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        <p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0001" />
        <p>Weather</p>
        <p>Punible bowers and cooler tonight, clearing Thursday.</p>
        <p>95th Year NO. 42</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTORTRUTH IN PREFERENCE TO FICTIONGREENVILLE, N.C. WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 18, 1976</p>
        <p>INSIDE READING</p>
        <p>Page 2No Paroles?</p>
        <p>Page IObituaries Page 27How They Voted</p>
        <p>28 PAGES3 SECTIONS PRICE 15 CENTSHeavy Fire Loss At Bethel Plant</p>
        <p>PLANT DAMAGED BV FIRE  A mid-day lire caused heavy damage to the Bethel Manufacturing Plant in Bethel yesterday. Members of the Bethel fire department cooi a wood pUe in the building after the blase. The plant manufactures wood vegetable shipment Wns. According to owner David Speir, the fire apparmUy</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)Legislative leaders have expressed hope that Gov. Jim Holshouser will act administratively to chop state spending so that a special session of the General Assembly wont be needed next month.</p>
        <p>The Appropriations Conference Committee recommended a number (rf ways to guarantee that spending this fiscal year, which ends June 30, will not exceed income Also, the panel wants enough money left over from this year to help ensure a pay increase to take effect July 1 for teachers and state workers.</p>
        <p>When the committee met Monday, there was talk of a special session around March 1 to cut spending But, some leaders expressed hope Tuesday that a session wouldnt be necessary if Holshouser used his administrative power to a sufficient degree Sea Ralph Scott, D-Alamance, co-chairman of the panel said, 1 would like to see him (the governor) put the recommendations into effect and we would not have to bother. I</p>
        <p>[ For Registrants</p>
        <p>Margaret Register, executive secretary of the Pitt Board of Elections, announced that the Second Street office will remain open until 7 pm. this Friday for the convenience of persons wishing to register for the March 23 primary.</p>
        <p>Miss Register, noting that Monday, Feb 23 at S pia is the deadline for registration for the primary, said that the Friday closing time is being extended in order to give persons who have not had a chance to register during normal hours the op portunity to get their names on the books.</p>
        <p>The office will operate on regular hours on Monday, she added, closing the books at 5 pm.</p>
        <p>Sheppard Memorial Library is also serving as a registration site and the registration books are open from9 a m until 12 noon and from 3 pm until6 pm weekdays for voter convenience RegistraUon will close atS pm atSheppard on Monday.</p>
        <p>The librarys Carver and East Branches are open for registrationfroml pm untile pm each weekday, although the tx-anches will cease registration for the primary at 5 pm Monday.</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>752-1336</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>Hotline gets things done for you Call 7S2-I336 and tell your problem or your sound-off or mail it to Hotline The Dally Reflector, Box 1967, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Because of the large numbers received. Hotline can answer and publish only those items considered most pertinent to our readers. Names must be givtea but only initials will be used. Transcribing is done once a day.</p>
        <p>A HOTLINE APPEAL</p>
        <p>PLEASE RETURN FLAG Would you please print the following note which we people of Winterville hope will appeal to the person who took our community flag last week: You have proven yourself capable of taking a flag 20 feet In the air; now would you please prove yourself a big enough person to return it. If you wrap it up and place it in front of the Wnterville Police Station, no questions will be asked. PJl.</p>
        <p>TOWELS</p>
        <p>Dec. 9,1 ordered two sets of flve towels for |2 each from Towels" in Stamford, Conn. My canceled check has been returned. This offer was, and still is, featured in Family Health Magaiine. Mrs. L. H.</p>
        <p>Hotline wrote to the company for you Feb. 2 and you report you got your towels a little more than a week later.</p>
        <p>think we ought to give him the opportunity.</p>
        <p>House Speaker Jimmy Green of Bladen County said he hopes a special session can be avoided. But, he said, a session will be called if necessary.</p>
        <p>The legislature is to meet in May to review next fiscal years budget and make adjustments as necessary. Budgets are adopted for two fiscal years at a time but uncertain economic conditions led the General Assembly to decitte last year on a review of the second years budget so that economic changes could be taken into consideration In its review of the budgel the committee recommended for gubernatorial or legislative action as necessary;</p>
        <p>A freeze on hiring for the rest of the fiscal year. No new jobs and those positions coming opest would not be filled except under emergency circumstances.</p>
        <p>-Out-of-state travel through June 30 be limited to official business relating to criminal justice, economic development, tax matters, philanthropy, bonds and investments and to meet requirements of state and federal laws.</p>
        <p>Goods on order but not received until after June 30 not be paid for until after the new fiscal year begins.</p>
        <p>The committee decided not to reclaim $4 million in a reserve fund for low income housing bonds. The agency running the program was given until the May session to get it started. So far, the program has not been used The committee hopes to save 843.5 million through its recommendations. A S per cent pay boost for teachers and state workers would cost about 170 millioa</p>
        <p>School Budget Studies Held By County Bd.</p>
        <p>The Pitt County Board of Education discussed three major areas of ccgglern at a budget workshop Monday night. Capital outlay projects, the county' wide current expense budget and program projects were considered as the three major areas which the board will request funding by the Board of County Commissioners later this month.</p>
        <p>Four items were considered under the capital outlay programs to be consistent with long range plans of improvements within the schools</p>
        <p>Additional classroom space is needed at the Belvoir Primary School to house fourth and fifth grade students.</p>
        <p> Major renovation projects are needed to build libraries and media centers particularly at Chicod and Falkland schools. This project will be necessary to</p>
        <p>keep within the standards of the Southern Association Accreditation policies Equipment and furniture as well as campus improvements are needed at Farmville Middle School.</p>
        <p>The construction of a rifle range at one of the high schools is an necessary project to fulfill government ROTC contracts.</p>
        <p>In the county wide current expense budget discussion the following three items were considered:</p>
        <p>A need for additional maintenance funds.</p>
        <p>A request of a five percent increase of all county personel working within the school system.</p>
        <p>The development of occupational programs in middle schools which do not have such programs, including Grifton, Chicod. and Belvior-Pactolus-Stokes.</p>
        <p>In the program projects, (Continued on pageia)</p>
        <p>Hospital Bd. Tours New Family Clinic</p>
        <p>By CAROL TVER Reflector Staff Writer Pitt Memorial Hospital Trustees last night toured the Family Practice Clinic on the hospital grounds which will open March 1.</p>
        <p>Dr. James Jones and one medical resident will begin next month to provide general medical services. The mobile home facility has space for four offices, but more residents could operate here on a rotating basis. It is hoped that this new service will eliminate some of the</p>
        <p>non-emergency traffic in the hospital emergency room and provide a family doctor for Pitt County people who heretofore have been unable to have a family doctor.</p>
        <p>,J. B. Kittrell reported on the work of the Bylaws Committee. The Board approved the following recommendations: that a nominating committee be appointed by the Board chairman; that the chairman appoint members of the finance and auditing committees, heretofore elected;</p>
        <p>that a joint policy committee as called for in the affiliation of the hospital with the ECU medical school be composed of five members of the Board of trustees and five from East Carolina University, including the vice chancellor for business affairs, vice chancellor for health affairs, the dean of the School of Medicine, and two members appointed by the University chancellor; that the Dean of the School of Medicine be an ex-officio member of the Trustee Board executive</p>
        <p>committee. By-law changes can be made only by the whole Board, it was pointed out.</p>
        <p>The Trustees asked Charles Gaskins of the County Commissioners to suggest that the hospital charter be amended to read that a member of the hospital medical staff recommended by the staff be appointed to the board.</p>
        <p>A regional hospital trustee education program will be offered here by the N. C.</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 10)</p>
        <p>started around a diesel engine used to power equipment In the building. Spetr said rebuilding of the tin and wood frame structure would begin immediately, estimating damages at 850,000, Tbe plant employs 20 persons. There were no Injuries reported. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)</p>
        <p>Belt-Tightening Sought Without Assembly's Call</p>
        <p>NEW MENTAL HEALTH FACILITY - The Pitt County MenUl Heslth Center began moving into the new facility on the Stan-tonsburg highway today. According to Mental Health officials the new building has 12,000 square feet of floor space and cost ap-</p>
        <p>Today Is Moving-ln Day</p>
        <p>proximately8444,079 to construct. The new facility replaces the old building on West Sixth SL The center will house 40 employees. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forrest)</p>
        <p>Ford Issues First Orders In Intelligence Changes</p>
        <p>By DAVID C. MARTIN</p>
        <p>Associated Press W rtter</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) -President Ford today issued orders barring the CIA and other intelligence agencies from using electronic or physical surveillance to collect information on the domestic activities of most American citizens and organizations.</p>
        <p>In a follow-up to his Tuesday night press conference at which he announced plans for reorganizing the intelligence community. Ford also said he would support legislation requiring judicial warrants for national security wiretaps and mail opening.</p>
        <p>in a message to Congress, Ford indicated he would seek to expand the power of the government to open mail which is now permitted only in criminal investigations. We need authority to open mail ... in order to obtain vitally needed foreign intelligence informtica Ford said.</p>
        <p>Ford also proposed a stiff new secrecy law which would provide criminad penalties for any government employe or contractor who leaks in-telligency secrets. The law also would give the government new legal powers to prevent the publication of sucb secrets.</p>
        <p>A 36-page executive order that takes effect March 1 also would bar infiltration of domestic organizations, drug tests on unsuspecting humans</p>
        <p>and illegally obtaining federal tax returns The restrictions do not apply to the FBI which will be governed by a separate set of guidelines to be issued within 90 days The CIA would be completely barred from electronic eavesdropping inside the United States, and The National Security Agency would be prohibited from intercepting any "communication which is made from, or is intended by the sender to be receive in, the United States."</p>
        <p>Fords plan to reorganize intelligence operations includes:</p>
        <p>A Committee on Foreign Intelligence, to manage U.S. intelligence agencies under the chairmanship of Bush;</p>
        <p>A three-member Oversight Board headed by for mer ambassador Robert D. Murphy to review reports from the inspectors general of the various intelligence agencies; and</p>
        <p>An Operations Advisory Group to be the successor of the so-called Forty Committee in directing covert</p>
        <p>Feb. Electric Bills Are Down</p>
        <p>February electric bills, for Greenville Utilities customers are running considerably less than January bills.</p>
        <p>The major reason for the decrease in electric bills is the drop-off in usage, " George Heel, customer service supervisor, said "The February billing period averaged around 30 days, whereas the January billing period was nearer 34 days. Also the mean average temperature in the January billing period was 10 to 20 per cent colder than in the February billing period.</p>
        <p>Reel said another contributing factor to the reduced usage was reaction to the extremely high</p>
        <p>bills received in January Following receipt of their January bills many electric heat customers immediately set back thermostats and have kept them down during the February hilling period Although the basic electric rate is exactly the same, the fossil fuel charge came down in February from $3.41 to $1.96 per I.OOO kilowatt hours The net effect of both the sharp reduction in usage plus the reduction of the fossil fuel charge found many electric heating customers with a reduction of 30 to 4(i percent in their February bills. Heel said.</p>
        <p>operations.</p>
        <p>Ford also said he would send legislation to Congress that would make it a crime for a government employe who has access to certain highly classified information to reveal that information improperly.</p>
        <p>Ford added that he would also support legislation that would prohibit attempts on the lives of foreign leaders.</p>
        <p>Fords plan met with mixed reaction from members of Congress.</p>
        <p>Chairman Otis G. Pike of the defunct House intelligence committee complained that  the emphasis is on secrecy rather than oversight</p>
        <p>Council Items</p>
        <p>Final adoption of the West Mcadowbrook Hedevelop-Iiirnt Ilan will be considered at a special meeting of the City Council on Thursday at S p.m. at city hall.</p>
        <p>The Council is also expected to consider a contract between the city and State of North Carolina concerning the Transit Development Program tor Greenville.</p>
        <p>The third item on the special agenda involves execution of a contract with Allen .&amp;gt;1. Voorhees &amp;amp; Vssoclates for a transit program planning study.</p>
        <p>In addition, the Council will consider the establishment of "no parking" zones on E. Hock Springs Road south of Itth Street.</p>
        <p>$524,207 In Distributal Tax Proceeds For County</p>
        <p>Some 8524,207 in net distributal tax proceeds were received by Pitt County for the quarter ending Dec. 31, 1975, it was announced by J Howard Coble, State Dapartment of Revenue secretary.</p>
        <p>On a per capita diatribution basis figured relatve to population. Greenville received 8142,523 of the total amount. Population was listed at 33,700 for Greenville.</p>
        <p>F'armville. with a population of 4,970, received 821,019 of the total distribution, according to Coble, while Ayden. figured on a population of 3,720, received 815,732.</p>
        <p>Other Pitt County towns, their papulations and receipts, include: Grifton (Pitt's share), 2,150. 89,092; Winterville, 1,750, 87,401; Bethel, 1,540. 86,512; Simp son, 520, 82,199; Fountain, 450, $1,903; Grimesland. 410,</p>
        <p>$1,733; and Falkland, 140, $592.</p>
        <p>Total population for Pitt County was listed as 74.600 and the county itself received $315,497 with the balance allocated to the ten towns in the county</p>
        <p>Greene County, figured on an ad valorem basis, received $29,533 in net distributions with $27,253 going to the county itself and the balance allotted to Snow Hill. II 7M; Hookerton. $322;</p>
        <p>and Walslonburg. $192</p>
        <p>Lenior County received $380.726 on an ad valorem basis with $286.235 going to the county and the rest distributed to Kinston, $85.048: La Grange. $7.025: PinkHill. $2.236: and Grifton (Lenioir's share). $180</p>
        <p>Martin County figures totaled $155;390 with $122,8T gotng to the county and nine towns sharing in the balance Receiving shares were</p>
        <p>Williamston, $25.188. Kobersonville, $5,363; Jamesville, $684, hak City. $555. Hamilton. $335; Everetts. $185. Parmele, 181, Bear Grass. $62: and Has.sell, $44 .Martin County's distribution was also figured on an ad valorem basis.</p>
        <p>Beaufort County, figured on a per capita basis, received $236,018 in net distributions Of the total. $173.508 went to the county on (he basis of a population of</p>
        <p>37,00() while seven towns shared in the balance</p>
        <p>Washington received the largest share. $41.548 on a population of 8.860 while Belhaven (2,260) received $10,590, Aurora (670), $3,141; Chocowinity (580). $2,719, Washington Park (520), $2,438. Bath (230). $1.031. and 1antego '220), $1,031.</p>
        <p>Total receipts of all counties amounted to $31.604.654</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0002" />
        <p>-The Daily Reflectar. CreeaTiUe, KC-Wedaefday, Fehraary ](, Itn</p>
        <p>Urge Mandatory Prison Terms</p>
        <p>By MARGARET GENTRY Aisociated Preu Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - A group of generally liberal scholars and politicians today urged mandatory prison sentences for violent offenders and called for an end to the parole system.</p>
        <p>The Committee lor the Study of Incarceration concluded that a convicted offender should be punished with jail or some lesser penalty primarily because he deserves it, not because of any hope of rehabilitation. But the panel also recommended that only the most vicious criminals should be jailed longer</p>
        <p>than five years.</p>
        <p>The committees conclusions from a four-year study were published today in a hook called Doing Justice."</p>
        <p>Former New York Sen. Charles Goodell, now a Washington lawyer, was chairman of the panel which was formed shortly after the 1971 Attica prison riot and was financed with grants from the Field Foundation and the New World Foundation.</p>
        <p>It may seem surprising that a group of liberal professors and activists, when faced with a choice between trying to</p>
        <p>Lebanon Plans To Ask Loans For Rebuilding</p>
        <p>FIRST FLAGG, FIRST SHIP-The flag flown ob the first ships of the Continental Navy In 177S Is raised on the destroyer Paul F. Foster at Ingalls Sh^yards at Pascagoula, Miss. The ship, the</p>
        <p>first to join the fleet in the bicentennial year, will</p>
        <p>be commissioned Saturday flying the Doot Tread on Me colors. (AP Wirepboto)</p>
        <p>Hails Student Work In Wake Of School Thefts</p>
        <p>By JERRY RAYNOR Reflector Staff Writer</p>
        <p>All of us are really appreciative of the enthusiasm and efforts of students to do something on their own, Tom Bennett, Program Director of the Extended School Program commented.</p>
        <p>Bennett referred to a project conceived, planned and presented by Extended School Program students to raise funds to help replace items stolen recently from classrooms during a break-in at Third Street Elementary School.</p>
        <p>Highlights of the Sunday afternoon event was the naming of a King and a Queen from among 13 infant candidates, children of students enrolled in the Extended School Program, conducted at Third Street</p>
        <p>Vital TV Unit Taken</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL (Ap)-A piece of equipment th^ the thief cannot use legally has been stolen, depriving' More-head City viewers of the state's educational television programs for several weeks, officials of the UNC-TV state network said.</p>
        <p>Officials said Tuesday that a translator was taken some time Monday. The translator receives the weak channel 2 educational TV signal coming from WUND-TV in Columbia, N.C., and converts it to channel 4 and rebroadcasts it for More-head City viewers.</p>
        <p>The translator can be used only for rebroadcast and to use it without a license would be a violation of federal law, network officials said. Value of the translator was placed at $1,400 and it will take two or three weeks to replace it, Robert E. Miss, network director, said.</p>
        <p>The translator is small enough to be carried by one person. Miss said. It was in a small building at the base of a power line tower on which its transmitting antenna was located.</p>
        <p>Also reported by the network Tuesday was damage to a microwave repeater in the Cane Creek area of Alamance County. Officials said vandals took nothing and the TV signal to the western part of the state which is routed through the repeaterwas not interrupted.</p>
        <p>School.</p>
        <p>Winner of the title for Queen was two months old Taneshia Valentine; and a six months old boy, Deon Mayo, received the title of King.</p>
        <p>Selection of the two infants was based on a competitive fund raising idea originated by the students, with each ticket sold representing a vote for the name of the child listed on an individual ticket.</p>
        <p>A measure of their enthusiasm for the project can be judged by the amount the students raised, a total of $174.00, Bennett said. Individual vote tickets were sold at 25 cents each, which means that nearly 700 tickets were sold.</p>
        <p>The project, Bennett added, reflected a coordinated group concern among the 122 Extended School Program students to find a way to help remedy the loss of valuable items used by them in their classes.</p>
        <p>In a report released Monday night by Superintendent of Greenville City Schools Glenn Cox, the school by school tabulation of losses due to items stolen or damaged shows that Third Street School has been most heavily hit of any city school  with a loss since July 1, 1975 amounting to $2,616.00, more than double the figure for Rose High School, the second highest in the scale of monetary value of items stolen. The Rose High loss figure is $1,300.</p>
        <p>Bennett said he was happy to report that this unfortunate state</p>
        <p>Quitting Day</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE (AP) -David Flaherty, state Sec. of Human Resources, said Tuesday night he will resign April 1 to campaign fulltime for the Republican guber natorial nomination.</p>
        <p>Fishery made his remarks during an interview on WSOC-TV.</p>
        <p>He said he is not looking for immediate support from Gov. Jim Hoishouser because of the possibiity that other members of the Hoishouser administration will run and Hoishouser would want to remain neutral</p>
        <p>In remarks to a newsman before the interview. Flaherty said he expects the Rev. Coy Privette of Kannapolis to be a tough opponent for the Republican gubernatorial nomination.Thank You</p>
        <p>The wife &amp;amp; children of Karie Lee Buck wish to extend their most gracious and heart felt thanks to all groups &amp;amp; individuals who participated in the search &amp;amp; recovery of our loved one. Also, to the many friends and family who made our time of such dispair a little more comfortable.</p>
        <p>May God bless you all.</p>
        <p>of affairs in this particular case had something of a happy ending. In addition to money raised by the students, a substantial portion of the items stolen in the recent break-in have been recovered.</p>
        <p>'I was contacted by the Greenville Police Department, he said, and was asked to identify a number of items they had recovered.</p>
        <p>Among recovered items which were returned to the school on Tuesday are an electric typewriter, a casette recorder, three small tape players, two headsets, a slide projector, a number of casette tapes and 12 boxes of ball point pens.</p>
        <p>Were fortunate in being able to recoup this much, which I would say amounts to about $400 to $500, Bennett commented. The Greenville police force has certainly given us excellent cooperation in recovering the equipment.</p>
        <p>By ALY MAHMOUD Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>BEIRUT, Lebanon (AP) -Lebanon will seek $1.5 billion in loans from the United States, Europe and the Arab oil states to help rebuild its war-shattered economy. Economy Minister Adel Osseiran says.</p>
        <p>"It is too early to determine the precise size of damage to the economy. Preliminary estimates by my experts put it at $3.5 billion to $4.4 billion, Osseiran said in an interview.</p>
        <p>Other estimates run as high as $10 billion.</p>
        <p>Osseiran said several Arab and Western governments have expressed readiness to help, and some wealthy Lebanese abroad have pledged financial contributions.</p>
        <p>Initially, we need $1.5 billion in loans, said Osseiran, but Im hopeful that the size of grants and contributions from governments and Lebanese emigrants would help squeeze the size of projected loans.</p>
        <p>The Lebanese government is to earmark a billion dollars in the regular budget for reconstruction, he said, but limiting expenditure to this amount would slow down development programs.</p>
        <p>, Ten months of street fighting wrecked the free-wheeling economy in what used to be the financial center and playground of the Middle East. About 12,-000 persons were killed and another 40,000 wounded.</p>
        <p>Several Lebanese banks fled</p>
        <p>and set up operations in Western Europe. Scores of Lebanese and foreign business firms transferred their headquarters and staff to Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan and Greece. More than 50,000 other Lebanese sought business opportunities and refuge in Paris, Brussels and London, according to Lebanese officials.</p>
        <p>Ive been assured by several banks and foreign firms that their operations would be resumed in Beirut as soon as possible, said Osseiran.</p>
        <p>However, he conceded Lebanons army is too small and its internal security forces  inadequate.</p>
        <p>rehabilitate offenders and punishing them as they deserve, ch'se deserved punishment, Goodell remarked.</p>
        <p>But he said the committee concluded that is the only fair basis for sentencing people. The committee made no claims that its proposal would reduce crime. Instead, Goodell said, the reforms were oHered as a means of making the system fairer.</p>
        <p>The committee also included Alan Dershowitz, a professor at Harvard law school; Herman Schwartz, chairman of the New York State Correction Commission; Eleanor Holmes Norton, chairman of the New York City Commission on Human Rights; Joseph (k&amp;gt;ldstein, a professor at Yale law school; and David Rothman, a professor of history at Columbia University.</p>
        <p>The committee joined Atty Gen. Edward H. Levi, other government officials and a growing number of criminal justice experts in the opinion that efforts at rehabilitating criminals  through vocational training or psychological counseling  have failed to curb crime.</p>
        <p>Rehabilitation has been the primary goal of sentencing during the recent past, the committee noted.</p>
        <p>Instead, the group proposed that the principal guide for the sentencing process should be a theory of commensurate deserts  punishing the offender because he deserves it, based on the seriousness of the crime and how much of a part he played in it.</p>
        <p>The committee recommended three types of punishment:</p>
        <p>For minor crimes and firsttime offenders, the offender is scolded by the court for his conduct, given a warning and released unconditionally with-</p>
        <p>j/nageA</p>
        <p>CREATIVE w  f</p>
        <p>vPHaTOaRAPHY=</p>
        <p>752-0123</p>
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        <p>outfurther supervision.</p>
        <p>-Intermittent confinement, such as serving weekends in jail for several weeks or months would be applied, for example, to most common thefts of personal belongings which do not involve the threat or risk of violence.</p>
        <p>Jail sentences of up to five</p>
        <p>years for intentional and unprovoked crimes of violence that cause (or are extremely likely to cause) grave bodily injury to the victim and to the most serious white-collar crimes, with sparing use made of sentences of imprisonment for more than three years.</p>
        <p>k\</p>
        <p>rASHMOTON'! MRTHDAY</p>
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        <p>iMENSr I BOYS &amp;amp;</p>
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        <p>5-10</p>
        <p>REG.</p>
        <p>$3.99</p>
        <p>PAIR</p>
        <p>100 CT. ASPIRIN</p>
        <p>I REG. 99$</p>
        <p>SAVE 260</p>
        <p>B]</p>
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        <p>RIG. $1.19</p>
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        <p>PEPSODENT TOOTHBRUSHES RIO. EACH MVE 9$,</p>
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        <p>Plus 20% Off Poppy Trail Accessories</p>
        <p>HARRIS SHOPPINO CINTCR MEMORIAL BRIVR, ORHNVILLl, N.C. OPEN MON.-WRO. TA.M.t07P.M. OPEN THUR$.-SAT.,A.M.TO*P.M. CLOSED SUNDAY</p>
        <p>PKICE5 QX)D THRU SAT. WHILi THtY LAST</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0003" />
        <p>Miss Gayle Wheeler Is Bride Of Dr. Patterson</p>
        <p>MRS. FM. SIMMONS PATTERSON JR.</p>
        <p>Cooking Is Fun</p>
        <p>By CECILY BROWNSTONE Associated Press Food Editor CHINESE SUPPER Fish with Black Beans Pork in Lettuce Rice  Pickle Cabbage</p>
        <p>Fruit  Tea</p>
        <p>PORK IN LETTUCE</p>
        <p>1 tablespoon oil Vi teaspoon salt</p>
        <p>1 garlic clove, smashed and peeled</p>
        <p>Vi pound ground lean pork</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons sherry mixed with 2 tablespoons water 10 Iresh or frozen snow peas, each cut into 3 crosswise</p>
        <p>pieces</p>
        <p>4 canned water chestnuts, minced</p>
        <p>1 tablespoon cornstarch blended with 2 tablespoons cold water, 1 teaspoon sugar and 2 teaspoons soy sauce</p>
        <p>2 tablespoons slivered almonds</p>
        <p>8 large iceberg lettuce leaves</p>
        <p>Heat a medium-size skillet or a wok until very hot. Add oil, salt and garlic and stir-fry until garlic is brown; discard garlic. Add pork and stir-fry for 3 minutes. Add sherry mixture and stir-fry for 2 minutes. Add snow peas and water chestnuts and stir-fry for 1 minute. Add corn</p>
        <p>starch mixture and cook and stir for 2 minutes. Garnish with almonds. Serve pork and lettuce in separate bowls. Each person scoops pork onto a lettuce leaf, folds it tightly and eats it with the fingers.</p>
        <p>Birth</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON, D.C. - In a single ring ceremony Saturday at 5:00 p.m. in Bethlehem Chapel of National Cathedral, Miss Gayle Marie Wheeler became the bride of Dr. F. M. Simmons Patterson Jr.</p>
        <p>The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth E. Wheeler of Lowell, Mass. Parents of the bridegroom are Dr. and Mrs. F. M. Simmons Patterson Sr. of Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>The ceremony was conducted by the Rev. John Simons.</p>
        <p>The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore a floor length gown of green and white silk screen print fashioned with an empire waistline. She carried a bridal bouquet of wdiite roses and Btephanotis.</p>
        <p>Miss Linda Hamilton of MUwaukee, Wis., was maid of honor. The best man was the father of the bridegroom.</p>
        <p>Ushers included Dr. David Read Patterson of Chapel Hill, N.C:, John Stefdien Patterson of Greenville, N.C., brothers of the bridegroom, and David Wheeler of Lowell, Mass., brother of the bride.</p>
        <p>Following the ceremony, a reception was held at the Embassy Row Hotel, Washington, given by the brides parents.</p>
        <p>After a wedding trip to New Orleans, La., the couple will reside in Chapel Hill.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Patterson is a graduate of Massachusetts General Hospital School of Nursing, Boston, Mass., and Duke University Hospital School of Physicians Associates. Dr. Patterson is a graduate of the UNC-CH and was a member of Phi Beta Kappa. He is also a graduate of the Pennsylvania School of Medicine, A.O.A., and is now chief medical resident at the University of George Washington Hospital, Washington, D.C. He will soon be / fellow in cardiology at the UNC HospiUI, Chapel HiU.</p>
        <p>A wedding rehearsal party was given by the bridegroom's parents Friday evening at the Army-Navy Country Club, Arlington, Va.</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>CDeo/i'Afct</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, GreeavlUe, MGWednesday, February 18, in*-3</p>
        <p>American History Month Being Observed By DAR</p>
        <p>Vick</p>
        <p>Bom to Mr. and Mrs. Steve Preston Vick, Greenville, a son, Steve Preston Jr., on Feb, 18, 1976 in Pitt Memorial Hospital.</p>
        <p>Personal</p>
        <p>JMrs. Ima Wooten, of 825 Flning St., is a surgical patient in Pitt Memorial Hospital, room 319.</p>
        <p>Marriage</p>
        <p>Announced</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Hunter of Greenville announce the marriage of their daughter, Mry, to Charles Wheat Jr., son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Wheat of New York City.</p>
