which fish is doing the swallowing.</p>
        <p>Critical Shoreline Wash</p>
        <p>By BILL NOBLITT</p>
        <p>RALEIGHTwo  miUion</p>
        <p>tons of soil from North Carolinas shoreline is being lost each year as cropland and other useful land, due to erosion of the banks along coastal rivers, bays, sounds, and estuaries.</p>
        <p>This startling rate of land wash in the state was revealed in a lS*county survey just completed by the U.S. Department of Agriculture Soil Conservation Service. Results are contained in an illustrated booklet on shoreline erosion now available.</p>
        <p>Most of the erosion is what soil experts term edge erosion rather than sheet erosion." That means the banks are actually caving into the water as of^&amp;gt;osed to topsoil washed off.</p>
        <p>Conservationist John F. Rice, author of the survey booklet, says most of the erosion is the result of direct wave action on exposed banks along the state's waterways. The study does not include losses on shorelines directly exposed to the Atlantic Ocean, or to the</p>
        <p>INSIDE REPORT</p>
        <p>sound side of the Outer Banks, although considerable additional erosion is occurring on those sections.</p>
        <p>Compare Photos</p>
        <p>Rice has compared recent aerial ];^tographs of the area with available data from previous surveys.</p>
        <p>As an example of the rate of land toss, he pointed to actual surface area washed away in two extreme cases: Beaufort County has lost 968 acres in 32 years; Hyde County has lost 2,136 acres in 25 years. Losses in other counties range from several hundred to the peak in Hyde County.</p>
        <p>The land loss, serious as that is, is not the only concern. The soil is being deposited in coastal waters as sediment, narrowing the flow channels, filling creek beds, and ultimately clogging passageways.</p>
        <p>State Conservationist Jesse L. Hicks, who heads the Soil Conservation Service in North Carolina, said the study was undertaken because of "an increasing awareness of the erosion and sediment problem in this</p>
        <p>area of the state." He said local conservation districts and county Soil Conservation offices receive increasing requests for help in solving such problems.</p>
        <p>The new publication entitled, North Carolina Shoreline Erosion Inventory" is available without charge to the public, and gives specific characteristics and locations of the areas of greatest erosion. Maps outline the problem in detail for each county.</p>
        <p>Land Washed</p>
        <p>Comparing the aerial photos dating back as far as 1938 produced the information on areas which eroded from dry, usable land to water. Local conservationists carried out onsite measurements, and compiled data on soil typ&amp;gt;e, land use, bank height, exposure, etc. An average weight of 90 pounds per cubic foot of soil material was used to reach the annual loss rate of two million tons.</p>
        <p>There are steps landowners can take to protect the shoreline, and in some cases</p>
        <p>reverse th#trend. Rice said. Ground cover crops selected to suit local conditions can do the job in some areas, while structural measures have been effective in others, Rice said.</p>
        <p>The most effective structure is a sloped rip-rap headwall of stone. Timber is used in the same way, but doesnt last as long.</p>
        <p>Concrete headwalls are effective, but more' expensive, and those methods only serve to hold and protect the soil from wave action.</p>
        <p>In certain locations where sand and sediment in the water can be trapped, groins or jetties made from heavy timber can be built into the waterway to actually build up land area.</p>
        <p>The state has a real problem in the coastal regions on which we have compiled this data, Hicks id. The Soil Conservation Service is ready to help Iaidowners, local government officials, and other concerned individuals do something about this very real problem.</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Why Johnny Can't </p>
        <p>WASHINGTONThere is increasing evidence that students are not doing as well in school these days as they used to. The national tests they take to get into college show that in most subjects this generation of scholars has taken a dive. Are the kids of today any dumber than those of yesteryear? I dont think so. I believe one of the reasons theres been such a letdown is that the p&amp;gt;arents of todays students are doing their kids' homework.</p>
        <p>The phone rings in my office about six times a week, and this is a typical conversation.</p>
        <p>Mr. Buchwald, my name is Mrs. Thunderbush, and my son Gerald has to do a paper on freedom of speech and the First Amendment. I wonder if you could help him?</p>
        <p>Where is Gerald now? I</p>
        <p>asked her. Why doesnt he call me himself?</p>
        <p>Hes very busy, and I said I would get the information for him.</p>
        <p>What good is it going to do him if you get the information? I assume the teacher gave him the assignment to instruct him in how to gether data for his paper.</p>
        <p>But Im his mother. Its not as if he asked a stranger to call up up.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Thunderbush, you sound like a wonderful parent, but dont you think you would be doing Gerald a better service if you let him do his own homework?.- Mr. Buchwald, Gerald is 15 years old. When a boy gets to that age theres so little a mother can do for him. Hes so independent. I cant buy clothes for him any more. I cant tell him who to play</p>
        <p>with. I cant even tell him when to go to bed at night. The only thing hell still let me do is help with homework. Believe me, if I didnt have that I wouldnt know I had a son."</p>
        <p>ART</p>
        <p>The Politics Of Blandness  Editors  say</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON-While almost surely avoiding a Senate confirmation fight, the nomination of Judge John Paul Stevms contains subtle dangers for the Supreme Court and again exposes the limitations of Gerald R. Fords bland presidency.</p>
        <p>There is no secret why Stevens, a member of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Chicago, was selected. President Ford and his justice-hunters were seeking the best qualified nominee likely to win quick confirmation. But in doing so, Mr. Ford furthered a trend toward capture of the nations highest court by the organized legal profession which could convert it into a body of legal mechanics rather than lawgivers.</p>
        <p>Moreover, the Stevens appointment reflects two characteristics at the Ford White House; a genuine desire to fill the Supreme Court with the best qualified justices, tempered by a timid inability to seize the</p>
        <p>challenge and opportunity of a coveted court vacancy. The end product comes over as the politics of blandness.</p>
        <p>Whereas President Richard M. Nixons court nomination strategy was crassly political, Mr. Ford may have gone to the opposite extreme. The selection process was conducted by Atty. Gen. Edward Levi and White House Counsel Philip Buchen, assisted by Richard Cheney, the new White House chief of staff. Cheney has little experience in party politics, Levi and Buchen none at all.</p>
        <p>Mr. Ford, shaken by four non-judicial nominations shot down in the Senate recently, wanted no [X'olonged fight over William 0. Douglass successor. So Levi and Buchen quickly eliminated the favorite of hard-line conservatives; Solicitor General Robert Bork. superbly qualified but stigmatized, unfairly, by the Saturday night massacre.</p>
        <p>In fact, the justice-hunters decided a sitting federal judge would both ease con-</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street. Greenville. N.C. 27834 Established 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARDDAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Grenville, N. C.</p>
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        <p>Advertising rates and dcndlines available iq&amp;gt;oe request Member AudR Bureau of Circulation.</p>
        <p>firmation and expedite the courts backlog. That killed chances for a woman justice. District Judge Cornelia Kennedy of Michigan, the only conservative Republican woman on the federal bench seriously considered, was deemed unqualified for the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Finalists for the seat were all male Republican conservative federal judgesa result bringing much joy to the American Bar Assn. (ABA). "A lot of us feel . , . that you shouldnt start your judicial career on the Supreme Court, said ABA president Lawrence E. Walsh.</p>
        <p>Selecting Stevens not only means that five of the courts nine members now will be alumni of federal appellate courts but strengthens the new role in shaping the court exercised by the ABA, the legal professions trade association. With Mr. Ford continuing the questionable Nixon precedent of submitting names in advance to the ABA, the legal professions trade association. With Mr. Ford continuing the questionable Nixon precedent of submitting names in advance to the ABA, the high court could become the mere high point in a judicial escalator system.</p>
        <p>Certainly Hugo Black, who as a Senator from Alabama</p>
        <p>lacked legal experience but proved a towering figure on the court, could never pass ABA muster today. No member of Congress would even be submitted by the Ford White House. Considerable conservative sentiment built up in recent weeks for Rep. Charles Wiggins of California. But Wiggins. while an indisputably brijlliant lawyer, lacked long legal experience and was blackballed as undistinguished. Resp&amp;gt;e-cted conservative academicians, such as the University of Chicagos Philip B. Kurland, were scarcely considered.</p>
        <p>That criterion would have deprived the court not only of Hugo Black and William Douglas but other famed justices lacking judicial experienceincluding John Marshall, Roger Taney, Louis Brandis, Felix Frankfurter, Charles Evans Hughes and Earl Warren (plus Nixon appointees Lewis Powell and William Rehniquist &amp;gt;.</p>
        <p>Furthermore. some lawyers (including loyal Ford Republicans) worry whether the veto power of faceless lawyers in the ABA is inappropriate for a Supreme Court which, uniquely in the world, is not merely the highest appeals court but a separate branch of govern-&amp;lt; Continued on page 6)</p>
        <p>Highwo'y 264</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; The Wilson Times)</p>
        <p>It is encouraging to read that a Highway 264 Association Executive Advisory Board has been named. As much time and effort has been spent on efforts to obtain four^laning of Highway 264 as any project we can recall. It makes no difference whether the efforts occur during a Democratic administration or a Republican administration, the object is the same and, to date, progress has been made.</p>
        <p>Highway 64 has been four-laned to Zebulon and a new Highway 264, consisting of two limited-access lanes on a four-lane right-of-way, is under construction from Zebulon to Wilson. This should ease congestion because traffic to Sims, Bailey, Middlesex and Zebulon will utilize the old Highway264.</p>
        <p>It should not be long now before completion of the new highway from Zebulon to Highway 1-95 west of Wilson and this will make travel from Wilson to Haleigh and points west convenient and pleasant. With only two lanes of Highway 264 the traffic was heavy and dangerous for a motorist cannot get around the tractor-trailer rigs which are becoming larger and heavier.</p>
        <p>While some degree of success has marked efforts to obtain an improved highway between Wilson and Raleigh, little progress has' been made to get Highway 264 four-laned frcmi Wilson eastward</p>
        <p>Much time and effort has been spent on this project Several years ago, there was a meeting at the Cherry Hotel attended by leaders of the area which a four-laned Highway 264 would serve. Since that time, there has been one try after another.</p>
        <p>From the new advisory board, some progress should be made in four-laning 264 on down to Swan Quarter. This section is growing industrially and roads can either increase the growth or restrict it. With such a board, progress should be made and we are certain the board can get all the help it needs from those who live along the proposed improved highway.</p>
        <p>BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>But, I protested, someday when Gerald goes out in the cold, cruel world and he has a research assignment, how will he know how to do it?</p>
        <p>Ill always be there when Gerald needs me.</p>
        <p>Thats not the point. The idea of writing a paper is to learn how to gather facts and then put them down. The teacher doesnt care what you or I have to say about the First Amendment. She wants Gerald to find out about it, and the only way it will make an impression on him is if he t does it himself.</p>
        <p>You can say that, Mr. Buchwald, because your son doesnt have the assignment. But, believe me, if you were Geralds parent, youd be whistling out of the other side of your mouth. After all, you dont have to sign Geralds report card.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Thunderbush, I believe youre doing your son harm by working on his homework. What pleasure will Gerald get out of a paper he hands in which he knows is not all his own work?</p>
        <p>Hell get pleasure out of knowing there was a mother who stood by him and cared. enough about him to help him through the rockiest part of his lifewhich was school. Well, first of all, why didnt you look up the Fir%t Amendment in the encyclopedia instead of calling me?"</p>
        <p>Because all the mothers of the kids in Geralds class use the encyclopedia. 1 wanted Gerald's paper to be more original.</p>
        <p>All right. Im terribly busy now, but if you come by this afternoon Ill give you</p>
        <p>(CfMitinued on page6&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Panel's</p>
        <p>Absent</p>
        <p>Voice</p>
        <p>By ROBERT B. CULLEN Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)  Something was missing last week when Carolina Power and Light Co.s Shearon Harris stopped in at the State Utilities Commission to testify in behalf of CP4Ls latrat rate increase request.</p>
        <p>Hugh Wells was not there.</p>
        <p>Wells resigned from the commission last summer to take a more lucrative job with the North Carolina Electric Membership Corp.</p>
        <p>When he was a member, the usually soporific commission hearings were energized. One never knew when Wells would lash out at a utilities executive like Duke Power Co.s Carl Horn. Once he said Horn expected the commissioners to be waterboys who will bail him out on request. He often exchanged heated words with Harris.</p>
        <p>Hugh Wells was nobody's wa-terboy. He was a man who feltand stated that when Shearon Harris and (3ar1 Horn come to plead their cases, I figure its my job to look them in the eye and say, Well, you say you did right, but thats your word. Thats not enough for me. I want to see the proof you can back it up with.</p>
        <p>wells did just that. When he wasnt satisfied with the proof, he voted against the utilities requests.</p>
        <p>His influence went beyond his single vote. Wells could be persuasive with the other commissioners, partly because they knew he would not hesitate to take his case to the public in a critical dissent or newspaper interview.</p>
        <p>His absence at the commission is reflected in more than the lack of questions from the bench to Harris last week.</p>
        <p>With Wells gone, the two most influential commissioners have become George Clark and Marvin Wooten. Clark is the leader of the Republicans on the commission; there are now five of them among the seven members. Wooten is the commissions chairman. He was originally appointed by conservative Democratic Gov. Dan K. Moore.</p>
        <p>The influence of Wooten and Clark is increased by the inexperience of the three newest members. Ward Purrington, Barbara Simpson and Lester Teal. All began serving in July.</p>
        <p>The panel for the CP&amp;amp;L case, for example, consisted of Clark, Teal and Simpson. Clark is the only lawyer among them and the only one who has heard a major CP&amp;amp;L request before.</p>
        <p>Attorneys who practice before the commission consider both Clark and Wooten men of firm integrity. But they say neither one has the viewpoint Hugh Wells brought to a hearing.</p>
        <p>There seems to be a feeling on the commission now that the men who manage the utilities are pretty capabie and wouldnt be asking for a rate increase if they didnt need it, said one lawyer.</p>
        <p>The consumers are going to have to prove theres something wrong with a request before this group wiU deny it, The burden should be on the company, said another. Neither would speak on the record, since both must practice before the commissioners they were speaking of.</p>
        <p>Since Wells departure, there have been several decisions that indicated a change In the commissions attitude. It reversed a position argued by Wells and granted a higher rate increase in a Nantahala Power Co. case. It granted CP&amp;amp;L an (Continued on page 6)</p>
        <p>Says Industry Irritating Wives</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>MORE THAN WHITE PAINT NEEDED</p>
        <p>In this town there stands a little old house which used to sag very noticebly. But recoitly the bouse received a new coat of paint, and strange as it may seem, the fact that the house does not stand four square is by no means so d&amp;lt;^nable.</p>
        <p>But of course it sags just as badly as it ever did. It isnt possible to straighten up a crooked house with a coat of white paint. The situation regarding the bouse has its parallel in human life. A</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>iiiiie white paint might make a sagging, crooker character look better, but the improvement is only in the appearance. Underneath the paint the habits, the selfish desires, the indifference to the welfare of other peofi^e is just the same. It takes a fundamental overhauling of the structure to strai^ten out both sagging houses and sagging characters. And until this task is done at the cost of sacrifice and labor, both house and character, even though freshly painted, are in danger of collapse.</p>
        <p>By Ellisha Doaglass</p>
        <p>By JOHN eUJNNIFF AP Business Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YOFIK (AP)  An authority on corporate personnel matters says industry is irritating an increasing number of wives and the corporate world must seek a truce or face defeat.</p>
        <p>As Eugene Jennings sees it, business is overmatched. It cannot meet its challenges if it continues to offend tlie wives. Eiterally. he feels, enough unhappy wives can undermine industry.</p>
        <p>Jennings, a maziagement professor at Michigan State University who is also an author and counselor to top ccHporate executives, says the reason is that future management men cannot be develc^&amp;gt;ed without the support erf wives.</p>
        <p>Basic to his argument is the observation, proven over the years, that industry best</p>
        <p>trains its managers, at least in parL by testing them in various jobs in many parts d the ccxporation. Usually requires geographical m&amp;lt;rf}ility.</p>
        <p>Geographical mobility means the uprooting of the family every few years  new homes, schools, churches. clubs, friends, activities. For the man, his career compensates. For the wife there are few personal rewards.</p>
        <p>A mobile manager is most effective whra be has a wife willing to make these sacrifices for his careo*. For many years this has been so; the wives have been willing to stay home and make the sacrifices.</p>
        <p> In the 1960s and before, the vast majority of mobile managers had wives who were homemakers, said Jennings, who began his pioneer</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>studies of corporate mobility in the late 1940s. Nine of 10 mobile managers in their early 30s had wives who were homemanagers. </p>
        <p>Now, however, the ratio is down to 6 in 10. The women are becoming less and less supportive the husbands mobility, Jennings ex-l^ined. They are seeking their own identities. Many pursue their own careers.</p>
        <p>Seeking the exp^nati&amp;lt;m, Jennings spent many weekends with managers and their wives. His CMiclusion: The real issue, as the mtrfxle wives perceive it, is social inequity.</p>
        <p>Ilte worst injustice eacaan-tered by the wife who stays home to take care of the family is to see her husband surpassed by a career woman who sends kids out to a day care WUle the hoonemak^ is pursuing the traditional</p>
        <p>responsibilities of giving tender loving care to the family and home, another woman captures the brass ring, even though neglecting her family responsibilities, said Jennings.</p>
        <p>There is no wrath like that &amp;lt;rf a mobile wife when her husband is beaten out by a woman &amp;lt;rf this type</p>
        <p>Adding to the home-managers rage is the fact that some career women can obtain a tax deduction for child care costs. BuL asks Jennings, can the ho me manager, whose work is equally importanL do sc^ Na</p>
        <p>As the childrra grow older and &amp;lt;rften more expensive, the disadvantage of a single income becomes painful to the wife who stays at home. She sees her career coun^ terpart able to afford a (osidmraUy higbar living standard</p>
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        <p>Daily Rdleclor, Greanville. N.CMonday. December S. lt7S</p>
        <p>Aurora People Fear Their Town Will Be Devoured</p>
        <p>By DAVID R. NELSEN Asaeciated Preat Writer</p>
        <p>AURORA, N.C. (AP)  Reai-denti &amp;lt;tf this eastern North Carolina (arming community have taken on a multinational corporation in a battle that they say will determine whether the town continues to exist.</p>
        <p>Once lauded by town officials at Aurora's hope of salvation, Texasgulf Inc. is now considered a predator that will devour the town. Aurora Mayor Grace Bonner said. Every indication is that they wish the town would not develop, that it would disappear. They keep trying things to erase the town, to remove the town," she said.</p>
        <p>Company officials, however, deny the allegations.</p>
        <p>Phosphate, a valuable mineral in fertilizer production, is at the heart of the issue. Texas-gulf is digging the black rock about ei^t miles from Aurora and townspeople say it is only a matter of time before the behe-moth^raglines reach the town. AurdSa is amidst some 100,000 acres of one of the world's richest i^KMphate deposits.</p>
        <p>Fearing the company will eventually raze the town to get at the phosphate about 100 feet below, Aurora has adopted a land use plan that controls development within a mile of town limits. The plan rules out mining in all but a few parts of that area.</p>
        <p>Among the 50,000-plus acres owned by Texasgulf in the county liB a substantial portion of the section to be regulated by Aurora. Texasgulf says it wont mine Aurora. But, James Paden, manager of the mining operation, said at a town meeting last month that the firm would take whatever action necessary, "legal or otherwise," to oppose the plan, Mrs. Bonner and others at the meeting said. Paden denies saying or otherwise.</p>
        <p>Near the Atlantic Coast, Aurora is on South Creek, a tributary of the Pamlico River. It has a population of 671 and, until Texasgulf moved in. depended on agriculture for its economy.</p>
        <p>Phosphate was discovered</p>
        <p>there in 1951 but little was done until 1958 when Texasgulfthen Texas Gulf Sulphur Co.explored and found more than 100,000 acres of mirieable rock. It is 100-200 feet underground and 30-40 feet thick. It is removed by stripmining and the supply may last more than 200 years.</p>
        <p>Texasgulf began buying land about 1963. Farm profits were low at the time and local farmers said they were happy to sell. The company was offering up to $630 an acres, about double the going price.</p>
        <p>"It kxAed like a tremendous opportunity to sell some of this land, pay for some equipment and get ahead," said Billy Thompson, a farmer and owner of a farm supply store.</p>
        <p>Aurora and Beaufort County officials were also excited about the potential offered by Texasgulf. Mrs. Bonners husband. Frank, was mayor then. He said he worked to bring the company in because it would provide jobs, keep young people from leaving and make the town grow.</p>
        <p>Texasgulf dominates the areas economy. The county's largest taxpayer, it has invested some $180 million and pays $700,000 in state and cmin-ty taxes. $300,000 going to the county. Employing 980 persons locally, the annual payroll is $13.5 million. Beginning pay is $3.62 an hour, about 30 per cent higher than the average industrial wage in North Carolina.</p>
        <p>The company also donates $350 a month for a teacher aide, $100 a month to support a band director and provides an environmental science class for Auroras schools. The company also has given a cash gift to each of the towns teachers at Christmas.</p>
        <p>Beyond economics. Texas^f has been influential in local affairs with its upper level employes serving on governmental and public service agency boards. One company official said upper echelon employes are virtually assigned to live in one of the communities near the plant and strongly urged to</p>
        <p>INVOLVED IN STRUGGLE  These are the principals involved in a fight they say will determine whether Aurora ccmtinues to exist. Fcom left: Grace Bonner, mayor of Aurora; her husband Frank, a</p>
        <p>former mayw*; Randy Hester, a professor who directed development of the towns land-use plan; and Donna Palmer, a student, who c&amp;lt;mducted much of the project. (AP Wir^hoto)</p>
        <p>Discount Pestcide Buyers Complaining</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) ment that Alexander Hamilton called an "intermediate body between the people and the legislature" to protect their rights.</p>
        <p>But even if limited to sitting federal judges, why did Mr. Ford not the seven-year absence a Jewish justice which is keenly resented by Jews? One finalist. Judge Arlen Adams of the U.S. Court of Appeals in Philadelphia, was in fact Jewish. Or. failing that, why not name an Italian or a Pole or a black?</p>
        <p>Atty. Gen Levi pushed vigorously for Stevens as the best qualified among the finalist. Levi is supremely non-political and, although Jewish, would never let that influence him. The result is the court's fifth Midwestern WASP (four named in the Ford-Nixon years)  irrelevant if the court is viewed non-politically in European terms but perhaps inappropriate in the American tradition.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, the mood at the White House is one of self-congratulation over an apparently fail-safe nominee. Everybodys poring over Stevenss record. chortled one presidential aide, but they cant lay a glove on him." Considering the pummeling Mr, Ford has taken lately, that may be good news enough for the Presidents men today, despite the subtle risks of encapsulating the Supreme (Ourt in a blandness never intended for it.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)State Department of Agriculture officials say they have been flooded with complaints about discount pesticides sold to farmers by telephone.</p>
        <p>Farmers have complained that the products they getare often watered down, overpriced. or toxic to livestock and</p>
        <p>Cash Stolen In Local Break-In</p>
        <p>The theft of $24 in cash from National Printing Co. at 715 Albemarle Ave. is under investigation.</p>
        <p>Chief Glenn Cannon said thieves tocdc the money from an office at the printing firm after forcing a door to the building o^n.</p>
        <p>The break-in was reported at 12;10 a.m. Saturday.</p>
        <p>Set Program On Alcoholism</p>
        <p>BETHELAn alcoholism education program will be presented at the Bethel Middle School Wednesday from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>A film entitled "Chalk Talk About Alcoholism" will be shown.</p>
        <p>The program is being S{X&amp;gt;n-sored by the Pitt County Mental Health Center Alcohol Program.</p>
        <p>valuable crops, chief pesticide specialist James Collins said.</p>
        <p>The state Pesticide Board, itself chaired by a salesman for a major pesticide manufacturer. has revoked the license of one of the companies, Dartmouth Chemical Corp. of New York.</p>
        <p>Department officials estimate that there are about 30 similar companies still operating in the state.</p>
        <p>Board chairman John C. Williamson said his firm. Uniroyal Chemical, does not compete with the telephone firms' products. Theyre a scourge on the industry. The agricultural</p>
        <p>Cullen Col . . .</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) interim rate hike; Wells opposed interim hikes on principle.</p>
        <p>The commission also decided not to make the internal audit of Southern Bells political slush fund a matter of ptdblic record. And it announced a more lenient policy on advertising by utilities.</p>
        <p>All of those things might have happened anyway if Wells had remained on the commission. But Wells would (K-obably have oi^posed them and made his views known in no uncertain terms. If any of the present commissioners opposed them, they have kept their dissenting views to themselves.</p>
        <p>chemical business has enough trouble as it is."</p>
        <p>Collins said he knew of one farmer that nearly ruined his peanut cropland with chemicals he had bought as weed killers.</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>"They would have killed anything growing. It would have been like salting the earth." Collins said.</p>
        <p>Another farnmer, A.P. Holtz-man of Warren County, said he was called at night by a salesman offering him a herbicide for the weeds near his hog pen. Holtzman agreed to buy 10 gallons for more than $15 per gallon.</p>
        <p>When he received the chemical he found that, contrary to the salesman's claim, it was dangerous to his hogs and to nearby grapes.</p>
        <p>VISITORS Fourteen physics students from Richlands High School were recent visitors to the East Carolina University Department of Physics.</p>
        <p>become involved in local affairs and get to know influential peo|rfe.</p>
        <p>For example, John Hird, a supervisor at the mine, is chairman of the county planning board, the panel which reviewed Aurmvs land use ]rian. According to Mrs. Bonner, Hird refused to let the town present the plan at a meeting last month and stormed out when town (rfficials demanded to be heard. The other board members listened to the presentation, however.</p>
        <p>The land use plan created frictitm between the town and the company with Texasgulf being accused of trying to kill Aurora. There are also charges of economic sanctions being imposed against Aurora.</p>
        <p>Whit Morrow, who heads the local office of the state Department of Natural and Economic Resources, commented in a telephone interview, I know Texasgulf has put the squeeze on the town in the past few months." Morrows role has been mediating, trying to help the town and the company resolve their differences. If it cant be talked out, be said, "it could really get ugly."</p>
        <p>Scott Stidham, administrative manager for Texasgulfs agricultural division, and June Crawford, the engineering manager. said the company is not trying to kill the town and denied there have been economic sanctions against those favoring the land use plan.</p>
        <p>Bonner, who said he built an apartment complex at the urging of Texasgulf officials, said a company employe recently told him his housing is being boycotted. Few Texasgulf employes rent his apartments, but when they do, they move out as fast as lightning, Bonner said.</p>
        <p>As to claims of boycotts, Crawford said. "We buy from the local hardware store, the local gas company and the local oil company if we can... Its just gcKKi business."</p>
        <p>An Aurora businessman who asked to remain anonymous said his dealings with Texasgulf fell dramatically after the land use dispute erupted. He said the company gave no explanation.</p>
        <p>Another factor causing the town to wilt is Texasgulfs farming activites. Some 1,200 acres are used for growing crops and there are several cattle grazing areas. Since the company has taken over the land, small farmers have been driven out.</p>
        <p>Thompson said his farm supply business has fallen about 60 per cent because Texasgulf buys its supplies direct. Ten years ago he had 300-400 farm customers, but now has about 50, he said.</p>
        <p>Several farmers who sold</p>
        <p>Buchwald * . .</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) some information on it. "Ill have my husband stop by on his way home from work.</p>
        <p>"Why dont you send Gerald down for it?</p>
        <p>"He has basketball practice this afternoon. Besides, my husband rarely gets a chance to help with homework, and it will be a good oi^rtunity to show Gerald his father also cares how his son does in school."</p>
        <p>land to Texasgulf say they were deceived. They were led to believe they could farm the land until the Arm needed it for mining, they said. Instead, the company went into farming itself.</p>
        <p>Hiram Paul, who farms about 450 acres, is bitter about being evicted from land he was renting from Texasgulf. "If this keeps hai^ning and they keep moWng in on me. Im going to get squeezed out," be said. Noting the company has provided needed jobs, Paul said. "As far as the farmer goes, they havent done anything but slit his throat.</p>
        <p>Farming the land before It is mined is just an effort to make a profit on it in the meantime, Stidham said.</p>
        <p>A dozen years ago there was harmony. John Wilkinson, an attorney in nearby Washington, N.C., handled land acquisition and some legal matters for the firm back then. He and company officials were predicting a boom for Aurora with a population hittii^ 15,000.</p>
        <p>It didnt happen. In the last 15 years, Auroras population increased by only 242 persons. The downtown area is rotting as businesses close and no other new industry has moved in.</p>
        <p>Town leaders are miffed. "We feel like we were misled, Bonner said.</p>
        <p>Crawford said one reason the town hasn't grown is, "It's an out-of the-way place in the world. Its on a back road, far from a major highway.</p>
        <p>Work on the controversial land use plan began two years ago. Randy Hester, a professor of landscape architecture at North Carolina State Univer</p>
        <p>sity. and several students drew it up after exhaustive sUrfies of the town's problems and potential and what the people want.</p>
        <p>Hester, who calls the dispute a"classic story of the small town versus the monster industry," said the noise and air pollution would drive residents away if mining were allowed closer than a mile of the town. Donna Palmer, a student on the prject from the start, said townspeople have flatly rejected moving the town as a solution.</p>
        <p>A $31,000 grant financed development of the plan, but those funds run out in May. Miss Palmer said additional funds are needed to help the town implement and enforce the plan as 4vell as carry out civic improvements. But, Hes</p>
        <p>ter said, the governors office and govermentai agencies have refused to help.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Bonner said the company is trying to force the town to deteriorate so people will move out and land values will plummet.</p>
        <p>It wont work, she said. I think everyone is in total agreement and everyone is willing to stick to their guns and stick together," she said, adding, "But no one outside of here really cares about Aurora.</p>
        <p>Again Texasgulf officials disagree. We cant control what happens to Aurora; we cant make Aurora grow or not grow, Crawford said.</p>
        <p>Our company has a real interest in improving the standard of living there and improving education," Stidham said.</p>
        <p>HAVE YOU WRITTEN A BOOK?</p>
        <p>Mr. Herbert Gilbert the executive editw of a well-known New York subsidy publishing firm will be interviewing local authors io a quest for finished manuscripts suitable ftr book publication. All subjects will be considered, including fictioa and non-fiction, poetry, juveniles, religioa philos(^hy, etc.</p>
        <p>He will be in Greenville in late January.</p>
        <p>If you have completed a boob-length manuscript (or nearly so) on any subject and would like a professional appraisal (without cost or obligation), please write immediately and describe your wmk. State which part of the day (a.m. or p.m.) you would jxefer for an appointment and kindly mention your phtme number. You will receive a confirmation by mail for a definite time and place.</p>
        <p>Authors with completed manuscripts unable to appear may send them directly to os for a free reading and evaluatloa We will also be glad to hear from those whose literary woriu are still in progress.</p>
        <p>Mr. Herbert Gilbert Carlton Press, Inc.</p>
        <p>84 Fifth Avenue, New Ywk, N.Y. 10011 Phmie (212 ) 243-8800</p>
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        <p>fTlic DaUy Refkctor. Greenville. N.CMonday. Decemb- , 1*7*VMi Coach Smiles Over'One Of Our Best Games' As New Dimension Is Added To Conference Race</p>
        <p>  'Walking Wounded' Aid Wins</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>A couple of walking wounded helped North Carolina and Duke to basketball victories.</p>
        <p>Mitch Kupchak, who had injured his left hip against Seton Hall Thursday night, and was reduced to shuffling instead of running, still played 27 minutes against Virginia Tech Saturday. And he had 24 points and 13 rebounds as the Tar Heels won 8&amp;amp;-T5 to brii their record to 3-0.</p>
        <p>Phil Ford twisted his knee late in the first half against VPI and did not play in the second half. Up to then he had scored 10 points, and he took a lot of excitement and a lot of points to the bench with him.</p>
        <p>Coach Dean Smith says Ford, a star guard who directs the offense, is a doubtful starter for the fourth-ranked Tar Heels in tonight's game against seventh-ranked Kentucky in the Charlotte. N.C., Coliseum. The coach said that Ford likely will be replaced by senior Dave Hanners, who played the second half against Virginia Tech and scored four points.</p>
        <p>Smith said that Kupchak, and</p>
        <p>Walter Davis, who also played against Tech despite an injury, would play against Kentucky.</p>
        <p>There also will be one other game for Atlantic Cosist Conference teams tonight. Maryland will be home to Boston University.</p>
        <p>Mark Crow of Duke, who had been examined by doctors after a groin injury during Fridays practice, came to the rescue of the Blue Devils in the final 44 seconds of the game against Virginia the next day. His five free throws in that span enabled Duke to win 81-79 in the first conference game of the new season.</p>
        <p>Crow had just two other points in the game, but they were of some significance. His field goat with 10:50 left to play halted a 19-2 Cavalier spurt that changed a 54-43 deficit with 16 minutes remaining into a 62-56 advantage with 11:01 left.</p>
        <p>Maryland, No. 2 nationally, kept its record unblemished by rolling past Richmond 98-71, aided by Steve Sheppards 24 points. John Lucas contributed 19 points to the victory.</p>
        <p>'Rear Broncos Might Reappear</p>
        <p>By ERIC PREWITT AP Sports Writer OAKLAND (AP)  The real Denver Broncos, the team which ran through the Oakland Raiders to an upset victory one year ago, might reappear tonight.</p>
        <p>If we had Otis Armstrong all year, theres no telling what would have happened, Coach John Ralston of Denver says.</p>
        <p>Armstrong, the National Football Leagues leading rusher with 1,407 yards last season, has played just one complete game this year. His last appearance was against Pittsburgh in the fourth game when he reinjured a hamstring.</p>
        <p>The former Purdue star practiced with the Broncos last week and could return to action in tonight's nationally televised game. Also, quarterback Charley Johnson appears to be recovered from a broken collarbone.</p>
        <p>Ralston said that if Armstrong is ready to face the Raiders, Wed love to have him. But its getting so late in the season, you almost want to wait on him until next year. The Broncos were 3-2 after five games, tied with Oakland for the American Conference West lead. But now Ralstons team is 5-6 and the Raiders have w(Hi six in a row to clinch their fourth consecutive division title.</p>
        <p>Excellence in the AFC West is measured by the Raiders, says Ralston. They have the great defense, the premier quarterback in Ken Stabler, a solid offensive line and great receivers.</p>
        <p>The Broncos hopes for 1975 were high after they beat Oakland 20-17 here last December, with Armstrong and Jon Key-</p>
        <p>Rookie Named For KC Award</p>
        <p>KANSAS CITY (AP)  Right-hander Dennis Leonard, who won 12 of his last 15 decisions. is the pitcher of the year for the Kansas City Royals.</p>
        <p>Leonard, a rookie, finished with a 15-7 record, and his .682 percentage was second in the American League.</p>
        <p>Leonard will receive the Royals Pitcher of the Year Award at the fifth annual Kansas City baseball dinner Jan. 25.</p>
        <p>worth leading a running attack which gained 292 yards.</p>
        <p>Keyworth and Floyd Little, starters most of the season, both came out of last weekends 13-10 overtime victory over San Diego with minor injuries after helping the Broncos establish a team record 328 rushing yards.</p>
        <p>Stabler was on target four times for touchdown pasyes last weekend, three times to Cliff Branch, and the Raiders pulled out their second consecutive overtime victory by beating Atlanta 37-34 on George Blandas last-second field goal.</p>
        <p>Two key Raiders may not play in the contest. Safety Jack Tatum is listed as questionable because of an ankle problem, and running back Clarence Davis, who suffered a back bruise against Atlanta last week, is doubtful, a team spokesman said Sunday night.</p>
        <p>Charles Phillips, a rookie out of Southern California, would replace Tatum, while second-year-man Harold Hart would take over for Davis.</p>
        <p>Adds $3,000 To PGA Winnings</p>
        <p>JACKSONVILLE, Fla. (AP)  Second-year pro Randy Er-skine has captured the Navy-Mayport Open on the Florida PGA winter tour, adding $3,000 to the $15,267 he earned in the regular PGA tour this year.</p>
        <p>Erskine. 27. of Battle Creek, Mich., fired a three-under-par 68 Sunday for a 54-hole total of</p>
        <p>204. one shot ahead of Calvin Peete of St. Petersburg. Er-ykine shot 67-69-88.</p>
        <p>Peete. who was one-stroke behind going into Sundays final round on the par-71, 6,400-yard Mayport Golf Club Course, couldn't catch Erskine. Peetes three-day record was 70-67-68</p>
        <p>205.</p>
        <p>Third place and $1,500 went to Charlton White of Beckiey. W.Va., who fired a 66-70-70</p>
        <p>206.</p>
        <p>Kenny Carr scored a career-high 39 points to lead 13tb-rank-</p>
        <p>Ashe Is Still Ranked Best</p>