        <p>Former Patient Praises Hospital</p>
        <p>By Abigail Van Buren</p>
        <p>&amp;lt;0197C W cncv&amp;gt; Tribunt.N. T. Nm Syild. Inc.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: May God Mess you for asking readers who had spent three months or more in a men^ hospital to write to you explaining the problems of getting back into society. You really do care about people, don't you?</p>
        <p>I spent two years in a county mental hospital. At first I expected to he thrown together with freaks and nuts who would chmb the walls, scream bloody murder and act crazy. Some were a little strange, and occasionally hostile and hard to handle, hut none was dangerous. Most were in a deep state of dmression.</p>
        <p>Abby, wfll you please say a kind word for those wonderful people who work with disturbed patients? It takes a deep love for humanity to care for people who are mentally ill.</p>
        <p>To^y I am home, well and happy, and I know I never could have made it without the patient, loving and understanding people who looked after me. Thank you.</p>
        <p>FORMER MENTAL PATIENT</p>
        <p>DEAR FORMER; I appreciate your Idnd letter. And I still welcome letters from former mental patients. You need not sign your names. The response to my request has been heartwarming.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: I am a ministers wife, and I would like to tell you what Christmas means to me:</p>
        <p>It means spending the holidays going to programs in which my musically talented children perform. (Most ministers marry women who can play the piano so they will always have someone to play for the services. These wives usually produce musically gifted children.)</p>
        <p>Christmas means working hard to make gifts for the family in order to live withM a limited bud^t. Ministers' wives have always done this. It means cookmg everything from scratch for the same reason.</p>
        <p>Christmas means being excluded from a lot of holiday parties because most pwple dont want us to know the kind of drinks theyre serving. (We know anyway).</p>
        <p>Christmas means spending all the time at the stove, sink or washing machine. Nobody offers to help with anything, and after a few tries, you end up doing it Mone because its easier than begging for help is.</p>
        <p>Christmas means receiving gifts from your family that will enable you to serve them betterrarely anything to satisfy your personal, feminine desires.</p>
        <p>Christmas means becoming physically exhausted and trying to keep it from showing. 'The family isnt concerned. Any suggestions, Abby?</p>
        <p>NAMELESS AND NO LOCATION</p>
        <p>DEAR NAMELESS; Yours is the saddest Christmas song Ive ever heard. Clip this and show it to your family. If they don't know how you fed, they should.</p>
        <p>DEAR ABBY: Ive been going with Roy for a year and a half. We plan to be married.</p>
        <p>Roys brother went with a girl Ill call Gloria. Gloria and I are good friends. Gloria broke up with Ro^s brother and is going to marry someone else.  *</p>
        <p>My boyfriend and I were invited to the wedding. I want to go. My boyfriend says that he will not go and that out of respect to his brother, I shouldnt go, either. I think hes out of line, and I told him I thought he was childishand if everyone thought like this, no one would have a friend in the world.</p>
        <p>What do you say?</p>
        <p>EASTERNER</p>
        <p>DEAR EASTERNER: Im with you. AdulU choose thdr own frdends. (And enemies.)</p>
        <p>Everyone has a problem. Whats yours? For s personal reply, write to ABBY: Box No. 69700. L.A., CaUf. 90069. Enclose stamped, self-addresaed envelope, please.</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Major Benjamin May Chapter, Daughters of the American Revolution, met Saturday, afternoon in the Farmville Public Library.</p>
        <p>Dr. Emily Farnham, regent, presided and Miss Mary Henry of Farmville. Mrs. Thomas E. Hales, chaplain, conducted a memorial service for Mrs. J. Bruce Eagles.</p>
        <p>The President Generals message for the month was given by Dr. Farnham. In her message, Mrs. Wakelee Rawson Smith stressed the importance of observing American History Month.</p>
        <p>February was first proclaimed American History Month by the governor of Kentucky in 1952 in response to a request by Mrs. William H. Noel, Kentucky state chairman of Americanism. In 1956 the</p>
        <p>Chapter Members Hear Speaker</p>
        <p>Arthur S. Alford, superintendent of Pitt County Schools, was guest speaker at the dinner meeting of Alpha Nu Chapter of Alpha Delta Kappa held at the Ramada Inn.</p>
        <p>His program topic was 'School Law.</p>
        <p>An honorary member of Alpha Nu, Mrs. J.B. Spilman, will be the March speaker. President Ann Byrd and President-Elect Ann Hardee will relate the events of the Presidents Council meeting being held in Concord at the next meeting.</p>
        <p>Martha Alcorn, chairman of the Altruistic Committee, announced the name of the sorority^ adopted patient at Cherry Hospital and it was suggested that gifts for the patient should be brought to the next meeting. Ms. Alcorn reported that (400 had been contributed to Girls Haven from Alpha Nu.</p>
        <p>Ms. Barbara Tyson will assist Clevie Wallace with the Pledge Committee. Members were reminded that pledge applications need to be turned in to the committee in the near future.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>There^more beauty in thislitde couponthan one woman can handle.</p>
        <p>That's why wa rt inviting you to bring a tnand This coupon antiiiM both of you to fiva Marla Norman beauty'mahars (Milky Freshener Moisture Emulsion, Makeup Taxturizar. Cocoa Baiga Liquid Makeup, Oaf Cleanser), when both ot you make a $6 Merle Norman Coamaiic purchase Offer good through March 31.1976. or while supplM last at participating studios Redeem bleiaily-at time ot purchSM</p>
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        <p>American History Month Committee was authorized with the historian general as national chairman.</p>
        <p>Mrs. F. McCoy Tripp, National Defense Committee chairman, read an article written by Thomas ODell for The Washington Post entitled Shortage Of Uranium Being Felt,</p>
        <p>Mrs. Arch J. Flanagan, chairman of the Membership Committee, announced that Mrs. Gene Brewer of Farmville had been accepted as a prospective member. She reported that the celebration planned for commemoration of the 50th anniversary of Major May Chapter has been postponed indefinitely because of necessary repairs to the Chapter House. Other committee reports were given.</p>
        <p>Mrs. W. Leroy Bass, chairman of the American History Month Committee, stated that students in the fiftti through eighth grades of Farmville had participated in the American History Essay Contest and had made a good showing in the District. She said that there is sustained and growing interest in the Junior American Citizens Clubs sponsored in the schools by Major May Chapter.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Edward Lee Hill, representing the Flag of the U.S.A. Committee, reported that a flag was given by the chapter to Ayden Boy Scout Troop No. 34. It was presented Feb. 8, Boy Scout Sunday, at services in the Ayden United Methodist Church. Chapter members in attendance were Mrs. Hill, Mrs. Tripp, Dr. Farnham and Mrs. Ernest Hardee.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Troy W. Rouse, chairman of the By-Laws Committee, presented newly revised By-Laws to the membership for approval.</p>
        <p>Mrs. John Riley of Raleigh was elected as alternate to the official delegate to the 1976 Continental Congress.</p>
        <p>Dr. Farnham announced finalized plans for the</p>
        <p>Rededication Service being jointly sponsored with the Colonel Alexander McAllister DAR Chapter. The program, for DAR members only, is for the purpose of rededication to the objects of the National Society of the Daughters of the American Revolution. It will take place in Hookerton Methodist Church Sunday, March 14. Dr. Farnham further reported that Major May members have been extended an invitation by Blount Chapter, Washington, members to attend the unveiling of a marker commemorating the 200th anniversary of the founding of the town. She read a summation of the current years activities, which she had compiled. This review, along with others from ail DAR Chapters in North Carolina, will make up the 1976 Yearbook of the .NSDAR of North Carolina.</p>
        <p>Mrs. Thomas E. Hales noted that North Carolina DAR Chapters now number 100. She recently co-sponsored the 100th chapter in Zebulon and that it has been given the name of Wake.</p>
        <p>Couple Honored Saturday Night</p>
        <p>Mr. and Mrs. Cullen J. Rogers of Shirley, Mass., were honored on their 30th wedding anniversary Saturday at a surprise dinner party.</p>
        <p>Hosts and hostesses were her sisters and brothers-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Tyree Evans of Win-tervilleand Mr. and Mrs. Frank Braxton of Hampton, Va.</p>
        <p>The dinner party was held at the home of their father, Dewey Lee Buck, of Winterville.</p>
        <p>CHERRY</p>
        <p>TARTS</p>
        <p>Dieners Bakery</p>
        <p>815 Dickinson Ave</p>
        <p>The failure of many Americans to get all the dietary iron they need is among the most serious of our current national nutritional problems.</p>
        <p>DOWNTOWN PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>mas</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA</p>
        <p>...Just</p>
        <p>BrotJy's!</p>
        <p>.r</p>
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        <p>jumpsuit dressing now It's soft, brushed denim that looks like we washed it in the sun. Comes in the palest shades of toast, blucbcrry or lemon.</p>
        <p>Tie the self belt, put your hands in the, slash pockets and you're off!</p>
        <p>Sizes 4 16,  *48</p>
        <p>PITT PLAZA</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0004" />
        <p>4The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N,C.Wednefdny, Febmniy IS, 1S7I</p>
        <p>Something Better Is Needed</p>
        <p>Superior Court Judge William Z, Woods of Winston-Salemno doubt in exasperation-advocated the return of the whipping post in a recent court session.</p>
        <p>We talk about the high increase in crime and what to do about it, the judge said, What we need to cure it is a whipping post ixi the courthouse square. Let everybody see it, and then see how many folks will try to go out and break the law,</p>
        <p>We can fully understand the judges firustration with the senseless crimes which he and all other judges must deal with daily. The crimes seem to be wanton. Robbery victims are shot even after they turn over their valuables. Rapes and sometimes unprovoked assaults occur frequently.</p>
        <p>Alas, there is as little chance of our society returning to the whipping post as there is of resuming public hangings on the court house square.</p>
        <p>What then is the answer ? Nobody seems to have it. A major concern these days seems to be the poor conditions of the prisonsand there are few who</p>
        <p>will deny that much improvement needs to be made. Just the knowledge of the terrible conditions of jail should be enough to deter any sensible person from a life of crime.</p>
        <p>We suspect that the reason it doesnt is that those who commit crimes are not fully aware of what hell-holes jails can be; that coupled with the fact that many law breakers just believe that they wont be sent to jail even if they are caught.</p>
        <p>Maybe the answer is a campaign to educate everyone from children on up as to the bad conditions that will be faced in prison for someone who is caught and convicted of a major crime and sent there. Certainly we should have clear mandatory terms spelled out for the particularly horrible crimes involving injury or death for innocent victims.</p>
        <p>Society owes it to those who would commit crimes to see that they are fully informed of what faces them if their luck goes bad and they are sent to jail.</p>
        <p>Finding A Standard Bearer Lies Ahead</p>
        <p>It is interesting that many Democratic delegates to their county conventions are uncommitted in the race for party presidential nominee.</p>
        <p>Early checks showed that a large percentage of the delegates listed no choice in the presidential primary.</p>
        <p>The information is really not surprising this year when there is no candidate at present who</p>
        <p>THIS AFTERNOON</p>
        <p>seems to be far ahead in the broad field.</p>
        <p>Finding a Democratic standard bearer is going to be a tedious process this year, with the candidates being eliminated one-by-one until a final choice is made. The Democratic party is not dominated by any single personality this year, and that might turn out to be best insofar as choosing the best possible presidential candidate.</p>
        <p>Is N.C. A Vicious State?</p>
        <p>By BILL NOBLITT RALEIGHFor  many</p>
        <p>years, North Carolina has been the leading state in the nation for aggravated assaultattacks on people, usually with a weapon, with intent to inflict severe injury.</p>
        <p>In 1966,1967,1970,1973, and 1974, North Carolina was number one in the nation in that crime category. When not the worst, the state was runnerup for that dubious distinction.</p>
        <p>The rate of aggravated assaults in this state ran 369.4 per 100,000 population in 1974, compared to 27,9 in North Dakota. 45.5 in Vermont, and 52 in Hawaii, New Hampshire, and Wisconsin. The national average was 214.2, per 100,000.</p>
        <p>Some Clues?</p>
        <p>This crime category, among others, annually pushes North Carolina into the top ranks for crime activities, and the legislative Crime Study Commission chaired by State Senator McNeill Smith, D-Guilford,</p>
        <p>INSIDE REPORT</p>
        <p>has been puzzling over national crime figures for some clue to the problems in this state, and what to do about that.</p>
        <p>The early returns on the" study of crime statistics show that North Caroiinians commit more aggravated assaults than any other Americans, and more murders than the nationai average. There are, however, fewer rapes, robberies, burglaries and thefts.</p>
        <p>On balance. North Carolina has fewer crimes against property than the national average, but we also have more crimes against persons. The national statistics, gathered through the Federal Bureau of Investigation Uniform Crime Report process cover seven crimes: murder, rape, aggravated assault, and robbery; and burglary, larceny, and auto theft. The first four are crimes against persons; the last three, crimes against property.</p>
        <p>In total crimes against persons. North Carolina ranks 42nd, with 488.9 per 190,000 population, in the same general class with Louisiana, South Carolina, and Arizona. New York is 50th with 791.6 per 100,000.</p>
        <p>In murders, this state ranks 37th with 11.7 per .100,000, in the same range as Arkansas, New Mexico. Maryland, and Illinois. Georgia is 50th with 17.8 per 100,000.</p>
        <p>In rape, the state ranks 13th with 15.5 per 100,000, about the same as Wyoming, Massachusetts, and Idaho. Alaska is 50th with 49.3 per 100,000.</p>
        <p>Robbery figures place North Carolina 21st, with 92,3 per 100,000; New York is worst with 476.3.</p>
        <p>Worst Cases</p>
        <p>North Carolina is worst in aggravated assaults (369.4 per 100,000) followed closely by Florida, and Nevada.</p>
        <p>This state ranks loth in crimes against property, with</p>
        <p>3,022.2 per 100,000. Arizona and Nevada are the worst, with over 7,000.</p>
        <p>Auto theft is relatively rare in this state, with a seventh-place rating at 188.3 per 100,000 population. Massachusetts ranks 50th with 1,365.1 per 100,000.</p>
        <p>Burglary sees the state in 23rd place, in company with Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. The rate is 1,186.9 per 100,000; and Arizona leads with 2,534 per 100,000.</p>
        <p>Larceny is reported at the rate of 1,647 per 100,000 to rank the state in ninth place; Arizona, again, is worst with 4,518.6.</p>
        <p>Overall, Arizona is the worst state for property crimes, followed closely by Nevada. The best record is found in West Virginia, Mississippi, and North Dakota.</p>
        <p>In crimes of violence. New York, Georgia, North Carolina and Alaska lead; while the safest states are North Dakota and Rhode Island,</p>
        <p>By ROWLAND EVANS and ROBERT NOVAK ANTRIM,  N.H.-The</p>
        <p>potential disaster faced by President Ford in the Feb. 24 New Hampshire primary is affirmed by voters in this rockribbed Republican town, who are not truly anti-Ford but hope for Ronald Reagan as a political savior to regenerate the nation.</p>
        <p>Interviews conducted in picturesque, 199-year-old Antrim at the foot of the White Mountains, with the help of Patrick Caddells Cambridge Survey Research, showed a better than 3-to-2 edge for Reagan against the President. But this was not the usual lesser-of-two choice. Whereas Republican</p>
        <p>voters interviewed gave Mr. Ford a high 62 per cent approval rating, they gave an astronomically high 84 per cent approval of Reagan.</p>
        <p>What these voters think they see in Reagan was typified by a 45-year-old commercial artist who professed to admire the President but is voting against him because I think Reagan will bring in a breath of fresh air. At least, I hope so.</p>
        <p>Antrim, whose population of 2,122 is largely lower-middle income of Yankee stock, was selected by Caddell as a statewide weathervane in recent Republican primary elections. If it should prove a good</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>INCORPORATED 209 Cotanche Street, Greenville, N,C, 27834 EsUbllshed 1882 Published Monday Through Friday Afternoon and Sunday Morning</p>
        <p>DAVID JULIAN WHICHARD, Chairman of the Board JOHN S. WHICHARD-DAVID J. WHICHARD Publishers Second Class Postage Paid at Greenville. N. C.</p>
        <p>SUBSCRIPTION RATES Payable in Advance</p>
        <p>Home Delivery By Carrier or Motor Route Monthly $3.00</p>
        <p>By Mail One Year  $36.00</p>
        <p>Sis Months  18.00</p>
        <p>Three .Months  9.00</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to use for publication all news dlspat-ches credited to it or not otherwise credited to this paper and also the local news published herein. All righto of publications of special dispatches here are also reserved.</p>
        <p>UNITED PRESS INTERNATIONAL</p>
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        <p>barometer again. Ford campaign operatives have totally failed in their New Hampshire efforts to paint Reagan as an incompetent. Indeed, for salvation the President may now need a self-inflicted Reagan wound of critical dimensions, or some spectacular break abroad.</p>
        <p>Accompanied by Dotty Lynch, senior Caddell analyst, we interviewed 57 registered Republicans the second day after Mr. Ford's swing through New Hampshire, with these results: Reagan, 27; Ford, 16; undecided, 14.</p>
        <p>Contrary to widespread reports from New Hampshire about soft voting attitudes, Antrim Republicans were firm. Only three Ford voters and three Reagan voters seemed susceptible to change. Although undecided voters were unusually numerous, they do not seem a fertile field for exploitation. Most profess far less interest in the primary than decided voters, and many probably</p>
        <p>will not vote at all.</p>
        <p>Thus, the Reagan edge here seems committed and hard, revealing a drastic shortfall in the anti-Reagan strategy. Reagan's $90 billion transfer plan was favored 4-to-l, getting approval from many Ford supporters. Despite Ford campaign efforts to paint Reagan as a high-tax governor, several voters mentioned his record there as reason for supporting him. "I hope Reagan can do in the nation what he did in California, said a fiftyish schoolteacher.</p>
        <p>Several Reagan backers echoed his oratory and William Loeb's Manchester Union Leader. He wants to put government back with the people, said the 43-year-old wife of a grocery store owner. A 51-year-old plant guard told us Reagan "hasn't been contaminated by Washington politics.</p>
        <p>Beyond this lies an unusual vein of optimistic hope in Reagan, extraordinary for the 1970s. Declaring himself (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>.1</p>
        <p>Strength For Today</p>
        <p>FAITH IS THE VICTORY</p>
        <p>We observed yesterday that anxiety never pays and said that when people fling it over their shoulders and resolutely start out to live a more wholesome life, an intolerable burden is lifted from their hearts and minds.</p>
        <p>But this is not so easy to do.. The worry habit grows on us over a period of years, and just as it takes a long time for us to get into bad habits, so it takes a long time to break them.</p>
        <p>How can we break the worry habit? First, by</p>
        <p>assuring ourselves that most of our anxieties are unreal. Also, we have to learn to substitute other thoughts for the ones which have burdened our minds. The only way to get an anxious throught out of our minds is to push in a healthy thought to take its place.</p>
        <p>But none of these things work unless we believe that above us is a loving God whose desire is not to punish us but to do us good at all times. Nothing can give our hearts permanent security and peace but religious faith.</p>
        <p>By Elisha Douglass</p>
        <p>Courlrr-MnrnaU</p>
        <p>OlStillUIIO I I A IlM(b STNWCAlt</p>
        <p>Awripht. wheres the comedian who determined that this w as. Suitable for our purposes?</p>
        <p>By ART BUCHWALD</p>
        <p>Poems For A China Trip</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON - Former President Richard Nixon is preparing for his trip to the People's Republic of China. I wonder if he will write any poems for Mao Tsetung. Here are a few for Mr. Nixon in case he doesn't have the time</p>
        <p>Once again I stand at the Great Wall made from centuries of stone</p>
        <p>Confucius says, "Those who stone wall will receive a thousand pardons.</p>
        <p>The Chinese greet me with open arms</p>
        <p>and throw pink rose petals at my feet Why do all forsake me save the Teamsters and the Red Guanf</p>
        <p>If winter has come to cold Peking</p>
        <p>Can David Frost be far behind?</p>
        <p>The wind blows across the Forbidden City The earth groans and twists while ice laden Rivers rush down to meet the sea.</p>
        <p>A cloud crosses the sky.</p>
        <p>I wonder how much money RabbiKiuTf has raised for me in Toledo?</p>
        <p>Weathervane' For Reagan</p>
        <p>Public Forum</p>
        <p>Letters submitted tor Public Forum must be limited to 306 words.</p>
        <p>To the editor</p>
        <p>In the February 3 issue of your newspaper Richard K. Worsley wrote a letter raising questions relative to information about North Carolina taxes reported by the Greenville-Pitt County League of Womoi Voters on January 29. He raised questions with regard to two statistics which were reported The League inadvertently stated that a family whose income is $1,150 or less per year pays 4.9 percoit of all its income in food tax. Mr. Worsley is correct in questioning this percentage since the maximum rate anyone could spend on the sales tax on food is 4 percent, the maximum allowed according to North Carolina law. The figure that should have been reported is 1.5 percent The source for this information is the 1975 Report of the Special Senate Commission on North Carolina Revenue Laws which was chaired by Senator Russell Kirby.</p>
        <p>The same Senate commission reports that families with less than$1,150 yearly income (the definition of income used here includes non-taxable items such as social security and public assistance, as well as things that would be declared on a state personal income tax return) pay approximately 19.7 percent of their income in taxes. The commission makes this estimate on the assumption that in addition to direct taxes individuals pay, they also pay indirect taxes in the corporate income and property taxes are split 50-50 between consumers and owners of capital.</p>
        <p>The League regrets the publication of the incorrect figure. However, we are grateful to Mr. Worsley for calling this error to our attention and we are equally glad to know that readers follow League studies as reported in the newspaper.</p>
        <p>Rhea R. Resnik, President Patricia Dunn, Chairperson-Tax Study Committee GreenvUle-Pitt County League of Women Voteri</p>
        <p>I sit in the Great Hall feasting on Peking duck.</p>
        <p>How good it is compared to San Clemente crow.</p>
        <p>I can testify to the beauty of China</p>
        <p>I can testify to the goodness of Mao I can testify to the greatness of Chou I can testify to the wisdom of Teng But I cant testify in Washington, D.C.</p>
        <p>Because my health forbids me to travel</p>
        <p>Why have I come back to this strange land Shrouded in mystery and silence?</p>
        <p>. Cloaked in a thousand secrets Of ten thousand years of more?</p>
        <p>Because it beats the devil out of Writing my book.</p>
        <p>I have seen peasants work with their hoes I have seen steelworkers work with their backs I have seen dockworkers work with their shoulders I have seen women work with their men.</p>
        <p>Yet I have not seen one peison in all China Ask me what was on the 18 minutes of Rosemary's tape.</p>
        <p>The hawk flies across the sky</p>
        <p>Waiting to swoop down and make its kiE Trees sway in the wind and watch and wait As tiny birds sing sad songs of yesterday.</p>
        <p>Sowhy'wont the Supreme Court</p>
        <p>Give me back my personal papers</p>
        <p>While the IRS tries to find chinks in my taxes TheChinesefind only peace in my heart</p>
        <p>As night falls over the Yangtze And a wolf cries out in Tibet The fires of the sun become embers</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>Doubt</p>
        <p>Ally's</p>
        <p>Stance</p>
        <p>By ARTHUR L. GAVSHON Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>LONDON (AP) - Some in-fuential Europeans are beginning to worry that the post-World War II dlliance with the United States is in danger of crumbling. Many of them feel their ttans-Atlantic ally can no longer be counted on to give firm leadership in a changing world.</p>
        <p>A survey by The Associated Press disclosed that the main factor behind these concerns is the continuing conflict between the White House and Congress and other domestic developments that seem to some Europeans to have paralyzed the ability of President Fords administration to counter Soviet threats around the world.</p>
        <p>They see this condition continuing into future administrations.</p>
        <p>Julian Amery, son-in-law of former British Prime Minister Harold MacMillan and a former Junior minister in the Foreign Office, said in a recent interview that Americas internal problems have robbed Washington of its capacity to lead.</p>
        <p>"In Vietnam they have experienced the first military defeat in their history, he said, "They have seen the dollar drastically devalued, they have endured the shame of Watergate and now are in the toils of a masochistic investigation into the CIA. The administrations hands are tied by their legislature. They cannot give the lead.</p>
        <p>Winston S. (3iurchill, grandson of Britains World War II leader, also lamented in a recent speech what he called the grotesque orgy of self-denigration, of party political mud-slinging going on in Washington.</p>
        <p>Late last month, Belgian Defense Minister Paul Vanden Boeynants called for a truly unified European defense system because he said the continent could no longer put all its trust in the United States.</p>
        <p>"What would become of us if the U.S. nuclear umbrella were to disappear tomorrow? he asked. "The farmer in Nevada does not care about faraway Europe.</p>
        <p>Some Europeans are also concerned by Secretary of State Henry A. Kissingers warnings of serious consequences to the North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) if the Communists gain admission to the government coalition in Italy. (Continued on page 5)</p>
        <p>40 Years Ago Today</p>
        <p>February 18.1936</p>
        <p>J. E. Winslow, prominent Pitt County farmer and chairman of the Pitt County Board of Agriculture, was named chairman of the temporary organization of the North Carolina Farm Bureau Federation organized here yesterday.</p>
        <p>Mr. Winslow was empowered to name six associates to aid him in carrying on organization work of the Bureau.</p>
        <p>The first local branch of the Farm Bureau Federation ever to be located in North Carolina was organized by Pitt County farmers here after the temporary state organization was set up.</p>
        <p>G. E. Trevathan of Fountain was elected chairman of the Pitt Bureau and Miss Blonzie Pearson was chosen secretary-treasurer.</p>
        <p>James Kyle</p>
        <p>Volatile Decade For Business</p>
        <p>By JOHN CUNNIFF AP Buihiess Analyst</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - As measured by the numbers, this countrys economy over the past decade has risen to the heights, plunged to the depths and is now climbing back up a slippery incline that has few footholds.</p>
        <p>The numbers show ratail sales are moving ahead, industrial production is rising, the ^ situation is improving, the stock market has recovered lost ground, inflation Is tending lower and some interest rates are half what they were.</p>
        <p>Sometimes we become hypnotized by these numbers, and tend to think they are a continuous measurement of the same economic body. But</p>
        <p>the numbers are mere abstractions, bare bones without the flesh of memory or emotion, unable to distinguish changes in the quality.</p>
        <p>A look at the nonstatistical record will show that this past decade was perhaps even more violent than the numbers in regard to our business institutions, including retailers, airliners, railroads, banks, insurers.</p>
        <p>Property and liability insurers have lost billions of dollars on underwritings over the past two years, perhaps more than $6 billion in all. Some have gone bankrupt, and others are looking for support or are retrenching.</p>
        <p>The banking industry has lost billions more on bad loans, and the names of many</p>
        <p>banks are on various official problem lists. The list of failures, for years restricted to relatively small institutions, now includes giants.</p>
        <p>The stock market took one of the deepest dives in its history, from 1052 points on the Dow Jones industrial average early in 1973 to m late in 1974, before beginning an unsteady climb to its current mid-900 level.</p>
        <p>But these stock averages too are numbers that disguise the carnage, individual and institutional This is a very different stock market today, even if the numbers suggest business as usual or, in fact, better than usual</p>
        <p>IHere are many thousands fewer brokers and hundreds fewer brokerage houses.</p>
        <p>While the volume sets records, there are fewer investors. Most of the trading is by funds and trusts and other institutions.</p>
        <p>Moreover, the structure of the stock market is diffwent. The big, individual exchanges have lost much of their individuality, their autonomy, their separate identities. We are attempting to evolve a central market place.</p>
        <p>Our three vital financial Institutions  insurance, banking and the stock market  are all changed and changing. It is a diffent world today: it is a world in transition. Other industries too are changing, irre-versiMy.</p>
        <p>(Continued on page 5)</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0005" />
        <p>TIH</p>
        <p>He 'Stole' Feb. 22 From Washington</p>
        <p>By Dr.H.G.Jonei, Curator NorthCaroUna CoUectlon For the Aiaoctated Presi</p>
        <p>CHAPEL HILL (AP) - BUI Nye may have been the only person ever to steal February 22 from George Washington.</p>
        <p>It happened back in 1911 when the Superintendent ol Public Instruction prociaimed February S Bill Nye Day. At the bottom of Uie program was a notation in small print, Being Also George Washingtons Anniversary."</p>
        <p>The purpose of Uie special day in the public schools was to commemorate one of North Carolinas most famous adopted sons and to help the North Carolina Press Association raise funds for construction of a building in bis name at the Stonewall Jackson Training School at Concord.</p>
        <p>The school children had great fun remembering the humorist, but the building did not mate-</p>
        <p>EvanS'Novak....</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) sick and tired of the other politicians," a 64-year-old retired railroad worker declared he wanted "some new Uood out there." A 19-year-old factory worker said he registered as a Republican last week specifically so he could vote for Reagan to turn things around." Said a 56-year-old miU worker: I think Reagan will clean up Uie country and help out Uie working class.</p>
        <p>In addition, foreign policy is working for Reagan and against the President. By a 5-to-1 margin, these voters were critical of detente and felt Uie U.S. should take a harder stand. Secretary of State Henry Kissinger got an anemic 43 per cit approval ratingcompared wiUi 54 per cent for super-controversial publisher Loeb and 75 per cent for Gov. Meldrim Thomson. When asked about Kissinger, many Yankee votersincluding some Ford supportersresponded wiUi grimaces and grunts.</p>
        <p>While voters rated the two candidates roughly even in honesty, thoughtfulness and job qualifications (with a slight edge to Reagan), a substantial majority felt Reagan is more conservative, closer to the people of Antrim in his views and more concerned wiUi Uieir needs. Given Uiese views, only Mr. Fords incumbency may be keeping the race as close as it is.</p>
        <p>Although negative comments about either were few, pro-Ford voters were markedly less intense about their man than the Reaganites. Their support is generally passive, based on a feeling that Uie President is trying" and ought to be given more time.</p>
        <p>WiUi what Ford inherited as President, hes done a good job, said Uie 27-year-old wife of a papermill worker. A 37-year-old secretary said that since he's never been elected, he ought to have a chance to serve a full term"a frequenUy voiced argument.</p>
        <p>Surprisingly little awe is shown in this snow-covered village about Uie prospect of turning out an incumbent Republican President. Even some Ford supporters suspect Reagan will win the primary. Of the voters expressing an opinion about who is ahead, Reagan was picked 4 to I, wiUi only eight lonely voters putting the President in front with election day nearby.</p>
        <p>rialize, possibly because juvenile misbehavior was not view-</p>
        <p>Gavshon Col...</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 41</p>
        <p>This is a real possibility, and the Communists are increasing their influence in other NATO nations to such an extent that some Socialist governments are considering closer cooperation wiU) Uiem.</p>
        <p>There seems little doubt, according to Uie AP survey, Uiat some key governments within Uie 15-nation NATO alliance share some of these concerns. But thus far, the worries have been expressed by out-of-office politicians, diplomats and newspaper and magazine commentators rather than by heads of governments.</p>
        <p>All this is occurring at a time of growing Soviet military buildup around Uie world and increasing Soviet political influence, as in Angola.</p>
        <p>Twelve years ago, the Americans were spending 20 per cent more on defense than the Russians. An authoritative NATO estimate suggests real U.S. military spending, discounUng inflation, is 20 per cent less today than in 1962 and about 75 per cent of the Soviet defense budget.</p>
        <p>Cunniff....</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 41</p>
        <p>The naUons bankrupt rail-roads still havent been successfully reconstructed. The airline industry, healUiy in a few areas, generally is buffeted by ffnaticial tiu&amp;lt;-bulence, often accompanied tty a total absence of profits.</p>
        <p>Few people back in Uie 1960s would have believed ttiat Uie Great AUanUc k Pacific Tea Co., largest food retail- in Uw naUon, and W.T. Grant, one of Uie leading soft goods retailers, would fall on bad times. They have.</p>
        <p>And the ciUes The cities of the seventies cannot be viewed as they were in the sixties. Even to Uie untrained eye Uiey are different. They are financially unstable, some of Uiem on the verge of bankruptcy.</p>
        <p>You wont find Uiese ctai-trasts in Uie numbers unless you look very closely and have an expert to interpret what you see. No, Uie numbers provide a sense of continuity when it really doesn't exist</p>
        <p>If you study all the numbers you might be inclined to say Uiat everything is back to where it was, because a lot of die numbers have returned to Uieir old position, or, are heading in that direction.</p>
        <p>The truth is that we are in a vastly different situation today, a weaker one in some respects, because some old institutions are unstable, but a stronger one in others, because old problems have finally been faced up ta</p>
        <p>Those numbers have their uses, but we can be lulled by their monotony, by their continuity, into Uilnking Uiat economic life is just a series of ups and downs. It isnt: vast changes have occurred and are occurring.</p>
        <p>Buchwald</p>
        <p>J...S</p>
        <p>(Continued from page 4) And the embers become</p>
        <p>And from Uie ashes a great man will rise again.</p>
        <p>Ill bet you cant guess who it will be?</p>
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        <p>ed as amusing.</p>
        <p>North Carolina might never have heard of Bill Nye had he not disliked his job as postmaster of Laramie in the Wyoming Territory. He concluded Uiat the country was made up of two kinds of people: those who worked for</p>
        <p>the postal service and Uiose who wanted to get their mail on time.</p>
        <p>So he decided to quit. But he knew what a blow his resignation would be to President Chester Arthur who had appointed him a year earlier in 1882. To soften the presidents</p>
        <p>disappointment, Uie postmaster wrote a long letter, explaining his regret that he was leaving such a great void in the Republican administration. He assured Uie president Uiat he was leaving his office in good shape, and advised him that if the stove didnt draw properly.</p>
        <p>close Uie damper in the pipe and shut the general delivery window.</p>
        <p>Describing where everything was located in his office, Nye gave the president Uie numbers of the safe combination. He added, however, "I do not remember at this moment which</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector. Greenville. N.C.Wednesday, February 18, 19785</p>
        <p>comes first, or how many times  child to Wisconsin where he</p>
        <p>you revolve the knob, or which  grew up and got his education,</p>
        <p>direction you should turn."  He taught school, studied law.</p>
        <p>President Arthur was so amused by Nyes letter of resignation that he released it to the press. Bill Nyes literary career received a big boost, and soon he was famous.</p>
        <p>Born Edgar Wilson Nye in 1850 in Shirley, Maine, his route to North Carolina was a circuitous one.</p>
        <p>His family took him as a</p>
        <p>and at the age of 26 moved to the Wyoming Territory where he became a justice of the peace and postmaster. His chief interest, though, was writing, and he furnished stories to several western papers.</p>
        <p>In 1881 Nye started a newspaper titled the Laramie Boomerang.</p>
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        <p>Overwhelmed By Rhetoric And Abuse, Avers Patty</p>
        <p>By TONY LEDWELL Associated Press Writer SAN FRANCISCO (AP) -Patricia Hears! says her mind was swamped with revolutionary rhetoric and her body ravaged by rape and other physical abuse when she robbed a bank under fear of execution.</p>
        <p>Miss Hearst wept frequently as she testified before the jury for the second time Tuesday  a day on which the trial judge issued a memorandum saying the newspaper heiress had failed to convince him she was a prisoner whose every move was made under the watchful eye" of her Symbionese Liberation Army kidnapers.</p>
        <p>Miss Hearst, sipping water and using tissues to wipe away her tears, told her jurors that she entered a Hibernia Bank branch on Aprii 15, 1974, certain that SLA chieften Donald "Cinque DeFreeze intended to gun her down in front of surveillance cameras.</p>
        <p>She watched a replay of the bank robbery and, when asked by defense counsel F. Lee Bailey why she frequently glanced over her shoulder at DeFreeze, replied, "I had thought that even though I would go in and do this, that he was going to kill me anyway inside the bank.</p>
        <p>She said she reacted with disbelief when the SLA told her they were going to rob a bank and she would participate. They said they needed money, she testified, and that DeFreeze wanted me to be wanted by the FBI.</p>
        <p>The basis of Miss Hearst's defense is that she participated in the holdup under threat of death.</p>
        <p>The jurors listened intently Tuesday as the defendant testified between replays of the tapes she said she recorded in blind terror.</p>
        <p>She told them of being forced</p>
        <p>to have sexual intercourse with DeFreeze and SLA member Willie Wolfe in the ceU-like closet where she was kept blindfolded.</p>
        <p>Bailey said Miss Hearst would continue her saga today, her third day on the stand, as she moves into what he concedes is the "stickiest point in her defense  a shooting spree that led indirectly to the deaths of DeFreeze, Willie Wolfe and four other SLA members in a shootout.</p>
        <p>The defendant has admitted spraying a Los Angeles sporting goods store with rifle fire in what she claimed was an SLA-induced reflex to free two SLA members from a bungled shoplifting attempt.</p>
        <p>A pistol left on the sidewalk and a teen-ager taken hostage overnight plus other clues led Los Angeles police to the shootout in which the six SLA mem</p>
        <p>bers died on May 17, 1974. The jury will see a videotaped newscast of the fiery afternoon, Bailey said.</p>
        <p>U.S. Atty. James L. Browning Jr. won a crucial victory last Wednesday when U.S. Dist. Judge Oliver J. Carter allowed the Los Angeles activities and Miss Hearst's tape-recorded words as "Tania to be admitted into evidence.</p>
        <p>Browning has contended the 21-year-old newspaper heiress acted of her own free will when she robbed the bank and then a month later, acting alone, used a submachine gun to rescue SLA members William and Emily Harris.</p>
        <p>The jurors will not see the judges explanation of his decision last week to allow underground statements and actions of Miss Hearst in Los Angeles to be used as evidence.</p>
        <p>At a two-day special hearing</p>
        <p>outside the presence of the jury. Miss Hearst testified that she was under the SLAs influence throughout her 19-month journey through the underground. But government witnesses testified that she boasted about her role.</p>
        <p>Carter said in his eight-page memorandum that it appeared the tape in which she said she willingly robbed the bank and her bragging to others "were voluntary.</p>
        <p>But he said he would instruct the jury to make its own decision "beyond a reasonable doubt."</p>
        <p>Miss Hearst. who began telling the jury last Friday about her Feb. 4, 1974, kidnaping by the SLA and subsequent incarceration in a closet, testified Tuesday that she had been ordered to Join the SLA or be killed.</p>
        <p>She branded her taped oath</p>
        <p>of allegiance to the tiny terrorist group as her only remaining avenue to survival and her blistering vilification of her parents as an SLA-written attack she felt compelled to read with conviction.</p>
        <p>The bank robbery that transformed her from a kidnap victim to a fugitive was a well-drilled and meticulously planned movement, she said. She recalled that a rehearsal was held, using the SLA hideout on Golden Gate Avenue as a theater, and that SLA member Patricia Soltysik was upset about Miss Hearst's demeanor.</p>
        <p>I got kicked around by Patricia Soltysik because I wasnt enthusiastic enough and Cinque said that  that he was going to keep his eye on me and that if I messed up in any way, that Id be killed, she said.</p>
        <p>The SLA endorsed and practiced violence, she continued, in</p>
        <p>hopes the authorities would respond likewise, furthering their cause of overthrowing the government.</p>
        <p>She has testified that she was kept blindfolded in a closet at a suburban Daly City home for 4A weeks and then spirited in the night inside a garbage can to a San Francisco apartment where she was imprisoned similarly for another 4tj weeks.</p>
        <p>It was in the closets, she told the. jury in a breaking voice, that Angela Atwood ordered her to submit sexually to Wolfe, the man she euglogized as her lover after he was killed in the shootout but whose memory she now scorns.</p>
        <p>Miss Hearst said Nancy Ling Perry cut her hair to within an inch of her scalp shortly before the bank heist, but said she never knew the reason. She was required to wear a long, curly wig in the bank, she said.</p>
        <p>"so that I would look more like myself."</p>
        <p>Harris and DeFreeze held classes in the use of the sawed-off carbine she wielded in the bank and, she said, she was instructed that if anybody in her area of the bank moved, she was to open fire.</p>
        <p>In the bank, she said, she successfully uttered, This is Tania, Patricia Hearst" as ordered but froze when she was supposed to give a pro-SLA speech written by Mrs. Perry.</p>
        <p>She watched again a film of her movements in the bank as pieced together from surveillance camera photographs, and Bailey asked her what had happened when she looked down at her weapon.</p>
        <p>I saw that the bolt was turned," Miss Hearst replied, nodding affirmatively when Bailey asked if this Indicated the weapon would not fire.</p>
        <p>LIKES WOMEN WORKERS - Frank P. Moolin Jr. stands In Rockefeller Center Tuesday, where he came to pick up an Englneer-of-theyear award for his work as boss builder of the Alaska Pipeline. Moolin says women are working on the pipeline on equal terms with men In what he believes is the first Ume in U. S. construction history. Some of our best workers are women, he says. A lot feel theyre pace-setting, and strive to outdo everyone. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
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        <p>OPEN DAILY 10 A.M.' TIL  P.M.</p>
        <p>You SaveFunds Lagging For Lung Ass'n</p>
        <p>The Eastern Lung Associations campaign is running $8,0(X) behind last years goal. If additional funds are not received before March 31, 1976, some cutting of worthwhile health programs must take place, Lorey H. White, Jr., Executive Director of the Eastern Lung Association said.</p>
        <p>Lung disease is becoming one of the nations greatest threats, White noted. The recent statistics of nearly 47 million Americans suffering from a chronic respiratory condition is proof of this growing problem.</p>
        <p>What is alarming about the statistics is there are more than 26,500 children under five years that die yearly from respiratory diseases, 19,600 during the first month of life, White said.</p>
        <p>He pointed out that emphysema is very serious because there is no cure and damaged lungs are not reversible, although with rehabilitation, lung function can be improved. Deaths from respiratory</p>
        <p>diseases are at an all time high, claiming more than 41,000 victims annually. The seriousness of these diseases lie not so much in deaths as in the far greater number who suffer and are disabled for long periods of time.</p>
        <p>The Christmas Seal Association is working hard to conquer lung diseases, White said. "To make progress in the fight, support is needed now more than ever before.</p>
        <p>He said that persons wanting to make contributions, which are tax deductible, can mail contributions to: Christmas Seals, Raleigh, N. C. 27611.</p>
        <p>Pupils Earn Honor Lists</p>
        <p>Designated</p>
        <p>'Disaster'</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)-The U.S. Department of Agriculture has designated 14 North Carolina counties agricultural disaster areas. Gov Jim Holshouser said Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Droughts followed by excessive rains last spring and summer caused the ruling, the governors office said. The designation allows farmers to apply for emergency loans under the Consolidated Farm and Rural Development Act.</p>
        <p>Farmers in Caswell, Davidson, Durham, Forsyth, Greene, Guilford, Lenoir, Orange. Rockingham, Sampson and Wake counties are eligible through March 12 to apply for loans to cover physical losses and through Oct. 20 to apply for loans for production losses.</p>
        <p>Farmers in Franklin, Granville and Warren counties may apply through March 22 for loans to cover ptjysical losses and through Oct. 20 for production losses.</p>
        <p>Further information about the program operated through the Farmers Home Administration may be obtained from county FmHA supervisors.</p>
        <p>The following students received honor roll and principals list honors for the third grading period at Ayden Grammar School:</p>
        <p>Honor Roll: Sibby Anderson, Angela Ingram, Wendy Jones, Marla Avery, Amy Eason, and Ginger Haddock, fifth grade; James Nobles, Jennie Garris, Sherry Worthington, Randy Fussell, and Denise Branch, sixth grade; Mark Anderson and Patricia McDarmott seventh grade: Peggy Jones, Jackie McLawhorn, Daniel Elke, West Paul, and Alan Tenpenny, eighth grade.</p>
        <p>Principals List:  Debra</p>
        <p>Dennis, Carolyn Jones, Yvette Lawrence, Michael Coombs, Robert Norris, Patricia Carter, Patrice Sasser, Kevin Craft, Tina Bowen, Rita Jackson, -Michelle Lowandowski, John Bisseil, Tammy Cannon, Rodney Carter, Pam Wollard and Jo Dennis, fifth grade; Rhonda McLawhorn, Vicki Dixon, Sherry Williams, Gordon Strickland, Donovan Arnold. Julie Hall, Angela Best, Valerie Cannon, Kenneth Jones, Robin McLawhorn, Christie Register, Cathy Sutton, Jessie Garris, Trade Allen, Pam Miller, and Joanna Stallings, sixth grade; Jenny Nobles, Kathy Loftin, Regina Hardee, Cathy Lang, Bobbie Jo Whitaker, Margaret Joyner, and Sharon Carmon, seventh grade; Janice Newell, Vickie Cannon, Melinda McLamb, and Ines Woods, eighth grade.</p>
        <p>and More</p>
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        <p>TREMENDOUS STOREWIDE SAVINGS! BE EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS!</p>
        <p>&amp;lt; ----^</p>
        <p>MISSES TRIMMED</p>
        <p>AND UNTRIMMED</p>
        <p>Dress Coats</p>
        <p>25 s 30</p>
        <p>Orlfl 39.97 to 53.97</p>
        <p>Assorted plaids and solids in group.</p>
        <p>r--^</p>
        <p>MISSES TRIMMED AND UNTRIMMED</p>
        <p>Car Coats</p>
        <p>*20 - *30 - *32</p>
        <p>Orig 35.97 to 53.97</p>
        <p>Choose from solids and plaids.</p>
        <p>-</p>
        <p>( '--\</p>
        <p>JRS. MISSES, WOMENS</p>
        <p>Polyester Pant Suits</p>
        <p>*9-*11</p>
        <p>Orlg11.97 to 18.97</p>
        <p>Sizes 5 to 13,10 to 18,14/, to 24/,.</p>
        <p>\----</p>
        <p>^ BOYS LONG SLEEVE ^</p>
        <p>Sport Shirts</p>
        <p>Orig 3.99 &amp;lt;2 BOYS LONG SLEEVE</p>
        <p>Knh Shirts SalaPrlca99^ &amp;amp; 1*</p>
        <p>' TEENS, LADIES ASSORTED^</p>
        <p>Sport &amp;amp; Dress Shoes</p>
        <p>"S *3 - *5 - 7</p>
        <p>MISSES NYLON CIRE ^</p>
        <p>Car Coats</p>
        <p>Sale Price *0</p>
        <p>V__J</p>
        <p>' MISSES, WOMENS ^</p>
        <p>Long Loungers</p>
        <p>Sale Price *0</p>
        <p>V Sizes 1010 18, S-M-L</p>
        <p>JR BOYS LONG SLEEVE ^</p>
        <p>KnH Shirts</p>
        <p>Orig 1.28 to 1.49 88*</p>
        <p>/ MENS &amp;amp; BOYS LEATHER &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Athletic Shoes</p>
        <p>Orig 8.99 to 9.99 $0</p>
        <p>Suede leather uppers. Blue &amp;amp; tan.</p>
        <p>L 3VI-6.7-12. y</p>
        <p>* JRS, MISSES, WOMENS</p>
        <p>Long Dresses</p>
        <p>Orig 13.97 to 17.97 ^ Aast. styles and sizes. ^</p>
        <p>^MISSES BRUSHED FLEECe'^</p>
        <p>Sleepwear</p>
        <p>Sale Price *2</p>
        <p>Acetate/nylon cartoon" styles. S-M-L. ^</p>
        <p>^ INFANTS, TODDLERS ^</p>
        <p>Dresses</p>
        <p>OrIg 5.99 to 6.99 $4 V--- ^</p>
        <p>MENS ASSORTED</p>
        <p>Dress Shoes</p>
        <p>Orig 12.9910 14.99 &amp;lt;0</p>
        <p>^ Oxfords, slip-ons. Black, brown. 7 to 12. ^</p>
        <p>^ MISSES ASSORTED ^</p>
        <p>Fashion T-Tops</p>
        <p>Sale Price *2 4 *3</p>
        <p>^ Solids, prints. Nylon, polyester, S-M-L. ^</p>
        <p>' BRUSHED FLEECE, QUILT ^</p>
        <p>Girls Robes</p>
        <p>Orig 5.99 $A .$C V. to 10.99 a O J</p>
        <p>INFANTS BOY OR GIRL ^</p>
        <p>Diaper Sets, Dresses</p>
        <p>Orig 3.99 &amp;gt;2 Warm, eaay-care acrylic knita.</p>
        <p>TEENS AND LADIES</p>
        <p>Dressy Rats</p>
        <p>Orig 2.99 3.99 $2</p>
        <p>Black &amp;amp; blue. Sizes 5 to 10 In group.</p>
        <p>Moc Sllp-Ons</p>
        <p>Orig 6.99</p>
        <p>^ Assorted colors. 5 to 10. ^</p>
        <p>Misses Blouses ^ &amp;amp; Big Tops</p>
        <p>Orig 5.99 .08.99</p>
        <p>MISSES ^ MAN MADE FUR</p>
        <p>Coats and Jackets</p>
        <p>*15 1. *30</p>
        <p>Beautiful long or short styles!</p>
        <p>girls 4 TO 14 ^</p>
        <p>Cardigans</p>
        <p>SalaPrIca SO</p>
        <p>MISSES ACRYLIC A</p>
        <p>Sweaters</p>
        <p>Air *2s*3</p>
        <p>I. Slip-ons or cardigans. S-M-L.</p>
        <p>ASSORTED 4 TO 14</p>
        <p>Girls Dresses</p>
        <p>Orlg3.99 $0 ^ toS.99 A ft W</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0007" />
        <p>The DaUy Renector. GreenvUle, N.C.Wednexby. February 18, in5-7Ford Elaborates On His Differences With Reagan</p>
        <p>By DICK BARNES Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - President Ford says he and challenger Ronald Reagan differ on some issues. But whether its a philosophical difference seems to depend on which of the President's statements one hears.</p>
        <p>At one point in a nationally broadcast news conference Tuesday night, Ford said, Governor Reagan is to the right of me philosophically. Elaborating on their differences</p>
        <p>about federal spending and Social Security, he said it is a somewhat different philosophy.</p>
        <p>But a few minutes later, in response to another Reagan question. Ford said, I dont think there are any philosophical differences.... I think he is to the right of me in a pragmatic and practical way.</p>
        <p>Either way, Ford also declared that anybody to the right of me. Democrat or Republican, cant win a national</p>
        <p>By DON KENDALL AP Farm Writer WASHINGTON (AP) - After a tight fertiliser supply situation two years ago and soaring prices, Agriculture Department experts say the picture now has changed and that there is little chance of another severe crunch in the next five years.</p>
        <p>Even so, the world supply and the demand for fertiliser Is still close in the near future, especially for nitrogen, and there could be some sporadic tightening of supplies, the departments Economic Research Service said Tuesday, "Over-all, though, a recurrence of tight world market conditions for fertiliser seems unlikely over the next few years to 1960-81, the agency said. World capacity, particularly for nitrogen and phosphate will increase substantially.</p>
        <p>Further, the report said, over the next five years poor countries will steadily increase their share" of both the use and production of fertiliser. That is expected to help close the food gap between needy and rich countries.</p>
        <p>In review, the report rioted that in 1974 fertiliser became scarce and prices then soared to record levels. This helped prompt new fertilizer plant construction, but not before some</p>
        <p>No Charges In Auto Collision</p>
        <p>No charges were reported following investigation of a 4:05 p.m. collision on Greene Street four tenths of a mile North of the First Street intersection which resulted in an estimated $850 property damage, according to Greenville police.</p>
        <p>Officers identified drivers involved in the mishap as Sandra Butts Poole of Route 4, Greenville and Dewanda Sue Williams of 506 Church St.</p>
        <p>Damage was estimated at $750 to the Poole car and $100 to the Williams auto.</p>
        <p>meet THURSDAY La Leche League of Greenville Group No. 2 meets Thursday at 10 a.m. at 108 DuPont Circle.</p>
        <p>Pregnant and nursing mothers may call 756^197 or 7564466 for further information.</p>
        <p>election.</p>
        <p>He named no other names, but on the Democratic side seemed clearly to be referring to Gov. George C. Wallace of Alabama.</p>
        <p>In stressing the Social Security and federal spending issues. Ford continued to hit at themes he believes will help him in the New Hampshire and Florida primaries.</p>
        <p>But he declined two opportunities at the news conference to flatly predict victories.</p>
        <p>I think we will do well in both.... I am encouraged ii^ both cases, he said.</p>
        <p>Reagan campaign manager Lyn Nofsiger challenged Fords recitations of the former California governors positions. Ford said Reagan has suggested from time to time that Social Security ought to be voluntary and that he has suggested Social Security funds</p>
        <p>might be invested in the stock market.</p>
        <p>Nofsiger said Reagan has been stating very clearly that he believes Social Security must be mandatory and that Reagan has never proposed stock market investment for the fund. Reagan told a news conference in Florida last week that Social Security funds are not invested, as they could be invested, in the industrial might of America.</p>
        <p>Ford said he disagreed with what he described as Reagans proposal of a $90-billion cut in ' federal expenditures transferring the responsibilities and the programs to the local and state officials where they either have to abandon the programs or raise taxes to support them. Nofsiger said Reagan has always proposed that any transfer of federal program funds back to the states must</p>
        <p>be accompanied by a transfer of tax sources.</p>
        <p>Ford said he would campaign in New Hampshire Thursday and Friday this week. The election is next Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Meanwhile, a variety of controversies swirled at the level of the lifeblood of political campaigns  money.</p>
        <p>The Senate Rules Committee scheduled hearings for today on proposals to reconstitute the Federal Election Commission, which will lose many of its powers after Feb. 29 unless Congress revamps the new federal election law that was partially struck down by the Supreme Court.</p>
        <p>Sen. James L. Buckley. Cons.-R-N.Y., whose name led the lawsuit attacking the law, called Tuesday for prompt and major restructuring of the campaign finance procedure.</p>
        <p>He said a new Justice De</p>
        <p>partment unit should enforce the law, the Congress should not be allowed as at present to veto FEC regulations and the limits on campaign contributions that were upheld by the Supreme Court should be raised.</p>
        <p>House Speaker Carl Albert said he was confident new agreement could be reached on a new law including a reconstituted commission before the end-of-the-month deadline set by the court. The fight to reconstitute the commission is expected to be tougher in the House because of the opposition of Rep. Wayne L. Hays, D-Ohio, chairman of the committee handling election legislation.</p>
        <p>But if the panel is not reconstituted, the faucet of federal matching funds may be turned off as of March 1. Even as the debate over its future</p>
        <p>continued Tuesday, the FEC certified Reagan for an additional $494,687.68 in government money for his campaign.</p>
        <p>At the same time, the National Abortion Rights Action League filed a complaint with the FEC trying to stop the award of any matching funds to antiabortionist Ellen McCormack. She is campaigning for the presidency on a single-issue platform and submitted her matching funds application Jan. 31.</p>
        <p>She claims she has raised the required $5,000 in each of 20 states from individual contributions of $250 or less.</p>
        <p>The FEC staff, now auditing the McCormack submission, plans to report to the commission Thursday.</p>
        <p>There were these other political developments Tuesday;</p>
        <p>Sen. Henry M. Jackson, D-Wash., called for a maximum</p>
        <p>determined national effort to rebuild the U.S. Navy, which he said has fallen dangerously behind the Soviet navy. Jackson said as president he would increase the fleet to from 650 to 700 ships instead of the present 477.</p>
        <p>Jackson also made public his federal income tax returns for the past five years, which showed he earned $322^10 du^ ing the period 1971-1975. According to the returns, he donated $102,725 received for speeches and other honoraria to charity.</p>
        <p>Fred Harris called on all the Democratic contenders to develop a joint program that would put people back to work.</p>
        <p>Sen. Birch Bayh said he will introduce legislation to eliminate discrimination against military women in such areas as enlistment, promotion and job opportunities.</p>
        <p>SPRING IS IN THE AIR la TlMtiiy't larprlsiag, and sort-Uved. burst of spring weather In ScntUe, Wash., a kite flyer found the combinattoo of sun and breezes irreslsuble at a city park. (AP WIrephoto)</p>
        <p>No Shortage Of Fertilizer Now</p>
        <p>countries suffered from fertilizer shortages.</p>
        <p>Panic and speculative buying in the face of forecast shortages exaggerated both actual shortages and price rises, the report said. Many countries, particularly developing countries, imported fertilizer at such high prices their farmers could not afford to use it.</p>
        <p>Last year, in response to larger output, shortages disappeared and prices fell, the report said. Consequently, fertiliser inventories built up in some areas.</p>
        <p>Continuing this trend in 1976, adequate fertiliser supplies and reasonable prices are expected, the report said. Continued weakness in demand tor nitrogen and phosphate is likely if grain prices continue weak or decline further, or until large inventories are reduced, the study predicted.</p>
        <p>Pot Trials Set In April</p>
        <p>NEW BERN, N.C. (AP)-Trials have been scheduled for April 12 in U.S. District Court here for 10 men charged in last months seizure of 22 tons of marijuana.</p>
        <p>At arraignment Tuesday before U.S. Magistrate Logan Howell, the men each pleaded innocent. Each has been charged with conspiracy to import marijuana, importing it and possession with intent to distribute marijuana. Maximum penalty for each person is 45 years imprisonment and a $75,000 fine.</p>
        <p>Facing trial are former Hallandale, Fla., Mayor John D. Steele and his son John David Steele, George Brent Poppis and Daniel Edward Engle, all of Florida: Ernest High Mayo. Gary Stephen Mayo, Johnnie Brent Armstrong. Michael Wayne Rowe, Danny Robert Isenhart and Grayden Louis Lupton of Pamlico County, N.C.</p>
        <p>Federal and state law en forcement officers arrested the men In a predawn raid Jan. Il at Mesic, a small town in Pamlico County. Seised In the raid were the 22 tons of high grade Colombian marijuana, estimated to be worth $25 million, and the Lillian B, a 113-foot trawler.</p>
        <p>Ernest Mayo was charged with operating the trawler, Tie government has accused Mayo of taking the marijuana from a ship he rendezvoused with about 19 miles at sea.</p>
        <p>We Reserve The Right To Limit Quantities. Not Responsible For Typogrophtcol Errors. No Deolers Pleose</p>
        <p>Prices Effective Thursday, Feb. 19th Thru Soturdoy, Feb. 21st</p>
        <p>RAINCHECK II vte tell oui 01 any advsnited tpeciali'. you will receive a written order. "Ram-check" which entitles you to buy the item at the adveriited price when our itock it replenithed</p>
        <p>WEST END SHOPPING CENTER, GREENVILLE</p>
        <p>MON. FRI.10 A.M. TOVP.M. SATURDAY 10 AM. TOO P.M.</p>
        <p>iBANXAMfaiCillO</p>
        <p>Just say CMARGE-IT</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0008" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, Februai^ 8, 1W8</p>
        <p>Training School Idled For Training Of Staff</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)There was history of scandal and prob-</p>
        <p>Goldsboro Man Named HSA Acting Chairman</p>
        <p>no specific incident to cause it, state officials said, but the Samarkand Manor training school will be closed for about three weeks beginning Feb. 29 for intensive training" of its staff,</p>
        <p>George Hicks, deputy director of youth services, said the staff has never been properly trained and is not equipped to cope with todays juvenile delinquent. It's unfair to ask them to do things they havent been trained to do.</p>
        <p>Closing of the school and the training effort was ordered Tuesday by Raymond T. Shurl-ing the new director of youth services. He ordered the 120 children at the facility be placed elsewhere while the staff is trained.</p>
        <p>Shurling said other training schools in the state will be investigated and if necessary, similar actions will be ordered.</p>
        <p>The Samarkand school has a</p>
        <p>lems. Samarkand Manor is on 450 acres in rural Moore County near Eagle Springs. It has no fences and originally was a training school for white girls. It was racially integrated in the 1960s and is now coeducational.</p>
        <p>There were rumors of drug use, prostitution and a lack of discipline at the school. That came when a 16-year-old girl who ran away from the school was shot and killed m Montgomery County in 1974, nine months after Corrections Secretary David Jones fired Mable R Mitchell, the long-time director.</p>
        <p>The State Bureau of Investigation looked into the situation and concluded there was evidence of illicit drug use, lax security, inadequate programs lor inmates and "questions as to the attitude and competence of the staff.</p>
        <p>Nehemiah Parker, Miss Mit</p>
        <p>chells successor, was also fired. Replacing him was James Leathers who resigned in August 1975 saying in a memo he was disgusted, disgusted, disgusted with the staffs failure to supervise inmates. He was replaced by Tom Gray.</p>
        <p>Staff morale reach a low point and some workers there filed a $200,000 suit to recover back wages for overtime. The action was later dismissed.</p>