        <p>By GEOFFREY MILLER AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>STOCKHOLM (AP) - Arthur Ashe, who failed to win the Masters Tournament in Stockholm, is still ranked by most observers as the top tennis star of 1975.</p>
        <p>Ilie Nastase, who won the Masters Sunday after a remarkable up-and-down week, said he rated Ashe the years No 1.</p>
        <p>So did Bjora Borg, who disappointed his home fans by losing hopelessly to Nastase in the final.</p>
        <p>You have to consider results first, Nastase. said. I think Ashe must be No 1., and I would rate Borg No. 2, and then perhaps Jimmy Connors. I would put myself No 5 or 6..</p>
        <p>This is how the years major titles have been split up:</p>
        <p>Ashe  won Wimbledon and the World Championship Tennis title at Dallas.</p>
        <p>Borg  won the French open title in Paris, runner-up at the WCTT event and the Masters.</p>
        <p>Connors  won the Australian title, runner-up at Wimbledon and Forest Hills.</p>
        <p>Nastase himself had not won a major event all the year  until the strange, fluctuating week of the Masters. On the first day of the tournament he was disqualified from a match against Ashe for his behavior on the court. On the final day he really looked like a master reigning among masters.</p>
        <p>Nastase toyed with Borg and won 6-2 6-2 6-1. As in the semifinal against Guillermo Vilas the previous day, he played with calculated coolness and never betrayed a hint of his usual excitement or tantrums.</p>
        <p>For reasons which no one was able to answer satisfactorily. Nastase makes a habit of winning this particular tournament and Borg continues to disappoint his home fans.</p>
        <p>Nastase has been in the final of the Masters five yars in a row and has won the title four times. The tournament features the leading players in the yearlong grand prix.</p>
        <p>Borg, Swedens l9-year-old golden boy, has still to win an important event in his home country.</p>
        <p>Borg has another chance in this same Kungliga Hall Dec. 19-21 when he leads Sweden against Czechoslovakia in the Davis Cup final. It is another outstanding event for this tennis-mad country, which has never yet won the Davis Cup.</p>
        <p>Nastase won $40,000 and has now earned $179,124 dollars this year. Btx'gs runner-up prize of $20,000 boosted his 1975 winnings to $220,817.</p>
        <p>Ashe is top money winner with $325,550. He picked up $10,000 for reaching the semifinals here.</p>
        <p>The four semifinalists in the Masters were based on points determined by round-robln play,</p>
        <p>rd North Carolina State past North C^rolina-Asheville, lll-60. Phil Spence had 20 points and 7-foot-l freshman Glenn Sudhop added 15 for the Wolf-pack.</p>
        <p>A tap-in with nine seconds left gave Wake Forest its third strai^t victory, 78-77 over George Washington.</p>
        <p>Griffin had hit one of two</p>
        <p>free-throw attempts with 47 seconds l^t to cut GWs lead to 77-76.</p>
        <p>Five Clemson players were in double figues as the the Tigers gained their third victory in four starts, 93-49 over Baptist College of Charleston, S.C. Tiger reserve Stan Rome scored 14 points, 12 of them in the first half, helping Clemson take a 47-27 lead into intermission.</p>
        <p>Pro Basketball</p>
        <p>Pro Basketball At A Glance By The Associated Press NBA</p>
        <p>Eastern Conference Atlantic Division  84</p>
        <p>W L Pet. GB Phill^ia  16  6  .727  </p>
        <p>Boston  12  7  .632  2^^</p>
        <p>Buffalo  10  11  .476  5M2</p>
        <p>NewYork  8  16  .333  9</p>
        <p>Central Division</p>
        <p>Atlanta</p>
        <p>Houston</p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>N.Oreans</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>11 8 11 9 9 9 8 12 8 13</p>
        <p>.579</p>
        <p>.550</p>
        <p>.500</p>
        <p>.400</p>
        <p>.381</p>
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        <p>(^INTEqpN*</p>
        <p>Boston 111, Atlanta 104 Houston 105, Detroit 96 Portland 90, Chicago 77 Philadelphia 98, Kansas</p>
        <p>City</p>
        <p>Western Conference Midwest Divisiyn</p>
        <p>Detroit  11  7  .611</p>
        <p>Milwaukee  9 11  .450</p>
        <p>K.C.  8  12  .400</p>
        <p>Chicago  5  15  .250</p>
        <p>Pacific Division G.State  14  6  .700</p>
        <p>L A.  16  8  .667</p>
        <p>Phoenix  9  8  .529</p>
        <p>Seattle  11  13  .458</p>
        <p>Portland  9  14  .391</p>
        <p>Saturdays Results New York 108, Buffalo 98</p>
        <p>Set Record In A Losing Gome</p>
        <p>FOXBORO, Mass. (AP)  Linebacker Steve Nelson of the New England Patriots set a club record with 18 unassisted tackles Sunday, but he was an unhapi^ young man after the Pats 30-28 National Football League loss to the New York Jets.</p>
        <p>Id rather play terrible and win, the second-year pro from North Dakota State said. I have had better games. I got caught in the flow a few times and they cut back on me a few times. I could have played better.</p>
        <p>Nelson, who also was credited with assists on two tackles, said he was not concerned with the individual record.</p>
        <p>Maybe some day when Im in a rocking chair it will mean something, but it doesnt mean anything right now, he said.</p>
        <p>Sundays College Basketball Results -By The Associated Press Penn State 74, Ohio State 68 Seattle U. 77, Gonzaga 65</p>
        <p>Golden State 104, Seattle 94 Sunday's Results Los Angeles 114, Washington 106</p>
        <p>Phoenix 114, Chicago 97 Golden State 115, Seattle 106 Mondays Games No games scheduled Tuesdays Games Kansas City at Buffalo Milwaukee at New York Cleveland at Philadelphia Phoenix at New Orleans Detroit at Golden State Washington at Portland</p>
        <p>ABA</p>
        <p>W</p>
        <p>L</p>
        <p>Pet.</p>
        <p>GB</p>
        <p>Denver</p>
        <p>14</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>.737</p>
        <p>Indiana</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>.650</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>6</p>
        <p>.647</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>San Anton</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>.632</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Kentucky</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>.619</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>S.Louis</p>
        <p>11</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>.458</p>
        <p>5/fe</p>
        <p>Virginia</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>19</p>
        <p>.174</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>Saturdays Results Denver 125, Indiana 118 San Antonio 118, St. Louis 104 Sundays Results Kentucky 112, Virginia 98 Denver 123, New York 119 Mondays Games No games scheduled Tuesdays Games No games scheduled</p>
        <p>By MARSHALL JOHNSON AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>Virginia Militarys Keydets, turning in what Coach BUI Blair called one of the best games weve played since Tve been here, have added a new dimension to the Southern Conference baskett)aU race that was supposed to be dominated by Richmond and East Carolina.</p>
        <p>The Keydets projected themselves into the picture Sahirday night with a 73-56 shocker over East Carolinas Pirates while William and Marys Indians were gaining a share of the lead with a 7(^ 61 decisiwi over The Citadels Bulldogs.</p>
        <p>William and Mary and Richmonds Spiders, beaten 98-71 by Marylands second-ranked Terps in one of three nonleague games, are on top at 2-0, foUowed by VMI at 1-0. It was the conference debut for both East Carolina and The Citadel</p>
        <p>In other nonconfbrence action, Appalachian States Mountaineers won for the first time in three starts by beating Lenoir Rhyne 75-61, but Davidsons Wildcats fell tol-2 ina9l-79 whippingatSL Johns.</p>
        <p>It was a whole team fort We woriced together hard all week and knew we had to play one ctf our best games to beat East Carolina, said Blair. Defense and hustle did the job.</p>
        <p>TheKeydets left little doubt about the outcome, bolting to a 10-2 lead as Dave Montgomery scored six of his 16 points. East Carolina pulled to within two, but Will Bynumwho finished with 10 points led another spurt that gave VMI a 34-27 halftime cushion.</p>
        <p>East Carolina never got closer than six points as VMI, with John Krovic scoring 17 points and Ron Carter 14, hit 62.5 per cent of its floor shots after intermission. Louis Crosby had 12 points and</p>
        <p>Larry Hunt 11 points and 15 rebounds for ECU, 0-3 overall</p>
        <p>Whil# Blair was pleased with the Keydets third victory overall in four starts, he aid that  man, do we have a lough week ahead If we can take at least two of the three games, we'U be on our way.</p>
        <p>The we^ starts at home tonight against Ge&amp;lt;rgia Tech and ends Saturday at home against Richmond with little Radford thrown in on Thursday. Tonights only other acticxi has Furmans three-time champion Paladins, 0-2, at home against Oklahoma.</p>
        <p>William and Marys Rem Satterthwaite had by far the best of it against The CitadeTs Rod McKeever in a battle of All-Southern guards. Satterthwaite had a game-high 23 points, McKeever just</p>
        <p>Pitcher's Feat Memorable</p>
        <p>CINCINNATI (AP)  Johnny Vander Meers double no4iit-ters were voted the Most Memorable Event in the Cincinnati Reds 100-year history and Pete Rose has been named the Most Memorable Personality.</p>
        <p>Vander Meer, who achieved the unprecedented back-to-back feat in 1938, and  Rose were named in a poll of Cincinnati area media.</p>
        <p>They will be part of a national contest involving other candidates from the rest of major league baseball. The two overall winners will be announced at the All-Star Game in July at Philadephla.</p>
        <p>Vander Meers feat outpolled the Reds 19TO World Championship. Rose finished ahead of teammate Johnny Bench in the voting.</p>
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        <p>The Bulldogs built a 37-29 telftime lead, but the Indian with Dennis Vail adding 21 points to Sat-terthwaites outputtwice ran off six-p&amp;lt;nnt unanswered strii^s in the second half to win Richard Johnson led the Bulldogs with 12 points.</p>
        <p>Richmond, 2-2 overfall, trailed Maryland by just72-68 with6V^ minutes left, but the Terpeled by Steve Sheppard and John Lucaw^t on a 14-1 tear that finished off theSpiders. Sheppard, hitting his last seven shots, had 24 points and Lucas 19 for the game</p>
        <p>Once we broke it open, we didnt have much trouble But it took a long time said Maryland Coach Lefty DrieselL</p>
        <p>In those last 6V^ minutes, Richmond Coach Carl Slone said we got to running with them . . . out of ccmtroL We had five or six breakawaye didnt sc&amp;lt;we and they scored on theirs.</p>
        <p>Tony Marshall led the Spiders with a game-high 25 points.</p>
        <p>Calvin Bowser scored 21 points as Appalachian State put away its first triumph with an eight-point streak midway the sec(md half. Don Stringfellow pulled down 13 rebcHinds for the Mountaineers SL Johns built a 38-32 half-time lead over Davidson and ran away from the Wildcats after intermission with GcKtrge Johnson scoring 20 points and GlennWilliams 18. John Gerdy had 18 for Davidson.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092926_0009" />
        <p>jDolphns' Strock Denies Nervousness As Starter</p>
        <p>t, int-t</p>
        <p>By BRUCE LOWITT AP Sports Writer</p>
        <p>He was just a kid, they said. In his first two years as a reserve quarterback, a third-stri-nger, he hadn't thrown the ball even once. In this, his third year, hed thrown It only five times  and that in a game that was already decided.</p>
        <p>How in the world, they won-rdered, would this lanky, raw I kid take over as a starter and I direct a team fighting for its llife in the National Football League?</p>
        <p>He did it just fine, thank you. V "Its not my nature to be ner-ivous," &amp;gt;on Strock said after r passing for two touchdowns and ^running for one to lead the Miami Z&amp;gt;olphins to a 31-21 victory over the Buffalo Bills. "I wasnt scared. I slept like a log last night, but I probably wont sleep tonight." i Xn Sundays other games it was Baltimore 21, the New jYork Giants 0; St. Louis 31, I Dallas 17; Washington 30, At-I lanta 27; Pittsburgh 31, Cleveland 17; Cincinnati 31, Phila-Idelphia O; San Diego 28, Kan-i sas City 20; Minnesota 24,</p>
        <p>I Green Bay 3; Los Angeles 14,</p>
        <p>I New Orleans 7; Houston 27, San ^ Francisco 13;' the New York Jets 30, New England 28, and Chicago 25, Detroit 21. Tonight  its D^ver at Oakland.</p>
        <p>Strock, a 6-foot-5 , 200-pounder (who had warmed Miamis : bench since coming out of Vir-; ginia Tech as the nations coUe-I giate passing champion in 1972, went from No. 3 to No. 1 in a [hurry when Bob Griese and Earl Morrall were hobbled by injuries in successive weeks. If Coach Don Shula had any reservations about how his kid quarterback would do, he didnt give any evidence of it.</p>
        <p>"He was on his own, play-calling," Shula said. "All he needed was an opportunity and he showed that in a big way." He showed his stuff in a big hiirry, too. He hit 10 straight passes and staked the Dolphins to a 21-0 halftime lead on his TD run of five yards and scoring strikes of eight yards and one yard to Howard Twilley.</p>
        <p>The Bills charged back in the second half. O.J. Simpson scored twice on a 14-yard run and a 62-yard pass from Joe Ferguson, who also hit J.D. Hill with a 31-yard TD pass.</p>
        <p>But the raUy was offset by h^orm Bulaichs one-yard touchdown run. And for Buffalo, it was too little, too late. With the</p>
        <p>loss, the Bills feU out of the playo^ chase. And with the victory, Miami remained a game ahead of Baltimore in the American Conference East and set up a first-place showdown in the Colts corral next Sunday.</p>
        <p>Colta 21. Giants </p>
        <p>"The record means a lot  if we get into the playoffs," Ly-dell Mitchell said after rushing for 119 yards to give himself l,-008 for the season and become the first Baltimore running back ever to hit four figures. But individual efforts dont mean that much if we don't make it all the way."</p>
        <p>Mitchell scored the only TD the Colts needed to make the Giants their seventh straight victim with a nine-yard run. The Baltimore defense did its part by sacking Craig Morton eight times.</p>
        <p>Cardinals 31. Cowboys 17 Jim Hart made up for the four interceptions he threw against Buffalo on Thanksgiving Day by throwing three touchdowns in St. Louis victory over Dallas that restored the Cardinals sole possession of first place in the National Con- . ference East.</p>
        <p>The Cowboys fell into a second-place tie with Washington, their foe next Saturday.</p>
        <p>Redskins 30. Falcons 27 Once again, Washington seemed headed for overtime when Atlantas Nick Mike-May-er kicked a 44-yard field goal with 61 seconds to play, tying things at 27-27.</p>
        <p>But Billy Kilmer, who had thrown three touchdown passes earlier, marched the Washington across the field and Mark Moseley booted a 39-yard field goal with five seconds to play, lifting the Redskins to victory.</p>
        <p>Steelers 31, Browns 17 Pittsburgh, stung by two Cleveland touchdowns within 14 seconds in the first half, rallied behind two Terry Bradshaw touchdown passes to Lynn Swann and two Franco Harris scoring runs. They rolled to their 10th straight victory and stayed a game ahead of Cincinnati in the AFCs Central Divi</p>
        <p>sion.</p>
        <p>Bengals 3, Eagles 0 Ken Anderson returned from a week on the bench with an injury and completed 20 of 25 passes for 223 yards, including a 10-yard TD pass to Ed Williams, in Cincinnatis rout of the Eagles. Williams also scored on a one-yard dive.</p>
        <p>Pro Football</p>
        <p>Pro Football At A Glance ' By The Associated Press National Football League National Conference Eastern Division</p>
        <p>W. L. T. Pct.PFPA S.Louis  9  3  0  .750  298  243</p>
        <p>Dallas  8  4  0  .667  288  237</p>
        <p>Wash  8  4  0  .667  312  219</p>
        <p>Phil  3  9  0  .250  189  274</p>
        <p>NYGnts 3  9  0 .250 162 269</p>
        <p>Central Division X-Minn.  11  1  0  .917  332  150</p>
        <p>Det.  6  6  0  .500  215  224</p>
        <p>G.Bay  3  9  0  .250  199  250</p>
        <p>Chic.  3  9  0  .250  129  328</p>
        <p>Western Division x-L.A.  10  2  0  .833  280  127</p>
        <p>S.Fr.  5  7  0.417  223  229</p>
        <p>Atl.  3  9  0.250  196  258</p>
        <p>N.Orl.  2  10  0  .167  134  290</p>
        <p>American Conference Eastern Division</p>
        <p>W. L. T.Pts.PFPA Miami  9  3  0  .750  336  199</p>
        <p>Balt.  8  4  0  . 667  351  241</p>
        <p>Buff.  .7  5  0.583  373  306</p>
        <p>N.Eng.  3  9  0  .250  223  290</p>
        <p>NY Jets  3  9  0  .250  221  378</p>
        <p>Central Divislcm Pitt.  11  1  0  .917  335  138</p>
        <p>Cinn.  10  2  0  .833  279  194</p>
        <p>Hous.  8  4  0  .667  245  190</p>
        <p>Cleve.  2  10  0  .167  168  337</p>
        <p>Western Division Oak.  9  2  0  .818  304  198</p>
        <p>Denver  5  6  0  .455  206  266</p>
        <p>K.City  5  7  0  .417  248  273</p>
        <p>S.Diego 1 11 0 .083 148 282 x-Clinched Division Title Sundays Games Washington 30, Atlanta 27 New York Jets 30, New England 28 Baltimore 21, New York Giants 0</p>
        <p>Cincinnati 31, Philadeliidiia 0 Pittsburgh 31, Cleveland 17 . Chicago 25, Detroit 21 San Diego 28, Kansas City 20 Minnesota 24, Green Bay 3 Los Angeles 14, New Orleans</p>
        <p>7</p>
        <p>St. Louis 31, Dallas 17 Miami 31, Buffalo 21 Houston 27, San Francisco 13 Mondays Game Denver at Oakland, n Saturday, Dec. 13 Cincinnati at Pittsburgh Washington at Dallas Sunday. Dec. 14 San Francisco at Atlanta Kansas City at Cleveland Buffalo at New England New Orleans at New York Giants</p>
        <p>Miami at Baltimore St. Louis at Chicago Philadelphia at Denver Minnesota at Detroit Green Bay at Los Angeles Houston at Oakland</p>
        <p>Monday, Dec. 15 New Yorii Jets at San Diego,</p>
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        <p>Chargen 28. Chiefs 2e I knew things were changing," San Diego Coach Tommy Prothro said, "when I beat a slot machine for the first time when our plane stopped in Las Vegas on the way to Kansas City." Prothro was right. The Chargers won their first game of the year behind rookie Rickey Youngs 124 yards and two touchdowns rushing.</p>
        <p>Vikings 24. Packers 3 Minnesotas Fran Tarkenton threw two touchdown passes to John Gilliam and another to Chuck Foreman to beat the Packers and move within one TD pass of Johnny Unitas NFL career record of 290.</p>
        <p>Rams 14. Saints 7 Defensive end Jack Young-</p>
        <p>Precision,</p>
        <p>Affection</p>
        <p>In Triumph</p>
        <p>LAS VEGAS, Nev. (AP) -For love maybe, and money for sure: Chris Evert and Jimmy Connors displayed playful affection and precision tennis in winning $100,000 in their nationally televised challenge match against Marty Riessen and Billie Jean King.</p>
        <p>After Saturdays much publicized mixed doubles, Miss Evert demurely gave most of the credit for the 4-6, 6-3, 6-4, 7-5 triumph to her former fiance.</p>
        <p>"Jimmy obviously controlled the match," she said.</p>
        <p>Miss Evert said she was more nervous than usual before the first set.</p>
        <p>Im known primarily as a singles player and havent had that much experience in mixed doubles," she said.</p>
        <p>But she said she soon relaxed as Connors played the dominant role in the match, making 80 per cent of the shots.</p>
        <p>And following a typically slow start, Connors did dominate the $150,000 exhibition at the Caesars Palace indoor pavilion.</p>
        <p>Connors used powerful forehand ground strokes, primarily at Ms. King. Afterward he said he was surprised with himself.</p>
        <p>"I didnt think Id go out and hit them that hard at the ladies," said Connors, who at 22 is the worlds No. 1 mens singles player. "Ive never done that before. But I guess for $100,000 I will.</p>
        <p>Actually Connors was hitting shots at Ms. King for $50,000 since he and Miss Evert split the purse.</p>
        <p>Riessen, 12 years older than Connors, figuped the match turned in the third set when he and Ms. King missed an opportunity to break Connors service and then lost service in the ninth game to give Connors and Evert the third set and a 2-1 advantage in sets.</p>
        <p>Theres talk already of another mixed doubles challenge involving Miss Evert and Connors, though nothing is set.</p>
        <p>John Newcombe and Margaret Court issued a challmge to the winners of Saturdays match and Connors said hed welcome the chance.</p>
        <p>Hes now picked up $400,000 in three exhibitions staged before national television' audiences by Caesars Palace.</p>
        <p>He defeated Rod Laver and John Newcombe in singles matches here before the doubles triumph.</p>
        <p>blood tackled New Orleans quarterback Archie Manning in the end zone for a safety and linebacker Jim Peterson ran 67 yards for a touchdown with a fumble recovery to lead Los Angeles to victory.</p>
        <p>Oilers 27. 49ers 13 Houstons defense limited San Francisco to just five net yards rushing and Billy Johnson returned a punt 76 yards late in the game to seal the Oilers victory over the 49ers.</p>
        <p>Jets 30, Patriots 28 Joe Namath picked apart New Englands defense, hitting on 14 of 18 passes for 160 yards, and John Riggins ran for 154 yards and two touchdowns as the Jets snapped an eight-game losing streak.</p>