        <p>The school is for children 10 to 13 years old.</p>
        <p>DECLARE DIVIDEND GREENVILLE. S.C. (AP) -The directors of Daniel International Corp of Greenville (S.C.) have declared a n-s cent quarterly dividend, payable March 29 to shareholders of record March 8.</p>
        <p>Joseph H. James Jr., administrator of Wayne County Memorial Hospital in Goldsboro was chosen as acting chairman of the Health Systems Agency governing board at a meeting of the 29-county Area VI HSA board here last week.</p>
        <p>Forty-six of the 53 members of the permanent HSA board attended the organizational meeting of the group.</p>
        <p>Three working committees were also established at the session, including a nominations committeecharged with the development of an executive committee and the drafting of recommendations for corporate officersa bylaws committee to finalize previously drafted HSA rules, and a planning committee to oversee development of the HSA grant application to the U.S. Department of Health, Education and Welfare.</p>
        <p>The nominations committee, which held its first meeting last</p>
        <p>night, includes among its Board of Commissioners, membership Ed Warren, a  The bylaws committee  will</p>
        <p>member of the Pitt County meet for the first time February 15 at 2 p.m. in the board room at the Mid-East Commission of</p>
        <p>fices in Washington, while the first meeting of the plannning commiteee has been set for February 20 in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Dr. WiUiam Laupus, Dean of the East Carolina University School of Medicine is a member of the planning committee.</p>
        <p>Also during the HSA meeting last week, Roy Selby of Greenville, Health planning director with the Mid-East</p>
        <p>Commission, was named as acting staff person to the HSA board and authorihed to act as liaison between the board and state agencies in overseeing work elements and processes to be followed in the preparation of the nal funding application.</p>
        <p>The next meeting of the full HSA board has beei set for 6:30 p.m. March 3 at the Holiday Inn in Greenville.</p>
        <p>Carnival Song Honors Amin</p>
        <p>RIO DE JANEIRO (AP) -Two Brazilian songwriters have composed a carnival time in honor of Uganda's controversial president, Idi Amin.</p>
        <p>The song, whose title is translated as If Amin Said So is said to be antong the favorites of the citys disc jockeys.</p>
        <p>The song has been recorded by one of Brazils veteran carnival performers and will be sung by frolickers during the citys official pre-Lenten carnival festivities from Feb. 28 through March 2.</p>
        <p>Can You</p>
        <p>COMMUNICATE WITH YOUR CHILDREN</p>
        <p>Our Parent-Oiiki Relations course, also known as Adult Growth and Parent Education (AGAPE) is helping local adults to build richer family relationships. AGAPE heips parents to:</p>
        <p>1. Understand the needs and emotions of their children.</p>
        <p>2. Communicate effectively with each other in famiiy matters.</p>
        <p>3. Oeveiop a greater sense of self-esteem among family members.</p>
        <p>4. Gain self-confidence in handling family problems.</p>
        <p>If you would like to enroll in an AGAPE class, mail this slip to ABE Director, P.T.I. P.O. Box 7007, Greenville, N.C. 27834.</p>
        <p>Name.</p>
        <p>Address.</p>
        <p>.Telephone.WE HELP YOU SPEND</p>
        <p>^^OWb</p>
        <p>Friday Thru Saturday</p>
        <p>8:30 A.M. To9:00P.M. Sunday</p>
        <p>12 P.M. To 7 P.M.</p>
        <p>Pitt Plaza Shopping Centerif?</p>
        <p>ow</p>
        <p>best</p>
        <p>BUYS</p>
        <p>OSCA*</p>
        <p>09</p>
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        <p>SHORTENING</p>
        <p>CRISCO</p>
        <p>$138</p>
        <p>3-LB.</p>
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        <p>JUMBO DC ROLL</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>U.S. CHOICE BEEF CHUCKBLADE ROAST</p>
        <p>.EAN PORK SHOULDER ARMIFRESH PICNICS</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>U.S.'CHOICE BEEF</p>
        <p>"ROAST SALE"</p>
        <p>7-BONE</p>
        <p>ROAST</p>
        <p>CHUCK LB.</p>
        <p>68</p>
        <p>Round Tip Formerly Called</p>
        <p>SIRLOIN TIP</p>
        <p>ROAST</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>eARM ROAST o..&amp;lt;&amp;lt; r t. 98*</p>
        <p>eARM ROAST Chuck Boneless L.B. ^ 1.28</p>
        <p>ePOT ROAST</p>
        <p>Boneless Chuck Boston Roll LB.</p>
        <p>*1.28</p>
        <p>fSnns*,</p>
        <p>CHIOttN</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>HOLLY FAR^ - U.S. GRAO^A</p>
        <p>BAKING HEN QUARTERS</p>
        <p>el Breast Qtr. e i Leg Qtr.  iC  O  C</p>
        <p>,eiNeck ei Giblet Pack LB. 90</p>
        <p>SAVE MORE WITH LARGER PACKAGISI</p>
        <p>FAMILY PACK</p>
        <p>Lmr Mastv</p>
        <p>eBEEF SHORT RIBS s-lb.ormore  lb.  73*</p>
        <p>eBEEF STEW  5-lb.or more  lb.  M.28</p>
        <p>eSIRLOIN TIP STEAK j.lb. ormore  lb.  *1.58</p>
        <p>PORK SPARE RIBS Al^RAGB</p>
        <p>BRUNSWICK STEW</p>
        <p>star</p>
        <p>2 LB. CUP</p>
        <p>98</p>
        <p>1.39</p>
        <p>eGORTON'S SHRIMP STICKS ePERCH FILLET eFRESH FROZEN CROAKERS eFILLET OF TUf^BOT</p>
        <p>14-Oz. Pkg. 1-Lb. Pkg. 1-Lb. Pkg. 1-Lb. Pkg.</p>
        <p>*1.39</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>69*</p>
        <p>99*</p>
        <p>GARDEN CHARM</p>
        <p>Fruit Cocktail</p>
        <p>EVERVa  ^</p>
        <p>filc.'f 39*</p>
        <p>PRICE</p>
        <p>CAMPBELL TOMATO</p>
        <p>SOUP</p>
        <p>14*</p>
        <p>lA-r ^</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>OVEN KRISP PLACE PACK</p>
        <p>COOKIES</p>
        <p>12-Oz. Pk{.</p>
        <p>33*</p>
        <p>TOASTEM</p>
        <p>POP UPS</p>
        <p>10V2-0:.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>48</p>
        <p>OUR PRIDE BAKERY PRODUCTS</p>
        <p> BROWN A SERVE</p>
        <p> SESAME  POPPY OR SEEDLESS</p>
        <p>lURD MILS</p>
        <p>BUTTERTOP</p>
        <p>BREAD</p>
        <p>15-OZ.</p>
        <p>PKG.</p>
        <p>24-OZ. PKG.</p>
        <p>55'</p>
        <p>39&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>FARM CHARM FRESH</p>
        <p>MILK</p>
        <p>Gillei</p>
        <p>1.59</p>
        <p>,.^X&amp;lt;g:Vi\\sY)ury</p>
        <p>( J i Hufltrmi/i-</p>
        <p>  M  Biscuits</p>
        <p>PILLS8URY</p>
        <p>Buttermilk</p>
        <p>BISCUITS</p>
        <p>8-Oz. Con 4-Pak</p>
        <p>48*</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0009" />
        <p>The Dally Refleclor. GreenvUle, N.a-Wednefday. Februaiy 1. 1*71-</p>
        <p>'Nesfiness' Helps Minority Students into Coiiege</p>
        <p>By CAROLE A. CARMICHAEL NEW YORK (UPI) - There are six of us in my family, including my grandmother. We live in a small house, which we dont own, and theres never any money for anything but food and rent. No one in my family has ever gone to college, but I want to go. I want a better life.</p>
        <p>These words are echoed daily throughout tiie country by young people who, for want of a better life, see college as the solution to their problem.</p>
        <p>In this caser the young woman happens to be black. Her case is not unique. There are thousands like it.</p>
        <p>Who do these young people turn to for assistance and guidance? Surely they cannot seek out the help of their family? Although sympathetic to their childrens needs, these families hands are generally tied by their circumstances.</p>
        <p>Since 1947, the National Scholarship Service and Fund</p>
        <p>for Negro StudenU (NSSFNS)  its officials and participants pronounce the acronym phonetically and call it Nesness has been more than sympathetic. It has been instrumental in turning the idealistic dreams of a college education into a reality for many.</p>
        <p>David Kent, president of NSSFNS, describes the organization as basically a college advisory and referral service. Our primary objective, he says, is to provide greater opportunities for minority students to gain access as well as choice into the array of post secondary institutions across the country.</p>
        <p>To do this, Kent said Nesfiness tries to supplement, complement and in some way act as a substitute for the guidance function that either takes place or doesn't take place in the secondary schools.</p>
        <p>Many of the nations school guidance offices are suffering</p>
        <p>from a lack in personnel and guidance counselors, Kent said. As a result, the counselors often are overburdened with paperwork and responsibilities.</p>
        <p>"niey really only get to see a handful of students during the course of the day, he said. "Over the course of a semester they arent able to sit (k&amp;gt;wn and really assist all of the students for which they are responsible.</p>
        <p>This is the point at which Nesfiness finds it can be most useful.</p>
        <p>We get a students application, process it and, based on how we evaluate it. come up with Five schools we think are appropriate, he said.</p>
        <p>The list of five is sent to the student. With it, Nesfiness sends a booklet which tells him or her how to go about applying to college and other schools step by step.</p>
        <p>As an alternative, we ask the student to take it down to his guidance counselor, Kent</p>
        <p>said. At the same time, Nesfiness advises the counselor of the recommendations it has made. The idea is to encourage the two to get together and narrow the choices.</p>
        <p>"On the other hand, were in touch with the coUeges and tell them, 'here are the list of students were recommending apply to your particular institution, he said.</p>
        <p>We teU them we feel they can make it and theyre deserving of a chance, he said. At the same time, Nesfiness asks the college to send the student the necessary information and forms for making application and for financial aid.</p>
        <p>Nesfiness also helps with cash. It maintains a small scholarship program {79,000 a year. Its scholarships range from $200 to $1,000.</p>
        <p>These funds mainly come from the private sector  corporations and individuals, Kent said. Their award is</p>
        <p>totally based on need.</p>
        <p>In all, Nesfiness works with some 8,000 high schools across the country. There is a box on the Preliminary Scholastic Aptitude Test students take when they are in the 11th grade students. All a student needs to do to indicate he or she wants Nesfiness help is check it. This is how 77,000 students requested Nesfiness information this year.</p>
        <p>The students represent a cross-section of the country. Kent said they come from schools in the inner cities, the suburbs and rural areas.</p>
        <p>We try to stress that were not after the bright student, Kent said. What Nesfiness is after is the student who needs a chance, needs assistance and could really profit from going to college,</p>
        <p>In making its evaluation, Nesfiness takes a look at the students grade, rank and class. Then it considers the strength of his or her high school and</p>
        <p>the students self-perception academically and in relation to peers. What it does not do is place what Kent considers the wrong kind of emphasis on college boards, commonly known as the Scholastic Aptitute Test.</p>
        <p>Very often SATs are used to prevent a student from being admitted rather than assessing where the student is and using it for diagnostic purposes and taking stock of what the sthdent might need in order to make it through college, Kent said. Its more of a screening process to screen them out rather than to assist them getting in.</p>
        <p>In 1974, Nesfiness sponsored its first conference on The Minorities Right to Post-Secondary Education in Chicago.</p>
        <p>It grew out of a sense of urgency on the part of our constituency, Kent said. We felt the present forums were not providing discussions for</p>
        <p>minorities and enough attention wasnt being paid to our particular concerns.</p>
        <p>Nesfiness sponsored its second conference Feb. 8-11 in Houston.</p>
        <p>Kent feels students are not fully aware of the opportunities available to them.</p>
        <p>Last year a lot of money was not utilized in the Basic Educational Opportunity Grant Program by minority and low-income students, which means that somewhere along the line they were not informed or for some reason did not apply, he said.</p>
        <p>One reason for this, according to Kent, may be a key obstacle a minority student must overcome which others do not face  that of making the decision to consider a college education.</p>
        <p>Very often, a minority student has to decide should he go to college. he said. "In the middle-class, upper-middle class and more affluent fami</p>
        <p>lies its taken for granted. Its just a matter of which college he will attend.</p>
        <p>After hes made it Over this hurdle and decided hes going, he then must find that someone to ask, 'Hey, how do I get to school? *</p>
        <p>The Quartermaster Corps was replaced by the Army in 1962 with the U.S. Army Materiel Command.</p>
        <p>Here comes richer sauces, casseroles, desserts, candies.,j</p>
        <p>LESS!</p>
        <p>EVERYDAY LOW PRICES</p>
        <p>BIG STAR makes it &amp;lt;i pomt to keep prices low every clay in every department , . . ijioceiy , . , meat . . . produce . . . dairy . . , frozen food, Oui everyday low (rrices plus money savintj BONUS BU'VS adds up to total saviiujs'</p>
        <p>BONUS BUYS!</p>
        <p>From time to time Manufacturers offer extra allowances on their products. When this happens, BIG STAR passes the savimjs on to you. These items are indicated with a BONUS BUY emtalem. You can he sure of getting extra strvincjs when you purchase an item with a BONUS BUY emblem on it.</p>
        <p>Oranges</p>
        <p>MOTHER'S OR DUKES</p>
        <p>Mayonnaise</p>
        <p>Quart Jar</p>
        <p>LIMIT 1 WITH $5.00 ORDER OR MORE</p>
        <p>FIESTA BRAND</p>
        <p>SALADS</p>
        <p>POTATO SALAD COLE SLAW</p>
        <p>1S-0Z.</p>
        <p>CUP</p>
        <p>MILD</p>
        <p>49$ 49$</p>
        <p>CHEESE pimenVoC m A A SPREADtsoz cuT I tUT</p>
        <p>FREEZER QUEEN</p>
        <p>MEAT ENTREES</p>
        <p> MUSHROOM ORAVY-CHAR BROILRO BEEF PATTIES  MAN SIZE BEEF PATTIES W-ONION ORAVV  ORAVY N' SLICED TURKEY</p>
        <p> TURKEY CROQUETTES W-OIBLET ORAVY  SALISBURY STEAK</p>
        <p>YOUR 2-Lb. CHOICE! Pkg. Ea.</p>
        <p>$^08</p>
        <p>LARGE RIPE</p>
        <p>Bananas</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>LARGE FLORIDA il RED &amp;amp; WHITE SEEDLESS</p>
        <p>rapefruit Vo', 88</p>
        <p>PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., FEB. 21, 197i - QUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED -NONE SOLD TO OTHER DEALERS OR RESTAURANTS.</p>
        <p>9 SUNKIST</p>
        <p>LEMONS</p>
        <p>Dozen</p>
        <p>YELLOW</p>
        <p>ONIONS</p>
        <p>3-LL Bag 64*^</p>
        <p>LARGE FLORIDA ORANGES</p>
        <p>Dozen</p>
        <p>58* ti</p>
        <p>86</p>
        <p>FRUIT DRINKS</p>
        <p>Hl-C DRINKS</p>
        <p>43*</p>
        <p>EVERY^</p>
        <p>K</p>
        <p>46-Oz.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>DUNCAN HINES</p>
        <p>CAKE MIXES</p>
        <p>54</p>
        <p>EVERl^</p>
        <p>ISVj-Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>RED BAND</p>
        <p>FLOUR</p>
        <p> PLAIN</p>
        <p> SELF-RISING UNBLEACHED</p>
        <p>EVERfYd</p>
        <p>5Lb.</p>
        <p>Bag</p>
        <p>78</p>
        <p>COMPARE THESE EVERYDAY LOW PRICES!</p>
        <p>n</p>
        <p>OUR PRIDE</p>
        <p>Sandwich</p>
        <p>BREAD</p>
        <p>24-Oz. 4 Loaf w W</p>
        <p>DOG FOOD</p>
        <p>KEN-L-RATION</p>
        <p>15V-Oz.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>6-Pak</p>
        <p>17</p>
        <p>LIQUID BLEACH</p>
        <p>MORTON</p>
        <p>CLOROX POT PIES ORANGE JUICE ARMOUR TREET CHUNK TUNA GOLD MEDAL FLOUR</p>
        <p>HALF</p>
        <p>GALLON</p>
        <p>8-OZ.</p>
        <p>PKG.</p>
        <p>GARDEN CHARM -0Z. CAN</p>
        <p>FROZEN</p>
        <p>LUNCH MEAT</p>
        <p>STAR KiST LIGHT</p>
        <p>6-PAK</p>
        <p>12-OZ.</p>
        <p>CAN</p>
        <p>61,^-OZ.</p>
        <p>CAN</p>
        <p>5-LB.</p>
        <p>BAG</p>
        <p>49*</p>
        <p>28*</p>
        <p>*1.38</p>
        <p>88*</p>
        <p>48*</p>
        <p>78*</p>
        <p>ii$2</p>
        <p>00 CASH BACK"</p>
        <p>FROM THE CHESEBROUOH PONDS COMPANY</p>
        <p>WHEN YOU BUY ANY 4 OF THESE FINE PRODUCTS</p>
        <p>VASELINE BATH BEADS</p>
        <p>VASELINE LOTION</p>
        <p>PETROLEUM JELLY v.Mim.</p>
        <p>InNmilv.</p>
        <p>Car.</p>
        <p>Intwislv*</p>
        <p>C.r*</p>
        <p>l-Ox. 4-Oi. 7.1 Ol.</p>
        <p>$1.12 78' 63</p>
        <p>CUTEX REMOVER polish REMOVER 1.0. 57 Q-TIPS COTTON SWABS  ,;r.  68*</p>
        <p>WE</p>
        <p>BUFFERIN</p>
        <p>100</p>
        <p>Tablots</p>
        <p>ARRID .</p>
        <p> Dry</p>
        <p>*1.35 WELCOME *1.28</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>FEDERAL</p>
        <p>ASPIRIN SHAMPOO</p>
        <p>Bayer</p>
        <p>100's</p>
        <p>Johnson</p>
        <p>Baby</p>
        <p>11-Ox.</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0010" />
        <p>D*y Reflector. GrteiivUle, N.C.-W&amp;lt;iiw*i gtbiwy 1. i</p>
        <p>Stock And Market Reports</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA)-The North Carolina egg market was unchanged Tuesday. Supplies were adequate and demand light. Weighted average prices for small lot sales of consumer grade eggs delivered in cartons to nearby retail outlets: grade A large whites 69.68, medium whites 66.69, small whites 59.83.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA)-Com and soybean prices were higher at leading elevators in the state Tuesday. No. 2 yellow shelled com was 2.60 2.70, mostly 2.65-2.68 in the East, and 2,75 in the Piedmont; No. 1 yellow soybeans were 4.53-4.70, mostly 4.60-4.66; No. 2 red winter wheat was mostly 3.62; No. 2 red oats 1.50-1.55.</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP) (NCDA)-The North Carolina graded feeder pig auction for Tuesday in Wallace-Chadbourn reported 1,-521 head sold. Prices were: U.S. No.I and 2 40-50 pounds 110.19, 50-60 pounds 94.75, 6070</p>
        <p>GaPac</p>
        <p>Goodrfi</p>
        <p>Coodyr</p>
        <p>Crc</p>
        <p>Greyhd</p>
        <p>GulfOI)</p>
        <p>HarcuiM</p>
        <p>Honywll</p>
        <p>IBM</p>
        <p>ifrtHarv</p>
        <p>intPaper</p>
        <p>intTT</p>
        <p>KSiar Al</p>
        <p>KraftCo</p>
        <p>Krttoat</p>
        <p>Kroger</p>
        <p>LiggMY</p>
        <p>LockHdAirc</p>
        <p>LOCWA</p>
        <p>Marcor</p>
        <p>MaadCp</p>
        <p>MinnAAM</p>
        <p>MobilOl</p>
        <p>Monsan</p>
        <p>Nabisco</p>
        <p>NatOlsl</p>
        <p>OlinCp</p>
        <p>Oweniii</p>
        <p>Penney</p>
        <p>PhilMogr</p>
        <p>PbiMPel</p>
        <p>Polaroid</p>
        <p>Pr octGam</p>
        <p>Raisronp</p>
        <p>RCA</p>
        <p>Repsri</p>
        <p>Revlon</p>
        <p>Reylnd</p>
        <p>RocKwlint</p>
        <p>RoyCCola</p>
        <p>SrRegP</p>
        <p>ScortPap</p>
        <p>SeabCL</p>
        <p>Sears</p>
        <p>SouthCo</p>
        <p>SouRy</p>
        <p>SperryR</p>
        <p>StBrand</p>
        <p>StdOHCai</p>
        <p>StdOlilnd</p>
        <p>StevensJ</p>
        <p>pounds 88.75,  70-80  pounds</p>
        <p>80.50; U.S. No.3 40-50 pounds ucm ind 108.25, 50-60 pounds 86.25, 6070 pounds 82.25, 70-80 pounds 73.00.</p>
        <p>US sti Wachova</p>
        <p>(NCDA) w&amp;gt;yhr</p>
        <p>RALEIGH (AP)</p>
        <p>Cattle auction sales for Monday for Nort Wilkesboro totaled 435 head and for Hillsborough totaled 246 head. Prices averaged: slaughter cows utility and commercial 24.50-39.50; slaughtei calves (325-550 pounds) good 34.25-41.50; vealers (150-240 pounds) good 45.00-55.50; feeder steers (300-600 pounds) good 32.50 37.75; feeder heifers (300-500 pounds) 25.00-28.00.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) - The stock market was mixed today, facing more of the profit taking that has weighed it down over the past several sessions.</p>
        <p>The opening Dow Jones average of 30 industrials was down almost a point. Gainers and losers stood about even in the over-all tally of New York Stock Exchange-listed issues.</p>
        <p>Brokers said the market was in a continued pause after its sharp early-1976 rally, with little in the days economic news to give it any strong push in either direction.</p>
        <p>Todays early prices included Esmark, unchanged at 36'.i.; Williams Cos., % higher at 26%; W.R. Grace, up % at 31, and Ethyl Corp., steady at 44%.</p>
        <p>On Tuesday the Dow Jones industrial average dropped 7.79 to 950.57, extending its loss for the last three sessions to 21.33 points.</p>
        <p>Losers held a 4-3 edge on gainers among NYSE-listed issues, and the exchanges composite index fell .32 to 52.95.</p>
        <p>Big Board volume came to 25.46 million shares.</p>
        <p>At the American Stock Exchange, the market value index climbed .59 to 100,13.</p>
        <p>WInnDx</p>
        <p>Wolwth</p>
        <p>XeroxCp</p>
        <p>School Bd.</p>
        <p>(Continued from page I)</p>
        <p>the board discussed the possibility of requesting tbe equalization of special funding in the county school to supplement art, music, counselling, and libraries. This equalization would allow for a more equal amount of funds per child between city and county students. These funds would also help construct programs necessary for Southern Association Accreditation. The board will with equal emphasis of program projects request increases in teacher supplements to equal city school teachers supplements.</p>
        <p>Probing Thefts</p>
        <p>Greenville Police Chief Glenn Cannon said this morning that officers are continuing their investigation into a break-in at Rose High School that neted thieves 11,950 worth of merchandise.</p>
        <p>According to Cannon, two typewriters, a calculator and a digital clock-radio were taken by thieves who gained entrance to the building through the roof.</p>
        <p>The theft was reported tt 11:25 a.m.Saturday.</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (AP) -Midday tocks</p>
        <p>HIgO Lm Lnl</p>
        <p>AbbtLab</p>
        <p>Akiona</p>
        <p>AlllsChal</p>
        <p>ATcoa</p>
        <p>Am AirLin</p>
        <p>A Brands</p>
        <p>A Can</p>
        <p>A Cyan</p>
        <p>Am Motors</p>
        <p>AmTAT</p>
        <p>BabckW</p>
        <p>BeatFds</p>
        <p>Bathsti</p>
        <p>Boeing</p>
        <p>Borden</p>
        <p>CaroPw</p>
        <p>Calanese</p>
        <p>Champlnt</p>
        <p>Chessle</p>
        <p>Chrysler</p>
        <p>CocaCoi</p>
        <p>ColgPal</p>
        <p>ComwE</p>
        <p>ConCen</p>
        <p>DeltaAir</p>
        <p>DowCh</p>
        <p>DukePw</p>
        <p>duPont</p>
        <p>EaslAir Lin</p>
        <p>EasKd</p>
        <p>Eaton</p>
        <p>Esmark</p>
        <p>Exxon</p>
        <p>Firestn</p>
        <p>FlaPow</p>
        <p>FlaPwL</p>
        <p>FordM</p>
        <p>FordMcK</p>
        <p>GenDynam</p>
        <p>GenEI</p>
        <p>GnFood</p>
        <p>GanMlti</p>
        <p>GnMot</p>
        <p>G Telel</p>
        <p>V4 39H 39^</p>
        <p>23'/j T3'/3 W?*</p>
        <p>46^ 46H 44^</p>
        <p>1V/ IIH W/7 42'/} 42^ 42H</p>
        <p>33Vt 33V4  33'/4</p>
        <p>26'A 26&amp;lt;/4 5H 5^ iS7/t SS'/i 55V4 27  26?% 27</p>
        <p>23?% Zy&amp;gt; 23^ 41H 41?% 4V/t</p>
        <p>26  25^ 26</p>
        <p>27  27  27</p>
        <p>20Vj 2M% 20V} 54  53'/% 54</p>
        <p>236% 23?a 37A 37'/i 37'/% 15  14?% 14?%</p>
        <p>6?% 86Vi 86'/% 27  266% 26^</p>
        <p>28?k 2^ 28?k 29?% 294% 294% 40?% 40'/} 40?% 1064% 106  1064%</p>
        <p>19V4 19'-% 19'/4 1484% 148  148?%</p>
        <p>6'/%  6  6</p>
        <p>105?% 105'A 105?% 3SV4 35  35</p>
        <p>364% 36?% 36?% 86V4 B5H 15?% 24?% 24?% 24?%</p>
        <p>Sunny skies and high temperatures has been the weather outlook for the past several days in the Pitt County area. Temperatures were recorded by the Greenville Utilities Department Tuesday registering a high of 81 degrees and a low of 60 degrees. The temperature at 8 a.m. Wednesday was recorded at 59 degrees and the river level measured 3.5 feet according to the Utilities Department.</p>
        <p>A high temperature of 80</p>
        <p>Hospital Bd...</p>
        <p>(Continued from page I) Hospital Association Monday, Mar. 23. All the trustees were invited.</p>
        <p>A visit from represen-</p>
        <p>4I'A 48  48</p>
        <p>2S?% 25?% 2S?% 24'/% 24?% 34*/% 31V% 30?% 31 U&amp;lt;/4 16'/% U'A</p>
        <p>24  234% 23?% 34&amp;lt;/% U'M</p>
        <p>SI'A 50?% 4I'A 254  2S2V%  254</p>
        <p>27  26?b 27</p>
        <p>72V% 72  72'/%</p>
        <p>2l&amp;gt;/l 21  31</p>
        <p>32?% 32?% 33?% 424% 42/% 424% 33  334% 33</p>
        <p>19'/% 19'/i 19/% 34'/% 34/% 34&amp;lt;/l I'/t 7?%  7?%</p>
        <p>38?% 28?% 28?% 29/% 29'% 29% 25?% 25?% 2S?% 59  584%  58?%</p>
        <p>52'/t 52% 52?% 94/% 93?% 93?i 37'/% 37'/% 371% 23&amp;lt;/% 23'/% 23?% 43?% 43?% 43?% 58  57'/% 58</p>
        <p>51'% 51% Sl'% 54?% 54?% 54?% 53?% 53% 53H 4l?i 414% 41?% 17/} 87  87'/%</p>
        <p>47/% 47'/% 47'/} 36?% 26% 26% 364% 36?% 364% 744% 74?% 74?% 66?% 66'% 66?% 28H 28/% 28V] 19?% 19?% 19?% 43  43  43</p>
        <p>31'% 21?% 21'% 26'/% 26'% 26'/} 66?% 66'/% 66'% 15'% 1S'% 15/% S8?% 54/% 54'/% 454% 454% 454% 34?% 34H 34?% 30?% 30/} 30'/% 444% 44?% 44'/% 21?% 21?% 21?%</p>
        <p>25  24?% 25</p>
        <p>32% 32'/% 32/% 33V} 33?% 33'/% 13'-% 13V% 13'/% 73'% 73  73</p>
        <p>42H 42?% 424% 10'% 10'% 10'/% 79?% 79?% 79&amp;gt;/% 24?% 24?% 24?% 15'/% 15?% 15?% 434% 43'% 43'/% 40&amp;lt;/% 40'% 40'% 23?% 234% 23H 63'% 62?% 63&amp;gt;%</p>
        <p>Temperatures Up To 81 Degrees</p>
        <p>tatives of the Joint Committee on Hospital Accreditation is expected Feb. 24. Written procedure for the care and referral of emotionally ill or alcoholic or drug patients has been completed. Jack Richardson, Hospital Director, said. Dr, Eric Fearrington, Chief of Staff, reported on two more completed medical audits. He also said that the Medical Records Department is in good shape on keeping up with patient files. All of these things and more will be noted by the Accreditation Committee visitors.</p>
        <p>Promoted from provisional to full active medical staff privileges were Dr. Carl Wille in opthalmology; Dr. Albert Warshauer in anesthesiology; Dr. Douglas Newton in gastroenterolgy; and Dr. Wayne Kendrick in nephrology. Dr. Mike Weaver was given provisional privileges in radiology. Dr. James Jones was given full privileges. Dr. James Smith was kept on the active staff, but excepted from emergency room and other staff duties, at his request. Dr. E. B. Aycock was accorded courtesy privileges, at his request. Consulting privileges were given Dr. Charles Fitzgerald, Dr. Judith Yongue, Dr. C, G. Garrenton, and Dr. Dan Jordan.</p>
        <p>Dr, Fearrington asked that the Board make clear exactly what kinds of cases it expects the emergency room to treat, as this information is needed in hiring emergency room doctors to begin giving 24-hour service. Emergency only, they replied.</p>
        <p>The fee to be paid doctors, until the 24-hour coverage can be started, was raised from 915 to $20 an hour.</p>
        <p>Nominating committee chairman Leroy James reported the nomination of W. R. Duke as chairman; Kenneth Dews as vice chairman; Glenn Hardee as secretary; Eugene James to the executive committee; Hap Moye to treasurer; and Delton Perry as assistant treasurer. Elections will be held next month, with nominations from the floor in order.</p>
        <p>Dr. John Wooten asked why, when orders for equipment for the new hospital are behind because of the lack of available money, the medical school cannot be prevailed upon to help out. Dr. William Laupus answered that he needs only to be given a list of equipment needed to submit, that ECU medical school money is budgeted to help out with Pitt Memorial equipment needs. A meeting will be held to discuss this matter within the next few days.</p>
        <p>Dave McRae, the director of the hospital rehabilitation unit, was introduced. He is visiting here now, but will move here soon.</p>
        <p>Copies of the new selective menu being used by the hospital dietary department were passed out for the trustees inspection.</p>
        <p>a-i jsv! degrees was recorded Tuesday 49'/. 49' 49&amp;lt;A at thc Greenvllle Airport which "'A  was 26 degrees higher than last</p>
        <p>J9'A  recorded  high  tem-</p>
        <p>  a/ a/i perature of 54 degrees.</p>
        <p>U'/I 244 244 27W 27'/j 27'A</p>
        <p>SPECIAL PROGRAM Faith Assembly of God is hosting a "Youth Happening Monday, February 16 until Sunday, February 22. The program will feature Evangelist Dickie Daughtridge, The Collie Singers, Friday and the Young World Singers, Sunday. The public is invited.</p>
        <p>NO SLEEVES- NO SHOES WEATHER- A warm traad bas keen tka talk tf the Greenville the past few days, with temperaturet climbing Into the Ugh 79s. Two East Carolina UniversUy stodenli, Eliubeth PatterMo (right), a</p>
        <p>Mphnmore Imm RaMgh, ak Ami MasMagffl. a fraAman bam BeaMa. taka a</p>
        <p>tun bath while catching up 00 tbclr itndlea. (Reflector Photo by Tommy Forraat)</p>
        <p>Obituaries</p>
        <p>Andrews</p>
        <p>BETHEL  Funeral services for Mrs. Bonnie Crusenberry Andrews, who died this morning, will be held at 2 p.m. Thursday in Titusville, Fla. Burial will follow in Titusville.</p>
        <p>Surviving are her husband, Henry Martin Andrews, formerly of Bethel; three brothers, J. B. and S. C. Crusenberry, both of Rocky Mount, and W. B. Crusenberry of Macon,Ga.; a sister, Mrs. Josephine C. Griffin of Rocky Mount.</p>
        <p>BrUey</p>
        <p>Mr, Johnny B. BrUey, 78, died in Ciirteret County Hospital in Morehead City Tuesday.</p>
        <p>Funeral services will be conducted at 3:30 p.m. Thursday at the Wilkerson Funeral Chapel by the Rev. L, B. Manning, pastor of the LaGrange Free Will Baptist Church, and the Rev. Willis Wilson, pastor of Reedy Branch Free Will Baptist Church. Burial will be In Pinewood Memorial Park.</p>
        <p>Mr. Briley, a native of Pitt County, had lived in the Bethel and Stokes Communities prior to moving to Newport several years ago. He was a retired farmer.</p>
        <p>He is survived by several nieces and nephews including Mrs. Jarvis Worthington and Mrs, Doris Curtis, both of Greenville, Louis D, Whitehurst of Morehead City, Curtis 0. Whitehurst of Robersonville, and Harvey 0. Whitehurst of Stokes.</p>
        <p>The family visitation will be tonight from 7 to 9 p.m.</p>
        <p>Break-In And pjcji GtoderS Will</p>
        <p>EXTENDED WEATHER OUTLOOK FOR N.C.</p>
        <p>Partly cloudy with chance of rain Friday and Saturday, and mainly along the coast Sunday. Unseasonably warm Friday and Saturday, turning cooler Sunday.</p>
        <p>Gospel Sing</p>
        <p>featuring</p>
        <p>LaVerne Tripp</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY</p>
        <p>1:00 p/n.W6lcom Wagon Gienvenue Book Club meet* with Mr, Vincent Froatz 1:30p,m.Duplcate bridge at Planters Bank</p>
        <p>6 30 p.m,Kiwanlf Club meets 6:30 p.m.-EAL Crisis Intervention meets</p>
        <p>8:00 pjn,Pitt County Al Anon Group meets at AA Btdg. on Farmvitle Hwy. Telephone 752-7606 or 756-0567 8:00 p,m,Pitt County Ala-Teen Group meets at the AA BIdg., Fermvllle Hwy.</p>
        <p>THURSDAY 9:30 a,m.wtlcome Wagon ladies bowling at Hlllcrett Lanes 11:00 .m,Elm Street Senior Citizens 2:00-5:00 pjTt,-Game day at Woman's Club</p>
        <p>6 30p/n.Exchartgt Club meets 7:00 p,m,WIntervllle Kiwanis Club meets et community bCdg,</p>
        <p>8:00 pJ11 ,-VFW meets at Post Home 1:00 pjn.Coochee Council No. so. Degree ot Poeahontes meets at Redmen*! Hall</p>
        <p>8;00p/n.n&amp;gt;e League of women Voter membership coffee will be held at the home Of Mrs , 3ot Taylor</p>
        <p>Thursday, February 19 7:30 p.ni.</p>
        <p>at the</p>
        <p>First Pentecostal Holiness Church</p>
        <p>Brinkley Road at Plaza Drive</p>
        <p>Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>Born to write and sing, are the words that best describe this young man, dedicated to God and to God's music. Raised on a farm on the coast of North</p>
        <p>Carolina, LaVerne Tripp has always had a song in his heart. He began tint ......</p>
        <p>singing at camp meetings and in church when he was only two and a half</p>
        <p>years old, and, as he grew, his love for music grew also'. After finishing vTlI</p>
        <p>Bible school in Greenville, South Carolina, he sang with several part-time groups before joining the Blue Ridge Quartet for six years. LaVerne left the Blue Ridge to enter into full time evangelistic work.</p>
        <p>Come and listen to him, you will experience an evening of spiritual uplift you will never forget.</p>
        <p>brothers, Marcellus Harrington of Greenville and Raymond Harrington of Hamptonville, N. Y., 17 grandchildren and two great-grandchildren.</p>
        <p>The body will be taken from Flanagan and Parker Fhueral Home to the church one hour prior to services. Family visitation will be at the Flanagan and Parker (Jiapel from 8 to 9 p.m. tonight.</p>
        <p>Loftin</p>
        <p>Krista Jean Loftin, one-day-old daughter of Wayne and Barbara Loftin, died in Pitt Memorial Hospital this morning.</p>
        <p>Graveside services will be conducted at 3:30 Thursday afternoon at Pinewood Memorial Park by the Rev. N. D. Beaman, pastor of Rose High Free Will BapUst Church.</p>
        <p>Besides her parents, she is survived by her paternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Billy Wa^ Loftin of Ayden; her maternal grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Guy Kite of Grimesland; paternal great grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Ernest W. Loftin of Ayden, a maternal great grandmother, Mrs. W. Lacy Kite of Black Jack, and a paternal great grandmother, Mrs. Carrie Briley of Simpson.</p>
        <p>An Attempt' In Early Hours</p>
        <p>Host 'Open House'</p>
        <p>Police Chief Glenn Cannon said officers are investigating a break-in and an attempted break-in that occurred early today.</p>
        <p>He reported the first of the incidents involved an attempted break-in at 2001 Fairview Way, about 2 a.m. There, according to Cannon, a man attempted to gain entrance through a bedroom window of the CJiarles D. Burnette home.</p>
        <p>Burnette, Cannon said, awoke, fired a pistol, and the would-be intruder fled.</p>
        <p>The second incident occurred at 4:10 a.m. at the Delta Zeta sorority house at 801 East Fifth St.</p>
        <p>The chief said a man broke a glass from a patio door there to gain entrance. He noted that a resident ot the Delta Zeta home studying, heard a noise, then saw the intruder and screamed. The man then fled.</p>
        <p>On April 21, 1962, the Seattle, Wash., Worlds Fair was opened by remote control when President Kennedy pressed a gold key at Miami, Fla.</p>
        <p>Twenty-six first grade students at Wahl-Coates Elementary School, students of Mrs. Anna Thomas, will be hosts from 1 to 2 p.m. on Thursday for an open house for paroits, university faculty and university students.</p>
        <p>As a focus point of the event, the children will display and read from books they have authored. Each child has written his own story, titled it, illustrated it and has bound it in hard cover made of wall paper and paste, with the pages sewn in.</p>
        <p>Among East Carolina University, university personnel to be on hand for the event are Dr. Douglas Jones and Dr. Lois Staton. Education students and parents of the first graders are also expected to be attending.</p>
        <p>Assisting Mrs. Thomas in the open house will be a current student teacher, Mary Gall Grimes, a former student teacher. Donna Howell, and a student teacher to be teaching in the spring quarter, Sharon Hawkins. Assistance in binding the books was given to the first graders by three third grade students of Mrs. Esther Warren</p>
        <p>- Kimber Smith, Tim Wright and Pam Barnes.</p>
        <p>Last week, this flrst grade class conducted a program for education students of East Carolina University, and at that time presented Dr. Jones and Dr. Staton each a bound copy ot a Valentine book.</p>
        <p>Precint No. 5</p>
        <p>Meets Thursday</p>
        <p>Greenville Precinct No. Five will meet Thursday at 7:30 pun. at the American Legion Building.</p>
        <p>New officers will be elected and delegates to the Democrats Convention will be named during the meeting.</p>
        <p>The announcement was made by Mrs. Ed Warren, vice chairman.</p>
        <p>HEIL</p>
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        <p>Evans</p>
        <p>FARMVILLE - Solangel Latog Evans died at her home Tuesday. She was the infant daughter ot Wanda Evans of 208 Anderson Ave.</p>
        <p>Arrangements are incomplete.</p>
        <p>Harrington</p>
        <p>Funeral services for Mr. Manning Harrington, Sr., of Rt. 1, Stokes, who died Saturday in the Robersonville Hospital, will be conducted Thursday at 2:30 p.m. at Clemmons Grove Holiness Church, with the Rev. Artis officiating. Burial will be in Brown Hill Cemetery.</p>
        <p>Mr. Harrington was a native of Pitt County and spent most of his life in tbe Stakes Community.</p>
        <p>He is survived by his wife, Mrs. Helen Fleming Harrington of the home; five daughters. Miss Beleatha Harrington, Mrs. Mary Brown and Mrs. Helen Stroud, all of Newburgh, N.Y.,. Sgt. Linda Harrington of Shaw AFB, S.C., and Miss Bettie Joe Harrington of the home; four sons, James Harrington of Newburgh, N. Y., Manning Harrington, Jr., Arthur Harrington and Clifton Harrington, all of the home; two sisters, Mrs. Annie Shepard of Greenville, and Mrs. Lela Bradley of Williamston; two</p>
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        <pb facs="00092987_0011" />
        <p>Sports the daily reflector</p>
        <p>WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON, FEBRUARY 18, 1976Mercer Runs Past East Carolina, 86-68</p>
        <p>No Changes In Sonny Randle: Claims ECU Is Near ACC Level</p>
        <p>By WOODV PEELE Reflector Sports Editor</p>
        <p>One thing about Sonny Randle: he never changes. He always speaks his mind.</p>
        <p>And yesterday at the Greenville Sports Club, the former East Carolina University football coach who found that the grass is not always greener on the other side of the fence, had a few things to say.</p>
        <p>A packed house at the Ramada Inn listened and laughed and applauded the man who left East Carolina to return to his alma mater Virginia, only to be fired after two seasons.</p>
        <p>Sonny Randle was not a bitter man, however. Referring back to his introduction, when his pass catching records were mentioned, Randle said he caught "quite a few apples" on the sidelines in the East Carolina games.</p>
        <p>"It's not the easiest thing in the world to come back here, but Id be doing an injustice to both you and myself if I didn't, he said; When you are the Coach of the Year, you have a lot of friends. But when youre the coach of nothing, you dont have as many, he joked.</p>
        <p>"They told me that theyd get me some money for coming down, and I asked how much. They told me that they paid according to who you were. Lou Holtz was supposed to come for tlOO. They told me Id get $25.</p>
        <p>Randle said he would like to talk about something other than football, but he knew nothing else to talk about. "Somebody</p>
        <p>asked me what 1 was going to do now. I don't know, but Ive got three years to thing about it. Randles Virginia contract, to be paid off, had three more years to run.</p>
        <p>Randle then spoke on several things close to him.</p>
        <p>The Rozelle Rule: Without it pro football will die. If a player who doesn't like the cold leaves Minnesota for California, then Minnesota has gof to have some compensation or pretty soon, theyll have nobody left. And as far as players being slaves, I havent seen to many slaves who are making $50,000 a year.</p>
        <p>On ECU and the Atlantic Coast Conference: "There is no question that East Carolina wasnt the best team in the Southern Conference at the end of the season. On a given Saturday, they could beat anyone in the ACC. But I dont think theyre ready to do it week-after-week. They dont have the numbers. I was happy wheti East Carolina beat Carolina. Randle added that Maryland is the team of the future in the ACC and if the others dont do something soon, theyll be left behind.</p>
        <p>East Carolina should get into a conference where they can play interesting football. I think they can compete in the ACC when they get their numbers up. The ACC and East Carolina are moving toward each other in this respect, and should be about even in a couple of more years,</p>
        <p>But Randle also felt that if the ACC expands, it will be to allow</p>
        <p>North Lenoir Halts Conley</p>
        <p>HOLLYWOOD - North Unoir outhit Conley from the foul line, 22-8, and gained a 64-58 victory over the Vikings last night. Ihe loss elminated the defending champs from this years title.</p>
        <p>The North Lenoir girls beat Conley, 50-27, while the Baby Vikes came up with a 65-60 victory.</p>
        <p>In the girls game. North Lenoir built upan 11-7 lead In the opening quarter, then streaked away to a 31-13 halftime lead. North Lenoir continued to fly high in the third, building its lead to 48-20. They allowed Conley a 7-2 final period advantage.</p>
        <p>Vickie Vail led North Lenoir with 20. while Beverly Faison added 16. Annie Wooten led Conley with nine.</p>
        <p>North Lenoirs boys pulled out to a 16-12 lead In the first period and the two teams matched points in the second frame, 13-13. That left the Hawks in a 29-25 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>CWMtY</p>
        <p>N.LtnoIr</p>
        <p>R.JW&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Avffy</p>
        <p>Pop#</p>
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        <p>LM</p>
        <p>Sheppard</p>
        <p>Ffahar</p>
        <p>0. Jonas</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p>North Ltflolr</p>
        <p>Conftv</p>
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        <p>3 I U Straater</p>
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        <p>Roanoke Falls To W. Edgecombe</p>
        <p>ROBERSONVILLE - Charlie Parker and Arnie Winstead overcame Paul Jones 33 points to lead West Edgecombe to a 77-65 win over the Redskins last night.</p>
        <p>The boys' win was one of two by West Edgecombe, The Wildcats took the J.V. game, 54-53, but lost the girls game, 52-39.</p>
        <p>West Edgecombe took the lead in the first period of the girls game, 12-8, but Roanoke knocked it down to a two-point</p>
        <p>Taday'ilparti</p>
        <p>wraittint</p>
        <p>E. B. Aycock at Rocky Mount Upjn.) aahathall</p>
        <p>Loulahurg at EMt Carolina JV woman &amp;lt;7:30 pjn .)</p>
        <p>Mult Loaflua WMtam SInlln' vi. Po-Boya flD Motor VI. Happy Stora johnny* MoBlla Homai vs. Aialao Motila Homas ShaltaroO Workhop vi. Carolina Tataphona Emprla Brushai vs. St. Pavi^</p>
        <p>Smith* Haarlng vi. St. Jama*</p>
        <p>Eaton V. Sonoco Coca-Cola va. crowt Nait AiOridga-Southarland vs. Oraanvilta utmtlat</p>
        <p>Stata Highway vs. Hanrahan Hawga Thvndayh Iparti Baskatball</p>
        <p>Rocky Mount at Rosa (7:30 pjnm)</p>
        <p>Eat Carolina at Campbaii woman (7 p/ni)</p>
        <p>woman) LoHwa VM&amp;gt;man)Laagua ICrlspy Krama vs. Book Barn Littia Mint vs, Cox Raalty MultLaagua St. Janfka v. Carolina Talaphona Shaltarad Workhop vs. Si. Paul's Pitt Mamorlal vs Union CarbWa Orady Whitavs Stawart)</p>
        <p>either South Carolina or Virginia Tech to enter.</p>
        <p>On the difference between ECU and Virginia players: After we got beat 58-7 at State (the third year), the players were serious and went to work on Sunday. There was no nonsense and a lot of soul-searching. Nobody lost his mind or his composure. The players accepted what we wanted to do, and the next Saturday, they played one of the greatest games evr by an East Carolina team, beating Southern Mississippi. This year, when Navy beat Virginia, 44-14, we tried to do the same thing we had done at East Carolina, but Ive never seen a group practice like that one Sunday, and they didnt want to practice at all on Monday. They wouldnt accept anything we tried to do. They questioned everything. One group believed in us, this group didnt. They couldnt accept my ways.</p>
        <p>On his own future: "Ive had several offers outside coaching, but Id really like to stay in college coaching. Right now. Im waiting for my contract to be settled before I can do anything.</p>
        <p>On Lou Holtz going to the Jets : When I first saw Lou, I said, this cant be a football coach. But he beat me at William t Mary, and he beat me at N. C. State. I'm not going to say he wont win at New York, but its a whole different world up there. 1 dont know how hell do, but I think hes in for the shock of his life. I cant wait to see Joe Namath running the veer.</p>
        <p>On whether he could have won at Virginia: One doctor up there told me that he thought hed find it easier to bring Knute Rockne back to life than for me to have a winner at Virginia, and he may have been right. Virigina is going to have to relax its standards to be successful. Id like to say that the program (at East Carolina) is better now. Doing away with the foreign language requirements here has helped Pat (Dye) hes done one heck of a job here. And finally, on hindsight: Somebody asked me if I had a time machine, and could go back to two years ago, if Id still make the same choice. Thats not a touch decision. You would never have seen a moving van in front of my house."</p>
        <p>Southern Nash Tops Chargers</p>
        <p>North Lenoir added three more points to its lead in the third quarter, 44-37, and then saw Conley chip one off that in a 21-20 dash to the wire.</p>
        <p>Roger Jones led North Lenoir with 18, while Keith Avery had 14 and Jimmy Wynne and James Lee each had 11. Rick Mobley had 16, Byron Tyson,11, and Johnny Streeter, 10, for Conley.</p>
        <p>The Vikings got to Southern Nash on Friday.</p>
        <p>jV-Cooly 65. Norm Lnoir 60.</p>
        <p>OlrDOAm</p>
        <p>North Lnoir-Vill 30. Plron 16, Cox 3, BtKhsm 3. Ldt&amp;gt;nor 8, BotHe X Atkinson. Outlaw. Curloy, Armslrong. Toot, B4.dbttor.</p>
        <p>Ctt'loy-Costin 8. McCrocksn, iMwton 9. Boksr. Hints X Mills 3. Cush 3. E MItchtll. MMitchfll, Dixon, Dtws t Phillips.</p>
        <p>North Ltnoir  H  2  37  3M</p>
        <p>7 4 7 737</p>
        <p>SPRING HOPE-Ayden-Grifton again went to the wire with an opponent in the Eastern Carolina Conference, but this time, the Cliargers suffered their third straight defeat, 78-76, at the hands of Southern Nash. The Southern Nash girls wen, 56-51, while the Baby Firebirds made it a clean sweep, 81-71.</p>
        <p>In the girls game, Ayden-Grifton broke out into a 14-3 lead in the first period. But Southern rallied, 22-14. and cut the Chargerette lead back to just 28-25 at the half.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton remained in the lead in the third period, moving out to a 44-38 advantage. But Southern put on one last rally, 18-7, and pulled out the victory.</p>
        <p>Shirley Hall led Southern with 30 points. Audrey McCarter had 17 and Vertha Dixon, 14, for A-G</p>
        <p>In the boys game. Southern pushed ahead early, building up a 23-12 lead. Ayden-Grifton moved to a pressing defense, and outhit the Firebirds, 19-14, in the second frame to cut the lead to 37-31.</p>
        <p>In the third frame, the Chargers pushed ahead, with a 24-17, advantage. 55-54. But they</p>
        <p>rdwiOrlflon SnjHwn Nh</p>
        <p>Greene Central Downs Falcons</p>
        <p>difference at halftime, 22-20.</p>
        <p>The Squaws blew the Wildcats out in the third period, 22-6 and coasted from there on out.</p>
        <p>Donna Walker led West Edgecombe with 26. Delores Stanley had 14 and Yvette Mdica 10 for the Squaws.</p>
        <p>Roanokes boys inched out to a 13-12 lead but West Edgecombe got hot in the second frame to take a 35-32 advantage.</p>
        <p>The Wildcats increased the lead by eight in the third period and by one more in the final quarter.</p>
        <p>Parker scored 22 and Winstead 20 for the Wildcats and Willie Lovely score 13 and Willie Tyson 11. Jones led the Skins with 33 and Ken Howell had IS.</p>
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        <p>SNOW HILL-Greene Central roared out to an 18-8 first period lead and, led by Marvin Rouses 17 points, went on to beat C.B. Aycock, 6(M5, in an Eastern Carolina Conference basketball game last night.</p>
        <p>Greene Central lost the other two games of the night as Aycock won the J.V. game, 54-52, and the girls game, 40-33.</p>
        <p>The first period of the girls game was close with the Ewes taking a 13-12 lead. But in the second frame, Aycock slipped ahead by one for a 26-25 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>Aycock added five points more in the third period and one in the last for the seven-point win.</p>
        <p>Helen Jones led the Lady Falcons with 16 and Donna Winbon had 10. Sharon Brown had 10 and Teresa Whitley 14 for the Ewes.</p>
        <p>Greene Central rolled up their 10-point lead and added three to it by halftime, 35-22.</p>
        <p>Aycock began to come back in the third period cutting the gap to five but Greene Central ran up a 19-10 fourth period to win easily. Harold Best led the Falcons with 11, Roses 17 paced Greene Central while Nelson Edwards had 14 and Melvin Briggs had II.</p>
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        <p>16 13 AS TOTALS 33 14 60</p>
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        <p>MACON, Ga.-Mercer University vowed revenge last year when East Carolina took a 121-82 victory over the Bears. Last night, the Bears got their revenge, 86-68.</p>
        <p>East Carolinas Bucs, playing their third game in four nights, appeared tired and listless much of the game. They had played in a losing effort Monday night against Furman University on their home court, then had arisen Tuesday morning at 5 p.m. to catch a flight to Macon for this game.</p>
        <p>Mercer took full advantage of the Bucs' problems, and went to work right at the start, building up a 9-0 lead in the first minute and a half of play. Jerry Thruston and Andre Brown led the charge away, each hitting four points in that period.</p>
        <p>Reggie Lee finally put the Pirates on the board, hitting with 17:12 left.</p>
        <p>During the first eight minutes, however, Lee got little help, as he hit six points, and Larry Hunt added five more as the score rose to 24-n in favor of the Bears.</p>
        <p>Scores</p>
        <p>Twttdsv's Colltg*</p>
        <p>Bik*tb*ll Rfiutt*</p>
        <p>By Th* Assoclit*d Prtss CAST</p>
        <p>Boston St 103, Fitchburg St 95 B06ton U 79, Northeasttrn 78 Canlsius 66, Colgate 58 Maine 94, Bowdoin 69 Massachusetts 91. Vermont 83 Rhode Island 85, Naw Hampshire 63</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p>Ale-Huntsville 79, St 55 Centenary 95,</p>
        <p>Hardin-Sim-</p>
        <p>Fairmont St 99, Salem 90 Florid* Tech 83. Bisceyn*  67</p>
        <p>Jeckson S5 98. Grambling 94 Marshall 86, Roanoke Col  78</p>
        <p>W Virginia St 101, Bccklay 76</p>
        <p>MIDWEST</p>
        <p>Louisville 98, Tulsa 90, OT Oral Roberts 80, Nebraska-Omaha $7</p>
        <p>were unable to hold on. Southern, scoring half of their 24 points at the foul line, managed to regain the lead, and held off the Chargers for the win.</p>
        <p>We had the chance to get the points we needed, Coach Bob Murphrey said. We just couldnt hit.</p>
        <p>Willie Williams led Southern with 26, while Walter Williams added 24 and Pridgen had 12. Ogden Braxton led A-G with 30, while Paul Ricciarelli had 14, Willie Forbes had 13 and Vern Davenport had 10.</p>
        <p>Ayden-Grifton hosts Farm-vilie Central on Friday.</p>
        <p>JV-Soutkarn Nask II, AydakOrifton 71 OltiTOaint AydanOrllton-McCarl, 17. Pottar A Whitehurst 4, Heseley 4. Dixon 14. Loftin 3. Brown 3, O'Neal, To. Smith.</p>
        <p>Southern NashPope 8, Hall 30. Edwards 6. Mingcs 7. F Edwards 5, Emig, Riley, Lamb.</p>
        <p>Ayd*n,Oriften  i  14  16  7-61</p>
        <p>SovnwrhNastl  3  33  13  18-56</p>
        <p>BoysOema A-0  g  f  t  s. Nash  g  f  t</p>
        <p>Braxton  14  I  30  Pridgen  5  3  13</p>
        <p>Davenport  5  0  10  W. Williams 9  8  36</p>
        <p>Forbes  6  1  13  Stricklend  1  3  4</p>
        <p>Rlcderelli  6  3  14  Murray  3  0  6</p>
        <p>Simpson  3  0  6  Sherrod  3  0  6</p>
        <p>Oall  0  3  3  Wa.Wiliiems9  6  34</p>
        <p>Moore  0  0  0  Taybron  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Teachey  0  0  0</p>
        <p>Leggett  0  0  0</p>
        <p>TOTALS  34  8  76  TOTALS 30 18  78</p>
        <p>SOUTHWEST</p>
        <p>Rice 93, TCU 78 Texas ASM  94,  Houston 80</p>
        <p>Texas Tech  87,  Baylor  76</p>
        <p>W Texas St  96,  N Texas  St  87</p>
        <p>PAR WEST</p>
        <p>Redlands 77, Pomona-Pitier</p>
        <p>53</p>
        <p>Westminster, Utah 81. S Utah St 71</p>
        <p>Whittier 87, La Verne 81</p>
        <p>EXHIBITIONS</p>
        <p>Athletfs-ln-Action 96, land 63</p>
        <p>After that, the Pirates started lo show some signs of coming to life and began to push back into the game. They cut the margin to nine at 26-17, then to seven at 30-23 with 4:50 left in the half.</p>
        <p>Finally, with 1:54 left, A1 Edwards bit a jumper to pull the Bucs within five, 36-31, but they could come no closer, Edwards hit again with five seconds left, to trim it to 40-35, but Steve Hendrickson of Washington, N .C., hit at the buzzer to give the Bears a 42-35 lead.</p>
        <p>In the opening minutes of the second half, the Bucs cut the lead down to just three points as Earl Garner hit two quick ones for a 42-39 deficit.</p>
        <p>But during the next few minutes, Mercer turned it around as the Pirate thrust ran out of gas. Over the next few minutes, the Bears outhit the Bucs, 9-2, building up a 51-41 lead. Then, in the next four minutes, the Bears outshot the Pirates, 10-2, and ran their lead out to 6143. After that, it was just a question of time.</p>
        <p>East Carolina hit a fine 50 per cent of their shots in the first half, but Mercer shot an even</p>
        <p>Pace Has Two Games</p>
        <p>Pace Academy will hold a double-header basketball game tonight at 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>The opening game will feature Pace facing Salem Methodist Church of Simpson. In the second game at 7:30 p.m., the WFAG-WRQR Disc Jockeys will meet patrons and friends of Pace.</p>
        <p>Among those playing for Pace will be Jim Galloway, Pat Dye, Junior Whitehurst, Kelly Kee, Don Patrick, Willis Manning, Dave Bumgarner, Clifton Edwards, Mac Carr. Roland Brinson, Marty Myrick, and coaches Phil Lewis and Dale Manning.</p>
        <p>Admission will be $1.25 for adults and 75 cents for children.</p>
        <p>hotter 62,5 per cent. In the second half, both teams cooled off, and the Bucs finished with a 43.6 mark, while Mercer fell to a still very respectable 53.3 percent.</p>
        <p>The Bucs were hurt by their lop scorers having poor nights. Garner made just three of 16 shots from the floor and got just six points. Lee made only five of 15 and finished with 12 points.</p>
        <p>Mercer held a 42-32 rebounding edge, with Leroy Turner leading the way with 12 and Thruston adding eight. Garner and Hunt each had seven for the Pirates.</p>
        <p>We just beat ourselves, Dave Patton said afterwards. We didn't move or get things done.</p>
        <p>Hendrickson led the Bear scoring with 26 points, while Thurston had 21 and Turner had 13. Edwards paced the Bucs with 17, while Hunt had 13 and Lee had 12. Buzzy Braman added 10, The game was the final regular season road trip tor the J, Bucs They return home" Saturday to face Patton's old school. Georgia Southern.</p>
        <p>ECU</p>
        <p>Braman</p>
        <p>Garner</p>
        <p>Crosby</p>
        <p>Dineen</p>
        <p>Lee</p>
        <p>A Edwards Hunt T.Edwards Hartley Henkel</p>
        <p>1 t Mercer 0 10 Brown</p>
        <p>0 6 Thruston 0 2 Hend'son</p>
        <p>0 2 Everette</p>
        <p>2 12 Mock</p>
        <p>8 1 17 Whitney</p>
        <p>1 13 Shaw</p>
        <p>2 6 Turner 0 0 Reese 0 0 Fiche</p>
        <p>Skinner Linville 6 68 TOTALS</p>
        <p>f </p>
        <p>1 5 1 21 3 26</p>
        <p>0 0 0 0 1 13 0 8</p>
        <p>0 0 1 1 0 0 6 86</p>
        <p>East Caroline Mercer</p>
        <p>25 }3-a 42 44-86</p>
        <p>Bucettes Top Old Dominion</p>
        <p>East Carolina Universitys womens basketball team returned to the victory circle last night, holding off Old Dominion, 81-75.</p>
        <p>The game was tight most of the way, with the lead changing hands on several occasions. Old Dominion pushed out early, taking a four point lead. With 12:52 left in the first half, the Lady Monarchs held an 11-7 lead.</p>
        <p>But the Bucettes got hot and pushed into a 16-15 lead, then inched out to hold a five-point edge several times in the half. They held that margin, 38-33, at the end of the period.</p>
        <p>In the second half. Old Dominion pul on a rally, and pushed back into a 41-39 lead with 17 minutes left to play. They again moved out by four points, 4541.</p>
        <p>East Carolina came back once more, however, and with 14:45 left, the Bucettes pushed back up, 4745, and were never caught again. During the time remaining, they built up as</p>
        <p>much as a nine point lead before another Old Dominion thrust cut the score back. OD was never able to tie it up, as the Lady Pirates edged back to their final six point edge.</p>
        <p>Debbie Freeman led the Pirate scoring with 26 points, while Gail Kerbaugh added 24 and Rosie Thompson had 10. Old Dominions Yvette Baggett led all the scoring with 35 points, while Debbie Richard had 12.</p>
        <p>Freeman also led the Pirate rebounding with 12 East Carolina travels to Campbell on Thursday lor a 6 p.m. game.</p>
        <p>Old DominionAbrshein 9, Beggait 35, Burgun 6. Gardy 6- Lampert 5, Richard 12. Walden 2, Larry.</p>
        <p>East carolina-Chamblee 4, Freeman 26, Garrison 6. Horne 3, Kerbaugn 24, Manning 8, Thompson 10, Dail. Ross. Swenholt Old Dominion  )|  427}</p>
        <p>East Carolina  18  41-11</p>
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        <p>lThe Daily RrilectOf. GreenvlUe, N.C.Wednesday, February 18. 1*78Last Second Shot Sinks Rose, 52-50</p>
        <p>By WOODY PEELE Reflector Sports Editor RED OAK-WiUie Williams flung in a 40-foot desperation shot at the buzzer last night to hand snake-bit Rose High School a 52-50 deafeat at the hands of Northern Nash.</p>
        <p>The loss insured the Rampants of a last place finish in the</p>
        <p>Division I standings. Although they couid still tie for fifth place by winning their last twoand having Northern Nash lose its final twothey would still be seeded sixth in the playoffs now.</p>
        <p>Rose is now 2-15 overall and 0-8 in Division I play.</p>
        <p>The Rampants had the chance to pull the victory out just</p>
        <p>seconds earlier, Iwt they were too impatient and took a bad shot. Northern got the rebound and called time out. Although they, too, didnt work it in, the desperation shot hit nothing but the nets as it swished through.</p>
        <p>Rose, up by one at the start of the final period, 42-41, added five points to that on a jumper by</p>
        <p>Derek Brewington and a three-point play by Curtis Keys, and appeared headed for their first league win.</p>
        <p>But after Northern got one basket, two straight turnovers gave the Knights another bucket and two free throws and a 47-47 tie.</p>
        <p>Mike Brewington put Rose</p>
        <p>back up with a charity shot, but Swinson Wiggins tied it up, also at the line. Both teams then missed chances both from the floor and from the line before David Battle hit to put Northern up, 50-48. Just seconds later, however, Brewington tied it up with two at the line.</p>
        <p>Northern went into a stall for</p>
        <p>North Pitt Slips By Jaguars</p>
        <p>By CHIP LAMBETH Reflector Sports Writer</p>
        <p>BETHELKenneth  Rober</p>
        <p>sons free throws with 26 seconds left to play gave North Pitt the points it needed to preserve a 53-50 win over a tenacious Farm-ville Central team last night.</p>
        <p>Jesse Harris added two more free throws with one second on the clock for the final three point margin but it was Robersons shot that made the'difference in a rock-em, sock-'em battle that saw both teams take leads, lose them and gain them right back. It was also the second win of the</p>
        <p>night over Farmville Central teams for the Panthers.</p>
        <p>In the first game. North Pitts Baby Panthers bopped FC, 64-55. But in the second game, North Pitt's Orange Machine was stalled by the Lady Jags, 48-41 in a game almost as exciting as the boys' contest.</p>
        <p>It took a fourth quarter rally for the Lady Jaguars to beat North Pitt. Farmville Central saw eight and nine-point leads evaporate to nothing in the third quarter. Wanda Phillips got FC back in the lead with three middle-of-the-period buckets and the Lady Jags never trailed</p>
        <p>again.</p>
        <p>Farmville Central got the opening lead with Diane Barretts free throw but that started the lead changing hands faster than money at a cock fight.</p>
        <p>Farmville Central ended up with it at the end of the first period, 11-8.</p>
        <p>The Lady Jags got three buckets, one from Phillips and two from Jennifer Counterman for a 19-10 lead, and the difference remained at halftime, 25-16.</p>
        <p>North Pitt had the upper hand</p>
        <p>Louisville Struggles Lowly Tulsa, 98-90</p>
        <p>By</p>
        <p>By MIKE CLARK AP Sports Writer LOUISVILLE (AP)  The Louisville Cardinals celebrated their return to the Top 20 by pulling the same shenanigans that last month cost them a spot among the nations college basketball elite.</p>
        <p>The 19th-ranked Cardinals, just short of miserable in the first half, needed some halftime psychology by Coach Denny Crum, a couple of lucky bounces and an overtime to down 16-time loser Tulsa 98-90 Tuesday night.</p>
        <p>In the end, Louisville won its nth straight game and boosted its record to 18-4 because 6-11 center Ricky Gallon took Crums hint to heart. Limited to two layups and no rebounds in the first half. Gallon exploded for 21 points and six</p>
        <p>rebounds in the second half.</p>
        <p>"Coach was waiting for us (in the locker room), said Gallon of the halftime showdown. All he said was, Im through with it, and then walked out of the locker room and shut the door.</p>
        <p>That had a great effect on me," added Gallon with a sheepish grin.</p>
        <p>With an inspired Gallon taking control underneath, Louisville moved from a 40-31 half-time deficit into a 62-62 tie with 9:09 left in regulation. The Cards led by as many as four points down the stretch, but Tulsa fought back on the scoring of Dan OLeary, who finished with 19 points.</p>
        <p>The Golden Hurricanes had a chance to win the game in the final seconds, but Tom Vincent had two of three free throws</p>
        <p>Scoreboard</p>
        <p>'A</p>
        <p>Pro</p>
        <p>ftv</p>
        <p>Bookotboll At A Oloneo Tho ASMClotod pro</p>
        <p>NBA</p>
        <p>lastam</p>
        <p>Conference</p>
        <p>Atlantic</p>
        <p>Division</p>
        <p>W L Pet. OB</p>
        <p>Boston</p>
        <p>34 14</p>
        <p>.492 </p>
        <p>Buffalo</p>
        <p>34 33</p>
        <p>.594 4Vi</p>
        <p>Phllphia</p>
        <p>33 24</p>
        <p>.579 5V</p>
        <p>New York</p>
        <p>28 30</p>
        <p>.483 11</p>
        <p>Control</p>
        <p>Divisin</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>33 22</p>
        <p>.400 </p>
        <p>Washington</p>
        <p>33 23</p>
        <p>.589 4</p>
        <p>houston</p>
        <p>24 27</p>
        <p>.491 6</p>
        <p>N. Or leans</p>
        <p>25 29</p>
        <p>.443 7Vj</p>
        <p>Atlanta</p>
        <p>24 31</p>
        <p>.456 8</p>
        <p>Westarn</p>
        <p>Conference</p>
        <p>Midwest</p>
        <p>Division</p>
        <p>Milwaukee</p>
        <p>34 33</p>
        <p>.421 </p>
        <p>Detroit</p>
        <p>30 33</p>
        <p>.377 2</p>
        <p>K.C.</p>
        <p>20 34</p>
        <p>.357 JV2</p>
        <p>Chicago</p>
        <p>17 38</p>
        <p>.309 6</p>
        <p>Pacific</p>
        <p>DIvlsien</p>
        <p>G.State</p>
        <p>40 15</p>
        <p>.727 </p>
        <p>L.A.</p>
        <p>29 38</p>
        <p>.509 12</p>
        <p>Seattle</p>
        <p>27 29</p>
        <p>.482 13V^</p>
        <p>Phoenix</p>
        <p>33 29</p>
        <p>.442 ^5'/a</p>
        <p>Portland</p>
        <p>24 32</p>
        <p>.429 14W</p>
        <p>Tuesday's Results</p>
        <p>Buffalo 114,</p>
        <p>Portland l</p>
        <p>113</p>
        <p>Goldtn State</p>
        <p>104, New York</p>
        <p>94</p>
        <p>Cleveland 113, Atlanta</p>
        <p>92</p>
        <p>Los Angeles</p>
        <p>115, New</p>
        <p>Orleans</p>
        <p>Thurodoy'i Oomo Atlonta at Buffalo Toronto of Plttburgh</p>
        <p>Phoonix 111, OT 125, Philadelphia</p>
        <p>113, Milwaukee</p>
        <p>101</p>
        <p>Chicago na,</p>
        <p>Kanas City 107</p>
        <p>Washington 112</p>
        <p>Wodnosday's Oamat</p>
        <p>LOS Angele - -at Houston Phoenix at Detroit Golden state vs. Kansas at Omaha Boston at Seattle</p>
        <p>Thursday's Oomo Portland at Cleveland</p>
        <p>N. Eng.</p>
        <p>CInci</p>
        <p>Cleveland</p>
        <p>IndapoMs  22 33 2 46 15 7 1 75</p>
        <p>west Division HOUlton  3&amp;lt; 0 0 72 2 191</p>
        <p>29 23 4 62 201 202 POOtnlx  2  22  6  6 2 209  1S6</p>
        <p>S.DIeoO  20  26  4  60 224  204</p>
        <p>Cinodlan DIvlilan Wlcinlpo  39 20 2 10 260 104</p>
        <p>Quebec  34  10  4  76 261  223</p>
        <p>Celoery  20  24  3  6 9 210  107</p>
        <p>Edmonton 21 35 4 46 204  254</p>
        <p>Toronto  15 36 5 35 230 204</p>
        <p>Tuiedav'i Riiuiti Winnipeg  4,  Edmonton  4, OT,</p>
        <p>tie</p>
        <p>Quebec 5. San Diego 2 VInneiota  6,  Toronto 3</p>
        <p>Houiton 4, New England 3 Wedneeday'i samei Calgary at Cleveland Phoenix at Winnipeg Thuriday'i Oamei New England at Indlanapolle Cleveland  at  Houtton</p>
        <p>bounce out before canning the one that tied matters 86-86 at the end of regulation.</p>
        <p>Louisville got its act together in the extra period. Gallon hit a layup, Rick Wilson scored on a rebound and a steal and reserve Danny Brown hit a pair of free throws for a safe 94-86 lead with 1:54 left.</p>
        <p>Was Louisville perhaps looking ahead to Saturdays nationally televised showdown here with second-ranked Marquette?</p>