        <p>Bears 25. Lions 21 Roland Harper  bolted 27 yards for a touchdown with 4:22 left to lift the Bears past Detroit. Harpers run came after the Lions had scored twice in a 69-second span on touchdown passes of 15 and 59 yards from Joe Reed to Marlin Briscoe.</p>
        <p>ONE OF MANY Washington quarterback Billy Kilmer (17) fires me of his 38 passes under a heavy rush from Atlanta defenders Mike Tilleman (74) and John Zook (71) during fourth quarter action</p>
        <p>in Sundays fame at Atlanta stadium. Kilmer, playing with a l*oken bmte in his left foot, completed 25 of 38 passes for 320 yards and three touchdowns. (AP Wlrephoto)</p>
        <p>World Cup Tourney In</p>
        <p>U.S. Seems Set In '76</p>
        <p>By HARI S. MANIAM Associated Press Writer BANGKOK (AP)  Next years World Cup Golf Tournament appears headed for the United States, the country which headed home today with both the team and individual titles from the 23rd tournament.</p>
        <p>"That will nicely coincide with the 200th anniversary cele-</p>
        <p>GRIFFIN AGAIN NEW HAVEN, Conn. (AP) Ohio State running back Archie Griffin has been named winner of the Walter Ltamp Football Foundation Player of the Year Award for the second consecutive year.</p>
        <p>GORDIE SUSPENDED TORONTO (AP)All-time great Gordie Howe of the Houston Aeros was suspended by the World Hockey Association for his involvement in an altercation with a referee in Friday nights game.</p>
        <p>bratiCMis," tournament director Fred J. Corcoran said after Johnny Miller rallied in the final round Sunday to win the individual title and teamed with Lou Graham for the team cha m pionsh ip.</p>
        <p>Corcoran, a former caddy who has arranged all of the Cup tournaments, said three states in the United States were bidding to host the 24th renewal. He did not name them.</p>
        <p>The United States finished at 22-under-par 554 for four rounds over the 6,906-yard, par-72 Navatanee golf course, 10 strokes ahead of Taiwan. Japan was third at 565, followed by Australia, 566, and Argentina, 571.</p>
        <p>"We played hard to try and win the honor for our country, but I did not expect to win the individual honor as well," said Miller.</p>
        <p>The 28-year-oId Californian</p>
        <p>shot a final-round 68 for a 13 under-par 275. That gave him a one-stroke victory over Bob Shearer of Australia and co-third round leaders Ben Arda of The Philippines and Hsieh Min-Nan of Taiwan. Shearer finished with a 69 while Arda and Hsieh each shot 73s.</p>
        <p>Graham, the U.S. Open winner, finished with a 70 for a 279 total and fifth place.</p>
        <p>Christy OConnor Sr. of Ireland suggested that in the future the country that holds the World Cup should host preliminary tournaments so that golfers from various parts of the world could get used to the</p>
        <p>weather and other conditions.</p>
        <p>For example, most of the Europeans had stoppped playing in October at the colder home grounds and suddenly they had to come here to play a world championship in tropical heat, OConnor said.</p>
        <p>"This is the first and last time I will be playing in Asia, said Brian Barnes of Scotland.</p>
        <p>Juan Cabrera of Argentina suffered a dizzy spell in the clubhouse and Venezuelan Neal Machado stopped playing after getting a heat rash.</p>
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        <p>DETROIT DEAL HOLLYWOOD, Fla. (AP)  The Detroit Tigers have acquired catcher Milt May and left-handed pitcher Jim Crawford and sent outfielder Leon Roberts, catcher Terry Humphrey and pitchers Gene Pentz and Mark Lemongello to Houston.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092926_0010" />
        <p>lTke Daily RflTlactar. GreeevlBe. N.C.~*Maiay, December 8. IfTB</p>
        <p>Jailhouse Lawyer Ranks Grow; Some Succeed</p>
        <p>By mCHAIUD BENKB AseaclateB Prcas Writer The odds are afalnst them, the courts discourage tbrnn. and prosecutors and public defenders disapprove of their legal dabbling'. Still, jailhotme</p>
        <p>law3rers are growing In large niBnbeis.</p>
        <p>They have something they want to aay. They are broke and Mnt afford a lawyer. They dont like their court-appointed public counsel. They want to</p>
        <p>Tough Year In College System</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP&amp;gt;It has been A tough y^r for the North Carcdina community college system.</p>
        <p>EnroUmmit audits by the state Department &amp;lt;ji Education have found four schools that padded enrollments to gain an additional and un^istified total of $145,000 in state funds.</p>
        <p>Presidents of two technical institutes have been ffred; one vice laesident and one tHisiness manager have resigned under pressure.</p>
        <p>The president of Piedmont Technical Institute in Roxboro was indicted last March on charges of embezzling and of authorizing Uie expenditure of itate funds to rebuild a burned :ture under the guise of iucting a course in iM'lck-vwork and masonry. The building had burned during a barbete.</p>
        <p>Community college officials say the {M'c^lems are an inevitable result of the 57-campus systems growth.</p>
        <p>The community college system now spends nearly $100 million in state funds each year. It estimates that 500,000 North Carolinians take its courses.</p>
        <p>In 8 new and rapidly growing system, youre bound to get a few who just cant cut it. There are going to be some square pegs in round holes, said Ben E. Fountain Jr., the systems' iMesident.</p>
        <p>Dallas Herring^ chairman of the state Board of Education, said the fact that the discrepancies were discovered internally shows that the system is working &amp;lt;mt its pr&amp;lt;^lems.</p>
        <p>Joan Little In 2 Courts</p>
        <p>RALEIGH, N.C. (AP)Joan Littles fi^t to stay out of jail continued in two courts today.</p>
        <p>Miss Little and her attorney, Jerry Paul, were scheduled to ai^&amp;gt;ear before the Beaufort County Superior Court in Washington. N.C. to oppose a prose-riition request that she be sent to jail to b^in serving the rest of her 7-10 year sentence for tn-eaking and entering and larceny.</p>
        <p>Paul said he would also file a motion with the state Supreme Court to ask for a delay while it reviews a state Court of Appeals decision that upheld her breaking and entering and lar-caiy conviction.</p>
        <p>Miss Little is currently free on $15,000 bond. Paul said both courts would be asked to aUow her to remain free until her appeals have been exhausted.</p>
        <p>He said Sunday he felt it was unlikely that she would have to b^in serving the sentence today.</p>
        <p>Miss Little was in the Beaufort County jail as a remit of the 1974 conviction whra she stabbed and killed jailer Clar-eace AUigood during what she said was a sexual attack.</p>
        <p>9te was acquitted of murder charges after a celebrated trial earlier this year. But the Court of Am&amp;gt;eals recently ufrfield her CMiviction on the initial breaking and entering charge.</p>
        <p>Paul said Uie prosecutor who lost the AUigood case, WiUiam Griffin, was asking for the sentence to resume.</p>
        <p>Under state law. he said, Miss Little had until December IS to ask the Supreme Court to review the decision.</p>
        <p>But state law also allows Griffin to ask that the sentence be resumed the first time Superior Court convenes in Beaufort County after the Court of Appeals decision has been certified. Ihat occurred last week. The court convened today.</p>
        <p>One state chan, said campuses experienced</p>
        <p>auditor, Jc^n Buhe thought some had hired inbookkeepers who</p>
        <p>lacked competence.</p>
        <p>Buchans State Auditor's o-fce has yet to audit the enrollment claims of nearly half the campuses in the system.</p>
        <p>Ten Die In N.C. Traffic</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press</p>
        <p>Ten persons died in traffic accidents in Norfii Carolina over the we^end.</p>
        <p>Three were killed in one wreck and two in another.</p>
        <p>The toU for the year rose to 1,362, but was still 112 fewer than at the corresponding time a year ago.</p>
        <p>A car hit a tree in Cumberland County, killing two teen-aged boys from Fayetteville and Albert Benjamin Nunnery, 42, of Rt. 5, Fayetteville. The boys were Eugene Giberson, 14, and Walter Bryant Giberson, 13.</p>
        <p>Both drivers were killed in the coUision of cars near Pitts-boro in Chatham County. They were Eldward Holloway, 55, of Rt. 2, Wendell in Wake County, and Joseph Allen Keys, 29, of Rt. 1, Pittsboro.</p>
        <p>Mildred Ycdcley, was struck and killed by a car near her home in Winston-Salem.</p>
        <p>Tom Howard, 35, of Rt. 1, Bethel, lost his life near that Pitt County town. The Highway Patrol said he was riding on the front of a farm tractor, fell off on a curve, and was run over by the vehicle.</p>
        <p>Tony Douglas McKinney, 2, of Rt. 2, Roxboro, Person County, died when a car in which he was riding overturned near Roxboro.</p>
        <p>Samuel Wilson Stout, 58, of Rt. 2, Liberty in Randolph County, was fatally injured when his car hit a tree five miles south of Burlington.</p>
        <p>Viola Wilkins. 69. of Rt. l. Halifax, was struck and killed by a car near Tillery in Halifax County.</p>
        <p>The count was kept from 6 p.m. Friday until midnight Sunday.</p>
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        <p>Have You Missed Youf Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your Independent Carrier. Iff You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Refflector</p>
        <p>752-3952</p>
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        <p>learn about the law. They have lots of time.</p>
        <p>Lynette Squeaky Fromme, convicted of attempting to as-saasinate President F&amp;lt;ti, chose to represent herself In propria persona, as lawbooks call being ones own attorney. The court heard ho* views on ecology and a variety other subjects before the privilege was revtdted.</p>
        <p>Other notables handling their own cases have included Sym-bioneae Liberatira Army members Rwsell Little and Joseph R^niro, convicted of murdering Oakland Schools Supt. Mar-cttt Foster; and former University oi Callf(xnia philosophy professor Angels Davis, who was acquitted of murder charges stemming from allegations ^ 8UN&amp;gt;Ued the gun used in a San Rafael, Calif., courtroom shootout.</p>
        <p>Judges {xefer to keep such cases to a minimum, fearing too many will clog the court calendar with lengthy semi-competent legal wrangling.</p>
        <p>e court discourages it (self -representation),  said Joan McIntosh &amp;lt;4 the public defenders office in Fresno, Calif.</p>
        <p>It puts the courts in the position of teaching defendants the law. In the past, jailhouse lawyers had to convince a judge they were competent to handle their own defense, but as a result o a niling handed down by the U5. Supreme Ckmrt last June, a defendant need only be warned o the possible consequences if he proceeds on his own without a lawyer.</p>
        <p>Now you can have it for wanting it, said Stuart R. Rappaport, chief of the trial division of the Los Angeles public defenders office. But he warned: Almost anybody who represents himself is going to be convicted.</p>
        <p>Since the Supreme Court ruled on June 30 that Anthony Pasquall Faretta of Los Angeles had the right to be his own attorney the number of jailhouse lawyers has tripled in Los Angeles County.</p>
        <p>In other urban areas, the recent trend also has been toward more prisoner selfn^presenta-tion, according to a spot survey by The Associated Press. Cumulative nationwide figures were not available.</p>
        <p>Its very fair to say that more residents of state prisons are seeking (their own) court relief following their conviction than in past years, said a prison official in Massachusetts, where a prisoners rights suit three years ago resulted in the creation of law libraries in jails and prisons throughout the state.</p>
        <p>Jailhouse lawyers interviewed complain that public defenders are overloaded with cases and go along too readily with judges and prosecutors in bargaining for a guilty idea by the client.</p>
        <p>A defendant is going to demand every right in court, said Los Angeles County prisoner Dennis Rutherford. I fired my lawyer, got a new hearing on my own and I won the issue that he lost.</p>
        <p>The public defender assumed I was guilty, said Joseph B. Garcia, 27, of Santa Monica, Calif., who got part of the r(d&amp;gt;bery case against him dropped after firing his court-appointed lawyer.</p>
        <p>T made a deal and went to prison twice at the suggestion of the public defender. Never</p>
        <p>again, said Roy Newsome, 31, (rf Los Angeles, now on trial for escaping from a courthouae.</p>
        <p>Rappaport denies he helps Tallied defendants but agrees court-encouraged plea bargaining can undermine a defendants confidence is his lawyer. It compromises our position, he said. But he maintains jailhouse lawyers bring most of thdr troubles on themselves out &amp;lt;rf ignorance.</p>
        <p>Some increase in prisoners' filing petitions, especially habeas corpus legal briefs asking release from custody, has been noted in New Ymk, West Virginia, Missouri, Ohio and Nevada, although apparently no formal statistics on such cases are being kept.</p>
        <p>The incidence jailhouse lawyers in lUinoia mostly comes in political trials where someone wanU to get his message across, said Henry ^leff-ler, an official with the Ckx&amp;gt;k County public defenders &amp;lt;^ice.</p>
        <p>I would guess political activist types charged with crimes will try to represent themselves because they want to interject whatever fx^tical ideology they have into the case  a forum for their own political beliefs, said Kenneth Wells, head erf the public defenders office in Sac-ramoito, Calif.</p>
        <p>Most prisoners interviewed said they act as their own attorney for lack of money to hire {Nivate counsel.</p>
        <p>Its mcmey, said Barry Mintzes, spcAesman for the Miriiigan Department o Corrections. Most of the inmates are able to file as indigents, so they dont have to pay court costs in filing.</p>
        <p>The number o jailhouse lawyers in Los Angeles peaked at 55 following several court rulings favoring pro per defendants, those who represent themselves "in propria persona. The boom ended when the Superior Court issued a memorandum of understandii^ cutting back on pro per i^vUeges in 1972. Since the membrapdum the number of inmaM^sking to represwit themsUTw had fallen off substantially untU the Faretta ruling last June.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092926_0011" />
        <p>The Daily Renector. Greenville, N.C.Monday, December i; lf7V--il</p>
        <p>Kantor Sums Up Career Views</p>
        <p>OLD SOLDIERS NEVER DIEIn a near perfil resemblance actOT Henry F&amp;lt;mda {daying the cole of Gen. Douglass MacArthor gets ready to ilehearse a scene from the ABC-TV special. 'Collision Course. Fonda worked the scene on a ^serted runway at Lockheed Airport where he</p>
        <p>met with Pres. Harry Truman played by E. G. Marshall in a re-enactment oi their historic meeting on Wake Island after the two bad clashed over methods to, end the Korean War. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Do TV Viewers Really Listen?</p>
        <p>By JAY SHARBUTT AP Television Writer</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - Do viewers these days ever really listen to whats being said on television? Or do they simply watch, munch potato chips and doze off?</p>
        <p>We began worrying about this the other day while watching, munching potato chips and dozing off. It made us wonder how many people actually would notice slight changes in oft-heard phrases on television.</p>
        <p>Suppose, for example, a commercial stressing that the Widget compact car gets 41 miles per gallon on the highway and 30 in the city ended by cautioning:</p>
        <p>Actual mileage wont vary according to individual driving habits.</p>
        <p>One wonders if thered be an uproar if someone lotriced at the supposedly clean shirt of a man, then dismayed his wife by crying, Square around the collar, square around the collar! Would you do a double-take if the TV announcer said, Chico and the Man is taped in Hollywood before a dead studio audience.</p>
        <p>What about: Portions of this show were post-recorded.</p>
        <p>Or: All in the Family will be back in just one hour. Watch an old movie about the U.S. Cavalry and the Indians. See if youd feel somethings wrong just before the big battle scene when the grizzled old scout tells the headstrong young officer:</p>
        <p>I dont like it, lieutenant. Its too noisy.</p>
        <p>See if youd wonder about that bath soap commercial where a handsome dude passes a young couple and the girl sighs and says he smells nice, whereupon her beau complains: But I use a deodorant soap, And she says: Thats the</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD PUZZLE</p>
        <p>ACROSS</p>
        <p>I. Mexican shawl 7. Keeps</p>
        <p>account of</p>
        <p>II. Pineapples . 12. Fragrant</p>
        <p>rootstock</p>
        <p>14. Aspects</p>
        <p>15. Laughing</p>
        <p>16. "DownurKler" native clan</p>
        <p>17. Wrong</p>
        <p>19. Department in Peru</p>
        <p>20. Western city 22. Producer 24. French river 26. Keel-billed</p>
        <p>27. Wine vessels</p>
        <p>29. New Zealand trees</p>
        <p>33. Bank employees</p>
        <p>37. Moses' death mountain</p>
        <p>38. English country festival</p>
        <p>39. South American</p>
        <p>trouble. You smell.</p>
        <p>On Sundays, who really listens to the audio portion of pro football games on TV? We defy you to find anyone who remembers that just before kickoff, the National Anthem singer sang:</p>
        <p>Ohhhhh, say can you seeee ... by the ah, um, er, light....</p>
        <p>We also doubt anyone would realize it if A1 DeRogatis cried, O.J. Simpson has just scored</p>
        <p>Writes On Law Tips</p>
        <p>Oliver W. Leary, a Pitt County native of the Calico community has a book published by the North Carolina Central University in Durham.</p>
        <p>Entitled Some Useful Hints About Law. the 84 page paperback book covers topics such as criminal justice process, property rights, contract law, consumer problems, inform consent and landlord-tenant practice. Learyreceivedthe B.A. and the J.D. degree from N.C. Central University and served a tour of duty in the U.S. Army Signal Corps.</p>
        <p>Leary is a licensed pilot and a member of the National Chess Federation.</p>
        <p>The book is available from Leary at Apt. 31, Greenway Apartments, Greenville.</p>
        <p>BIG COMPLEX BOSTON (UPI)  The John F. Kennedy Federal Building, two 26-story towers with a 400-foot-long annex, has over 25 acres of office space and cost approximately $29 million to build.</p>
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        <p>Porliaia 35 min.</p>
        <p>AA N*irrt*afvr*i</p>
        <p>the 33rd home run of his career.</p>
        <p>Television news seems to be a biggie when It comes to watching, but not listening carefully. Take President Fords China trip, for example. Whod really notice if the anchorman said;</p>
        <p>White House spokesman Ron Ziegler described the talks as frank, cordial arid silly.</p>
        <p>Well, maybe a few viewers would- But wed bet theyre so swamped with stories about Fun Citys fiitancial mess they wouldnt notice it if John Chancellor reported:</p>
        <p>New York City officials told President Ford today their city is on the verge of fiscal stability unless the government acts soon.</p>
        <p>Maybe we should lay off this susiness about viewers who watch but dont listen carefully. Otherwise, Walter Cronkite may test such suspicions at the ;nd of his newscast tonight by saying:</p>
        <p>And thats the way it is, Monday, December 8, 1941....</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV Ch. 9</p>
        <p>By PHIL THOMAS AP Bo(As Editor NEW YORK (AP)  I remember, 1 remember, 'tis a joy to recall, is the first line of MacKinlay Kantors new novel about the American Revolution, Valley Forge, but it also sums up the Pulitzer Prize-winning authors own feelings about his long writing career.</p>
        <p>Now 71, the tall, erect Kantor smiles as he looks back over the years in which he wrote 43 books  mostly fiction  and says, Ive been very fortunate. Because of writing Ive never had to worry about eatin money or livin money from the time I was 30 up to now, and Im rapidly approaching 72. Bom in Webster City, Iowa, Kantor dropped out of high school after finishing his sophomore year and got a job with the state highway commission. 1 tested soil samples, he recalls ruefully, pulling at his thick white mustache, and one really gloomy day I decided that this was a hell of a way to spend my life. I wanted to be out in the woods looking at the flowers. I wanted it to be sunny and warm. And then, suddenly, I thought that if I tell myself about the way I want it to be I can make it true for myself. And then, I thought that if I</p>
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        <p>THE OTHER SIDE GF THE MOUNTAIN^</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Truth Or 7:30 Basketball :30 Maude )0:00 Med. Center 11 :QD Newswatch 11:30 Movie</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>0:00 Car. Today S:00 Morn. News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 Price Right 11:00 Gambit 11:30 LOve Of Ule 11:55 Graham Kerr 12:00 Newswatch 13:30 Search For</p>
        <p>Car</p>
        <p>9:00 Movie 11.00 News 11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>5:30 country i:00 Almanac 7:00 Today 7:25 News 7:30 News :2S News g;30 Today 9:00 Mike Douglas 10:00 Sweepstakes</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>1:30 Deal</p>