        <p>We emphasized over and over again not to look ahead," said Crum. But Gallon had the Warriors on his mind just minutes after Tulsa had been dispatched.</p>
        <p>The place will be full and well be ready, said Gallon. Thats going to be a game and a half.</p>
        <p>Elsewhere in coUege basket-bali. Berry Davis scored 27 points as Texas A&amp;amp;M, playing without two ineligible players, held off Houston 94-80; Mike Russell and Grant Dues sparked a second-half rally to carry Texas Tech past Baylor 87-76; Maurice Cheeks and Melvin Jones teamed for 47 points to pace West Texas over North Texas State 96-87; Fairfield beat Long Island University 111-93 behind Mark Plefkas 30 points in a game disrupted by the death of a fan and Charlie</p>
        <p>in the third period and cut seven points off the lead. Ellen Dixon hit a hot spell for the Pant-HERS with 1:03 left in the period and her three outside buckets trimmed the lead to two. 33-31 going into the final quarter.</p>
        <p>Mabel James hit from the stripe to tie the game but Barretts bucket put the Lady Jags back up by two. A four-point play helped North Pitt see its first lead, 37-35, but Phillips retied the game on an assist from Counterman, 37-37. Phillips tapped in a rebound, hit from the iane and scored on a feed from Cindy Williams and that flurry all but finished the Pant-HERS off as they fell back 43-37.</p>
        <p>James and Forbes led the Pant-HERS with 13 each while Phillips 23 and Barretts 14 led the Lady Jaguars.</p>
        <p>North Pitts (?obby Deans said that playing smart basketbail and having a little luck made the difference last night. We were just lucky, he said. They have the best material in the conference. It was anybodys ball game.</p>
        <p>We played smart basketball at the end. I was really impressed with their big boy (Mitchell Foskey) and their guards. They all did a good job. Foskey proved to be a nuisance to the Panthers all night. Besides scoring 18 points, he had 10 rebounds, blocked nine shots and had two assists.</p>
        <p>And it was Foskey that got Farmville Central started helping Timmy Ward score to tie the game 2-2 after North Pitt went on top on Jesse Harriss field goal.</p>
        <p>Kino Farrow tapped in a shot with 5:28 left in the first frame for a 4-2 FC lead but two basket by Donnie Perkins put North Pitt right back on top.</p>
        <p>Farmville Central slipped back up by two but the Panthers reeied off six points in the space of two minjites to take a 12-8 lead and the Panther held the advantage at the end of the period, 14-12.</p>
        <p>Hie lead changed hands seven</p>
        <p>times in the second quarter with no one getting an edge by halftime; the score was tied 25-25.</p>
        <p>The tempo picked right back up in the third period and after see-sawing for half the period, the lead finally went briefly to the Jaguars as Foskey fed James Baker for a bucket and a 35-31 lead.</p>
        <p>North Pitt battled back to move ahead, 37-36 on Perkins baseline drive. North Pitt did not have the lead long as the Jags took it back. They led at the end of the period, 40-39.</p>
        <p>North Pitt reeled off three fast scores giving the Panthers a five-point, 45-40, lead. Foskey made a four-point play for the Jags narrowing the margin to 45-44 with 3:42 left but the Panthers managed to remain in the lead until Farmville Central threatened to get it inside in the final minute.</p>
        <p>North Pitt tried to spread things out hut with 40 seconds left, Harris overthrew Perkins in the corner turning the ball over. North Pitt got it right back as Farrow traveled with 33 seconds left. Roberson drew a foul from Ward with 26 seconds left and made the shots for the winning point.</p>
        <p>Walter Gorham cut the spread to one with a lay-up with :02 left but he fouled Harris on the inbounds play and the two shots by Harris iced the win.</p>
        <p>North Pitt was led by Perkins with 16, Virgil Pilgreen had 14 and Harris 12. Ward had 13 for Farmville Central. North Pitt also took the rebounding, 44-25.</p>
        <p>JV-North PIN 64, Fgrmvlllt CBltral 55 Din'S Oims Farmville Central-Barrett 14, Counterman 6, W. Phillips 23. Turnaga 3. Williams 2.</p>
        <p>North PittE. Dixon s, AAanning 13, Forbes 13, Barnes, Grimes. Wilkins, Brown.</p>
        <p>Farmville Central 11 14</p>
        <p>the next two minutes, and finally with 50 seconds left, they tried a shot but missed. Rose got the rebound, but promptly threw it out of bounds. Then, Brewington blocked another shot attempt to give the ball to the Rampants with plenty of time left.</p>
        <p>But they hurried it. shooting under in-essure with 13 seconds left, and that turned out to be the game.</p>
        <p>Rose hit only 19 of 57 shots from the floor, a poor 33 per cent. Northern, thanks to a 7-for-10 second period, hit 21 of 50, for 42 per cent.</p>
        <p>That was the main difference in the game. The rebounding went to Rose, 45-41, while there was only a difference of one in turnovers, 14 for Rose and 13 for Northern.</p>
        <p>Rose broke into an early lead, scoring the first six points, but Northern came back to take the lead at 9-8. The lead then changed hands five more times before Rose gained a 14-13 edge on a jumper by Keys to end the period.</p>
        <p>The second period stayed just as tight. Northern regained the lead at 17-16, but Rose took it right back on a three-point play by Donnie Shields. After twice tieing it. Northern regained the lead, and fought off two Rose ties for its biggest lead of the half, 28-25. on a jumper by Wiggins^ Northern held a 30-28 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The Knights hit the first four of the second half to up their lead to six, 3428, but Rose came back to run off 12 straight points and</p>
        <p>take a 42-36 edge. Brewington and Shields each had four in the string, while Greg Ebron had the other four. Northern trimmed it hack to just one, however, 42-41, as the final period was set to begin.</p>
        <p>And while Rose pulled away again, they couldnt hold it, and the Knights came back to win.</p>
        <p>Battle led the Northern scoring with 14, while Williams hit 12. Brewington led Rose with 15, while Keys had 11 and Shields, 10.</p>
        <p>Northern also won the junior varisty game, 69-62, insuring the win only in the final period. The Baby Knights led at the end of the first period, 16-9, but Rose came back to cut it to 34-33 after the second frame.</p>
        <p>The Rampant Cubs tied it up after three periods, 46-46, but never couid get the ball and the lead. Northern then pulled away</p>
        <p>late at the foul line and outhit | Rose, 23-16, to win it.</p>
        <p>Willie Lucas led Taybron and Ricky Hardy each had 10. Rose was led by Greg Guthrie and Anthony Bryant, both with 17, and Mike Joyner with 13.</p>
        <p>The Rampants travel to Wilson on Friday.</p>
        <p>JVMim</p>
        <p>RoH-Oultirli 17, Bryinl 17, Wllllami g. Joynw a Slltlglit, Owm 7. Brady Chagman 1 Crandall.</p>
        <p>Nortnarn Naili-eoona 1, Myrick 11. r Taylar ZLucaa 14,Harra aTayOron Taylor 4, Bunn 5, Hardy M. CSaak. Davit OXmn 2,</p>
        <p>RMS    M  13</p>
        <p>NtrthtntNMk  U  II  12  tSa</p>
        <p>RMt</p>
        <p>Ptillstro</p>
        <p>M.Brton</p>
        <p>Barbtr</p>
        <p>BsrnM</p>
        <p>KVS</p>
        <p>Ebron</p>
        <p>Shlsids</p>
        <p>GoMtts</p>
        <p>Pair</p>
        <p>D.Brton</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p>RM</p>
        <p>Varstty Dame</p>
        <p>f</p>
        <p>t N.Nash</p>
        <p>t</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>t 1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0 Bryant</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>8 </p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>7 15 Rlch-son</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>e i</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>D Williams</p>
        <p>5</p>
        <p>3 12 1</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4 S.Wiggins</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>s</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>11 Cona</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>8</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4 WKIte.</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>4 10 Earl</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1 :</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0 C.Pittman</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>8 *</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>0 L . Pittman</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2 Battle</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>a u</p>
        <p>T.Wiggins</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>Perry</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>0</p>
        <p>I -</p>
        <p>wells</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>If 12 SO TOTALS 21 10 52</p>
        <p>14 14</p>
        <p>13 17</p>
        <p>1 11-52</p>
        <p>Lakers Glide Past The Bears</p>
        <p>BEAR GRASS-Mattamus-keet took advantage of a cold Bear Grass first half and rolled to a 66-47 win over the Bears last night. The Lady Bears, however, came away with a win.</p>
        <p>The Bear Grass girls bashed Mattamuskeet, 53-19, as they poured it on in the first half. Bear Grass out hit Mattamuskeet, 13-5 in the first period and 19-8 in the second for</p>
        <p>Aurora Downs Jamesville Five</p>
        <p>a 32-13 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The Lady Bears cooled off in the third period taking it by 19-4 but finished with an 11-2 fourth period.</p>
        <p>Janet Hllliday had 14 and Lou Rawls 12 Tor the Lady Bears.</p>
        <p>Mattamuskeet jumped out to a 16-6 lead in the first boys quarter and took the second period, 17-6.</p>
        <p>Bear Grass began to play ball in the third period giving just a bucket to the Lakers, 14-12, and rallying for a 23-19 fourth but by then they were too late.</p>
        <p>Keys Benson, Roy Murray and Glenwood Mann each scored 11 for the Lakers, David Price had 12 for the Bears.</p>
        <p>)v-ttlt6mukttl 56. BMr Sw 46</p>
        <p>Norm pm PC</p>
        <p>Fields</p>
        <p>Edwards</p>
        <p>W, Gorham</p>
        <p>Ward</p>
        <p>BaKer</p>
        <p>Foskey</p>
        <p>Mayo</p>
        <p>Farrow</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>Boy's Oima f t I NP</p>
        <p>0 0 0 Harris</p>
        <p>2 0 4 Roberson</p>
        <p>1 1 3 Pilgreen</p>
        <p>6 1 13 Spencer</p>
        <p>2 3 4 Best</p>
        <p>7 4 16 Perkins 0 0 0 Council</p>
        <p>3 0 4 Bedsworth 21 8 50 TOTALS</p>
        <p> 15-48</p>
        <p>15 , 1641</p>
        <p>g  t</p>
        <p>5 2 12</p>
        <p>3 3 9</p>
        <p>4 2 14 0 0 0 0 0 0 8 0 16 0 0 0 1 0 2</p>
        <p>23 7 53</p>
        <p>Farmville Central North Pitt</p>
        <p>13 1]</p>
        <p>14 11</p>
        <p>WHA</p>
        <p>W L T Pts OF DA East Division</p>
        <p>24 27 5 57 184 189  .....</p>
        <p>25 31 1 51 212 344 Novaks SIX poiiits latc in the 2! 21 s 49 187 198  triggered  Marshall  past</p>
        <p>Roanoke 86-78.</p>
        <p>Plymouth Nips Willlamston</p>
        <p>JAMESVILLE  Aurora took three games from Jamesville last night. Aurora won the boys game, 76-61, the girls by 49-43, and the JV by 28-25.</p>
        <p>In the girls contest, Aurora opened up a 14-8 lead after one period and upped that to 27-15 at the half. The Lady Bullets cut it back to 37-28 after the third, but their 15-12 rally in the final period wasnt enough.</p>
        <p>Daphne Horne led Aurora with</p>
        <p>14, while Velma Tyre had 10. Joyce Manning led Jamesville with 16 and Tempe Modlin had</p>
        <p>15.</p>
        <p>In the boys game, Jamesville took a 15-12 lead after one</p>
        <p>JV-Aurora It, JamMvllli 28.</p>
        <p>OlrlxaapM Aurora-Tyr 10, Potum 8. 0yiwr A Uvictorla 4, Horn# 1A McOonalo 7, Dudloy, HontycuH, Cradle, Warri.</p>
        <p>Jam44vlll4-T, TMdlln U, L. IWodlln 3, Jomts 2, Martin A AXanmng lA SHton, D8VI8, MoOlty, Bwbtr, K. HardlHm.</p>
        <p>14 12 18 12-89 8 2 II 1841</p>
        <p>BoysOama</p>
        <p>period, but couldnt hold it. Aurora outhit them, 25-16, and took a 37-31 halftime lead, Aurora then opened that up to 60-46 after three periods and added a point to that in the final period.</p>
        <p>Keith Holmes and Irvin Chapman each had 19 to lead Aurora, while William Bell had 12 and Alphonse Moore had 10. Jerry Ange led the Bullets with 17 while Ricky Whitehurst added 14.</p>
        <p>Jamesville travel to Bear Grass on Friday.</p>
        <p>WrlNOaiM M4tl4mulkt-A. APurray A C8r6win I iMiltakM 4. Wbod 1, L. Murrey l, Fonviilt i, C*hoon I T. Msrtn. D. Mnn. Mck*.</p>
        <p>Bwr GrsM-j. Holitfsy 14. K. Rawls l Hardin J. L. Rawls 12, Taylor 6, Rogarson 4. Peaks Z Crawford 3. Moell i.v, Holliday 5. Martamuskett  5  8  4  3-19</p>
        <p>BearOrau  13  19  18  II-S3</p>
        <p>ay's Dama MKeat  t  f  t  BD    f  I</p>
        <p>Benson  5  1  11  Price  6  0  12</p>
        <p>Murray  5  1  11  Peaks  2  2</p>
        <p>Cunningham 8  1  17  Crawford 3</p>
        <p>Merritt Shelton Douglas Mann Grey Thomas Spencer Beckwith TOTALS Matiamuskeef Bear Grass</p>
        <p>0 4 Cratt 0 4 je .wynn 0 2 Harrisdn</p>
        <p>3 11 Bailey 0 4 cowan</p>
        <p>0 2 Lawrence 0 0 Ju.Wynn 0 0 Brown</p>
        <p>4 44 TOTALS</p>
        <p>14 17 4  4</p>
        <p>Leaders Stay Among Unbeaten</p>
        <p>Jamesville</p>
        <p>ABA</p>
        <p>W L Pet. OB</p>
        <p>40 13 .755 </p>
        <p>34 21 .418 7 32 21 .604 8 30 34 .534 11 29 28 . 509 1 3 34 32 .448 ^6'/^ 9 44 .164 32 Result Virginia 94</p>
        <p>Denver New York San Anton Kentucky Indiana S. Louis Virginia</p>
        <p>Tuesday's</p>
        <p>St. Louis 112,</p>
        <p>Wsdaesday's Dames</p>
        <p>St. LOuis at Kentucky</p>
        <p>New York at  indiana</p>
        <p>San Antonio at Denver Thursday's OAMRS</p>
        <p>Kentucky vs. Virginia  at Nor</p>
        <p>folk</p>
        <p>Indiana at Denver</p>
        <p>Pro Hockey  At A Glance</p>
        <p>v The Aaseciatad  Press</p>
        <p>NHL</p>
        <p>Campbell Conftrtnca Patrick  Division</p>
        <p>W L T Pts OF  DA</p>
        <p>P*&amp;gt;l'Pbla  34 10 11 83 249  154</p>
        <p>NY island 29 14 12  70 217 140</p>
        <p>Atlanta NY Rangers</p>
        <p>Smytha</p>
        <p>Chicago  24 17 14  44  174  141</p>
        <p>Vancvr  23 23 11  57  189  192</p>
        <p>S.LOols  22 27 8  52  170  202</p>
        <p>Inn-  14  37  4  34  138  205</p>
        <p>K C.  12  38  7  31  137  244</p>
        <p>wales  Cenferenca</p>
        <p>Nerrls Division Montraal  40 9 9 89 241 1 25</p>
        <p>L.Angtlts  30 25 5 45 199 1 99</p>
        <p>24 25 9  57  236  224</p>
        <p>19 32 7  45  151  221</p>
        <p>Washn.  4  44  7  19  159  293</p>
        <p>Adams Divislan Boston  36  n  9  II  324  142</p>
        <p>Buffalo  32  16  9  73  239  149</p>
        <p>Toronto  24  22  11  59  201  194</p>
        <p>Cilif.  20  31  7  47  179  200</p>
        <p>Tuesday's  Results</p>
        <p>New york  Rangers  3,  New</p>
        <p>York islanders  1</p>
        <p>Philadelphia 2. Vancouver 2. tie</p>
        <p>Pittsburgh  4.  Kansas City 1</p>
        <p>Los Angelas  2, Minnesota  1</p>
        <p>Wednesday's Damas Washington at New York Rangers</p>
        <p>New York  Islanders  at  De</p>
        <p>trolt</p>
        <p>Montreal at Toronto St. Louis  at  Los Angeles</p>
        <p>Buffalo at Chicago Minnesota  at  California</p>
        <p>Boston at  Kansas City</p>
        <p>Philadtiphia at Vancouver</p>
        <p>^jorfs</p>
        <p>Briek</p>
        <p>By The Associated Press MOSCOW, Idaho (AP) -Former Washington State University offensive coordinator John Jack Elway has been added to the University of Idaho football coaching staff. Athletic Director Leon G. Green announced Tuesday.</p>
        <p>The 44-year-old Hoquiam, Wash., native succeeds Dennis Erickson, who left in December to join former Washington State coaph Jim Sweeney, now head man at Fresno State.</p>
        <p>Elway spent the last four years at Washington State, where he graduated in 1953. He Montana and head coach at Grays Harbor Community (College at Aberdeen, Wash., and Port Angeles High School, Port Angeles, Wash.</p>
        <p>18 78 8 60 196 1 78</p>
        <p>aZ.n  as been an assistant at</p>
        <p>Lemon Is Not There</p>
        <p>DURHAM (AP) - Meadow-lark Lemon of Wilmington was unable to attend Tuesday nights dinner at which he and three others were inducted into the North Carolina Sports Hall of Fame. The Harlem Globetrotters basketball team, of which he has been a mainstay for 20 years, were playing in New Yorks Madison Square Garden.</p>
        <p>But the others, Vic Bubas, Dr. Leroy Walker and Buddy Lewis were at the 13th annual Induction dinner.</p>
        <p>Duke basketbail teams coached by Bubas won four Atlantic Coast Conference titles in his 10 years as head coach. He left coaching after the 1969 season to take an administrative job at Duke, where he is now vice president for community relations.</p>
        <p>Dr. Walker, of North Carolina Central University in Durham, is head track coach of the 1976 U.S. Olympic team. He has developed outstanding trackmen at the university, and has helped bring international track meets to the Durham area, Lewis, from Gastonia, batted .297 over his 11 years as a third baseman and outfielder for the old Washington Senators baseball team. He was on two All-Star teams.</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH - Williamston High School and Plymouth were involved in a couple of heart-stoppers last night, with the net result a split. Williamston won the girls game, 41-40, while Plymouth took the boys by 70-69.</p>
        <p>The Tigerettes preserved their unbeaten string by pulling out the slim victory. Plymouth eased into a 12-10 lead in the opening period, but Williamston came back to outhit them, 15-8, in the second and take a 25-20 halftime lead.</p>
        <p>The Tigerettes held Plymouth off in the third quarter, 8-6, and built their lead to 33-26. But in the final period, Plymouth put on a run at Williamston, coming back to within one, but although they had a chance to go ahead, they never did.</p>
        <p>Nancy Williams led Williamston with 14, while Bet Brandon added 12. Miriam Davis led Plymouth with 23.</p>
        <p>In the boys game, it was much the same. Williamston jumped out to a 20-14 lead in the first period, but Plymouth came roaring back, 19-11, to take a 33-31 lead at the half.</p>
        <p>Williamston again gained the lead in the third period, outhitting Plymouth, 19-14, to</p>
        <p>push ahead, 50-47. Plymouth pushed back out into the lead, but Dinu Lloyd hit two free throws, then stole the ball for a basket to tie the score, then called for a time out before the ball was put back into play.</p>
        <p>The official denied the time out, however, and when Williamston Coach John Hardison asked why, he was slapped with a technical with one second left. William Barnes hit the shot to give Plymouth the win.</p>
        <p>Barnes led the Plymouth scoring with 21 points, while James Brown had 20 and Ronnie Cherry had 10. Barry Wallace led Williamston with 25, while Dwayne Bell had 16 and Butch Davis had 10.</p>
        <p>Williamston goes to Tarboro on Friday,</p>
        <p>JV - Plymoulti 8J, WIIIHmilMi S3.</p>
        <p>oirliaamt Williamston  Williams u, Sharp i, Bannatt 4, Branstoo 12, Culliphar t Taylor 4, Llllay 2, Hardison.</p>
        <p>Plymouth  Davis 9, Fuller % M, Davis 23. Hyman 4. A. Davis 2. S. Hyman, Williamston  i  u   141</p>
        <p>Holmes</p>
        <p>Bell</p>
        <p>Chapman</p>
        <p>AMoore</p>
        <p>Speight</p>
        <p>SMoore</p>
        <p>Fuller</p>
        <p>DAtoore</p>
        <p>Peaks</p>
        <p>PA^e</p>
        <p>Barber</p>
        <p>T Moore</p>
        <p>EAtoore</p>
        <p>Reese</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p>Avrora</p>
        <p>Jamesville</p>
        <p> i t jamMvllie 5 9 19 AAoe</p>
        <p>0 12 Davis 3 19 Stone  10 VMtlfst 0 4 Williams 0 4 Pierce 0 2 Hopkins 0 4 Home 0 2 Armond</p>
        <p>0 0 Grooms 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0</p>
        <p>f t 5 17 I 8</p>
        <p>1  7</p>
        <p>2  14 1 5</p>
        <p>3  7 0 2 0 0 0 0 1 1</p>
        <p>32 12 74 TOTALS 20 21 41 12 25 33 1474 IS 14 II 15-41</p>
        <p>PlymovtB</p>
        <p>WImslon</p>
        <p>Wallace</p>
        <p>Davis</p>
        <p>Hodges</p>
        <p>Jones</p>
        <p>B9II</p>
        <p>Lloyd</p>
        <p>Brown</p>
        <p>Mason</p>
        <p>TOTALS</p>
        <p>WflHamsten</p>
        <p>PiymevHi</p>
        <p>13 8 4 1448</p>
        <p>Boy's Dame g I t piymoutti</p>
        <p>12 I 25 Styon 4 3 10 BarnM</p>
        <p>2 0 4 Cherry</p>
        <p>3 1 5 Simpson I 0 14 Brown</p>
        <p>1 3 5 Harris</p>
        <p>2 0 4 Neptune 0 0 0</p>
        <p>31 7 49 TOTALS</p>
        <p>f t 1 5</p>
        <p>3  21</p>
        <p>4  10 0 8 4 20 0 4 0 0</p>
        <p>Aycock ]n Seventh Win</p>
        <p>E.B. Aycock Junior High School got back on the winning track with a 51-48 victory over Goldsboro yesterday.</p>
        <p>Aycock pushed into a 10-4 lead in the opening period, then matched Goldsboro, 14-14, in the second. That left Aycock up, 24-18, at the half.</p>
        <p>Goldsboro rallied, 18-15, to cut the lead to 39-36, in the third period, but Aycock let them get no closer, as each hit 12 paints in the flnal period.</p>
        <p>Ronnie Chapman led Aycock with 25 points. Howell and Battle each had 12 for Goldsboro.</p>
        <p>Aycock, now 7-5, travels to Southern Nash on Friday. Goldsboro  4 14 18 1248</p>
        <p>E.B. Aycock 10 14 IS 1251</p>
        <p>Davis Wildcats and Union Carbide remained unbeaten in their respective divisions of the Adult Basketball Leagues Class 2-A last night.</p>
        <p>In the opening game at Elm Street, Big Value Drugs took a 54-48 win over Wachovia, overcoming a 25-23 halftime deficit. John Taylor led Big Value with 16, while Curt Creech had 12. Leon Johnson led Wachovia with 13, while Jim Ellis had 10.</p>
        <p>In the second game, Davis Wildcats downed Pitt Tech, 79-75. Davis held a 35-27 halftime lead. Cleveland Johnson led Davis with 28, while Bobby Short had 13, Larry Brady and Darnell Speight each had 11 and Larry Worthington had 10. Ron Taylor led Pitt Tech with 20, while A. J. Tyson had 14, and Dan Nelson, David Tyson and Harold Stevenson each had 12.</p>
        <p>Allen Dean took a 5846 win over Mans Room, building from a 31-20 halftime lead. Terry Heire led Allen Dean with 22, with Charles Wynne adding 11 and Frank Ligon, 10. Ray</p>
        <p>Midget Play</p>
        <p>Cougars  4  4 3 3-14</p>
        <p>West Green. 15 12 14 9-50 High scorers:  CBilly</p>
        <p>Grimes 8; WGCarlton Smith 12.</p>
        <p>McLawhorn and Jeff Worthington each had 10 to pace Mans Room.</p>
        <p>In the first game at South Greenville, the Henrahan Hawgs look a 77-72 win over Grady-White. The Hawgs led at the half, 4541. Phil Duffy led the Hawgs with 23, while Billy Edwards had 14, Jesse Smith had 12, and Allen Jackson and Mike Jackson each had 10. Bobby Jones led Grady-White with 29, and Frank Brown had 13 and Ronald Battle, 12.</p>
        <p>Union Carbide took a 61-57 win over Stewarts Sandwiches in the second game, UNC held a 40-26 lead at intermission. Tommy Roach led the UNC scaring with IB, as Garland Warren added 12, Jimmy Sutton, 11, and Phil Page, 10. For Stewarts, Cotton Nicholson had 14 and Charles Meeks and Bill Kuykendall each had 10.</p>
        <p>The final game saw the Moose take a 77-70 win over Darryls. Moose led, 36-27 at the half. Ed Coburn and Bob Paulsen each had 24 and Rick Eason had 15 for the Moose. Lin Staton had 26 and George King, 10. for Darryls.</p>
        <p>Rijgai Shoi Repair and Shoe Store</p>
        <p>Wi Ripair All Uillitr Ooodt IHW.4HlSt.</p>
        <p>7JI4J04</p>
        <p>a II 19 19-69 1619 14 n-a</p>
        <p>CHARLOTTE, N.C. (AP) -Mrs. John L. Brickels, 86, of Boynton Beach, Fla., mother of Bo Brickels, Davidson College basketball coach, died in a Charlotte Hospital Tuesday.</p>
        <p>She had become ill while visiting him in nearby Davidson, N.C., last month.</p>
        <p>Her late husband had been basketball coach at West Virginia and athletic director at Miami of Ohio.</p>
        <p>Burial is expected to be Friday in Oxford, Ohio.</p>
        <p> I</p>
        <p>"All Snapper mowers meet</p>
        <p>A.N.S.I. safety</p>
        <p>specifications.</p>
        <p>Clark &amp;amp; Co.</p>
        <p>Memorial Dr., Greenville 756-2SS7</p>
        <p>Have You Missed Your Daily Reflector?</p>
        <p>First Call Your Independent Carrier. If You Are Unable To Reach Him Call The Daily Reflector</p>
        <p>752-3952</p>
        <p>Between 4:00 And 6:30 P.M. Weekdays And 8 'Til 9 A.M. On Sundays.</p>
        <p>y/estem SizzUn Steak Houte</p>
        <p>TH6 XXMLT XTIAK HOUH</p>
        <p>FEATWIMt</p>
        <p>IS SI2Z1M vmheties of</p>
        <p>.S. CHOICE HF m IMIir</p>
        <p>THURSDAY LUNCH &amp;amp; DINNER SPECIAL</p>
        <p>6% 0z6 Broilod</p>
        <p>Sirloin Tips 179</p>
        <p>Served with Bell Peimrs &amp;amp; Onions,</p>
        <p>Kino Baked Potato, Hot Toast with Melted Butter.</p>
        <p>We know you only havean hour for lunch; that's why we Hurry I</p>
        <p>-OPEM-</p>
        <p>n A.AA tolO P.M. Sunday thru Thursday, 11 A.M. toll P.M. Friday a Saturday.</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0013" />
        <p>SENSITIVE TRACKING EQUIPMENT ON KWAJALEIN missile range Is shown in this aerial</p>
        <p>photo. As part of detente, some of the installation is being destroyed. (UPI Photo)</p>
        <p>Detente Slowly Neutralizing Missile Range At Kwa|alein</p>
        <p>By ROBERT C. MILLER</p>
        <p>KWAJALEIN ATOLL (UPI)  Acre for acre this mid-Pacic atoll is the most expensive, precious and utilit-ized piece of coral real estate ever acquired by the United States,</p>
        <p>As part of the new detente with Russia, thousands of dollars have been spent on this remote central Pacific atoll to destroy some of the multimillion dollar installation of the Kwajalein missile range where America perfected its defense against atomic attack.</p>
        <p>The original purchase price of Kwajalein was paid in the blood and billions of World War</p>
        <p>II. At least 195 Marines of the Fourth Division and 289 men and officers of the Army's Seventh Division died in capturing the 95-island atoll from the 6,000 Japanese defenders during the first week of Febniury 1944.</p>
        <p>The bones of some of the Japanese defenders are still being uncovered by missile range workers on construction jobs around the 75-mile lagoon which makes Kwajalein the world's biggest atoll. Unlike the other captured Pacific Islands that were allowed to stagnate into unproductive, burdensome American responsibilities. Kwajalein has been used as a testing ground for, or a deterrent against. World War</p>
        <p>III. Some of the first American spending on Kwaj came during the atomic and hydrogen tests at Ehiwetok some 500 miles to the northwest where the U.S. detonated 59 nuclear device. Kwajalein was the rear echelon area and relay point for the tests.</p>
        <p>For the past decade Kwaja-iein has been the site of the :U.S. intercontinental ballistic missile tests. Here America's defense against a nuclear attack was developed and proved. Here th atomic offensive weapons fired with dummy warheads were launched in California and targeted to hit inside the 180-foot-deep lagoon. The shattered parts were retrieved for diagnostic analysis that led to the perfection of todays offensive and defensive atomic arsenal.</p>
        <p>During the past fiscal year, some $76 million was spent by the Kwajalein Missile Range which centers around the atoll. Rarely during the post war years has less than $50 million been spent each year, making Kwajalein the most advanced ballistic missile research and development monitoring center in the world.</p>
        <p>The staggering costs of moving construction materials to this atoll  whose closest</p>
        <p>port is 2,500 miles away  makes every foot of timber; sack of cement and pound of steel valuable.</p>
        <p>Harbors had to be dredged, land filled, homes and accommodation built for the scientists, technicians and workers needed first to construct the facilities, then to operate them. Skills were recruited from all over America to build and</p>
        <p>Honor Lists At N. Pitt</p>
        <p>The following students received honor roll and principals list honors at North Pitt High School for the third grading pwiod.</p>
        <p>Honor Roll: Tina Kamer, ninth grade; Bentley Jones, and Boyce Johnson, eleventh grade; Elaine Bunch, Nora Crawford, Edward Malloy, Patricia Lynn Morris, Martha Perkins, Mitchell Smith, Deborah Wynne and Joyce Whisenant, Twelfth grade.</p>
        <p>Principals List: Cynthia Barnes, Angela Bowers. William Keith Briley, Kathy Lynette Chauncey, Russell Clift. Jason Garris, Paula Morris, Susan Spain, Glenda Stancill, and Sandra Stancill, ninth grade;</p>
        <p>Oystal Allen, Mary Lynn Gray, Teresa Ellen Keel, Samuel Mayo, and Steve Whitehurst, tenth grade; Hunter Edwards, Nancy Fuchs, Teresa Moore, Teresa Morris, and Nannie Shaw, eleventh grade;</p>
        <p>Marsha Bell, Alice Brown, Diane Brown, Edward Daniel, Florida Daniels, Deborah Everette, Geneva Holder, Paul James, Rhonda Nichols, Cindy Singleton,</p>
        <p>Mary Smith, Jimmie Sue Spain Yvonne Tyson, Gayann Wallace and Glenett Ward, twelfth grade.</p>
        <p>Spending Will Be 'Selective'</p>
        <p>NEW YORK (UPI) - Consumer spending will make a strong showing this year but will be much more selective than in the past, according to Audits and Surveys Inc., a marketing research organita-tion. It says this year will see a quick return to former spending levels and adds that the recession not only made consumers postpone buying of major purchases but also has made them much more conscious of quality.</p>
        <p>operate the range with its complex radars, giant screens, massive cameras and tracking devices. Launching pads, silos and storage bins required square miles of concrete, thousands of tons of steel and more miles of conduit and cable.</p>
        <p>On Kwajalein is a photolab as complete as any housed in a Hollywood studio. The laboratories have hundreds of precision insuuments calibrated to the proverbial gnats eyelash, and in one is a mammoth granite slab weighing tons that was brought all the way from the mainland for use as a workbench for the delicate instruments used on the range. All are housed in airconditioned soundproofed buildings, some of them blast-proofed by four-foot thick concrete walls.</p>
        <p>Three-mile-long Kawajalein Island is nearly a third larger than when it was captured by the Americans. Hundreds of air-conditioned trailers were imported as temporary housing for the more than 5,000 people who populated the coral islands at the hight of the ICBM program.</p>
        <p>Many of the million-dollar structures  including a giant radar built with walls thick enough to stand an atomic hlast  are now empty monuments to advancing technology marking milestones of past achievements. Others, like the missile launching pads and cells, are being deliberately destroyed as a result of SALT talks and detente with Russia whereby the two countries agree to neutralise specific installations in their countries.</p>
        <p>The launching cell in Kwaj that has been filled with debris and cemented over was used in some of the early tests during which the entire population of the atoll took cover during a firing. "Those were known as the shake, rattle and roll launches, explained one of the Global Associate managers who has been on the island for years. The noise was deafening and the whole island shook when the missiles were fired.</p>
        <p>In contrast to the hundreds of miles encompassed in other missile ranges such as White</p>
        <p>Sands, New Mexico, and Woomera in Australia, Kwajalein has only a few square miles of land where the tracking installations are housed and from which the intercept missiles are launched.</p>
        <p>A KMR spokesman said all the missiles fired from California had fallen into the lagoon or the ocean and there had never been any injuries received from off-target landings. He said one missile was exploded high above the atoll as a safety precaution. But as all personnel were under cover, there were no injuries.</p>
        <p>The logistics on Kwajalein are undoubtedly the most difficult and complicated of any peacetime defense operation. An entire town and scientific center had to be built on a barren atoll that was without a drop of water, and equidistant from Honolulu, Manila and Tokyo.</p>
        <p>Streets were laid, sewers and utilities installed and a 15 milln gallon rainwater catchment system design^ using the airport runway area to supply the communitys water needs.</p>
        <p>Transient quarters, swimming pools, residences and laboratories were built. Stores and clubs followed, and on some islands in the atoll firing pits were dug, radars installed and the monitoring facilities completed. Millions and more millions were poured into the island complex until today it is a world wonder in sophisticated electronics gear that is so necessary in the weaponry of modern warfare.</p>
        <p>All Kwajs beauty, its suburban way of life, bridge clubs, amateur theatricals. South Seas living and modern amenities makes it easy to forget the prime reason for its existence: perfection of offenfive and defensive weapons. Every penny spent on the atoll is budgeted for one goal: the eventual perfection of the most modern, lethal, efficient and foolproof system of delivering Americas nuclear bombs on America's enemies and preventing those enemies from atomizing millions of Americans.</p>
        <p>PARTY A BANQUET GOODS - SICKROOM SUPPLIES CAMPING A SPORTING EQUIPMENT- EXERCISE EQUIPMENT - HOUSEHOLD SUPPLIES - GARDEN A YARD EQUIPMENT - POWER TOOLS - ALL TYPES.</p>
        <p>756-3862</p>
        <p>42) Gmavillc Bhd. Gnnvillc, N. C.</p>
        <p>Washington Is ; Campers'Choice</p>
        <p>; NEW YORK (UPI) - The J- most popular destination lor &amp;gt; Bicentennial year campers will - be Washington, D.C., according I. to a survey by Kampgrounds of : America. The KOA poll showed : 30 per cent of thoae families ; - who already have made Bicen-tennial travel plans indicated ; Washington is the primary t; destination. Williamaburg, Vs., is the choice of 14 per cent, and Boston and PhUadelphla eight and five per cent respectively.</p>
        <p>Seasonal Help Wanted</p>
        <p>Will begin work April 1, 1976. Most all ages acceptable. Excellent pay and good working conditions. Apply now for position.</p>
        <p>Contact Ralph C. Tucker Jr.</p>
        <p>756-4126 or 753-2140</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>The Dally Reflector, GreenvlUe, N.C.Wednesday, February |g. 197613</p>
        <p>GEORGE</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON</p>
        <p>SPECIALS</p>
        <p>Josllt-SUM</p>
        <p>FURNITURE</p>
        <p>.0' WIJI I* llUif Clllttvilli *</p>
        <p>List  Price  ^395.00  Double pedestai dining room table........</p>
        <p>List  Price  %0.00  Spindle back chair with upholstered seat</p>
        <p>List  Price  HI5.00  Ladder back chairs with cane seat.......</p>
        <p>List  Price  *52.00  Windsor oak chairs.............................</p>
        <p>List  Price  *130.00  Oak dining room table with formica top</p>
        <p>List Price *52.50 Solid maple mates chairs.....................</p>
        <p>List Price *120.00 Round pine dining room table...............</p>
        <p>List  Price  *130.00  Oval pine dining room table.................</p>
        <p>List  Price  *245.00  Pedestal oak table with one leaf..........</p>
        <p>List  Price  *270.00  Oval oak table with 2 leaves...............</p>
        <p>Special purchase of High Point and Hickory showroom samples! Colonial dinettes and chairs in oak, pine and maple. Huge savings, buy now.</p>
        <p>*220</p>
        <p>*33</p>
        <p>*40</p>
        <p>...*30</p>
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        <p>*30</p>
        <p>$7500</p>
        <p>*80</p>
        <p>*135</p>
        <p>n60</p>
        <p>Save On Antique Brass</p>
        <p>Finish Table Lamps</p>
        <p>By Keystone</p>
        <p>*22</p>
        <p>22</p>
        <p>Compare at $30.00 and more. Complete with shade and 3 way switch.</p>
        <p>Save *212.50 on oak colonial styled bedroom by Santee</p>
        <p>Freedom Collection. Now M inch triple dresser with hutch mirror, king size spindle headboard and two drawer night chest. All at one low price.</p>
        <p>*630</p>
        <p>00</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0014" />
        <p>14-The DtUy Renector. GreeavUle, N.C.-Wediiefday, Febrniry 18, ire</p>
        <p>Ballroom Is</p>
        <p>For Dancers</p>
        <p>By FRED T. FERGUSON NEW YORK (UPI) - Lou Brecker, starting his 60th year in the business, banned the twist and the frug from his public ballroom  and survived. Now its competition from the discotheques.</p>
        <p>Lou, 78, pulled out one of the 12 expensive cigars he puffs daily, surveyed his Roseland from a uble in the back and declared the trend is with him, I believe in cheek-to-cheek dancing, he said, labeling the twist, the frug and dances done to rock music just body movement  all right as long  as its done in the proper gymnasium.</p>
        <p>Cheek-to-cheek is coming back, he said.</p>
        <p>The hustle may not be cheek-to-cheek but Lou considers it a real dance. He has organized hustle lessons and says, It has made the young people come out  mostly on weekends, Brecker, who opened his first Roseland in Philadelphia in 1916 and the New York establishment three years later, feels the days of the big ballrooms are gone and his is one of the few exceptions. Many of the best known, such as the Aragon and the Trianon in Chicago, have closed. The Hollywood Palladium, in which Lou was once a partner, has turned to catering.</p>
        <p>Roseland is forever, said Lou. I put that on a sign 1 had put up in the lobby one time when there was this rumor we were going to fold.</p>
        <p>When the twist was all you heard and 1 wouldnt allow it, my children said, Dad, youre going to go out of business, But I said, We have gone through all these fads. Well live through this, too. People will never give up romance dancing. The boy wants to hold the girl in his arms.</p>
        <p>He drew on his stogie and figured the afternoons attendance was over 500,</p>
        <p>And, you see, 1 was right. Now there are the discos,</p>
        <p>Im not knocking them, said Lou. But people like to dance to a band.</p>
        <p>Strange thing is at 7:30, when the band takes a 15-minute break and we play records, I dont think 10 people get out on the floor.</p>
        <p>It was five on a Thursday afternoon. Several hundred couples, mostly middle-aged, filled the 10,000-square-foot dance floor made bouncy by a former ice rinks l2-inch cork insulation underneath.</p>
        <p>Scores of single women sat on The Strip, a 200-foot-long, red-upholstered banquette, chatting and waiting to be asked to dance. Some wore evening gowns. Others wore the pants suits Lou made taboo just as he had miniskirts before relenting on each.</p>
        <p>Its called cheaters day, said Herman Lobell, 66, who has been a regular at Roseland for 27 years.</p>
        <p>Its not what you might think, he said. Its just that by six many of the females run home to put up the potatoes for dinner.</p>
        <p>Not me, said his good friend and dance partner, Anne Ruggiero, a former steamship stewardess who came to this country from her native London in 1951. She said she had no need to rush home to Staten Island.</p>
        <p>"I just love to dance, she said. Where else would you pay such a small fee for dancing and meeting people. (Admission was $3.50.)</p>
        <p>And a place as refined, said Lobell, a widower, dapper in white turtleneck sweater and blue blazer. Breckas necktie requirement ended only two months ago, but jackets are still a must.</p>
        <p>The times and styles change, said Brecker. It was time to change, too.</p>
        <p>Lobell said he has survived several heart attacks and now, Dancing keeps me alive  this place keeps me young.</p>
        <p>I can do a mambo for six sets, but I cant climb a flight of stairs without being out of breath.</p>
        <p>The band stuck mostly to fox trots, with an occasional rumba or waltz for the afternoon crowd. Brecker said many would stay on for dinner and into the evening when some patrons are younger and the band plays faster.</p>
        <p>Brecker treasures lively memories. In the 1920s, long before the Lindy Hop was in, he arranged the first jazz wedding at Roseland, For performing the ceremony to jazz, the minister was defrocked.</p>
        <p>And I started almost every big band in the business, he said.</p>
        <p>Tommy Dorseys piano is on the bandstand. Lou bought it from his widow. The Tommy Dorsey Orchestra will be back for an appearance this spring.</p>
        <p>Harry James follows, and Lou proudly displays a key chain, the links of which spell Lous name. It was a gift from James. He remembers Glenn Miller as an arranger he got to organize a band and play In the ballroom he formerly operated in Boston. The Glenn Miller Band also is booked.</p>
        <p>He spoke as fondly of his regular customers as of the scores of Broadway celebrities who got their start or have performed in his ballroom.</p>
        <p>There was this woman who always came every night but Sunday, he said. One time I asked her why she never came on Sunday. She said, My husband hates dancing and I figure I should spend one night with him.</p>
        <p>Show him your medal,. Stanley, said May from Lodi, N.J. Introduced as a regular, she said her former husband might object if she gave her last name.</p>
        <p>Stanley Rabin, 59, proudly displayed the medal he won at Roseland for the jitterbug in 1945.</p>
        <p>IBKIIiiiKIM</p>
        <p>YOU'LL ENJOY THESE</p>
        <p>IffilTIililCII FOOD VALUES!</p>
        <p>DICKINSON AVENUE STORE OPEN SUNDAYS 1 P.M. UNTIL 6 P.M.</p>
        <p>LIPTON TEA BAGS</p>
        <p>100 Ct. Pkg.</p>
        <p>PIGGLY WIGGLY ALL PURPOSE</p>
        <p>DETERGENT</p>
        <p>49 Oz. Size</p>
        <p>KRAFT DELUXE</p>
        <p>MACARONI &amp;amp; CHEESE DINNER</p>
        <p>214-01.</p>
        <p>Boxes</p>
        <p>^ oSS'**</p>
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        <p>WILSC</p>
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        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED CENTER CUT</p>
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        <p>CLOROX</p>
        <p>BLEACH</p>
        <p>Gallon Jugs</p>
        <p>Now I'm a champion hustler, he said. He told how he met his former wife in Roseland when he was still in uniform and getting out of the service in 1945.</p>
        <p>When Is Your Rental</p>
        <p>No Secret At All?</p>
        <p>When people read about it in the Classified Section of</p>
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>"Pitt County's Home Newspaper'</p>
        <p>Get into circulation! Let our classified section display your rental services. . . it's 0 fast, efficient way to do business!</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p>PET NON-DAIRY</p>
        <p>CREAMER</p>
        <p>16 Oz. Jar</p>
        <p>GEORGE WASHINGTON 5 DETERGENT</p>
        <p>CHERRY BLOSSOM</p>
        <p>ICE CREAM I</p>
        <p>I GAIN</p>
        <p>Vz Gallon Container</p>
        <p>SMOKED</p>
        <p>SHANK</p>
        <p>END</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED  I</p>
        <p>SMOKED HAMS I!</p>
        <p>LUNDY'S NUMBER ONE</p>
        <p>Li.</p>
        <p>$</p>
        <p>LUNDY'S HOT OR MILD</p>
        <p>ROLL SAUSAEE it</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <p> JELLO INSTANT  ^  4</p>
        <p>I PISTACHIO PUDDING 5I</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p> POCAHONTAS CREAM STYLE OR 5 WHOLE KERNEL</p>
        <p>Phone</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>iCOLDEII comi 3</p>
        <p>303</p>
        <p>Cans</p>
        <p>$100</p>
        <p> POCAHONTAS CUT  ^  4  fTA</p>
        <p>GREEN BEANS 3</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>MT. OLIVE FRESH POLISH</p>
        <p>KOSHEN DILLS</p>
        <p>Qt.</p>
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        <p>PIE FILLER</p>
        <p>No. 3 Can</p>
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        <p>PORK N BEANS</p>
        <p>Ho.t'/i</p>
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        <p>MERITA CINNAMON</p>
        <p>COFFEE CAKE</p>
        <p>FiRMi.</p>
        <p>m</p>
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        <p>LEI</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0015" />
        <p>in Th is Adv. vd Thursday</p>
        <p>^ext Wednesday!</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;&amp;gt;sr SOLD TO DEALERS. TWO CONVENIENT GREENVILLE Ch IONSON AVENUE and 1212 NORTH GREENE STREET.</p>
        <p>^TIFtED BEEF SPECIALS</p>
        <p>FIT CUT</p>
        <p>BETTY CROCKER YELLOW</p>
        <p>The Dtily Reflector. Greenville, N.C.-Wedneidny. Fehrnery 1. IWt-lt</p>
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        <p>JTt. 78*</p>
        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED (BONE-IN)</p>
        <p>SHOULDER ROAST </p>
        <p>98'</p>
        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED (BONELESS)</p>
        <p>RIB STEAK</p>
        <p>n.89</p>
        <p>FRESH, CUT PARTS OF N.C. GRADE A</p>
        <p>FRYERS</p>
        <p>CERTIFIED</p>
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        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED  ^  ^  ^</p>
        <p>SMOKED HAMS-Jl';</p>
        <p>Cantar Sllcas I</p>
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        <p>BISCUITS !</p>
        <p>3 91^-02.  </p>
        <p>CANS 8</p>
        <p>$100</p>
        <p>KEN GIDNEY, a professional ant-catcher, studies the project that has grossed him |1.4 miliion in the past 20 years, (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Found A Career Catching Ants</p>
        <p>DEL MONTE</p>
        <p>CATSUP i</p>
        <p>32 Oz. Bottle</p>
        <p>KRAFT CRACKER BARREL SHARP &amp;amp; EXTRA SHARP</p>
        <p>CHEESE STICKS</p>
        <p>10 Oz. Pkg.</p>
        <p>WILSON'S CERTIFIED (QUARTERS)</p>
        <p>BUTTER</p>
        <p>NABISCO PREMIUM</p>
        <p>SALTINES</p>
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        <p>ICYi MEDIUM</p>
        <p>ELLOW ONIONS</p>
        <p>A LBS.  FOR</p>
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        <p>Qt. Jar</p>
        <p>LOS ANGELES (AP) -Some penny anty operation. So far, catching ants has grossed grandfather Ken Gid-ney $1.4 million.</p>
        <p>Gidneys career as an ant catcher has spanned 20 years. To date, he's snared 140 million of the little creatures.</p>
        <p>Back in 1956, Uncle Milton Industries of Culver City advertised for an ant catcher. Next morning, there was an ant-like line of applicants stretching around the block.</p>
        <p>Gidney was first in line and got the job, a company official said. He's done so well hunting bugs to populate the company's popular plastic ant farms  about 20 per farm  that he's still the only catcher on the payroll, the official said.</p>
        <p>Gidney got into the ant-catching business to help feed his nine children. Now the La Mirada, Calif., man has 13 grandchildren, and often, ant hunting becomes a family affair.</p>
        <p>"Sometimes, like after a rainstorm, we have to dig real deep," said Mrs. Gidney, Ken sends one of the boys down and later we hold down a shovel for him to climb back up."</p>
        <p>Uncle Milton, meanwhile, has sold 7 million ant farms with</p>
        <p>STATES ADOPT SHIP PORTLAND, Ore, (AP) -The brigantine Explorer has been adopted by Oregon and Washington as the official flagship to represent the states at bicentennial activities at Philadelphia and New York.</p>
        <p>The 150-foot wooden Explorer operated as a survey vessel along the Pacific Northwest and Alaska coasts until 1939 when it was transferred to the National Youth Administration as a training ship</p>
        <p>the help of Gidney's plastic proboscis.</p>
        <p>At first I excavated and I would catch them on broom straws," he explained. "Then I found I could dig a narrow hole alongside an ant hill and place a baby food jar next to it."</p>
        <p>He said he would blow into the hole using a plastic hose and the ants would scurry out, right into the jar.</p>
        <p>Before I thought of the hose I used to bend over and blow right into the hill," he said, "but I always got sand in my face,"</p>
        <p>Now he's automated his craft, Gidney said.</p>
        <p>He uses an auto heater as a blower and the plastic hose to increase the quantity of ants.</p>
        <p>I hook it up to my car's battery and run it like a vacuum," he said. Sucks 'em up by the dozen."</p>
        <p>Area Students On Dean's List</p>
        <p>The following Pitt County students received dean's list honors at North Carolina State University for the fall semester:</p>
        <p>Ernest Averetle, Donna P. Sayce, Mark S. Brown, Linda B. Cartner, Diane Dancy, Robert Forbes, Benjamin Forrest, Howard Hadley, Elbert Hudson, John McConney, Joseph Meeks. Ronald Rasberry, John Tucker, and Dale Williams. Greenville; Richard Albritton, Milton Barnette. Camille Griffin, Eugene Perkins, and Robert Winborn, Farmville, Glendel Tucker, Phillip Edmondson, and Teresa Thaxton Grifton , Phillip Abeyounis and John Ayres, Bethel, Joel Barnhill, Stokes; William McLawhorn, Ayden; and John May. Winterville.</p>
        <p>When Is Your Buying</p>
        <p>Two Convmlont Oromvilta Locations To Sorvo You I 2105 Dickinson Avonuo and 1212 North Ortono Stroot. Quantity Rights Rasarvad. Prictd Efiactlva Thursday Through Noxt Wodnosday.</p>
        <p>No Secret At All?</p>
        <p>When people read about it in the Classified Section of</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>"Pitt County's Home Newspaper"</p>
        <p>For the biggest selections of anything you could possibly want to buy . .. rood our clossifieds. You're bound to And iti</p>
        <p>Phone 752-6166</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0016" />
        <p>1The Delly Reflector, Greenville. N.C.Wednesday, February 18, 1876Tidal Current At Chappaquiddick Wasn't Strong</p>
        <p>EDITOR'S NOTEContinuing the report by two members of the Special Assignment team on their eight months' investigation in the still mysterious Chappaquiddick Island drowning.</p>
        <p>By MICHAEL PUTZEL and</p>
        <p>RICHARD PYLE Associated Press Writers Part IV</p>
        <p>The National Ocean Survey, a |ederal agency, reported that under normal conditionsand the conditions were substantially normalthe current in the area where Kennedy swam was slack, or at a standstill, at 1:36 a.m., minutes after the senator dived in.</p>
        <p>In the 15 minutes prior to that, the data show, the current was running in the direction Kennedy described at one tenth to two tenths of a knota very weak current. After 1:36. it turned in the opposite direction.</p>
        <p>So even if Kennedy was swimming at dog-paddle speedand he reportedly is an</p>
        <p>exceptionally strong swimmerhe shouid have reached the shore 85 to 170 feet below the Edgartown ferry slip. That distance wouldn't fit the senator's description of being swept well out into the darkness toward the lighthouse 2,000 feet from the slip.</p>
        <p>And he should have come ashore among the myriad boats tied up at the Edgartown docks, not the beach he recalled in his testimony.</p>
        <p>Had Kennedy swum the harbor earlier, about 40 minutes after the accident, he wouid have encountered a current three to seven times as strong as that running at 1:20 a.m. at that rate, the current would have carried him as far as 600</p>
        <p>HOW'S THAT?</p>
        <p>OCHO RIOS, Jamaica (UPI) - They have a word here that means pleasant, lovely, Cloud 9. Its boonoonoonoos. They have another word, almost as long, meaning beat, good-for-nothing. Its boogooyagga.</p>
        <p>feet downstream toward the lighthouse. That current would have swept him downstream farther than the distance he had to swim, perhaps giving him the impression he was losing headway.</p>
        <p>But while this would support his account of the conditions under which he swam the harbor, these circumstances i^ould</p>
        <p>not allow time for him to go finst to the bridge with Gargan and Markham as all three men claimed he did.</p>
        <p>, Kennedy was informed through an aide of the findings regarding the currents. A few days later, Kennedy retained Lawrence Hoch, an admiralty lawyer in Boston, to calculate the currents during the time in</p>
        <p>GOREN BRIDGE</p>
        <p>PIPES-Tbese pipei and others are beginning to line the sides of Hwy 11 between WintervUie and Grifton awaiting the connection of the Contentnea Metropolitan Sewage DistricL (Reflector Photo By Susan Quinn)</p>
        <p>BY CHARLES H.COBEN AND OMAR SHARIF</p>
        <p>C ISTS.nwCNcsooTrtbun*</p>
        <p>Neither vulnerable. North deals.</p>
        <p>NORTH 4K10872 7AQ6 0 AJ5</p>
        <p> 74</p>
        <p>WEST EAST</p>
        <p> Q983  4J4</p>
        <p>'v?7  (?K32</p>
        <p>01096  OKQ72</p>
        <p> KQ982  J6S3</p>
        <p>SOUTH</p>
        <p> A5</p>
        <p>'9J109854</p>
        <p>0843</p>
        <p> A 10</p>
        <p>The bidding:</p>
        <p>North  East  South  West</p>
        <p>1   Pass  2 9  Pass</p>
        <p>3  Pass  4 7  Pass</p>
        <p>Pass  Pass</p>
        <p>Opening lead; King of .</p>
        <p>It is essential to establish an order of priorities before you tackle the play of a hand. As a general rule, trumps should be drawn firstunless you have a good reason for not doing so.</p>
        <p>South judged well when he continued to game despite the fact that he held only 9 points in high cards. Once North could support hearts. South's hand increased in value to a full opening bid, and his ace in partner's suit was a most important card. Unfortunately. South's accuracy in the bidding was not matched by his play of the cards.</p>
        <p>West led the king of clubs, won by declarer's ace. South decided to take advantage of the entry to his hand to try the trump finesse. He ran the jack of hearts, and East ducked smoothly. Flushed with success, declarer continued with another heart, and he received a mortal blow when West discarded a club. The contract was now doomed.</p>
        <p>Declarer tried his best by</p>
        <p>winning the ace of hearts, cashing the ace and king of spades and ruffing a spade in his hand. Had that suit divided 3-3, declarer could have conceded a trump to East's king and discarded his two losing diamonds on the established spades, thus emerging with an overtrick. Unfortunately, the outstanding spades followed the odds and split 4-2, so declarer lost a trump, a club and two diamonds for down one.</p>
        <p>Declarer should have realized that he had more important work to do than draw trumps. He could afford to lose a trump trick if he could hold his losers in the minor suits to two. To accomplish this, it was essential that declarer set up the spade suit while he still had entries to dummy.</p>
        <p>After winning the ace of clubs, declarer should immediately cash the ace and king of spades, and lead a third round, intending to ruff high. He does not mind an overruff, for then both the ace and queen of trumps will become entries to dummy. When East fails to follow to the third spade, declarer ruffs and can now try the trump finesse. If East holds off with the king, declarer can attempt to repeat the finesse. When West shows out on the second trump, declarer rises with dummy's ace and ruffs another spade to set up a long spade. Now he can reenter dvif ay with the ace of diamondt and take a discard on the spade, and he is home.</p>
        <p>Learn the secrets of winning more points! Charles Goren explains the art" of doubling in his latest book) For your copy, write to "Goren's Doubles, c/o this newspaper, P. 0. Box 259, Norwood, N.J. 07648, enclosing $1.25 in cash or checks, payable to NEWS PAPERBOOKS.</p>
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        <p>GENERAL FOODS CORPORATION</p>
        <p>OOm ipim March 31.197.</p>
        <p>question. Hochs findings, provided to The AP, paralleled The APs own.</p>
        <p>The news service invited the senator to discuss or comment on the currents study. Kennedy did not respond.</p>
        <p>The AP found one account, other than the testimony of the three men involved, that reported Kennedy's second rescue story: two brief sentences in an affidavit signed by Dr. Watt, the physician who examined Kennedy the afternoon after the accident.</p>
        <p>He (Kennedy) went for help and returned, the doctor stated. Again, effort to rescue passenger was without success.</p>
        <p>Dr. Watt told The AP the affidavit was based entirely on notes he took of what the senator told him that afternoon-only hours after Kennedy had given police a different account.</p>
        <p>Kennedy was seen outside of his Edgartown hotel room at 2:25 a.m. He returned imme-diafeii^o his room and was not seen again until after 7 a.m. when he chatted with some friends about sailing and the weather, giving no hint that anything was wrong.</p>
        <p>Gargan and Markham spent the night on Chappaquiddick, arrived in Edgartown about 8 a.m. and met privately in Kennedys room. Then the three men went back across the harbor by ferry to the telephone booth. It was not until after 9:30 a.m. that Kennedy finally went to the police.</p>
        <p>Was Rescue Possible?</p>
        <p>Kennedy and his two friends say they abandoned their rescue effort, convinced that Miss Kopechne was dead. But the emotion-charged issue of how long she might have survived in the submerged car has been encouraged by John N. Farrar,</p>
        <p>the fire department scuba diver who eventually recovered the body.</p>
        <p>Farrar claims she might have lived for several hours breathing air trapped in the car and that she did not drown, as the medical examiner ruled, but suffocated.</p>
        <p>At the inquest, Farrar described his dive down to the sunken car:</p>
        <p>On entering the open right window and looking up I found the victim's head cocked back, face pressed into the footwell, hand holding onto the front edge of the back seat. By holding herself in a position such as she could avail herself of the last remaining air in the car. Arthur D. Little, Inc., a New England consulting firm hired by Kennedy to do a physical factors study of the accident, concluded that breathable air drained quickly from the car and that Miss Kopechne could not have remained conseu more than four minutes nor lived more than 14.</p>
        <p>The firm's tests with a car similar to Kennedys could not be readily duplicated, but expert opinion sought by The AP tended to agree with the Little findings rather than with Farrar.</p>
        <p>Experts say a car that sinks upside down loses air swiftly through floor drain holes, and an Indiana University research project found that a car sinking upside down with at least one window open does not retain an air pocket sufficient in size to enable an individual to remain in the vehicle, breathe the trapped air and survive.</p>
        <p>Little said about one-eighth of a cubic foot of air would have been trapped in the footwell between drain holes. The APs calculations based on criteria established by the Indiana study, indicated this amount</p>
        <p>would be used up in less than a minute.</p>
        <p>Dr. Donald R. Mills, an associate coroner, said a large amount of water came out of Miss Kopechne's nose and mouth when he pressed on her chest. But Farrar says he watched Mills' examination and relatively little water came out, leading to his view that she suffocated.</p>
        <p>One doctor, an expert on submersion, noted that in about one of five drownings, the cause of death is dry drowning  an involuntary closing of the larynx when water is first inhaled  and the victim's body contains very little water. The doctor asked that his name not be used ih connection with the Chappaquiddick case.</p>
        <p>(Mills said the body had no visible cuts or bruises and described her clothing; dark slacks, white blouse, blue bra. sandals. A gold chain link belt fell from the body as Farrar lifted it out. She was not wearing underpants.)</p>
        <p>Thus, it appears that Miss Kopechne could not have lived long enough to be saved after Kennedy's initial attempt. But Kennedy, Gargan and Markham had no way of knowing that.</p>
        <p>The Financial Setllemenl</p>
        <p>There is no evidence that Kennedy paid anyone for silence, but The AP learned that he did pay about $91,(XI0 out of his own pocket to the parents of Miss Kopechne as part of a financial settlement following her death.</p>
        <p>Joseph Flanagan, the Ko-</p>
        <p>pechnes Homey, said the senators insurance company refused to pay more than $50,000 damages, the maximum allowable under Massachusetts law for an auto accident death in which pain and suffering is not proved, and the Kopechnes informed Kennedy they planned to sue him.</p>
        <p>The lawyer said the senator agreed instead to a final settlement of $140,923, of which the insurance company paid $50,000. Kennedy paid the rest to the insurance firm, which passed it on to the Kopechnes. The amount was based on an insurance actuary's calculation of Miss Kopechne's earnings potential had she lived.</p>
        <p>Flanagan said that after his fee for representing the Kopechnes at the 1969 exhumation hearing and the insurance settlement, the family netted about $100,000. This figure included the proceeds from a first-person story by Mrs. Kopechne in McCalls magazine, which Flanagan also negotiated.</p>
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        <pb facs="00092987_0017" />
        <p>wherein Kojak Arrests A Song</p>
        <p>Earned Honor Lists At D.H. Conley</p>
        <p>By JAY 8HARBUTT AP Televisin Writer NEW YORK (AP) - Telly Savalas bumps Bumper Morgan's Blue Knight show tonight for a CBS musicale called Telly ... Who Loves Ya, Baby? U youve never seen Kojak arrest a song, heres your chance.</p>
        <p>Costarrlng with him in this</p>
        <p>TV Log</p>
        <p>WNCT-TV Ch. 9</p>
        <p>WIDNItOAY</p>
        <p>Trvtti Or 7; Match Oam |:M tatkttball WiOO mo loves Yov 11 Newswatch It: Movie TMIMSOAY *:N Car. Tody :0Q News 9:00 Kangaroo 10:00 t&amp;gt;rlce Right 11:00 Gambit 11:30 Love Of 11:SS Graham Karr 13:00 Newswatch</p>
        <p>li;30 Starch For 1:00 Young And 1:30 world Twme 3:30 Guiding Light 3:00 All In Family 3:30 Match Game 4:00 Tattlatales</p>
        <p>:00 Nn 7:00 TruHlOr 7:30 HsIlywmO Sq. 0:00 Waltooi 0:00 Awann U:00 Barnaby Jonas 11.00 Nawtwatch</p>
        <p>one-hour endeavor are Barbara 1 Dream of Jeannie Eden, Diahann Carroll, Cloris Leach-man, star of CBS new "Phyllis series, and Tellys only racehorse.</p>
        <p>Everyone gets to sing except the racehorse, who said neigh to the idea. Good horsie.</p>
        <p>The show starts in traditional Kojak style as Telly, in his unmarked police car, roars through the streets of Manhattan to CBS Television City in Los Angeles in less than a minute.</p>
        <p>two cops are waiting for him there. But they dont do the right thing and ticket him for going too slow on the Hollywood Freeway. They instead warn him the suspects are inside Television aty.</p>
        <p>Im going in alone, be</p>
        <p>The following students received honor roll and principals list honors for the third grading period at D.H. Conley High School:</p>
        <p>Honor Roll: Kathy Worthington, Cynthia Hardee, Christopher Paramor, Ben-</p>
        <p>higher notes of This Is All 1 Ask that someone should have advised TVs top cop of his right to remain silent.</p>
        <p>Tellys a fine actor. But his efforts at music give me the same sinking feeling I get when a guy sits down at the piano bar, has four stiff belts and says he will now sing Volare.</p>
        <p>jamin Wilson, Melissa Bailey, Michael Haddock, ninth Grade: Donald Ribeiro, Treva Woodley, Linda Hudson and Alice Hines, tenth grade;</p>
        <p>David Hines, Randy Hibbard, and Cathy Stokes, eleventh grade; Donna Lambert, Mark Berg, Deborah Toler, and Freddie Sue Wall, twelfth grade.</p>
        <p>Principal's List:  Shawn</p>
        <p>Carson, Cynthia Gaskins, Ervin Hines, Stacey Hubbard, Terry Cobb, Jodie Faust, John Moseby, Lisa Smith, Kimberly Allen, Cynthia Branch,</p>
        <p>Warren Franke, Carol Van-diford, Susan Jones, and Cathy Vandiford, ninth grade; Juanita Cash,  Gwendolyn Wilson,</p>
        <p>Priscilla Tucker, Mary Venters, Cindy Mills, Mark Forbes,</p>
        <p>FORECAST FOR THURSDAY, FEB. 19, 1976</p>
        <p>WITN-TV Ch. 7</p>
        <p>7:00 Fim Affilr  |2:00 Nfws Noon</p>
        <p>7:30 Wild King  12:30 Mrbl Moch</p>
        <p>1:00 Circus  12:55  NBC Nvws</p>
        <p>9:00 Chico &amp;amp; Man  i;00 Somarsat</p>
        <p>9:30 Dumplings  i;3o Days of Livts</p>
        <p>10:00 Rttroc9lll  2:30 Dodors</p>
        <p>11:00 Naws  3:00Anomar WW.</p>
        <p>II^X Tonight  4:00 Cart Cam</p>
        <p>TNUROOAY  4:30 Bawltchad</p>
        <p>S;30Muak FiKt 5:00 irontida 4:00 Almanac  4:00 Ntwi</p>
        <p>7:00 Today  4:30  NBC NWS</p>
        <p>7:35 Ntws  7:00  Fam AHaIr</p>
        <p>7:30 Today  7:30  Nath Music</p>
        <p>1:35 Nawi  1:00  Grady</p>
        <p>9:00 Mika Douglas  1:30 Cop 4 Kid</p>
        <p>10 ;00 Swaapatakas  9:00 Movia</p>
        <p>10:30 Fortuna  11:00 Nawa</p>
        <p>11:30 Hoiiywood  11:30 Tonight</p>
        <p>WCTI-TV Ch. 12</p>
        <p>WBDNISDAY</p>
        <p>7:30 Tall Truth 1:00 Bionic 9:00 Baratta 10:00 Starsky 11:00 Naws 11:30Movla 1:00 Naws THURSDAY 7:00 Morning 9:00 Montaga 10:00 Not For 10:30 Girl 11:00 Edga 11:30 Happy 13:00 Maka Daal 13:30 ChlWran 1:00 Ryant</p>
        <p>1:30 Rhyma 2:00 pyramid 2:30 Naighbors 3:00 Gan HOip 3:30 On# Ufa 4:00 Plintstona 4:30 Comady Hour 5:30 Naws 4:00 Naws 4:30 Mavtrick 7:30 Tall Truth 1:00 Kottar</p>
        <p>8:30 candid 9:00 San Fran 10:00 Harry 0 11:00 Naws 12 w.yo Spacial 1:45 Nav</p>
        <p>WUNK-TV Ch. 25</p>
        <p>wib1iU5IV^</p>
        <p>7:00 Erica 7:30 NOW</p>
        <p>0:00 imagts 9:00 Partormancas 10:00 Tall Ships THURSDAY 0:30 Rights 9:00 Storias -9:10 Raady 9:30 Sounds 10:00 Sasama y 11.00 Salt 11:15 imagas 11:35 Rights 12:03 Storias 12:15 About YOU</p>
        <p>12:30 Elac Co 1:00 Covar 1:15 About You</p>
        <p>1:30 sair</p>
        <p>1:45 Mulligan 2:15 Francals 2:30 Sounds 3:00 Adams 4:00 Mis Rooars 4:30Sasam9St 5:30 Elac Co 4:00 Zoom 4:30 Vision 7:00 Englntaring 7:30 NC Naws 8:00 Firing 9:00 Hooray</p>
        <p>CROSSWORD</p>
        <p>PUZZLE</p>
        <p>tCROSS</p>
        <p>30.</p>
        <p>1. Ballet step  32.</p>
        <p>4. Infant  33.</p>
        <p>6. Underhand throw</p>
        <p>11. Windswept</p>
        <p>12. Hautboy</p>
        <p>13. Baking pit</p>
        <p>14. Source of sulfur IB. Horse's diet</p>
        <p>16. Valets</p>
        <p>17. Studied action</p>
        <p>19. Tolled</p>
        <p>20. Information 22. Century plant 25.Indian</p>
        <p>26. Site of drawing papar</p>