        <p>7:30 Truth</p>
        <p>2:00 Pyramid</p>
        <p>8:00 Cousteau</p>
        <p>2:X Reason</p>
        <p>9:00 FOOtMII</p>
        <p>3:00 Gen. Hosp</p>
        <p>12:00 News</p>
        <p>3:30 Life</p>
        <p>4:00 Gilligan</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>4:30 Comedy</p>
        <p>6:30 Zoo</p>
        <p>5:30 News</p>
        <p>7:00 Morning</p>
        <p>6:00 News</p>
        <p>9:00 AAontage</p>
        <p>6:30 MavericK</p>
        <p>10:00 Gin</p>
        <p>7:30 Truth</p>
        <p>10:30 Concentration</p>
        <p>8:00 Santa</p>
        <p>11:00 Night</p>
        <p>9:00 Rookies</p>
        <p>11:30 Days</p>
        <p>10:00 welby</p>
        <p>12:00 Showotts</p>
        <p>11:00 News</p>
        <p>12:30 Children</p>
        <p>11:30 Mystery</p>
        <p>1:00 Hope</p>
        <p>1:00 News</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 Plano 7:30 Book Beat 8:00 Firing Line 9:00 Fireworks 10:00 Onedin Line</p>
        <p>TUESDAY B:4S Mathematics 9:00 Earth 9:30 Mythology 10:00 Sesame St. 11:00 Earth 11:30 Mathematics 11:45 Cover 12;0S Crisis 12:30 Electric CO</p>
        <p>write about it I can make it true for everybody.</p>
        <p>It was a marvelous idea! 1 went out, bought a big, lined notebocA, took it home and started to write. Id decided that from then on I didnt want to do anything else but write.</p>
        <p>His love of writing took him into newspaper work, but while doing this he also wrote stories and poems in his free time, sending them out and getting them back. He made his first sale, a short story, when he was 18. I was paid $50 for it, he recalls happily. I was just dizzy; I could hardly talk. I went on writing and sending out, but, do you know, it took five years before 1 sold another story.</p>
        <p>Kantor sold his first novel, Diversey, when he was 24. It was the first Chicago gang novel, he says emphatically. He published his books steadily after that, among them the worka for which he is best known such as The Voice of Bugle Ann, Glory For Me (a novel in verse on which the award-winning movie The BestYears of Our Lives was based), Signal 'Thirty-two, and the Pulitzer Prize-winning Andersonville, the absorbing story of a Civil War prison camp.</p>
        <p>1:00 Young And 1:30 World Turns 2:30 Guiding Ligtit 3:00 All in Family 3:30 Atotch Game 4:30 Batman 5:00 Gunsmoke 6:00 Newswatch 6:30 News 7:00 Truth Or 7:30 Hollywood Sqs 8:00 Good Times 8:30 Before Christ. 9:00 MASH 9:30 All in Family 10:00 Switch lHIB Newswatch 11:30 AMvie</p>
        <p>WiTN-TV Ch. 7</p>
        <p>MONDAY  10:30  Fortune</p>
        <p>7:00 Fam Affair  11;0Q HIgfi RpU</p>
        <p>7:30 Treas Hunt  11:30 Hollywood</p>
        <p>8.00 Invisi Man  12:00 News Noon</p>
        <p>8:57 News Update 12:30 Three Money</p>
        <p>12:55 NBC News 1:00 Jeannie 1:30 Days of Lives 3:30 Doctors 3:00 Another WId. 4:00 Spec Treat 5:00 Ironside 6:00 News 6:30 world Hunger 11:30 Telethon 11:30 News 12:00 Tonight</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV Ch. 12</p>
        <p>WUNK-TV Ch. 25</p>
        <p>1:00 images 1:30 Ripples 1:35 Bread 1:50 Earth 2:20 Mathematics 2:35 /Metric 4:00 Mr. Rogers 4:30 Sesame St 5:30 Electric Co. 6:00 Carrascolendas 6:30 your Future 7:00 Guitar II 7:30 Geographic 8:30 consumer 9:00 Ascent 10:00 woman 10:30 woman</p>
        <p>264 PLAYHOUSE</p>
        <p>INDOOR THEATRE 6 Miles Waat Ot Oreenviiie On U.S. 264 (Farmvilia Nwy.)</p>
        <p>Now Showing</p>
        <p>AtYavr A*lt BioartalafMRt Cantar</p>
        <p>The Virgin ^ Lovers</p>
        <p>mmtt6 Du Foyer Cover an</p>
        <p>OUNKA PODANY</p>
        <p>AfiMbvKBH4Honiu^</p>
        <p>A dHfrnt kind of Lev*. Cetor-RatEdX</p>
        <p>CALL FOR SHOWTIME</p>
        <p>756-0848</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR TUESDAY, DEC. 9, 1975</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES: A good day to attend to the various tasks that need to be done and to get them in back of you by a stick-to-itive approach. You can now fine the answers that eluded you in the past.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Take care of the duties awaiting you without delay and the rest of the week can be more lucrative. Think constructively.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Know what your personal aims are and plan just how to attain them with relative ease. Be sure to accept a social invitation.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) Attend to any civic or outside tasks and do much to raise prestige you now enjoy. Iron out any differences you have with mate.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) Obtain aU the data you need so that you can put a new project into operation. New associates can be helpful to you now.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug. 21) Handle all those duties ahead of you with vim and vigor. Know what is expected of you by mate and do your best to please.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug. 22 to Sept. 22) If you are not certain just what is expected of you by associates, ask directly and be sure. Dont neglect a civic duty.</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Organizing your work so that there will be more accord with co-workers is wise. Find new items for enhancing your wardrobe.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. to Nov. 21) Take time to make long-range plans for the future. Loved one is expecting something special from you. Do not disappoint.</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22 to Dec. 21) Be sure to see that home conditions are improved. Make plans for the holidays ahead and take care of necessary chores.</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Be sure to keep important appointments today. Handling communications may take more time than you thought. Be patient.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Handling finances should be first on the agenda today. Improve your surroundings and take care of repairs that should be made.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) A good day to improve your health and appearance. Take steps to make your life more meaningful. Evening is fine for sociability.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY ... he or she will handle duties in a very direct way, but can also add a flair to them, be it at home or elsewhere. Teach to be more modern since theres a tendency to be old-fashioned. Be sure to give spiritual training early in life.</p>
        <p>The Stars impel, they do not compel. What you make of your life is largely up to YOU!</p>
        <p>Carroll Righters Individual Forecast for your sign for January is now ready. For your copy send your birthdate and $1 to Carroll Righter Forecast (name of newspaper), P.O. Box 629, Hollywood, Calif. 90028.</p>
        <p>((c) 1975, McNaught Syndicate, Inc.)</p>
        <p>Big A, as Kantor affectionately calls Andersonville. probably made me the moet money of any single one of my books. I guess I got about a million dollars out of that book. But it was a long time coming. I did an enormous ammmt of research for that book. Why, I started taking notes for it when I was 29 it wasnt until 1 was 51 that it was published.</p>
        <p>This compulsion for research, to get things right, dominates much of Kantors work. To get the material he needed to write Signal Thirty-two, a novel about cops from the cops point of view, Kantor served with the New York City police force</p>
        <p>two years, working out of the busiest station house in town because I didnt feel I could tell the story of a policeman unless 1 had been one.</p>
        <p>He served as a combat correspondent in World War II and the Korean War and my combat experiences influenced much that appears in my bo&amp;lt;^s. During the Second World War, he recalls, I got tired of the Germans shooting at me and not being able to shoot back, so 1 went to aerial gunnery school, qualified,' went out in a B-17 and got my German plane.</p>
        <p>To get the material he wanted for Valley Forge. Kantor</p>
        <p>says, I have friendi^who live near Valley Forge. ^ went up there and stayed with them and studied the territory for a long time. I also did a tremendous amount of reading. After that, I spent two years writing the book.</p>
        <p>Kantor, who lives with his wife in Sarasota, Fla., says he is now putting the finishing touches on a biography that I cant talk about except to say it's about a great yachtsman who loved to sail to Alaska.</p>
        <p>Naturally, since I'd never been to Alaska, I had to go up there and look things over.</p>
        <p>East Carolina Playhouse</p>
        <p>Presents</p>
        <p>Now?</p>
        <p>A Count-y Western^ Comedy</p>
        <p>STUDIO i THEATRE ECU</p>
        <p>DEC. 10-13, 15-17  3:15</p>
        <p>Ges. Am. tzjm, Cmn 7SB-C3W Per Reecrvetfeae</p>
        <p>COREN BRIDGE</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H. GOREN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>O 19TS. Th. Chic.Ko Tribunr</p>
        <p>Q.lAs South, vulnerabie, you hold:</p>
        <p>1096  ^8  0KQJ6</p>
        <p>AQ1096</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: North East South West</p>
        <p>1   Pasa  2   Pass</p>
        <p>2 O  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Bid three diamonds. After a two-over-one response, a raise of partners second suit is forcing. This hand mi^ht produce a slam, but any more drastic action would  leave  you  awkwardly</p>
        <p>placed. If partners next bid is three no trump, you will, of course, correct to four spades to 4X&amp;gt;mplete the picture of your hana.</p>
        <p>Q.2 Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>10  ^K85  OQ1076</p>
        <p>AKQ84</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1   1 O  1    Pass</p>
        <p>2   2 0  3    Pass</p>
        <p>3NT  Pass  4  ^  Pass</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A.Bid four spades. It might seem stran^ to take a preference into a suit where you hold a singleton when you have three to the king in partners second suit, but he must have at least six</p>
        <p>f:o^ spades and only four hearts or his bidding. At a heart contract. the whole hand could fall apart if partner is forced to ruff a diamond early.</p>
        <p>Q,3As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>K &amp;lt;7AKQJ95 OQJ83 AB The bidding has proceeded: South  West  North  East</p>
        <p>1 ^  Pass  2    Pass</p>
        <p>3 &amp;lt;7  Pass  3    Pass</p>
        <p>4   Pass  4  ^  Pass</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A. Five hearts. In view of partners strong auction, slam should be odds-on if he has either flrst-or second-round diamond control. By raising beyond game after three suits have been bid, you draw partner's attention to the tact that you need a control in the fourth suit to contract for slam.</p>
        <p>Q.4Both vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>KQ &amp;lt;7954 OA52 AKQ62 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1   3 0 Pass 3 NT</p>
        <p>?</p>
        <p>What action do you take?</p>
        <p>A. Pass. Yes, we realize that by leading the king of spades, you are sure to beat three no trump. But what guarantee have you that if you double, the opponents wont escape into some makable spot like four diamonds? You know from the auction that partner must have a bust, so be happy with a small profit.</p>
        <p>Q.5As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>A &amp;lt;7AK752 0 872 10732 The bidding has proceeded: North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>10  1   2  ^  Pass</p>
        <p>3   Pass  4    Pmss</p>
        <p>4 0  PssB  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Five diamonds. It sounds as if partner has six good diamonds and only four clubs, and a bad break in trumps might sink a dub contract, we won t fault-you CTeatly if you elected to cue-bid four spades, but that call seems rather optimistic with such weak holdings in the minor suit.</p>
        <p>Q.6Neither vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>J7 ^Q863 OAKQ54 ^92 The bidding has proceeded: North East  South  West</p>
        <p>1 7 Pass  2 0  Pass</p>
        <p>3 7 Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Five hearts. Your hand is too strong for a mere four hearts, and no other action is appealing. By jumping over game, you alert partner to your interest in slam while warning him that he needs control of the unbid suits to go on. Blackwood would be a very poor choice, for you might get to slam off two fast tricks in one of the black suits.</p>
        <p>Q.7East-West vulnerable, as South you hold:</p>
        <p>Q10943  ^J762  0QJ83</p>
        <p>The bidding has proceeded: West North East  South</p>
        <p>1   1  Pass  ?</p>
        <p>What do you bid?</p>
        <p>A.Four spades. This is a two-way action you might make four spades, or by rasing the auction so swiftly to an uncomfortable level, you might succeed in keeping the opponents out of a good contract. One thing is sureyour length in spades has not improved partners defensive potential.</p>
        <p>Q.8As South, vulnerable, you hold:</p>
        <p>AKJ &amp;lt;7 AJ1073 0 6 K976 The bidding has proceeded: South West North East 1 7 Pass  1 4 Pass</p>
        <p>What do you bid now?</p>
        <p>A.Two clubs. The temptation to raise partners suit is great, but it should be resisted. Your hand is too strong for a simple raise to two spades, 'and you don't want to jump raise with three trumps even if they are as good 4s these are. The best way to describe your hand is to show your second suit now. and then raise spades at your next turn.</p>
        <p>Charles Goren has compiled a pocket guide, "Shortcut to Expert Bridge, which includes instant answers to all point counts. To obtain your copy, write to Goren's expert Bidding, c/o this newspaper, P. O. Box 259, Norwood, New Jersey 07648. Enclose $1.25 in cash or checks, payable to NEWS-PAPERBOOKS.</p>
        <p>(Valley Forge is published by M. Evans &amp;amp; Co.)</p>
        <p>Geneva Prizes Announced</p>
        <p>GENEVA, Switzerland (AP)  The Geneva Competition this year awarded only one first prize, in its guitar section, to Dusan Bogdanovic of Yugoslavia.</p>
        <p>William Westney of Forest Hills, N.Y., won the top prize, second, in the piano division. The cello and trumpet divisions had two persons sharing second prize and the voice division had three sharing second prize.</p>
        <p>Westney will perform in the Swiss cities of Basei and Schaffhausen and Mulhouse, France, in a tour with winners from other divisions of the competition. He is a graduate of Queens College and the Yale School of Music and in 1971 was awarded a Fulbright grant for a year of private study in Italy.</p>
        <p>Westneys recording of Leo Ornsteins Piano Quintet" will soon be released on the CRI label.</p>
        <p>PLAZA</p>
        <p>X ZSIDIX</p>
        <p> MAHOGANY </p>
        <p>NOW SHOWING!</p>
        <p>WtLLAXD HAD HIS RATS...</p>
        <p>RECAN HAD HER DEMON...</p>
        <p>NOW - MEET SUSAN and</p>
        <p>HER STALKING. CRAWUNC</p>
        <p>KILL6R TARANTULAS!</p>
        <p>Sbe bad POMTER witb her LIPS and her pet iSPIDERSI</p>
        <p>FREE ORAWINO CONTEST</p>
        <p>9S04 0$ m cash AAd prtz* AwA/tfs* WFAG AM W0OR FM F*rmiik</p>
        <p>Draw * TarsAttflA (sR4#r)  i  *  |  a  |$  Of</p>
        <p>ROOer and bnr&amp;gt;9 t fo o*r fhoofro 4on*o "Kis Of The TArOAlvl#</p>
        <p>No ORl*44f*on!</p>
        <p>TO Bvy!</p>
        <p>WINNERS WILL NOTIFICO</p>
        <p>iHOWl OAtL V &amp;gt; 7* ) IS I le 7 *  M</p>
        <p>DOO* 1IS i * M  _</p>
        <p>NEXT SIC HIT!</p>
        <p>STARDUST"</p>
        <p>Ring In The New Year</p>
        <p>at the</p>
        <p>%</p>
        <p>6 Piece Show Group</p>
        <p>Featuring Female Vocalist</p>
        <p>Dinner served at 8:30 P.M. Show starts at 10 P.M.</p>
        <p>Free Champagne at 12 Midnight Free Set-Ups All Night Buffet Breakfast at i A.M. All Party Favors Furnished</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <p>Per Couple</p>
        <p>$10 deposit required by Dec. 24tti.</p>
        <p>For ReservoHons Call 756-2792</p>
        <p>Double Occupancy Room</p>
        <p>MO'</p>
        <p>Buffet Menu-</p>
        <p>Fried Shrimp Beef Stroganoff Hawaiian Ham Asparagus with Cheese Sauce Potatoes Parmesan Assorted Parfaits Glazed Carrots Cream Spinach WaldoH Salad</p>
        <p>ifw Years Eve</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p>OMfple</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0012" />
        <p>ISTIm Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Monday. December 8, 1975</p>
        <p>Planting Black ySfalnut Trees</p>
        <p>By KAY McCarthy</p>
        <p>OKLAHOMA CITY (UPI)  Across Oklahoma children and civic workei*s are bending over shovels and spades to dig up the ground in an ambitious, if nutty. Bicentennial project.</p>
        <p>Their goal is to grow Five million black walnut trees, v^ich are native to the state but now scarce.</p>
        <p>Their first assignment is Opation Squirrel. The second. Operation George Washington.</p>
        <p>In Operation Squirrel the organizers plan to bury 50,000 walnuts by Thanksgiving to keep the walnuts moist and unfrozen. In Operation George Washington the walnuts will be dug up on his birthday next year and replanted.</p>
        <p>Were trying to spread the importance of getting civic and youth groups involved." said Leigh Nichols, executive vice president of the co-sponsoring Oklahoma Association of Realtors.</p>
        <p>The thing that impressed our board of directors about the program is its so very seldom someone comes up with an idea that appears p&amp;gt;ossib]e and at the same time is very unselfish.</p>
        <p>Nichols said John Booth.</p>
        <p>Oklahoma Mortgage Co. senior vice president, thought of the project while sitting next to Gladys Warren, state Bicentennial Commission director, at a Christmas banquet last year. Booth, a woodworking enthusiast. knew that hardwood is becoming scarce and expensive. Nichols said.</p>
        <p>The Realtors Association adopted the project to commemorate the Bicentennial.</p>
        <p>Unfortunately most of us working with the program wont be the beneficiaries." Nichols said. The trees take 60-70 years to mature."</p>
        <p>But if the trees grow to maturity in theory it could make Oklahoma the hardwood center of the country," he said. In turn. Oklahoma could become a quality furniture manufacturing state, he said.</p>
        <p>The state has been divided into 11 districts for the project with a chairman for each district as well as for each county within the district. The county chairmen are responsible for persuading groups to participate, procuring the walnuts to plant and finding -out fmm county officials where the walnuts should be planted.</p>
        <p>People have donated walnuts by the truckload but more would be welcome. Nichols said.</p>
        <p>Were eager to accept all walnuts we can get, he said. Ive been surprised. We have had a lot of calls even from people within three or four blocks of the office who brought flacks and boxes over.</p>
        <p>We checked with the forestry division of the slate Department of Agriculture and they gave us some pointers on how to go about planting the black walnuts, he said.</p>
        <p>They told us that the best way to get a black walnut in shape to permanently plant is to dig a hole during the fall, put a layer of black walnuts into the hole and several inches of dirt onto that. Then |Hit another layer of walnuts in and then more dirt.</p>
        <p>Nichols said the process is called stratifying and is supposed to prevent the walnuts from freezing or drying out.</p>
        <p>When (he walnuts are dug up in early spring they are to be planted in areas where they are not likely to be choked by weeds and will receive some moisture, he said.</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICEOF COMMISSIONER'S SALE OF REAL PROPERTY North Carolina County ot Pitt</p>
        <p>Under and by virtue of an Order of the Honorable Sandra Gaskins. Assistant Clerk of Superior Court, Pitt County, North Carolina, made and entered in Special Proceedins No. 7S Sp 306 pending in said Court entitled, "Bettie E. Edwards, Petitioner vs. Michael Anthony Holland, Minor, by his Guardian Ad Litem J. David Outtus, Jr. and Ericka Nichole Hill. Minor, and Any Unborn Issue or Minor Children ot Carol Jean Staton Hill, By Their Guardian Ad Litem, William I. Wooten, Jr., Ned Staton, Administrator, C.T.A. ot the Estate of Cherry P. Staton, Respondents," said Order ot Court bearing date of November 18, 1975, the undersigned Commissioner will, on the23nd day of December, 1975, at 12:00 o'clock, Noor, at the Courthouse door in Greenville, North Carolina, otter tor sale to the highest bidder, tor cash, that certain lot of parcel of land lying ard being situate in the City of Greenville, Pitt County, North Carolina, and more particularly described as follows:</p>
        <p>Being located in or near the Town of Greenville in the section known as the "Bama," BEGINNING at a point</p>
        <p>l&amp;gt;f ANL IS</p>
        <p>IT'5 SIMPLE. A\AieCi.. I GO OVT FOR A FAS5. ANP HU J05T THPOU) IT TO ME...</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>about 95 feet west from a stake on the west side ot Pitt Street, MO feet south of the southwest corner of the in tersection of Pitt and Mill Streets; running thence in a westwardly direction about 95 feet to the eastern boundary of McClellan Street, thence in a northwardly direction with the eastern boundary of McClellan Street, 50 feet to a stake,- thence In an eastwardly direction at right angles with McClellan Street, about 95 faet to a stake; thence in a southwardly direction parallel with McClellan Straet, SO feet to the point of beginning, the said lot is the western half of Parcel No. 2 described in deed from W. B. Wilson to j. C. Waldrop-recorded in Book T-20, at Page 590 in the Pitt County Registry. The eastern halt of said lot having been previously deeded to Mary Brawington, and being also the identical property conveyed to Alma Cox AAadlson and husband, Edward AAadlson by j. C. Waldrop and wife, Edna T. Waldrop, deed dated November 24, 1942, recorded in Book D-24, Page 73. Pitt County Registry.</p>
        <p>This house and lot Is known as 1713 McClellan Street.</p>
        <p>The successful bidder at this sale will be required to deposit with the Commissioner ten per cent (10 per cent) ot the first 1,000.00 of his bid. and five per cent (5 per cent) on all over 51,000.00 to show his good faith, and will be made subject to 1976 ad valorem taxes, and said sale will be made subject to confirmation ot the Court.</p>
        <p>This the 20th day ot November, 1975.</p>
        <p>A. LOUIS SINGLETON.</p>
        <p>COAAMISSiONER Nov. 24; Dec. 1, 8, 15, 1975</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Administrator ot the estate of A.E. Mangum, late ot Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Administrator within six (6) months from date ot the first publication ot 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 14th day ot November, 1975. Eugene Hiron Mangum Route 3, Box 315 Zebulon, N.C.</p>
        <p>Administrator ot the Estate of A.E. Mangum,</p>
        <p>Deceased Nov. 17. 24; Dec. 1. 8, 1975.</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executor of the estateotMary Irene Schlienz, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons Having claims against the estate ot 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. AM persons indebted to said estate please make Immedldate payment.</p>
        <p>This 12th day of November. 1975. Don Charles Schlienz 1609 E. Wright Road Greenville. N.C. 27834 Executor of the Estate of</p>
        <p>Mary Irene Schlienz,</p>
        <p>Deceased Nov. 17, 24; Dec. 1. 8. 1975</p>
        <p>' LET ME 6ET A LITTLE FL/RTHER CWlN vJHE R6LX&amp;gt; MARClEi</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF CREDITORS IN THE OENERAL COURTOF JUSTICE SUPERIOR COURT DIVISION North Carolina County Of Pitt in Tho Matter Of The Estate Of</p>
        <p>Woodrow Wilson Palmor</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Administratrix of the Estate of Woodrow Wilson Palmer, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons havirtg claims against the estate of said Woodrow Wilson Palmer to present them to the undersigned Administratrix, or her attorneys, within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. Ail persons indebted to said estate please make immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 3rd day of December, 1975. REBA ALLEN PALMER ROUTE 8. BOX 380 GREENVILLE. N.C. 27834 ADMINISTRATRIX OF THE ESTATE OF WOODROW WILSON PALMER, DECEASED Gaylord, Singleton A McNally Attorneys at Law P.O. Drawer 545 Greenville, N.C. 27834 Dec. 8. 15. 22, 29, 1975</p>
        <p>Classified</p>
        <p>Ads</p>
        <p>automotinT Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>Having Engine Trouble? See</p>
        <p>The Engine People"</p>
        <p>Auto Specialty Co.</p>
        <p>917 W. 5th St.</p>
        <p>758-1131</p>
        <p>BUICK RIVIERA 1970. Very clean, in excellent condition, new tires. AM extras. 51850. Call 752-1462 after 6</p>
        <p>p.m.</p>
        <p>CADILLAC Convertible '67. New top. 746-6124.</p>
        <p>MONDAY SPECIAL</p>
        <p>1969 Datsun 510</p>
        <p>4 door. Red, 4 speed, radio. Good second car.</p>
        <p>$595</p>
        <p>Goodman Auto Sales</p>
        <p>/vlemorlat Drive  7S6-63S3</p>
        <p>(adiacent to Edwards Motor Co.)</p>
        <p>HOLT</p>
        <p>OLDS-DATSUN</p>
        <p>Sales and Service</p>
        <p>101 Hooker Rd.  756-3115</p>
        <p>MGB 1971. AM-FM Stereo tape deck, wire wheels, new top and radiais. 52500 firm. 758-2163.</p>
        <p>MG MIDGETT 1974. Convertible and custom tops. Like new. Call 746-6892.</p>
        <p>MONTE CARLO '75. 9,000 miles, fully equipped. S4700. 752-0792 or 752-3143; leave message.</p>
        <p>MONTE CARLO 1973. Green with black landau vinyl top, air condition, power steering and brakes and swivel seats. 53,000. Call 752-6020.</p>
        <p>MUSTANG tl 1974. Red, sport wheels, air conditioning, automatic transmission. Reduced to 53395. Call Holt Olds, 756-3115.</p>
        <p>NOVA SS 1968, good for stock or super stock. 1967 Maiibu, good for stockor super stock. 1973 El Camino. 5100 and take over payments. Excellent condition, must sell. Call after 6 p.m., 752-6398.</p>
        <p>OPEL '66 Station Wagon. '66 Pontiac Lemans, hardtop. 756-2068.</p>
        <p>OPEL 1900,  '71  Sport Coupe.</p>
        <p>Automatic, in good condition. Below wholesale. 758-1)9 anytime.</p>
        <p>PINTO SQUIRE Wagon 1974. FuMy equipped. 20,000 miles. Call 746-6566.</p>
        <p>VEGA GT '74 Wagon. Blue, 4 speed, air. 52500. 758-5882 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>VOLKSWAGEN Square Back 1972. Like new, 52375. Cali Holt Olds, 756-3115.</p>
        <p>Bicycls_Far Sale</p>
        <p>GIRL'S 3 SPEED, 20". 758-9533.</p>
        <p>Boats For Salo</p>
        <p>'75 MARQUIS 19'. 160 HP Inboard-Outboard. Radio, depth finder. 752-0792, 752-3143; leave message.</p>
        <p>CANOS. 16' Fiberglass Hull and mahogany frame. Yole paddles and reck. 75 pounds. 5330. 756-7307.</p>
        <p>Cyclos For Salo</p>
        <p>'74 XL 17S HONDA. 5400. Call 7S6-19U after 4:30.</p>
        <p>Cyclos For Salo</p>
        <p>t974 SUZUKI 185. Like rew, only 1100 miles. Electric starter. 758-7349 day, 756.7278 night.__</p>
        <p>'73 HONDA SL 125. Excellent con-ditlan. 752-9278 after ._</p>
        <p>TRAIL 78. Excellent condition, 82M. Alio 100 Yamaha. In very good condition, 5225^. Call 756-4931.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Salo</p>
        <p>1970 CHEVROLRT Pickup. Extra Clean. 51,495. Call after 6. 752-6498.</p>
        <p>Dogs * Pots</p>
        <p>COLLEGE STUDENTS, need Christmas money? For fuM or parttime help, 52-53 per hour, caH Mr. Davis at 756-6129.</p>
        <p>HELP FOR SANTA. AKC registered Lassie type Collie puppies. Four left. 753-5600, FarmvMle.</p>
        <p>SLACK POODLE puppies for sale. 8 weeks old. 535. Cali 756-6624.</p>
        <p>AKC IRISH Setter puppies. AAales 5110, females 590. Fmone 756-3571.</p>
        <p>NEED OFFICE equipment? You'll find good buys in today's Want Ads. Check NOW!</p>
        <p>CHEVROLET '67. 396, 4 Speed, cam and headers. 5600. 758-0292.</p>
        <p>CHRYSLER 1970 Station Wagon. ? radial tires, new battery. S6(X). 758-4946.</p>
        <p>CORVAIR '64. Will run. 545. 756-2094 after 6.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE '66, hardtop. Gold metal flake with Keystone mags, 4 speed. 568 Corvette T-top. White Cragar mags, 4 speed. 1-795-3110.</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED Engine, transmission, body parts. Free parts iocating service.</p>
        <p>Crisp Auto Salvage, Inc.</p>
        <p>Phone 752-2572 N. Greene St.</p>
        <p>GORDER COLLIE pups, 6 weeks old. 758-3976.</p>
        <p>REGISTERED ENGLISH Setter pups, 95 per cent white. Mother is granddaughter of Johnny Crockett; sire, son of Cashmaster. Perfect Christmas present. 746-3433 after 5 p.m. or anytime weekends.</p>
        <p>MIXED GERMAN Shepherd Police puppies for sale. 530 each. Will keep until Christmas. 756-7437.</p>
        <p>BIRD DOG. 5150. Cali 752-7323.</p>
        <p>SAINT BERNARD pups. Great Christmas present. AKC registered, 11 weeks old. Only 575. 758-4026.</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT  ~</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>NEED SOMEONE to care for 3 month old baby in Hillsdale area. Call 752 1361 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>4 MEN OR WOMEN for telephone survey. Must have pleasant telephone voice. Call Mr. B.unn, 756-5555, extension 300.</p>
        <p>TO MAKE THE BEST CHOICE, look over the pets offered today in the Classified Ads and make someone especially happy.</p>
        <p>PART-TIME piano teacher. Call 752-0978.</p>
        <p>COSMETOLOGY Instructor wanted part-time or full time. Must be skilled in the use of thermal irons and combs. Necessary for practical application of thermal pressing, waving and curling. Apply Cosmetology Instructor, P.O. Box 1967, GreenvMIe, N.C.</p>
        <p>WAITRESS WANTED, day shift. Apply in person, Carolina Grill, 907 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>GROWING COMPANY. Male and emale help wanted. Well trained. Shift work. Excellent company benefits - starting pay. Polylok I Corporation, Anaconda Road, Tar-boro, N.C.</p>
        <p>PERSON NEEDED with- Layout and Paste-up experience. No phone calls acc^ted. Apply in person, Jimmy Smith Printing Company, 511 Cotanche Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>AVON TO BUY OR SELL ... at new</p>
        <p>low prices. Call for more information, 758-2444.</p>
        <p>CUTLASS SUPREME 1974. Fully equipped, low mileage. 53800. Call 752-1275 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CUTLASS OLDS '73. Good shape. 2 door hardtop, radio, heater and air conditioning. Gold with black vinyl top. 53395. 756-0758.</p>
        <p>FORD LTD '71. Air conditioning, power steering and brakes, automatic, AM-FM stereo, good condition. 756-5288.</p>
        <p>6TO PONTIAC '71. Loaded, 51500. 752-3662.</p>
        <p>WANTED Service Manager Eastern Tractor And Equipment Co., Inc.</p>
        <p>Call 756-2845 For Appointment</p>
        <p>DOMESTIC WORK 3 days a week. Good pay. Apply at ABC Mobile homes, 609 West Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>NEEDED IMMEDIATELY. 2 full time persons for office work. Call 756-5555, extension 300. Ask for Mr. Owens.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>HASTINGS FORD has daily rentals at reasonable prices. Call 758-0114.'</p>
        <p>VW '67. GOOD condition. 5595 . 756-1168 or 752-3548.</p>
        <p>VW '68 SQUAREBACK. 756-6210.</p>
        <p>VW SEDAN 19S7. Small window. Completely restored. New interior, new tires, new. paint job. Inciuire at 108 North Harding after 5. 752-4806.</p>
        <p>HARLEY DAVIDSON, 1975 XLCH 1000 Sportster. Extras. Cali 746-4540 before 3.</p>
        <p>SUZUKI TM 125K Challenger. Owner abroad. 5450. Mint condition. Will hold HI Christmas. 825-4591.</p>
        <p>1975, 758 HOMOA. 10" high bars, highway bars, sissy bar. XOOO miles. 51400. 746-3S45.</p>
        <p>HOPKINS A SONS moving and hauling. Home phone 758-1961 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>WORKING MOTHERS, let me take care of your child In my home. 756-6662.</p>
        <p>I AM INTERESTED in babysitting weekdays after 3 p.m., nights and weekends. 752-7627.</p>
        <p>WOMAN WANTS to keep children in her home, 7 a.m. til 6 p.m. 753-1320.</p>
        <p>WOUL D LIKE any kind of yard wc'k. 752-6884.  ^</p>
        <p>UNDERPINNING for double wide and single wide mobile homes at reasonable rates. Call for free estimates, 752-8420.</p>
        <p>WANTED. Bookkeeping to do at home. 746-6370.</p>
        <p>FULL charge BOOKKEEPER-SECRETARY seeking permanent, secure employment in area. For resume, write Bookkeeper-Secretary, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>ONE 2-ROW Powell tobacco topper. Call 946-2568.</p>
        <p>2630 JOHN DEERE tractor and equipment. Like new. 746-4780.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>hens for SALE. McGlohon Egg Farm, 746-3393.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM MADE fireplace screens. Sizes to SO". Choice of popular finishes. 539.95. Home Furniture Store, 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>FIREPLACE WOOD for sale. Alt oak. 758-1875 after 6.</p>
        <p>MAKE CHRISTMAS SHOPPING lEASIER and more fun than ever before . . . ^op the handy "GIFT SPOTTER" In the CLASSIFIED SECTION today and every day until ^^hristmas.  _____</p>
        <p>NEW CARPET remnants, room sizes. 756-0844 day, 756-3144 night.</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, top soil, rocks and sand for sale. Large loads. Henry Worthington, 746-3461.</p>
        <p>JUST MOVED. No room for upright freezer. 5 months old. 13.2 cubic feet, 5150. 758-4342.</p>
        <p>PINBALL MACHINES, juke boxes, footsbali, pool tables, and TV games. We service what we sell. Stancit Music Company, Falkland. Phone 752-6331.</p>
        <p>MAXWELL'S Christmas Special. Harculon plaid swivel rocker. Regularly 5119.95, now S68. AAaxvweli Home Furnishings, 604 Greenville B^d.</p>
        <p>HOOVER CLEANERS will preserve and prolong the beauty and life of the. carpet. See Smith Electric Company for sales and service. 415 Evans Street.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD for sale. 90 per cent oak, K per cent softwood. 1 cord, 830. 746-2196, 7-9 a.m. or 7-10 p.m.</p>
        <p>BULLDOZER for hire. Also topsoil defivared and spread. Call 756-2828 or S24U731.</p>
        <p>BROWN LEATHER bar with two bar stools. Been used 2 months, very good condition. 758-1041.</p>
        <p>ONE SET OF BUNK beds, washer, freezer. Can be seen at 1010 Club Drive or phono 746-6124, Ayden.</p>
        <p>SEPTIC TANK SERVICE and backhoe for hire. Also nail loads of safMi and fopsoil. Joe Rooers, 746-4788.</p>
        <p>MicdlUinaeu5</p>
        <p>OAK FIREWOOD for sale. Lerge toads, deliver ad and decked, 530. 758-2060 after 4, anytime weekends.</p>
        <p>LJSRGE LOADS OF sand, top soll, fill dirt and rock sold at reasonable prices. Lots cleared and debris hauled away. Call 756-4743 after 6 for Jim Hudson.</p>
        <p>Maus Piano Co.</p>
        <p>157 S.E. Main St. Rocky Mount, N.C.</p>
        <p>HOME OF BALDWIN PIANOS &amp;amp; ORGANS Service &amp;amp; Quality</p>
        <p>Phone 442-8655</p>
        <p>ROUND RED BED in window at Fisher's Appliance 8i Furniture. Regularly 5750, now 5499.95. 752-3609.</p>
        <p>WHEAT STRAW. 756-1538 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>1976 COMMERCIAL fishing licenses are now on sale. Greenville Marine &amp;amp; Sports Center, New 264 Bypass Northeast. 758-5938.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD for Sale. All oak. Pickup load, 530. 758-4204.</p>
        <p>LET THE CANDLELIGHT of Christmas reveal a new lovliness in your home. Carolina Candles at The Linen Closet, 3008 East Tenth Street.</p>
        <p>GIVE THE GIFT that keeps on giving. Coordinating bed fahions by Norman's of Salisbury or the traditional elegance of Heirloom Spread by Bates. The Linen Closet, 3008 East Tenth.</p>
        <p>20 PER CENT OFF ALL Family Bibles. Christian Bookstore, corner of 12th and Evans Streets. 752-9942.</p>
        <p>BOYS' 16" BIKE, Christmas tights, ornaments. 753-0562.</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT, builder sand, t&amp;lt;k&amp;gt; soil, and rock. J.L. McDaniel, day, 752-2382; night. 756-2351.</p>
        <p>USED REFRIGERATOR. 2 year warranty, 17 cubic foot, like new. 5200. 756-2176.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PRICE Filing Cabinet</p>
        <p>$7450</p>
        <p>'4 drawer Reg. $113.00</p>
        <p>Jaff Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>^ 752-2175 ,</p>
        <p>,569 S. Evans St.'</p>
        <p>BEAN BAG Chairs, 519.95 each. Red, yellow, black, pumpkin, lime, brown. Heavy duty, double stitched, double zippered, and e-z carrying handle. Ken's Furniture, 905 Dickinson, Greenville. 752-5663.</p>
        <p>POOL TABLE, 4' x 8', regulation V slate top. 1 year old, like new. Complete with balls, rack and 4 cue sticks. Sold for 51095, will sell for 5600. After 6, 756-0549.</p>
        <p>LIVING ROOM suite, 550; bedroom suite, 550; bunk bed set, 550; oil heater and oil drum, 550; GE electric stove, 550; dining room table, 510. 746-6124.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Miscall* fweus</p>
        <p>00 YOU HAVE TROUBLE hearing in crowds? StartHno new develop, ments in hearing aids may enable you to understand again. Theodore Baxter. The Hearing Aid Center, 207 Elks Building, New Bern. 697-3711, 637 4972.</p>
        <p>ONE PORTABLE typewriter with carryinp case. Pica type face. Also sewing machine in pecan wood cabinet. Both are in excellent condition. Phone 756-3917.</p>
        <p>SAVE 90 PERCENT and more on new scratched and dented furniture. Thompson's Discount Furniture, 924 Dickinson Avenue. Across from Sherwin-Williams.</p>
        <p>STEAMEX your carpets for the holidays. Larry's Carpetland, 758-2300 for reservations.</p>
        <p>CANNON TV SERVICE. Used color sets, Zenith, RCA and other models. New picture tubes. 12 month warranty. Open 8 a.m. to 10 p.m. Call 756-2555.</p>
        <p>INSTRUCTION</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL piano and orgart</p>
        <p>instruction. Daily and evening, 756 3522.  _  .  _  _  </p>
        <p>PIANO AND GUITAR lessons dally and evenings. Richard J. Knapp, 8.A., 7563908.  _  _</p>
        <p>GUITAR CLASSES. Group Instruction. Reasonable rates. Classes forming now. 756-3522.</p>
        <p>LOST AND FOUND</p>
        <p>LOST 7 MONTH OLD, tan half Collie puppy with red collar, 752-3761.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>FOR RENTMobile home spaces with shade, also mobile homes. Call 7'8 3644.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent in Ayden. Call 7466566.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES for rent. Couples preferred. Call 758-5712 after S.</p>
        <p>LIKE NEW 12 X 65 Sheraton. House-type furniture, air, washer and dryer, underpinned. Set up in nice park. Move in nowl 58,695. Mary Ward, 756 0191.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM mobile home. Central air and washer. City water and city sewer. Conveniently located. 752-0068.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, unfurnished except for kitchen appliances. Located 6 miles from Greenville. 758-0715 day, 752-2074 night.</p>
        <p>12 X 60, 2 BEDROOMS, furnished. Excellent location. 5150 per month. Call 756-7731.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. On private iot. Call 758-5831, 756-5228.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR RENT. '73 Charmer. After 5 p.m.. 752-5008.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOMS, good location. Cal 752-3286; night, 825-5391.</p>
        <p>TICE TRAILER Park. 12 x 60, 2 bedrooms, heated and air conditioned, stove, refrigerator, and furniture. 5150 . 756-6869 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m., Monday - Friday.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Storm Doors Glasses &amp;amp; Screens Repaired</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>Phone 752-6116</p>
        <p>Havent you done without a loro long enough?</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO</p>
        <p>MEMORIAL DR.</p>
        <p>75&amp;gt;2557^</p>
        <p>Economy Specials</p>
        <p>1974 Toyota Hilax</p>
        <p>1973 Fiat 128</p>
        <p>4 speed transmission, factory air,  4door sedan, 4 speed  transmission,</p>
        <p>long bed, H.O. bumper. Red with  White with black  interior. Exwhite, Mack interior, low mileage,  cellent MFG.</p>
        <p>extra clean.</p>
        <p>Was S3898 Now</p>
        <p>3698</p>
        <p>Was S2198 Now</p>
        <p>1998</p>
        <p>1973 Saab 99LE</p>
        <p>4 speed. AM-FM stereo, excellent condition. Tan.</p>
        <p>1972 Gremtin X</p>
        <p>Was $2998 Now</p>
        <p>2798</p>
        <p>2 door, radio, standard transmission, bucket seats, wdiitewalls. Purple with gold sport stripes, rally wheels. And to top it all  A SUN ROOF.</p>
        <p>1973 Volkswagen</p>
        <p>Was $1898 Now</p>
        <p>1698</p>
        <p>4 speed, radio, heater. Extra clean.</p>
        <p>Was $2498 Now</p>
        <p>*2295</p>
        <p>1970 VW</p>
        <p>Squareback Wagon</p>
        <p>Automatic, extra clean car.</p>
        <p>1973 Corolla 1200</p>
        <p>2 door Coupe, radio, 4 speed transmission, factory air. White with Mack interior. Super Gas Mileage.</p>
        <p>Was S1S98 Now</p>
        <p>1398</p>
        <p>2198</p>
        <p>1968 Toyota Corona</p>
        <p>4 door. 4 speed, radio.</p>
        <p>Was S2398 Now</p>
        <p>1973 Pinto</p>
        <p>Sunroof, 4 speed, radio, heater. Was S2298 Now</p>
        <p>1973 OatSBR</p>
        <p>2 door hardtop. 4 speed, radio, heater, good gas mileage.</p>
        <p>1298</p>
        <p>2098</p>
        <p>1964 Volkswagen</p>
        <p>4 speed, radio, heater.</p>
        <p>Was $2298 Now</p>
        <p>2098</p>
        <p>1972 Corolla Wagon</p>
        <p>Automatic, AAA radio, heater.</p>
        <p>Was $2298 Now</p>
        <p>1998</p>
        <p>698</p>
        <p>1963 Pengeot</p>
        <p>Extra clean, new paint.</p>
        <p>598</p>
        <p>7-1974 Toyota Mark lls</p>
        <p>Demonstrators. 2 doors and 4 deors, automatic. AM-FM stereo, air. reclining bucket scats.</p>
        <p>Factory Invoice plus tax</p>
        <p>1974 Vega Netchback</p>
        <p>rown, e</p>
        <p>1998</p>
        <p>2 doer, radio, 4 speed, brown, extra clean.</p>
        <p>Was $2298 Naw</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA</p>
        <p>109 Trade St,  756  3228</p>
        <p>Dea ler No. 3035  Used  Car  Office  756  3731</p>
        <p>Open til 8 p m.</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0013" />
        <p>The Dally Rcnector. Greenville, N.C^Monday, December i,</p>
        <p>Follow your nose to Christmas gifts for everyoneon your list in today's Want Ads</p>
        <p>MoMIe Homes For Rent</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOMS, completely furnished. Across from People's BlWe</p>
        <p>Church. 264 Bypass. 752-315S or 75-1S.</p>
        <p>12 X 55, 2 BEDROOMS. Wooded lot. 754-073.</p>
        <p>Mobile Homes For Sole</p>
        <p>195* DETROITER. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, 2 air conditioners. Set up In AAorehead, N.C. Call 746-65M.</p>
        <p>OWNER MUST SELL 1*73 Fairway 12 X 65. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, washer and dryer, central air. Equity and assume loan. S130 per month. 752-1320.</p>
        <p>DOUBLE WIDE 24 x 60. 3 years old, good CCn^tkHl. 75S-4630.</p>
        <p>12X 60 KINOSWOOD. 2 bedrooms, V/t baths. S35 transfer fee and assume payments. Call 746-M92.</p>
        <p>'64 BfLTMORE with expando. 12 x 60. 3 bedrooms, front kitchen. 746-6124.</p>
        <p>'72 KARA BELLA Americana. Fully furnished, washer and dryer, central air. 746-6847 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>12 X S2, 2^ BEDROOMS, 1 bath, front kitchen. S250 down, S99 per month. 756-5242.</p>
        <p>'73 EASY LIVINO 12 x 60. Washer, dryer, new furniture. SS495. 758-4413.</p>
        <p>'72 DOUBLE WIDE 24 x 45. 3</p>
        <p>bedrooms, iVi baths, new furniture, new appliances. $6495. 758-4413.</p>
        <p>12 X 60, 3 BEDROOMS, 1 bath, front kitchen with front dining room. $4995. 7565242.</p>
        <p>MOB! LE HOME Slightly damaged by fire. 12 X 60, '73 model. Excellent to rebuild. 758-1809 anytime.</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>DISTRIBUTOR</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>Be In Business For Yourself Full Or Part Time</p>
        <p>DISTRIBUTOR</p>
        <p>NEEDED</p>
        <p>To Service Stores . Dealers Racks of Bicycle Parts</p>
        <p>No experience necessary, as company wilt turn over accounts for you to supply and service, established In your immediate area by company, for SIMBA BICYCLE PARTS-ACCESS. This at this time is a BOOMING INDUSTRY and the accounts you will service shall ba located In Hard, ware. Variety Supermarkets, Bicycle, Discount and College Book Stores, Etc.</p>
        <p>Profit POTENTIAL Is virtually unlimited.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>44 ACRES FOR SALE nar COKvIM* with IS acres in beautiful pasture land. Over 1700 feet of paved road&amp;lt; frontage. Owner will divide. Contact Aldiidge and Southerland, 752-2606; nights, 752-1993.</p>
        <p>3V^ ACRES CLEARED land for sale to person building home. 210 feet road frontage. 346 miles from city limits. Call 7S8-4472.</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS In real estate, see or call E.H. Williford, Realtor. 222-B Cotanche Street, 756-3911. List your property with us.</p>
        <p>Buying or Selling, For Best Results Try Our "Personal -Service."</p>
        <p>175 D.G. NICHOLS IM AGENCY</p>
        <p>Phone 752-4012 anytime</p>
        <p>LET WEDCO REALTY do your teg-work. We are concerned about your housing needs. Call 7561595.</p>
        <p>WANT TO PURCHASE buiidino lots n Greenville or within 10 miles. We have customers waiting to build. East Carolina Builders, inc. Call Carl Darden or Joe Bowen, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>House For Sale</p>
        <p>NEAT 2 BEDROOM home On quiet street. Large lot, fenced In back yard. Pine paneled den, large living room. Close to school and shopping center. $23,000. Call Jon Day at Blount &amp;amp; Ball Realty Company, 752-6163; nights, 7524)345.</p>
        <p>House For Sale</p>
        <p>FOR SALE. Ayden Golf 8. Country Club. 3 bedroom brick veneer on golf course. Huge den with fireplace, patio, dining room, 2 baths, 2-car garage with alt the extras, drapes, carpet, central air and all electric system. Approximately 2000 square feet heated space. Excellent buy at S49,500. Good financing available or can assume present loan. Shown by appointment only. Call Ed Tipton Agency, 756-0911; nights or weekends, 756-2421.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. Hardee Acres. 3 bedrooms, IV3 baths, fresh paint. S3,SOO equity. $182 month. 758-1715.</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. Priced below appraised value for fast sale. Four bedrooms, three IMths, foyer, formal living and dining. Large den with fireplace, kitchen with lots of cabinets and eat-in area. Closed in back porch, hot water heat, central air and two-car carport. Fourth bedroom has private entrance and full bath. $49,500. Whitley &amp;amp; Associates  Mavis Butts. 752-7073; Dees Whitley, 758-0816.</p>
        <p>210 NORTH LIBRARY. 3 bedrooms, air conditimed, 1131 square feet heated, living room with shag carpet and fireplace. S26,000. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2615.</p>
        <p>Lots For Sale</p>
        <p>746 PER CENT financing plus tax credit on this 2 story brick home. 4 bedrooms, 7^/ baths, living room, family room with fireplace, kitchen with built-ins including dishwasher. Central heat and air, carpeting and wallpaper. Call Greenville Development Company, 752-2814 or Winnie Evans, 752-4224.</p>
        <p>PRICE REDUCED from $58,750 to $574)00. Large ranch. 3 bedrooms, den with fireplace, 2000 square feet. Located 20 minutes from Greenville in the country. 10 acres of woodsland included in price. Call Carl Darden, Bowen-Darden Realty, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM brick home at a very affordable price. V/a baths, garage, lot 100 x 200 and assumable loan. Priced to sell at only $29,900. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058; Robert Edwards, 7566652; Jarvis or DoriiS Mills, 752-3647.</p>
        <p>S4S9S.00 INVENTORY (Immediatsl In. vestment puts you In your own business Right Now.WRITE TODAY:  (Include</p>
        <p>phone number)</p>
        <p>SIMBA SALES CORP 3S$2Wltte Street Philadelphia, Pe. 19134</p>
        <p>^ CRAFTS Dealership now available with American Handicrafts if you have existing business or if you are opening a new business with companion lines. Call Cecil Hudson, 817-335-4161, Ext. 557 or write 1015 Foch, Ft. Worth, TX 76107.</p>
        <p> SHORT OR LONG TERM capital  available for business or real estate. Call 704-392-7322.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>CUSTOM PLANT BED fumlgatfon. 5 yard bed. Call Grimesland Plant Foods. Inc., 758-9414 or 758-1908 nights.</p>
        <p>HOUSEWORK GOT YOU DOWN?</p>
        <p>General cleaning, steam extraction carpet cleaning, floor waxing and stripping, window cleanInO, caii&amp;gt;et and upholstery shampooing. Bonded - Insured. Free estimate. Call</p>
        <p>Domesticare at 756-3940.</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>Need money In a hurry we will pay cash for your equity.</p>
        <p>nelson-NVallAce</p>
        <p>-r IOC.</p>
        <p>ReAl estate ^</p>
        <p>Since 1910"</p>
        <p>PHONE 752-5113</p>
        <p>90 ACRES OF cut-over woodsland. 18 miles Southeast of Greenville on paved road. $22,000. Contact Aldridge 8. Southerland, 752-2608; nights, 752-1993.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DOORS H. AWN INGS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>75? 6116</p>
        <p>Mutual Of Omaha</p>
        <p>We need one man who needs S376.34 per week. Write</p>
        <p>AAutual of Omaha Box 1840 Wilmington, N.C. 28401</p>
        <p>Phone 919-763-4621</p>
        <p>Mutual</p>
        <p>Of Omaha</p>
        <p>Life Ins. Affiliate; United of Omaha. Equal Opportunity Companies M-F</p>
        <p>naMs TEWd &amp;amp; Repaired</p>
        <p>CALL</p>
        <p>lacks Piaao Twig Service</p>
        <p>7S-5a4 Or Write r.O. Bex 7M4</p>
        <p>,N.C. 27884</p>
        <p>ffiP8Balito, I</p>
        <p>NEW LISTING. College Court. A very special home. Split level with 4 bedrooms, 2V3 baths, cozy fireplace In living room. Sitting on large wooded tot with fruit trees and garden. Call Carl Darden, Bowen-Darden Realty, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFULbuilding lots for sale in Country Club Acres, $4000. Lake Glenwood, SSOOOand up. Call Thomas Realty Company, 756-5166.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>OFFICES AND STORAGE for rent. 308 and 310 Pennsylvania Avenue. Call Pete West, 752-4220.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY Condominium. Newly redecorated in shag carpet. Exclusive neighborhood, style living. S180 per month. No pets. Call 752-1785; nights and weekends, 7563610.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM APARTMENT</p>
        <p>Ayden for rent. Call 7466892.</p>
        <p>t Come see the m&amp;lt;t luxurious apartments in Greenville.1 Chandelier, sauna baths, trash compactors, plus fabulous pool' and club room.</p>
        <p>752-1557</p>
        <p>7 ROOM APARTMENT. Call 756-6658.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>t MotS 9* OvtimciHip</p>
        <p>ARMSifl</p>
        <p>aptrimtnlt ^</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>4 D*B4, MBAaatf &amp;gt; ChBflM^rwl Tt* r*tt) 7S8-4MO</p>
        <p>Modern, convenient, luxurious, exclusive, jffurdable 1, 2, and J hedroom garden apts. and tvko bedroom town houKC&amp;gt;. I'urntshed or unfurnished.</p>
        <p>VII applications arc accepted subject to availabiity.</p>
        <p>704 EAST THIRD Street. 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator. Partially furnished. $140. 756-3119.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM, unfurnished duplex apartment. 1806 Myrtle Avenue. Prefer couple. 756-1260. Available January 1.</p>
        <p>STUDENTS HELPERS both new and used for sale in today's Want Ads. Check NOW!</p>
        <p>APARTIflENT^</p>
        <p>Two bedroom luxury apartments with ^lional dens and all the new amenities including wall to wall carpeting, draperies, dishwashers, individual air conditioning and heating AND MORE.</p>
        <p>201 Eastbrook Drive Oil Green vilic Boulevard (U.S. 264 By Pass) just south ol Tenth Street. Con venieni to ECU and everything.</p>
        <p>Apartmtnts For Rent</p>
        <p>o&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>. Ultimate In</p>
        <p>Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1. 2, and 3 bedrooms, washer, dryer hook-ups, pool, club house. Only 5 blocks from East Carolina University.</p>
        <p>Check everywhere else first. Then Call</p>
        <p>TAR RIVER ESTATES</p>
        <p>1401 Willow St. 752-4225</p>
        <p>  FEATURING</p>
        <p>I I o t_fjorLnjtr</p>
        <p>KITCHEN APPLIANCES</p>
        <p>FOR RENT. University Condominium, $180 per month. Vs month's free rent for right tenant. No pets. Move In today. Call 752-1785.</p>
        <p>One and two bedroom garden' apartments. Located just off. East Tenth Street.  &amp;lt;</p>
        <p>PHONE 752-3519</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CALL 758-4012</p>
        <p>Thomas Realty</p>
        <p>Co.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>OLD</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE</p>
        <p>HWY.</p>
        <p>reeriKouse 7564961</p>
        <p>POLYLOK PAY-UP</p>
        <p>The Polylok Corporation, today an&amp;gt; nounced that effective December 1, 1975 its pay scale and employee achievements standards will be revised.</p>
        <p>The change will result in an increased starting pay rate and an up-grading of most of Polylok's employees.</p>
        <p>The new standards will increase the company's pay scale by up to 20 per cent.</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>Beautiful 2 bedroom garden apartments off Country Club  Drive, adjacent to Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>756-6869</p>
        <p>Houses For Rant</p>
        <p>NICE HOME FOR RENT on South Sylvan Drive. 3 bedrooms, carpeted den and living room, kitchen, single garage, patio, fenced back yard. Must see to appreciate. Central heat and air. 752-6393 after 6.</p>
        <p>NICE AREA. Only 1 year old. 3 bedrooms, 7'/2 baths, fireplace, central heat and air. $350 per month. Call 752-6188.</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM HOME |ust minutes from Burroughs Wellcome. Couples only. S115 per month. Estate Realty Company, 752-5058.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>TOP CASH DOLLAR for your car or truck. 756-6353.  i</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SHOWER ANDTUB ENCLOSURES</p>
        <p>By Shower Door Co. INSTALLED</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>Memorial Dr.  7562557</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>RESIDENTIAL lot inside Greenville, call 7566143 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease</p>
        <p>WILL PAY TO LEASE small farm with or without tobacco pounds in Pitt County. Prefer Western Pitt County. Call 752-0001 or 752-7650 after 6.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Wanted To Rent</p>
        <p>21 YEAR OLD OIRL desperately needs place to live within walking distance of ECU. After 5, 758-1800.</p>
        <p>COUPLE DESIRES 2-3 bedroom house In country to rent or to rent with option to buy. Would like pasture for horse. Husband employed as livestock agent with county extension service. Call collect, (919) 833-0303.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>(liistorn Math'</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS &amp;amp; DOORS</p>
        <p>Screen and storm window repair.</p>
        <p>BACH, INC.</p>
        <p>417 W. 3rd St. - 758-0404</p>
        <p>AHENTION</p>
        <p>SALESMEN!</p>
        <p>Tarheel Toyota is looking for salespeople who</p>
        <p>want to selkTovotas. Experience not necessary. You can expect to earn above average earnings</p>
        <p>with a local aggressive dealer offering full company benefits: paid vacation, retirement plan, life and hospitalization insurance.</p>
        <p>Apply to:</p>
        <p>Gary Singleton or Jack Moody</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA, INC.</p>
        <p>109 Trade St.</p>
        <p>Dealer No. 3035</p>
        <p>NATIONAL FIRM INTERESTED IN 2 PERSONS</p>
        <p>Do You Believe That Life Offers More Thae Yon Have Been Able To Accomplish? Now Is The Time</p>
        <p>We are selecting 3 persons:</p>
        <p>With leadership ability Who have the ability to lead</p>
        <p>people</p>
        <p>Who will take interest in our business</p>
        <p>Who will be willing to put in full time and learn our business.</p>
        <p>Experienced unnecessary H you are;</p>
        <p>Hard worker Honest 22 Or over.</p>
        <p>and</p>
        <p>You will</p>
        <p>Attend 2 weeks school, expenses paid Be taught and trained in our successful business Assigned to area of your choice under directions guidance of a qualified director.</p>
        <p>Be provided the opportunity to advance into management as fast as your ability warrants Earn $10,000 to $20,000 your first year Have unusual family security program.</p>
        <p>Fringe benefits include:</p>
        <p>Usual 10 year retirement pension Savings plan.</p>
        <p>If You Are Interested In Earning *50.00 to *100.00 Per Day Call For Personal Interview. 919-946-0518</p>
        <p>Do It Now</p>
        <p>long Distance Call Collect</p>
        <p>Ask For Mr. Lee</p>
        <p>Call 9 to 9_</p>
        <p>POLYLOK CORPORATION</p>
        <p>Anaconda Road Tarboro, N.C. 823-6126</p>
        <p>THE REAL ESTATE CORNER</p>
        <p>THE HOMEBUYER*S TAX CREDIT EXDIIIiS DCCCMKM 31. ^ ^</p>
        <p>GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>The 5 per cent tax creclit is making imma buying history. But time is running nut. Because you must sign a contraict by December 31 to qualify.</p>
        <p>At Greenville Oevelegment Co., tliis couM mean up to $2,000 in additional savings on your new heme.  _  ^</p>
        <p>Please drop by to soe us. Wo Itavo tiomos mat are tiiTblc for ttw tax cradit.</p>
        <p>Better hurry though. Unete Sam can't wait much lenser.</p>
        <p>752-2814</p>
        <p>l-ocalwd 361 Ridgeway St.</p>
        <p>ns7S2-4</p>
        <p>IRHfifiia Evans 7S2-4234</p>
        <p>REALTOR</p>
        <p>Tbe</p>
        <p>spotter</p>
        <p>Gifts for the Home</p>
        <p>Cross* Sheaffer Parker</p>
        <p>Pens - Pencils - Desk Sets</p>
        <p>Carolina Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>320 Evans St., Greenville, N .C.</p>
        <p>Izod Chemise Lacoste</p>
        <p>The</p>
        <p>Shirt</p>
        <p>Blount Harvey Co.</p>
        <p>Holiday</p>
        <p>Food</p>
        <p>H&amp;gt;PY STORES</p>
        <p>Miniature Bottles Of Wine For Christmas Stockings</p>
        <p>Volume Discounts Your HoHdey Wine Tasting Or ktail Partas.</p>
        <p>OecemMr wit of the Month. Mtchet SehneMor LieWrawmitqi</p>
        <p>Gifts</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>Boys</p>
        <p>Ideal Gifts Tennis Buff</p>
        <p>For The</p>
        <p>Complete line of clothing. Racquets - both wood and melal. Good selection of tennis gifts including Thermos, Covers, Bags, Games and Gift Sets.</p>
        <p>"Your Christmas Tennis</p>
        <p>Specialist"</p>
        <p>H.L Hodges</p>
        <p>Hardware</p>
        <p>210 E. 5th St.</p>
        <p>HUNDREDS OF  GIFT</p>
        <p>SUGGESTIONS listed under con-venient headings in the "GIFT SPOTTER" in the CLASSIFIED SECTION. Check it NOWI</p>
        <p>Give a precious gift to the</p>
        <p>family</p>
        <p>A New Home</p>
        <p>ED TIPTON AGENCY</p>
        <p>756-0911</p>
        <p>Nignn 6 Weekends fit Z43%</p>
        <p>Peanut Gift Packs</p>
        <p>Two 2-Lb. Bags. Raw Shdled Extra Large Peanuts</p>
        <p>One Box of 10 Lb$. Hand Picked Fancy Peanuts (UnshetM)</p>
        <p>Postpaid anywhere in Continental U.S. Recipes Included Free.</p>
        <p>;For FREE use of our Champagrte &amp;gt;nd Wine Glasses and Party Planning Cali</p>
        <p>Bill IpocK 752-5933</p>
        <p>pjeBdsBasqkalkeBidiBMaBidiBdiilwii</p>
        <p>KEEL PEANUT CO.</p>
        <p>Memorial Dr.  752-7636</p>
        <p>SONY</p>
        <p>Complete line of Sony black and white and color TV's and stereos.</p>
        <p>Bob's TV And Appliance</p>
        <p>Ayden and Greenville 746 4021  752-0544</p>
        <p>GIFT SUGGESTIONS FOR THE BUSINESSAAAN OR WOAAAN</p>
        <p>Sheaffer Pen and Desk Sets</p>
        <p>From $2.95.</p>
        <p>Cross Pen Sets From $6.00</p>
        <p>World Globes</p>
        <p>Thermometers</p>
        <p>Desk Sets</p>
        <p>Office Chairs</p>
        <p>File Cabinets</p>
        <p>Safes</p>
        <p>Attache Cases</p>
        <p>Desk Nameplates</p>
        <p>Many Other Desk Accessories</p>
        <p>Taff Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>569 S. Evans St.</p>
        <p>Christmas Special</p>
        <p>Westing house Microwave Oven</p>
        <p>Clean-Safe-Cool-Economicaf $449.95 Value</p>
        <p>NOW $350.00</p>
        <p>Smith Electric Co.</p>
        <p>415 EVANS ST.</p>
        <p>752-2114</p>
        <p>igjaiaalMaiigeialiiaeiagiaiyaikag</p>
        <p>Gifts</p>
        <p>for</p>
        <p>Friends</p>
        <p>Gift Ideas</p>
        <p>Hand carvad wood from India. braM.i silver, wedding books, wedding in^ hafions, party items.  t</p>
        <p>Julienne's Cards and Gifts 400 Evans 51  752  5216</p>
        <p>Sports  J</p>
        <p>-Gifts  J</p>
        <p>All Boating Accessories</p>
        <p>Until Dec. 24</p>
        <p>Check Our Christmas Prices On Boats</p>
        <p>Gaskins Marina]</p>
        <p>Washington, N.C. 752-5374</p>
        <p>SEKINE</p>
        <p>CYCLES</p>
        <p>CHRISTMAS SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Ail 5 And 10 Speeds</p>
        <p>V2</p>
        <p>Price</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA</p>
        <p>109 Trade St. 756323$</p>
        <pb facs="00092926_0014" />
        <p>14~Tlw Daily Reflectmr, GrecnvUie. N.C^Mooday. Deeeml&amp;gt;er 8. IWS</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>RALEIGH AP  NCDA ~ The trend on the North Carolina hog market was steady to SO cents lower today. Wilson 51.50 to 52.50, High Falls 50.50 to 51.50, Rocky Mount 53.00 to 53.50, Clinton, Fayetteville, Dunn, Elizabethtown, Pink Hill, Pine Level, Chadboum, Ayden, Laurinburg, Benson 52.50. Kinston 51.50 to 52.50. Tarboro and Bethel 50.50 to 51.00. Salisbury 50.00 .</p>
        <p>Feilowino rt tMccttd 11 a.m. stock market MOtattona:</p>
        <p>Swrraw^  iih</p>
        <p>umtad Talaoemmunicatton Pfo.</p>
        <p>HawWtin    43H</p>
        <p>Jatt.PMH</p>
        <p>Wkka  ivk</p>
        <p>Watfwvla Raany</p>
        <p>Eckara  isat</p>
        <p>Cantral Soya  U'h</p>
        <p>Hardaaa  5H</p>
        <p>tntigan</p>
        <p>FlaMcraet  isvt</p>
        <p>HattarM tncoma  iS9h</p>
        <p>VRKO  13V%</p>
        <p>OVER THE COUNTERS Combinad Inauranct  tH-H</p>
        <p>PrankllnLHa  17.4a</p>
        <p>NCNS  .4a</p>
        <p>PMnantAIr  )Va-4a</p>
        <p>LitttaMint  H-1</p>
        <p>CormrHoma  VVa</p>
        <p>OuardlanCorp  i4fe.3i4</p>
        <p>Plantar* Sank  14BNO</p>
        <p>Danial Intarnatlonai Corp.  UW-IS</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stodc market dropped lower today, adding to its steep stump of last week.</p>
        <p>At 11:30 a.m., the Dow Jones average of 30 industrial stocks was off 2.99 at 815.61, and declining issues held a 687 to 295 margin over those advancing on the New York Stock Exchange.</p>
        <p>The closely followed Dow average plunged 41.87 last week in the markets sharpest weekly setback of the year.</p>
        <p>Analysts said investors could find little encouraging news to offset the uncertainty of the business recovery's progress.</p>
        <p>Although a slight drop in the nations unemployment rate and word that wholesale prices had held steady in November prompted a brief upturn, the market had failed to generate little buying enthusiasm at weeks end.</p>
        <p>Analysts also attributed the slump to concern over the direction of interest rates and the absence of a rally over President Fords acceptance of federal aid for New York City, a chief market influence recently.</p>
        <p>Most active on the NYSE was Dow Chemical, unchanged at 88V^. A block of 22,300 shares was traded at 8?3'4.</p>
        <p>High on the active list was Bucyrus Erie, which fell IVb to 36H.</p>
        <p>Bucking the general downward price trend today were several oil service issues. Fluor Ckirp. was up V4 to 32%; Halliburton rose % to 136%; and HughesTool was up v* to 38.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP)</p>
        <p>Akzon*</p>
        <p>AMI* CkAl AIcoa</p>
        <p>Am Air Lin A BrAnds A Can A Cyan Am Motors Am TAT Babck W Bast Fds Bam Sti Bong</p>
        <p>Midday</p>
        <p>H0II</p>
        <p>ITT*</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>344*</p>
        <p>74k</p>
        <p>U</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>23'k 54s 494* Illy 23&amp;lt;k 31 vy avj</p>
        <p>tocks Law Lail</p>
        <p>I9ly 194fe 104% n 34i 34&amp;lt;/4</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>7H</p>
        <p>36</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>23'.% 231-ii 54k  54k</p>
        <p>49&amp;lt;% 494%</p>
        <p>114% 1|4k</p>
        <p>'.%</p>
        <p>31</p>
        <p>BRIEF RELIEF LANTANA, Fla. (UPI) -Acupuncture relieves pain in some patients promptly but not for very long, the National Enquirer reports.</p>
        <p>It said University of Florida medical researchers discovered that after a month 65 per cent of the patients reported a return of the pain. Of the remaining 35 per cent. 17 per cmt noted a 50 per cent reduction in pain while 18 per cent said there was a 75 per cent reduction.</p>
        <p>MONDAY</p>
        <p>7:00 p.m.Lions Club meets at Moose Lodge</p>
        <p>7 30pm.Ofder of the Rantx* for Girls meets at Mesonic Temple</p>
        <p>1:00p.m.-Lodoe NO. M5. Loyal Order of the Moose</p>
        <p>TUESDAY</p>
        <p>7 00 a.m Greenville Breektast Lions Owe meets at Tom-s Restaurant</p>
        <p>11 NoonThe tngiis Fletcher Book Club luncheon will be held at me Greenville Golf and Country Club</p>
        <p>3.0Cp.m The AARP will meet at F&amp;lt;rst Federal</p>
        <p>3:00 pjn.Mrs. Irby jacksdn will be hoste* to the inter Se Book Club</p>
        <p>7. pjn.The Patient Circle of the Kings Oaughtcn meets at the ho me of Mrs. Luttwr Moore. Assistant hostesses are Mrs _L L. Rives and Miss Mary wells</p>
        <p>1:00 pjn withle Council. Degree V PocaMMa* ihaats at Rotary oub</p>
        <p>Borden Caro Pw Caiansa Ovamp inl Coca Col Coig Pal Comw E Con Con Oatta Air Oow Ch Ouk Pw duPont East Air Lin Eat Kd Eaten Etmark Exxon Fireatn Pta Pw Fla Pwi Ford M Ford AkcK Gan Oynam Gan El Gn Feed Gan Mill Cn Mot O Telal Ga Pac Goodrh Goodyr Graca Grayhd Gull Oil Harculas Hon^H IBM</p>
        <p>int Harv</p>
        <p>Int Papar</p>
        <p>Int TT</p>
        <p>Kalsr Al</p>
        <p>Kraft Co</p>
        <p>Kraspes</p>
        <p>Kroger</p>
        <p>LiggMY</p>
        <p>LockHdAirc</p>
        <p>Loaw*</p>
        <p>Marcor</p>
        <p>MaadCp</p>
        <p>MhtnMM</p>
        <p>Moot 101</p>
        <p>AAonsan</p>
        <p>Nabisco</p>
        <p>natDist</p>
        <p>OlinCp</p>
        <p>Owanlli</p>
        <p>Penrwy</p>
        <p>PapsiCo</p>
        <p>PHIIMorr</p>
        <p>PhlilPat</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>ProctGam</p>
        <p>Ralston P</p>
        <p>RCA</p>
        <p>RflpStI</p>
        <p>Revlon</p>
        <p>Reylnd</p>
        <p>Rockwlint</p>
        <p>RoyCCole</p>
        <p>StRegP</p>
        <p>Scottpap</p>
        <p>SaabCl</p>
        <p>Sears</p>
        <p>SouthCo</p>
        <p>SouRy</p>
        <p>SperryR</p>
        <p>StBrand</p>
        <p>StdOIICal</p>
        <p>StOIIInd</p>
        <p>Steve nsJ</p>
        <p>Texaco</p>
        <p>TexETr </p>
        <p>Texglf</p>
        <p>UMC Ind</p>
        <p>UnCarb</p>
        <p>UnOCal</p>
        <p>Uni royal</p>
        <p>US StI</p>
        <p>Wadtova</p>
        <p>WestgEI</p>
        <p>Weyarhr</p>
        <p>WlmDx</p>
        <p>Wolwth</p>
        <p>XaroxCp</p>
        <p>26 2S4k IIH IIH IIH S**/* UH 16H</p>
        <p>2 IIH</p>
        <p>27  26H 30&amp;lt;/% 30&amp;gt;% 27H 27H 33H UH II I7H 17V% I7H</p>
        <p>I24H 124 4  3'/%</p>
        <p>1IBV. 102 3T&amp;gt;k 2* 2IH 2IH 04% I3H 21V% 211/% 27H 27H 234% 23H 41H 4|i/% 13  13</p>
        <p>36 3SVS 45'/% 45&amp;lt;A r 26H 264% 264% S2H S3H 24H 24V% 41l/fc 41H 17  16H</p>
        <p>20'/&amp;gt; 2041 24H 24H 12H 12H 201/% 20 25H 2SH 321/k 32V% 2I5H 214H 22H 22H S3H 53H 21H 21H 24H 24 41H 40H 314% 31H 17H17H 2IH 2IH I I 201/4 20H</p>
        <p>2IV4 21/% 17  17</p>
        <p>S6H S6H 46H 44&amp;gt;,k 70H 70H</p>
        <p>3|i/4 21 I5H 15H 2IH 2IH 47H 47H 47H 47 674% 67'/% 5IH 51 41'/% 48 31H 31H 90/% 90 44H 444k IIH 11'/% 26 26 73&amp;gt;/4 n'k 57'/% 57'/% 22H 224% 154% I5H 30H 30'/% 14H 14'A 19H 19V% 67  664%</p>
        <p>134% 13H 4i&amp;lt;/% a'/% 39H 394% 35'/% 35 26H 26H 41'/k 41'A 17  164%</p>
        <p>23/k 23V% 21  27H</p>
        <p>2IH 2IH 10V% IQi/% 56'/% 56'/% 42H 42H 7H 7H 60'/% 60'/% 16V% 16V% 13'/% 13H 354% 3SH 374% 37'/% 21H 21&amp;lt;/4 474% 47H</p>
        <p>2SH</p>
        <p>IIH</p>
        <p>29'.%</p>
        <p>WH</p>
        <p>12</p>
        <p>26H</p>
        <p>30&amp;gt;,%</p>
        <p>274%</p>
        <p>33'/%</p>
        <p>I7H</p>
        <p>ir/%</p>
        <p>124</p>
        <p>3H</p>
        <p>102'/%</p>
        <p>29/k</p>
        <p>21'/%</p>
        <p>I3H</p>
        <p>21'/%</p>
        <p>27H</p>
        <p>23H</p>
        <p>41'.%</p>
        <p>13</p>
        <p>35V%</p>
        <p>4S&amp;gt;/%</p>
        <p>26'/%</p>
        <p>264%</p>
        <p>52H</p>
        <p>24'/%</p>
        <p>4l'k</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>20'/%</p>
        <p>24H</p>
        <p>12V%</p>
        <p>20</p>
        <p>2SH</p>
        <p>32'/%</p>
        <p>214H</p>
        <p>22H</p>
        <p>S3H</p>
        <p>2l'/k</p>
        <p>24'/4</p>
        <p>404%</p>
        <p>314%</p>
        <p>17H</p>
        <p>2IH</p>
        <p>20'.k</p>
        <p>21'/%</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>56H</p>
        <p>46H</p>
        <p>70H 31 1 15H 2IH 47H 47'.% 67'/ 51'.% 41 31H 90 44H 1l'/4 26 73'A 57 V% 22'/% 15H 30H 14H I9H 66'/ )3H 4l&amp;gt;/% 39'/ 35 26H 4l&amp;lt;/i 16'/% 23'.k 27H 23H 10'.% 56&amp;lt;/&amp;gt; 424% 7H 60'/ I6V% 13H 3S'/ 37'/% 2IH 474%</p>
        <p>Speaks To Safety Body</p>
        <p>Carl E. Whitfield, field representative for the Governors Highway Safety Program was guest speaker at the Pitt County Safety Council meeting last week.</p>
        <p>Whitfield, outlining the history of highways said the passing scene of highway history is not a pleasant one.</p>
        <p>It is littered with the accumulated wreckage of 75 years of accidents . . . strewn with bodies of more than 2 million killed," and 60 million to 65 million injured.</p>
        <p>The speaker said that highway construction, safety belts, padded instrument panels, sgeed governors, electronic policemen, and higher licensing requirements could help reduce the accident toll, but he said the final answer rests with the individual driver.</p>
        <p>He said that violation of the rules of the road, by drivers is a prelude to disaster. So are gross carelessness and willful abuse of highway etiquette."</p>
        <p>Whitfield continued, "in most accidents, the guilty party is man and not machine . . . mind and not motor .. . reflex and not roadway.</p>
        <p>"If the passing scene is to grow more peaceful and less deadly, the great change will have to come from the drivers and pedestrians who are now causing the accidents."</p>
        <p>Safety council president Jan Vincent presided at the meeting.</p>
        <p>MASONIC NOTICE Grimesland Masonic Lodge Na 475 A.F. k A. M. will have an emergent communication Tuesday at 12 noon for the purpose of paying last respects toBrother'R Lloyd Fomes, who died Saturday. All Master Masons are invited.</p>
        <p>Charlie Padgett, Master</p>
        <p>James E. Mauray, Sec'y</p>
        <p>Waters Carpet Center</p>
        <p>S. J. WATERS WINTERVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>YOUR MOHAWK BIGELOW CARPET HEADQUARTERS</p>
        <p>''Where Quality Installation Counts" Phone 756&amp;gt;2S41  Night 75A-0240</p>
        <p>Beamon FARMVILLE - Mrs Cherry Reeves Beamon died Saturday at the home of her daughter, Mrs. Lillie Bell Barrett.</p>
        <p>Funeral arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Clark</p>
        <p>Mrs. Queenie Sutton Clark, 75, widow of N. A. Clark, died at her home, 1406 West Ragsdale Road, Sunday.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at 3 p.m. Tuesday at Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church by her pastor, the Rev. Bobby G. Bazen, and the Rev. Floyd B. Cherry, a form pastor. Burial will be in Greenwood Cemetery. The body will be taken from the Wilkerson Funeral Home to the Church at noon Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Gark, a native of Pitt County, was reared in the Black Jack community and since 1^8 had made her home in Greenville. She was a member of the Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church, and taught the Queenie Clark Adult Sunday School Class, was a member of the Greenville Chapter 149, Order of the Eastern Star, and a member of the Greenville Senior Citizens.</p>
        <p>She is survived by a daughter, Mrs. J. C. Boyd of the home; three grandchildren; a sister, Mrs. Martha S. Garrett of Richmond, Va.; and a brother, Snodie A, Sutton of Portsmouth, Va.</p>
        <p>In lieu of flowers contributions may be made to Mrs. Queenie Clark Memorial Fund of the Black Jack Free Will Baptist Church.</p>
        <p>Dixon</p>
        <p>AYDENMrs. Allie Carmen Dixon of Plymouth died Friday in Albemarle Villa Nursing Home, Williamston. Funeral services will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Little Creek FWB Church. Rt. 1. Ayden, with her pastor, the Rev. C. R. Murphy of Plymouth, officiating. Burial will follow in the Red Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>She was a native of Greene County but had made her home in Plymouth for the past 34 years. She was a member of Macedonia Church of Christ, church home mission, founder of Christian Aide Lodge, and a member of the Senior Citizens Club, all in Plymouth.</p>
        <p>Survivors include her husband, James Dixon of the home; two sisters. Mrs. Nannie C. Wiliiams and Mrs. Marina C. Phillips, both of Grifton, one brother, Henry Carmen of Grifton.</p>
        <p>The body will be at the Toodle Funeral Home, Plymouth from 6 p.m. Tuesday until taken to the church Wednesday at 1 p.m. The family will be at the funeral home from 7 p.m. to 8 p.m. Tuesday.</p>
        <p>FINAL OFFER REJECTED WASHINGTON (AP) -Striking pressmen and stereotypers, by an overwhelming vote, said no to what The Washington Post had called its final offer to end the 10-week walkout.</p>
        <p>H. LOYD FORNES</p>
        <p>Fwnes</p>
        <p>Mr. H. Loyd Fornes, 45, Pitt County farmer and a partner in Raynor-Forbes, Clark Warehouse, died Saturday at N.C. Memorial Hospital in Chapel Hill. He resided in the Portertown Community of Pitt County.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at 2 p.m. Tuesday at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by his pastor, the Rev. Richard Arno. Burial will be in Pinewood Memorial Park. Masonic rites will be accorded at the grave.</p>
        <p>Mr. Fornes, a native of the Hollywood Community of Pitt County, attended the Chicod Schools and served in the United States Army during the Korean Conflict. A member of Salem United Methodist Church, he was a member and former chairman of the Official Board, and a former Superintendent of the Sunday School. He was a charter member and past president of both the Eastern Pines Volunteer Fire Department and the Eastern Pines Mens Club. He was co-founder and board member of the Eastern Pines Water Corporation and served as manager from its inception in 1965 until November 1975. For the past 15 years he had served as chairman of Chicod No. 2 voting precinct.</p>
        <p>A member and past master of the Grimesland Masonic Lodge No. 475, he was also a member of the Greenville York Rite Bodies, the New Bern Consistery of Scottish Rite, the Sudan Temple, the Provost Guard and the Grimesland Order of Redmen.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, the former Mary Frances Porter; a son. Robin L. Fornes of the home; two daughters. Miss Polly Fornes of the home and Mrs. Ricky Buck of Hudsons Crossroads; his mother, Mrs. Lillian Tucker Fornes of the Hollywood community; four brothers, Joe Tucker Fomes of Black Jack, Jimmy Fornes of Monroe, Robert Fornes of GreenviUe, and Dr. Raymond E. Fornes of Apex; a sister, Mrs. Thomas Gaverick of Newnan, Ga.; and his paternal grandmother, Mrs. Ella Page Fornes of Coxs Mill Community.</p>
        <p>The family has requested that flowers be omitted. Anyone desiring to do so may make a contribution in his memory to the Pitt County Cancer Society, P.O. Box 377, Greenville.</p>
        <p>Hines  *</p>
        <p>PINETOPSMr. Eddie Hines died Saturday as the result of a fire accident. Funeral arrangements are incomplete at Hemby Funeral Home in Fountain.</p>
        <p>Howard</p>
        <p>Mr. Thomas Howard died Saturday at Rt. 1, Bethel. He was a native of Pitt County, and received his schooling in the county schools. Funeral services will be conducted at the Bethel Clhapel FWB Church, Bethel, Wednesday at 3 p.m. conducted by the Rev. Matthew Best Jr. Burial will follow in Pinelawn Cemetery. Bethel.</p>
        <p>Surviving are his mother, Mrs. Clotee Staton; his stepfather, Charlie Staton; five brothers, William Howard, James Earl, Elibe, Charlie Ray, all of the home, and Alton Ray Staton of Durham; six sisters, Lillie Mae Lee, Rosa Lee Whitley, Alice Fay, Donna Kay and Deborah Staton, all of the home, and Shirley Staton of New Haven, Conn.</p>
        <p>The family visitation hour will be held Tuesday night from ei^it to nine oclock at Flanagan and Parker Funeral Home.</p>
        <p>Lloyd</p>
        <p>The name of a daughter surviving the Rev. Thurston H. Lloyd was omitted from an obituary in Sundays Daily Reflector. She is Mrs. Mary Ann Little of Farmville. Funeral services for the Rev. Lloyd were today at 3:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>Mercer</p>
        <p>BROOKLYN. N .Y .Funeral s^vices for Miss Tabatha Mercer were conducted today at Mount Pleasant Holiness CJhurch in Fountain by the pastor, Eldress Lillie Boyd. Burial was in the Bullock Cemetery in Fountain.</p>
        <p>Surviving her are her mother, Mrs. Stacie Mercer of Brooklyn, N.Y. and a great grandfather. Bishop B.H. Mercer of Fountain.</p>
        <p>Roberson</p>
        <p>Mrs. Ardul Williams Roberson. 81, of the Leggetts Crossroads community died in Beaufort County Hospital Saturday.</p>
        <p>Funeral services were held this afternoon at 3:30 at the Chapel of Paul Funeral Home in Washington by the Rev. Joseph Lehman and the Rev. Gurney Sauls. Burial will be in Oakdale Cemetery in Washington.</p>
        <p>Surviving her are two sons, Ray Roberson of Rt. l. Washington and Jay Roberson of Rt. 3. Washington; three daughters, Mrs. Roscoe Mizell of Rt. 3. Washington, Mrs. Bonnie Ingalls of Rt. 5, Greenville, and Mrs. Elmo Allcox of Walters, Va.; a sister, Mrs. Carl Grant of Asheville; nine grandchildren; and 14 great grandchildren.</p>
        <p>Williams</p>
        <p>SHARPSBURGFuneral services for Mr. Curlie Williams will be conducted Wednesday at 2 p.m. at Olive Chapel FWB Church here by the Rev. Wiley Barnes. Burial will be in the Sharpsburg Cemetery.</p>
        <p>A lifelong resident of Edgecombe County, he was a member of Olive Chapel. Surviving him are his wife, Mrs. Mary Williams of the home and</p>
        <p>BONANZA</p>
        <p>ALL DAY TUESDAY IS FAMIIY DAY AT BONANZA.</p>
        <p>ARIB-EYE STEAK DINNER FOR ONIY</p>
        <p>Free CrewlonS/ Bace Bits, Sovr Cream and Fraa Refills on Soft Drinks"</p>
        <p>Sefved with baked potato ond crisp soiod. with o choice of dressing, ond Texos Toast \falid all doy Tuesdoy.</p>
        <p>520 W. Greenville Blvd. on 264 Bypass</p>
        <p>Also in New Bern, Goldsboro, Wilsan, Rocky Mount, Jacksonville and Roanoke Rapids.</p>
        <p>Alice B. Alexander to Henry Thomas Evans al 10.00 William G. Erwin to William G. Erwin, Jr. 10.00 Home Security Corp. to Elnora B. Smith 500.00 Leonard D. Lilley, Jr. al to William G. Jones al 10.00 Wren Locke to Willie Blount, Jr. al 10.00 Janie H. Melton to George D. Melton 10.00 Willard Moye al to David McNeil al 10.00 Realty Industries, Inc. to Robert Richard Barraza 10.00 Gwendolyn S. Register to Edward B. Register 10.00 Edward B. Register to Willie James Brown, Jr. lO.O^ Benjamin F. Wells^ al to Waiters E. Briley al 10.00 W. E. Dancey al to Wm. L. Fowler al 10.00</p>
        <p>Deeds</p>
        <p>A. J. Whitehurst al to J. V, Taylor. Jr. 10.00 Jack T. Bates al to Addie Futrell Ricks 10.00 Jimmy L. Mullins al to John David Duffus, Jr. al 10.00 J. B. Nichols al to Kendrick W Nichols al 10.00 Sherlene B. Prayer to William T. Prayer 10.00 Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co., Inc. to Carlton E. Durham al 10.00</p>
        <p>Tipton Builders Inc. to Richard C. Thornton III al 10.00 Tipton Builders, Inc. to Coye Lee Carr al 10.00 Marion F. Tripp al to Myrtle W, Wainwright 10.00 Farmers Home Admin, to Bruce E. Garris 10.00 Phillip Alva Averette al to George M. Brannon, III al 10.00 Pherabe G. Bland to J.</p>
        <p>Farm Scene</p>
        <p>By EDWIN L. YANCEY. County Extension Chairman</p>
        <p>Recently, North Carolina farmers had an opportunity to visit one of the states most remarkable farms, the Swine Development Center at the Upper Coastal Plain Research Station, Rocky Mount. The occasion was a swine field day which dedicated the completion of feeding and nursery facilities at the farm.</p>
        <p>The Swine Development Center is remarkable in that it is a research farm operated to be as near like a well managed commercial hog farm as possible. The purpose is to demonstrate a production and management system that will work for the average hog producer. It is a 100 sow swine facility, where pigs are produced and fed to market hot weight. Animals are sold through regular markets.</p>
        <p>Facilities at the center represent the latest in design being recommended by the Agricultural Extension Service. Environmental control is the key feature. Sows and boars are housed in a slotted floor building that can be cooled in summer. The farrowing house is a totally enclosed, slotted floor building with zone air conditioning for the summer and heat for the winter. Nursery facilities and feeding floors feature slotted floors and the latest methods of controlling temperature and humidity.</p>
        <p>All buildings are designed for</p>
        <p>a stepson, Willie Dortch of Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>The body will be at Hemby Memorial Funeral Chapel in Tarboro after 6 p.m. Tuesday and until one hour before the funeral. Family visitation will be at the chapel-Tuesday from 8 to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>proper ventilation. Research has shown moisture and extreme temperature variations to be major problems for hog producers. The ventilating systems remove moisture and provide draft free, stable temperature conditions.</p>
        <p>In 1974 the Swine Development Center farrowed 202 litters with an average of 11.8 live pigs. The weaned average litter was 9.3 pigs. The conception rate was 93 percent. During the same year, when top hogs sold for $37.49 and com averaged $3.10 per bushel, the center showed a return to labor and management of $32,165. (Changes in the value of inventory are included in the returns figure.)</p>
        <p>Another remarkable feature of the Swine Development Center is that it is open to any person who wants to go and look. Officially, every Wednesday is visitors day. Dr. Charles Stainslaw, Area Extension Swine Specialist, is there on that day to talk with visitors. On other days, an appointment should be made.</p>
        <p>For more information about the Swine Development Center or to arrange a special y'sit. contact the Pitt County Agricultural Extension Service.</p>
        <p>Houston Tucker al lO.OO Fred V. Feamster al to John David Sutton 10.00 Leon R. Hardee al to Haywood Price a! 10.00  ^</p>
        <p>E. L. Harrington, Jr. al to Joe D. Ejcum al 10.00 Wren Locke to Jasper Darden 10.00</p>
        <p>Miller H. Price al to Procter k Gamble Mfg. Co. 10.00 Wachovia Bk, &amp;amp; Tr. Co. NA Trustee to Unco, Inc. lo.oo Blount k Bail Realty Co., Inc, to Michael D. Weaver al lo.oo James R. Brady to James Earl Morris, Jr. al 10.00 Brook Valley Realty Co., Inc, to Michael L. Bowman al lo.oo Jesse James Cogdell to 0. W. Gardner 10.00 Wachovia Bk. &amp;amp; Tr. Co. NA Trustee to Redevelopment Comm, of City of Greenville 10.00</p>
        <p>Leon A. Dowdy al to Jarvis J. Mills al 10.00</p>
        <p>E. k C.. Inc. to Clifton W. Everett, Jr. al 10.00</p>
        <p>Fleming &amp;amp; Associates to Robert D. Rouse, III al 10.00 Verna S, Jenkins to Roy A. Peaden, Jr. al 10.00 Ronald P. Jones, al to Pherabee G. Bland 10.00</p>
        <p>F. C. Martin, al to F. Curtis Martin, al 10.00</p>
        <p>Pansy Moore to Ruth Moore Rucker 1.00 Pansy Moore to William R, Moore, al 1.00.</p>
        <p>Realty Industries inc. to Ronald P. Jones, al 10.00 Shamrock Realty Co. of Pitt Co. to Patrick J. Dayson, al 10.00 Julius M, Warren, al ta James Melvin Warren, al 10.00</p>
        <p>Treat Seven In Bus Accident</p>
        <p>HERTFORD, N.C. (AP)Seven pupils were taken to an Elizabeth City hospital for treatment this morning after their school bus ran off the road on U.S. 17, about three miles north of Hertford.</p>
        <p>None was believed seriously injured.</p>
        <p>State Trooper A. C. Joyner said the vehicle apparently left the road when the drivers attention was diverted by a disturbance.</p>
        <p>HEIL</p>
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        <p>^ Computer Printed. Invoices it Power Vac Furnace Cleaning</p>
        <p>Leon L. Moore Oil Co.</p>
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