        <p>By golly, he winds up facing nothing more dangerous than a studio audience. It cheers and gives him a big hand for singing a disco-beat tune, Who Loves Ya, Baby, while six lovelies swirl about him.</p>
        <p>Then comes brisk patter, a modest concession hes no threat to Frank Sinatra and a rehearsal skit in need of both rehearsal and skit.</p>
        <p>He later introduces Miss Eden. After a quip exchange, she pulls her Jeannie magic bit, making him vanish so she can sing.</p>
        <p>He subsequently reappears at an empty racetrack, carrying on in his tough, warm Brooklyn style about 62 window habitues</p>
        <p> Joe Average, he calls em</p>
        <p> and a kids dream of owning a racehorse someday.</p>
        <p>And sure enough, Tellys steed does a clop-on. It doesnt add much to the show, but we dont want to nag.</p>
        <p>So wed say the good parts are Miss Cbirrolis singing. Miss Leachman's finetalk-and-song solo about life as an actress, Tellys patter about being Greek and the Greek dance number he does with his kid brother, Teddy, and 12 or so other dancers.</p>
        <p>IThe sets on the show are eyecatching, Marvin Lairds music arrangements are nifty and Marty Pasetta's direction keeps the proceedings reasonably lively.</p>
        <p>But when Telly sings, some trained ears may wrinkle in pain. He gets so flat on the</p>
        <p>UMQuio</p>
        <p>HfaRfi Manmaa HsmHS HaBaBa naa aas ano sEsa</p>
        <p>aa BHDS SIGB</p>
        <p>aaa sasiffi ana aissa saQaGBD PiKra Qsa anQHDG Gsaaa BDBGCia aaana asaaaaa naaao</p>
        <p>GENERAL TENDENCIES:  Uck of cooperation</p>
        <p>between you and others could cause some friction but if you make a point to clarify your desires you are able to reach a better understanding.</p>
        <p>ARIES (Mar. 21 to Apr. 19) Make sure you comprehend exactly what is expected of you by associates and try to cooperate to the fulleit.</p>
        <p>TAURUS (Apr. 20 to May 20) Strive for greater production in your line of endeavor and gain excellent results. Steer clear of an opponent.</p>
        <p>GEMINI (May 21 to June 21) If you q&amp;gt;end more than you can afford today you will soon be regretting it. Safeguard your asaeta Relax tonight.</p>
        <p>MOON CHILDREN (June 22 to July 21) You need to control your temper at home today despite riiction. Use your good judgment for best results.</p>
        <p>LEO (July 22 to Aug 21) You are in a poiition to assist associates in solving their problematical affairs so be sure to give your advice.</p>
        <p>VIRGO (Aug.  22 to Sept.  22) Take care  you  dont</p>
        <p>overspend today,  but try to  save money instead. Uae</p>
        <p>own good judgment now for best resulta</p>
        <p>LIBRA (Sept. 23 to Oct. 22) Make sure you know what it is you want of a personal nature before you commit yourself. Improve your health.</p>
        <p>SCORPIO (Oct. 23 to Nov. 21) Dont waste time in handling an important matter. You can eaaily benefit from outaide connections today.  "</p>
        <p>SAGITTARIUS  (Nov. 22  to Dec. 21)  Go  ahead</p>
        <p>with whatever it  is you have to do today  and  dont</p>
        <p>rely on friends who may have their own problema</p>
        <p>CAPRICORN (Dec. 22 to Jan. 20) Losing your temper is no way to solve an annoying matter, be it dvic or whatever. Dont neglect to pay bills.</p>
        <p>AQUARIUS (Jan. 21 to Feb. 19) Engage in tasks awaiting your attention and labor diligently until you get them all done. Avoid being snobbish.</p>
        <p>PISCES (Feb. 20 to Mar. 20) A higher-up can give you the support you need if you consult this person early in the day. Show devotion to mate.</p>
        <p>IF YOUR CHILD IS BORN TODAY... he or she will want to cooperate with others but is likely to be pugnacioua out of sheer enthusiaim in attempting to be successful Anything dl a governmental or teaching nature is fine here. Dont neglect ethical training</p>
        <p>Dale Bailey, Sharon Joyner, Clarissa Mobley, Atm Tyson, John Baker, Sandra, Toler, Clarissa Carmon, and Robert Hudson, tenth grade;</p>
        <p>Mary Tyson, Carolyn Horton, Connie MUIs, Vickie Humbles, Andy Riggs, Gail Suggs, Tammy Briley, Arlene Evans, Susan Smith, Wayne Worthington,</p>
        <p>Joni McLawhorn, Max Worthington, and Debbie Briley, eleventh grade; Joey Fomes, JoAnn Hines, Eddie McLawhorn, Gevena Mobley, Mike Nobles, Alice White, Betty Ebron,</p>
        <p>Patricia Ann Roach, Cynthia Carmon, Clifton Clemons, Sandra Haddock, Vanessa Taft, Patricia Buck, Michael Clen-denen. Dawn Branch, Thelma Moore, Robert Padgett, Tanya Peele, Larry Penley, and Elbert White, twelfth grade.</p>
        <p>RESTING PLACE LIMA, Peru (UPI) - The Cathedral of Lima is best known as the final resting place for Francisco Pizarro, who conquered Peru for Spain and founded Lima 400 years ago. But the cathedral also houses many little known works by outstanding artists of the colonial era, including some sculpted reliefs by Martinez Montanez, known to many art historians as the Michelangelo of Spain.</p>
        <p>PUBLIC NOTICES</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLICHEARINO ON THE QUESTION OF THE ADOPTION OF AN ORDINANCE REZONING TERRITORY LOCATED WITHIN THE ONE-MILE EXTRA-TERRITORIAL JURISDICTION OF THE CJTYOF GREENVILLE.</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA PursuBfit to Chapter 140A. Section 381 et seq. of the General Statutes of North Carolina, notice Is herebv given that the City Council of the City of Greenville. North Carolina, will hold a public hearing In the Council Chambers of the Municipal Building in the City of Greenville, North Carol Ina. on Thursday. March 4.1976, at 8:00 p.m. on the question of the adoption of an ordinance re-zoning the following described territory located within the one-mile extraterritorial jurisdiction of the City of Greenville, as follows:</p>
        <p>DESCRiPTIONOF PROPERTYTOBE REZONED To Wit: The Colonial Village Subdivisin Location: Located On The West Side Of N C H ighway 11, Opposite The Burroughs-Wellcome Plant. North Of Independtnct Boulevard. And Lying Outside The Corporate Limits Of The City of Greenville Property To Be Rezontd From RAM'' (Residential-Agricultural) To "Ri-MH" (Rosidontial-Mobllt Homo)</p>
        <p>BEGINNING at a point In the northern right-of-way line of Independence Boulevard, said point</p>
        <p>The Dally Renector. GreenvUle. N.C.-Wednesday. February 18, 1176-17 Within SIx (4) months from the date public hearing will be Thursday, Ihe first publication of this notice March., 1974, at :00p.m. In the City dapandanca Boultvard and tha ^  n,  bar of Council Chambers of the Municipal</p>
        <p>their recovery.  Building.</p>
        <p>All persons indebted to said estate, All persons Interested are please make immediate payment of requested to be present at the hearing the indebtedness.  at the time and place aforesaid whan</p>
        <p>This the 9th day of February. 1974.......</p>
        <p>northarn right-of-way line of NC Highway 11, and running thenct, N. 77 deg. 43' W., along the northern right-of-way line of independence Boulevard. 298.09 feet to a point in the centerline of a ditch; Thence, N. 23 deg. S3' W.. along the centerline of an open ditch. 857.05 feet to a point in said ditch;</p>
        <p>Thence. S. 77 deg. 4V E., along the northern bank of a proposed canal and the Pitt County Schools Pop-perty. 791.85 feet to a corner, a concrete marker, said marker being located 85 feet from a concrete marker In the northern right-of-way line of NC Highway 11 and being the northwest corner of the Burroughs-Wellcome Property; Thence, S. 12 deg. 17' W., along the Burroughs-Wellcome Property, 700.25 feet to the point of BEGINNING.</p>
        <p>Containing 8.76 acres.</p>
        <p>This description prepared from preliminary plan of Colonial village Subdivision as prepared by Rivers a&amp;gt; Associates, Inc., February, 1976.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are hereby requested to be present at the said hearing to be held at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY .ORDER OF THE CITY COUL.</p>
        <p>LOIS WORTHINGTON CITY CLERK David E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney Feb. 18 and 25</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF PUBLiCHEARiNG</p>
        <p>BY THE CITY COUNCIL OFTHECITYOF GREENVILLE.</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA.</p>
        <p>ON THE PLACEMENT OF A MOBILE HOME Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be conducted by the City Council of the City of Greenville on a request by Johnny's Mobile Home Sales, Inc. for the placement of a mobile home on Greenville Boulevard S.W., between Bob's AAoblle Homes and Eastern Tractor Company, for use as an office. The property is zoned "Highway Commercial" and contains 120,000 square feet.</p>
        <p>The time, date and place of the public hearing will be Thursday, March 4. 1976, at 8:00 p.m. in the City Council Chambers of the Municipal Building.</p>
        <p>All persons interested are requested to be present at the hearing at the time and place aforesaid when they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>LOIS WORTHINGTON CITY CLERK David E. Reid. Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney Feb. 18. 1976</p>
        <p>NOTICE TO CREDITORS Norm Carolina Pin County Having qualified as Executrix of the Estate of Arthur Mooring, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this Is to notify alt persons, firms and corporations, having claims against the estate of said deceased, to present them to the undersigned Executrix</p>
        <p>Lula S. Gooding,</p>
        <p>Executrix of the Estate of Arthur Mooring, deceased 506 Roosevelt Avenue GreenvUle, N.C. 27834 Richard Powell, Atty.</p>
        <p>007 W. 5th Street Greenville, N.C. 27834 Phone NO. 758-2123 Area Code 919</p>
        <p>Feb. 11, 18, 25; March 3, 1976</p>
        <p>NOTICE OF DISSOLUTION OF</p>
        <p>VANCES. HARRINGTON</p>
        <p>A CO., INC.</p>
        <p>All creditors of Vance S. Harrington A Co., Inc., a corporation organized and existing under the laws of the State of North Carolina and maintaining its principal office in Pitt County, North Carolina, and anyone else interested in said corporation are hereby notified that on the 5th day of February, 1976. Articles of Dissolution of said corporation were filed in the office of the Secretary of State of North Carolina and that said corporation is In the process of dissolution. Ait creditors, H any, should immediately file claim with the corporation and all persons indebted to the same should make immediate payment of such Indebtedness.</p>
        <p>This 9th day of February, 1976. VANCE S. HARRINGTON &amp;amp; CO., INC.</p>
        <p>By: Vance S. Harrington Feb. 18, 25; March 3 and 10, 1976</p>
        <p>NOTICEOF PUBLIC HEARING BY THECITY COUNCIL OFTHECITYOF GREENVILLE,</p>
        <p>NORTH CAROLINA,</p>
        <p>ON THE PLACEMENT OF A MOBILE HOME Notice is hereby given that a public hearing will be conducted by the City Council of the City of Greenville on a request by New Directions for the placement of a mobile home at 719 Hooker Road. The mobile home will be used for recreation purposes and office space. The property Is zoned "R-6" and contains 15,000 square feetr</p>
        <p>The time, date and place of the</p>
        <p>they will be afforded an opportunity to be heard.</p>
        <p>BY ORDER OF THE CITY COUNCIL.</p>
        <p>LOIS WORTHINGTON ' CITY CLERK David E. Reid, Jr.</p>
        <p>City Attorney Feb. IB, 1976</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>Having qualified as Executrix of the estate of James Luther Kilgo, late of Pitt County, North Carolina, this is to notify all persons having claims against the estate of said deceased to present them to the undersigned Executrix within six (6) months from date of the first publication of this notice or same will be pleaded in bar of their recovery. All persons indebted to said estate please make Immediate payment.</p>
        <p>This 9th day of February, 1976.</p>
        <p>Louise Kilgo Hudson</p>
        <p>108 W. Brentwood Road</p>
        <p>Greensboro, N.C.</p>
        <p>Executrix of the</p>
        <p>Estate of</p>
        <p>James Luther Kilgo.</p>
        <p>Deceased.</p>
        <p>Feb. 11, 18. 25; March 3, 1976</p>
        <p>UVEHKE</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;1NYM0RE</p>
        <p>SHOWTIMES</p>
        <p>7-*</p>
        <p>9MQE</p>
        <p>DRIVE IN THEATRE Aydwi Hlghwiy0pn:3fl&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>Tonite thru Sat.</p>
        <p>Americaji Graffiti At l:SO</p>
        <p>In Color-.</p>
        <p>At 4:45</p>
        <p>Red Sky At Morning</p>
        <p>ECU</p>
        <p>SYMPHONY ORCHESTRA CONCERT</p>
        <p>GERSHWIN:</p>
        <p>An American In Paris Porgy and Bess Suite Cuban Overture</p>
        <p>BERNSTEIN:  Candid  Overture</p>
        <p>MILHAUD:  concerto  For  Percussion</p>
        <p>Sunday February 22, 1976 3:15 P.M.</p>
        <p>Wright Auditorium</p>
        <p>Tallest living quadrupeds Legume Celebrated person Raced</p>
        <p>Balled egg white</p>
        <p>Inventor of the__</p>
        <p>prmti^presSjQjuTiON OF YISTIROAVS PUZZII</p>
        <p>50. Inclined walh 4. Fumble</p>
        <p>51. Femala sainte:</p>
        <p>MW</p>
        <p>Word of negation Rodent Chopping tool Japanese statesman Vicious Young mail Shooting marbla</p>
        <p>1. In favor of</p>
        <p>2. Rhine tributary</p>
        <p>3. Pullover or cardigan</p>
        <p>Par Hn&amp;gt; 20 nln.</p>
        <p>AP NtvlfMTurM</p>
        <p>Most comic operas contain some spoken diaiogue.</p>
        <p>264 PLAYHOUSE</p>
        <p>INDOOR THEATRE t Mim vmt M onMviiit m us IM (Frmvlll Hwy.l</p>
        <p>Ends Tonight</p>
        <p>AT you* ADULT INTIKTAINMBNT CINTI*</p>
        <p>^*BLACN, BEAUTIFUL,CLASSY!"</p>
        <p>CAVAt/f</p>
        <p>s'howtim 756-0848</p>
        <p>5. Camel's hair coat</p>
        <p>6. Horse fly larva</p>
        <p>7. Truly</p>
        <p>8. Bean</p>
        <p>9. Portend 10. Barrel plug</p>
        <p>18. Sun god</p>
        <p>19. Alkali</p>
        <p>20. Excavated</p>
        <p>21. New Zealand tribe</p>
        <p>22. Esparto grass</p>
        <p>23. Suggestive glance</p>
        <p>24. Harvest goddess</p>
        <p>26. Newt</p>
        <p>27. Pleas</p>
        <p>28. Born</p>
        <p>29. Urchin 31. Stupid person</p>
        <p>34. Provided that</p>
        <p>35. Unite</p>
        <p>36.Jot 37 Pack 38. Second</p>
        <p>40. Pronoun</p>
        <p>41. Pepper plant</p>
        <p>42. Edga</p>
        <p>  44. Totem pole</p>
        <p>].1I 45. Dutch commune</p>
        <p>* *  5 Piece Show Band ***</p>
        <p>Danny Mooiiy &amp;amp; Wil(3fire</p>
        <p>From Tampa, Florida</p>
        <p>No Cover Charge When Dining</p>
        <p>Call for Reservations</p>
        <p>Daily Lunchaon Buffat 11:30 to 2:00-$2.25 Sunday Buffat 12:00 to 2:00-$3.50'</p>
        <p>I</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0018" />
        <p>18-The Daily JWleclor, Greenville. N'.C.Tr.W*iieday. FefaniaryiM. mt</p>
        <p>Autos For Sale</p>
        <p>THE DAILY</p>
        <p>REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>Classified Advertising Rates</p>
        <p>752-6166</p>
        <p>Place your Classified ad for 7 days. The cost is less.</p>
        <p>RATES</p>
        <p>TRANSIENT RATES Minimum 3 Lines 1-3 Days  40c per line per day</p>
        <p>4-6 Days  37c per line per day</p>
        <p>7 or More  35c per line per day</p>
        <p>SEMIANNUAL</p>
        <p>CONTRACTS</p>
        <p>4 Lines Per Day  28c  per line</p>
        <p>(Monthly Charge  S29.12)</p>
        <p>8 Lines Per Day  26c  per line</p>
        <p>(Monthly Charge  SS4.08)</p>
        <p>'  CLASSIFIED</p>
        <p>DISPLAY RATES Open Rate  Si  .90  per inch</p>
        <p>7 Or More Days  Sl .t per inch</p>
        <p>SEMI-ANNUAL CONTRACTS 6 Inches Per Week t Inch Per Day (Monthly Charge</p>
        <p>DEADLINES</p>
        <p>$1.80</p>
        <p>$1.70</p>
        <p>$44.20}</p>
        <p>All lineage deadlines are 12:00 noon on the preceding day. Except Sunday which is 12:00 noon Friday and Monday which is 4:00 p.m. Friday. Ail display deadlines are 4:00 p.m. two days in advance of publication. Except Sunday which is 12:00 noon Thursday and Monday which is due by 12:00 noon on Friday and Tuesday which is due by 4:00 p.m. Friday.</p>
        <p>ERRORS Errors must be reported immediately. The Daily Reflector cannot make allowances for errors after the 1st day.</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR reserves the right to edit or reject any advertisement submitted.</p>
        <p>Ads</p>
        <p>AUTOMOTIVE</p>
        <p>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>6Y OWNER. '67 BuicK Skylark. Best offer, 752-5519.</p>
        <p>CAMARO 68. 3 speed. Also VW engine. 752-2335,</p>
        <p>CAPRI 1974. Silver, V-6, engine, low mileage. Call Bruce DeCamp, 756-7600</p>
        <p>CHEVELLE 1972 Concurs Estate Wagon. Excellent condition, low mileage, fully loaded including air, AM-FM radio, luggage rack. Must see to appreciate. 752-6493.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE 75. T-top, burgundy, full power, air. leather seats, 18,000 miles. 756-1702 after 5.</p>
        <p>GUARANTEED Engine, traof-mission, body parts. Free parts locating service.  ^</p>
        <p>Crisp Auto Salvage, Inc.'</p>
        <p>Phone752-2572 N. Greene St.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE. 74 Datsun Pickup. 752-4400 after 5.</p>
        <p>DODGE DEMON 19n. 2 door, red, power steering, automatic, vinyl top. Call Dick Evans, 756 7600.</p>
        <p>DODGE DART '6?. Blue with white vinyl top, power steering, automatic transmission. $495. 756 0501.</p>
        <p>FIAT SPIDER 1973 Convertible. Low mileage, AM-FM, cassette player, air conditioning, 4 new tires, new paint job, wooden dash, 5 speed, 30 miles per gallon. Excellent condition. $3000 or best offer. 756-0957.</p>
        <p>FORD MAVERICK 1972. 4 dOOr, red and white. Call Bruce OeCamp. 756-7600</p>
        <p>INTERNATIONAL Travelall '69. 345 V 8, automatic transmission, AM-FM radio, air conditioning, positive wheel drive. Good condition. $1350. Call 825-0031 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>MERCURY '68 Park Lane. 4 door hardtop, loaded. Also '65 FB5 Old-smobile, 4 door. 756-2958.</p>
        <p>MERCURY 1969 Marquis. Fully equipped, very clean. $795. 756-0131.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Ray's Front End Alignment Service</p>
        <p>Located at Curley's Exxon Station 756-0566 Factory Trained</p>
        <p>MOB 1972. British racing green, wire wheels. Excellent condition. Call 756-0342.</p>
        <p>MOB 1972. In excellent condition. $2750. Call 756-4931,</p>
        <p>MUSTANG II 75. 4,000 miles, 758 0695 after 5:30 p.m.</p>
        <p>OLDS 74 TORONADO. Black on black, fully equipped, AM-FM radio, tape deck, power seats and windows, air, extra clean. S35W. 758-0687 after</p>
        <p>5.</p>
        <p>OPEL KADETT '69 Station Wagon. Very clean interior, radio, good tires. $650 or best offer, 758-3210.</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH 1971 Fury III. $750. Call 752-2540.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER 65 Plymouth Fury HI. Full power, air conditioned, extra clean, good rubber. 752-3772.</p>
        <p>PLYMOUTH 74 Ouster. Manual transmission, slant six engine. 756-2790 after 5.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 1966. V-8, automatic, good condition. $250. Call 752-5660 between 1 and 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>PONTIAC 75 Grand Prix. $4700. Call 756 5526. Will trade for Older car.</p>
        <p>BY THE ONLY OWNER. 1973 Toyota Clica. Excellent condition, Michelln steel belted radials, new vinyl top, AM FM stereo tape player. $2950. 758-2525.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 73 Corona Wagon. 30,000 miles, air,AM-FM, Michelln tires. Book $2975, will take $2500. Cali Allen Dean's Sports Center, 752-8610 from 8</p>
        <p>til 6.</p>
        <p>TOYOTA 72 Carina. Excellent running condition, good mileage. 756-3301,</p>
        <p>TOYOTA COROLLA 73.4 speed, new</p>
        <p>tires, 34,000 miles, 35 miles gallon. $1750 . 756-1557 or 756-3180-</p>
        <p>TOVOTA 7S Clica GT. Air, FM-FM stereo, 10,000 miles, luggage rack. 752 3512 after 6.</p>
        <p>1975 TOYOTA STATION WAGON.</p>
        <p>Low mileage. Call Dick Evans, 756-7600.</p>
        <p>VEGA 1974 Hatchback. Excellent condition. Good gas mileage. Call 756-1042.</p>
        <p>VEGA GT 1972. New motor. 756-3846.</p>
        <p>LOOKING FOR VW PARt? We</p>
        <p>might have just what you're looking for. Hoods, fenders, engines, transmissions, etc. Call 734-7482.</p>
        <p>VW '64. RUNS GOOD. Call 758-0128 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>Boats For Sale</p>
        <p>16' BOAT, MOTOR and trailer. 40 HP Evinrude motor. $550. 752-2788.</p>
        <p>14' SAILBOAT. New sails with accessories. 756-5555, extension 268.</p>
        <p>'75 GRADY WHITE 19', 135 HP Evinrude. Depth finder, CB radio, compass, 30 gallon gas capacity, galvanized trailer. 746-4t44 day, 746-4261 night.</p>
        <p>'73 WELLCRAFT, '73, 115 HP Johnson motor and trailer. 17 foot center console. $2995. 527-8147.</p>
        <p>AQUASPORT 1700 With 80 HP Mercury. Both 1972. Galvanized Cox trailer. Bimini top, extras. 756-0608.</p>
        <p>'75, 16' MARQUIS Custom, '75, 115 HP Evinrude, Cox tilt trailer. Approximately 25 hours. $3350 firm. 750-3270.</p>
        <p>DIXIE BASS BOAT. 16' Dixie with 50 HP Mercury and front mount trolling motor. Excellent condition. Call 758-2107 day br 756-6155 evenings.</p>
        <p>Cycles For Sale</p>
        <p>1974 CB 750 HONDA. 2200 actual miles, excellent condition. Semichopped, Must sell. $1400. 758-4250.</p>
        <p>XL 250 HONDA 1973. condition. $475. 758-3967.</p>
        <p>1973 RD 350 YAMAHA. Road bike, excellent condition. Must sell, getting larger bike. $575. 758-4225 after 6.</p>
        <p>1972, 250 YAMAHA; street. Excellent condition. $350. 758-5631 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>Trucks For Sale</p>
        <p>75 TOYOTA L0N6BED. West coast mirrors, AM-FM with camper. $3995. 795-3886.</p>
        <p>1973 GMC. 752-3609.</p>
        <p>73 FORD BRONCO. Excellent condjtion. Call 756-1039 after 5.</p>
        <p>1974 JEEP PICKUP. 4 Wheel drive, 6 cylinder with power steering. Also 1974 Blazer. 36,000 miles, power steering and brakes, air conditioning. $4300. 756-4827.</p>
        <p>DOGS&amp;amp; PETS</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Boxer puppies. Fawn with beautiful markings. Excellent bloodline, dewormed, six weeks old. 752-9218 after 6.</p>
        <p>FOR SALE AKC Registered Dalmatians. 7 weeks old. Male, S75; female, $60. Call 946-7949 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>AKC PEKINGESE puppies, stud service. 758-3603.</p>
        <p>AKC REGISTERED Springer Spaniel puppies. 8 weeks old, dewormed and shots. Male, $125; female, $100. 756-5339.</p>
        <p>AKC LABRADOR Retrievers. 7 weeks old, dewormed with shots. Can see both parents. Females, $100; males, $125. 753-5375.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>NOTICE</p>
        <p>W. Calvin &amp;lt;*&amp;gt; Changing to ntw locatlan. Sanitary Barbar Shop, 10 E. 5th St. Betweon S Points and</p>
        <p>Beik-Tyiers.</p>
        <p>752-2560</p>
        <p>HELP WANTED</p>
        <p>SALES OPPORTUNiTY</p>
        <p>New car and truck sa its managor wantad for Ford and AAtrcury dua I dea iership. Tht parson host suittd for this position would bo an assistant sales manager now in a progrtssivtdtalorthipora top salesporson now cmploytd in the automoMIo businast. Aha ha VO opening tor 2 salosptoph who art willing to work and natd to make tIOOO to &amp;gt;1500 per month. Past axporionct hat shown pooph under M years old havt tht bast chanco of succotding in this work.</p>
        <p>Apply to:</p>
        <p>C.W. Wickham or T.C. Boyd, Jr.</p>
        <p>EDGECOMBE MOTOR CO, INC.</p>
        <p>Tarboro, N.C. 2788</p>
        <p>EMPLOYMENT</p>
        <p>Help Wanted</p>
        <p>AVON TO aUY OR SELI at new</p>
        <p>low prices. Ceil for more information, 758-2444.</p>
        <p>HOUSEWIVES, need extra money? Career opportunity in sales, set your own earnings and hours. Enter the glamorous world of Princeu House. For further information, call 756-6409.</p>
        <p>WANTED. LIVE-IN housemother for Alpha Delta Pi Sorority. Call for appointment after 4, 752-8179.</p>
        <p>HEAD CASHIER. Must be able to</p>
        <p>type accurately. Apply In person from 9 til 5:30, 511 Dickinson Avenut.</p>
        <p>RN'S AND LPN'S. Full or part-time. Excellent salary, evening and night shifts open. Albemarle Villa, 792-1616 between 9 and 5, Monday  Friday.</p>
        <p>SALES. PART-TIME. $90 - $100 per week. Local firm needs part-time representatives to show Paul Harvey fire safety film during the evening. Prefer married candidates with auto. Excellent income opportunity. No experience required. Will train. Call 758-2107 from 9 til 5 or 756-6155 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>TEMPORARY, part-time telephone calling. $2.30 per hour. Call 756-5195.</p>
        <p>WANT YOUNG aggressive person interested In profitable auto sales opportunity. Experience not required. Train while you learn. Send inquiries to Sales Opportunity, P.O. Box 1967, Greenville.</p>
        <p>BRODY'S HAS OPENING for win. dow display and Interior display personnel. Interesting job. Apply at Brody's Downtown.</p>
        <p>KEYPUNCH OPERATORS. $90</p>
        <p>$100. Temporary or permanent available. Experience required. Ounhlll, 758-2107.</p>
        <p>MARRIED COUPLE wanted as live-in teaching parents for juvenile group home. BA-BS preferred. Full benefits and relief provided. Send resume to New Directions, 719 Hooker Road, Greenville. 756-7665 for appointment.</p>
        <p>ACT NOWI Be a Sarah Coventry Fashion Show Director In your area. No Investment. No deliveryf Excellent arrangement to add to your family income. Opportunity for local management. 756-6509 or 734-4233.</p>
        <p>TEMPORARY FUND raising campaign needs telephone survey personnel. Good speaking voice a must. Experience in telephone sales helpful. 752-8977.</p>
        <p>WANT TO WORK while children in school? Must be neat and aggressive and be able to handle people. Up to six hours per day. Reply to P.O. Box 1846, Greenville. All replies held in strictest confidence.</p>
        <p>CRANE OPERATOR needed. Report to Bill Sandifer on 1-95 Bridge Project. Located off Highway 58 North of Wilson on state Road 1313, past the airport. Equal Opportunity Employer.</p>
        <p>Work Wanted</p>
        <p>WISH TO KEEPchild in my home for working mother. Shady KnoM Mobile Estates, 758-4934.</p>
        <p>WOMAN WOULD like to keep children in her home for working mothers. Cali 752-1320</p>
        <p>FOR SALE</p>
        <p>Campers For Sale</p>
        <p>FORD FIBERGLASS camper top. Red and white. $350. Call 756-3015 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>Farm Equipment</p>
        <p>ROANOKE bulk racking table. One year old. $200 or best offer. Call 758-1301.  </p>
        <p>1967 D-12 ALLIS CHALMER with two-row cultivators and fertilizer attachments. Also 24-blade disc harrow, row hoe and poison spreader. Call 758-4503 day or night.</p>
        <p>Live stock</p>
        <p>PUREBRED Yoerkshire boars for sale. Ready for service. $200 each. Phone 756-3229.</p>
        <p>Miscellaneous</p>
        <p>FILL DIRT builder sand, top soil, and rock. J.L. McDaniel, day, 752-2382; night, 756-2351.</p>
        <p>WHEATSTRAW. 756-1538 after 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>LARGE LOADS OF sand, top soil, dirt and rock sold at reasonable prices. Lots cleared and debris hauled away. Call 756-4742 after 6 fo&amp;lt;^ Jim Hudson.</p>
        <p>HOOVER CLEANERS will preserve and prolong the beauty wid life of the carpet. See Smith Electric Company-for sales and service. 415 Evans Street.</p>
        <p>CUSTOM MADE fireplace screens. Sizes to SO". Choice of popular finishes. $39.95. Home Furniture^ Store, 701 Dickinson Avenue.</p>
        <p>VICTORIAN STYLE Duncan Phyfe sofa with clawed feet. $275. Call 746-6126 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROOFING</p>
        <p>STORM WINDOWS DOORS &amp;amp; AWNINGS</p>
        <p>C.L. LUPTON CO.</p>
        <p>MiscBllantous</p>
        <p>UPRIGHT PIANO, racently rabuilt. $250. Call 758-3254.</p>
        <p>FILL Dl RT, top soil, rocks and sand for sale. Large loads. Henry Worthington, 746-3461.</p>
        <p>Seeds AND Plants</p>
        <p>Gordon sotdt weighed out, cabbage and coliard plants, onions and potatoeo. Vlalt our new wed store.</p>
        <p>OlcklnMn Avi. Extanslon</p>
        <p>Mre</p>
        <p>(breenk</p>
        <p>is</p>
        <p>ouac</p>
        <p>Mila From Moose Lodge</p>
        <p>MAKS YOUR HOME a showplace</p>
        <p>with beautiful bedspreads and drapti by Norman's of Salisbury. Tht Linen Closet,3008 East Tenth Street, Greenville.</p>
        <p>"JUST RIGHT" color. That's what you look for first In carpet. You can't go wrong with the magic of Masland during AAasland week, February 16 through 21 at Larry's Carpetland, 3010 East Tenth Street.</p>
        <p>USED AND NEW SHOES. Size 10,</p>
        <p>narrow and medium. 40 pairs for $45. 752-4289.</p>
        <p>LEAF MULCHER and shredder. 6</p>
        <p>HP motor, like new. $200. Call 756-3015 after 7 p.m.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL!</p>
        <p>SENTRY SAFE</p>
        <p>For Fire Protection</p>
        <p>up</p>
        <p>Toff Office Equipment Co.</p>
        <p>752-2175</p>
        <p>569 S, Evans St.</p>
        <p>12STRINOUNIVOXguitar. Bought3 months ago for $215, will sell with case for $150. 758-1489, ask for Ed.</p>
        <p>SEPTIC TANK SERVICE and backhoe for hire. Also small loads of sand and topsoll. Joe Rogers, 746-4780.  _</p>
        <p>CLEAN RUGS Hkenew. So easy, with Blue Lustre. Rent shampooer, $2. Rental Tool Company. Now open.</p>
        <p>36' INSULATED tandem van trailer. Side and back doors, good condition. Can be seen at 2605 East Third Street. Call Edenton, 482-3168.</p>
        <p>FOOT WARMER pads, $22.50. Womack Electronic Supply, 758-5029.</p>
        <p>CLOSEOUT. All microwave ovens wholesale. Cash and carry. Fisher's Appliance 8. Furniture, 752-3609.</p>
        <p>Maus Piano Co. |</p>
        <p>157 S.E. Main St.  ! Rocky AAount, N.C. t</p>
        <p>HOME OF BALDWInI .PIANOS &amp;amp; ORGANS Service &amp;amp; Quality</p>
        <p>Phone 442-8655</p>
        <p>ONE CARAT diamond ring. Tiffany sat. 756-0484 after 6 p.m., ask for B. Jean.</p>
        <p>BEAN HAY for sale. 756-7397.</p>
        <p>15.2 CUBIC FOOT frostfess refrlgerator-freezer. Also heavy duty washer. Both practically new and in excellent condition. Call 746-6412.</p>
        <p>NEED OFFICE equipment? You'll find good buys In today's Want Ads. Check NOWI</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>CLEARANCE</p>
        <p>SALE</p>
        <p>Sin lip It 20% On Gas Appljances</p>
        <p>Ranges</p>
        <p>Clothes Dryers Space Heaters Water Heaters Clothes Washers</p>
        <p>We Service What Wa Sell</p>
        <p>Suburban</p>
        <p>732 GreenvlllaBlvd. Greanville, N.C. 756-2242</p>
        <p>SECRETARY I</p>
        <p>Salary Range  6,864  to 8,760</p>
        <p>Desire a high proficiency shorthand, typing and communicating skills.</p>
        <p>Apply In person at Personnel pfflct. Municipal BuHOino, Fifth and Washington Streets, or submit written application to Ptrsonnal Otfica, Post Office Box ItOS, Greenville, N.C. 1713,. The City of Groenvllla Is an equal opportunity employer.</p>
        <p>C295</p>
        <p>1976</p>
        <p>Mercedes-Benz</p>
        <p>Engineersd Like No Other Car In The World</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTA</p>
        <p>109 Trade St.  756  3228</p>
        <p>Dealer No. 3035  Used  Car  Office  756  3231</p>
        <p>Open til 8 p.m.</p>
        <p>MIscbIIbmous</p>
        <p>OAK FIREWOOD for talt. Cut any</p>
        <p>length. Mixed, $25; oak, $30. im-mediate delivery. 752-7323, 7S2-7611.</p>
        <p>THIRTY r rtel-fo-rttl tapat, $; lurf board, $80; 2 Sansui ipMktrt, model SP 1500, $190; Pioneer PL51 turntable, new, $180; Zenith black and white 19" TV, $35; Undarwood typewriter with ca$a, $95; rxk albums. 756-5555. extanslon 261.</p>
        <p>STEAMER CLEANS carpet like the pros. Take cart of your Investment. Claan carpet lasts longer. Call 758-2300 for reservation. Larry's Carpet! and.</p>
        <p>YOU CAN "STEAM" claan carpets, professionally clean with naw par-table Rents-N-Vac. Rent at Rental. Tool Ownpany across from Hattlngs Ford. Now open  Rsntai Tool Company.</p>
        <p>ONE BEDROOM tulta. 4 bumar aiactrlc range. Both $425. 751-0253 after 5:30.</p>
        <p>MATTRESS SPECIAL. Quean siza</p>
        <p>interspring mattress and foundation. Regularly $219.95, now $129 par sat. Maxwell Home Furnishings, 604 Greenville Blvd.</p>
        <p>OAK FIREWOOD for sale, $30; mixad. $25. Cut any length, split and delivered. 7524)612.</p>
        <p>1966 BUICK SFICIAL* $100. New Hoover upright vacuum, $50. Rug shampooer, $10. Baby swing, $5. 756-5369.</p>
        <p>APPROXIMATELY 3,088 dd brIcks for sale. 758-2916,</p>
        <p>3 ROOMS OF furniture, only two weeks old, cheap, must tell. 75^14 or 746-3807.</p>
        <p>COLONIAL FINE twin bedroom set, double dresser, bookcase head boards, large mirror, box sprlngv $175. 756-6007.</p>
        <p>DON'T LET LAST WEEK fool you; March can still be the coldest month of the year. Firewood for mIo, $30 truckload, split oak. 756-6612.</p>
        <p>FIREWOOD for sale. Tree pruning and removal. Reasonable rates. Will negotiate. Call the Blue Ox at 756-7574.</p>
        <p>PA SYSTEM. "Woodson" top line, pro quality. Like new. 752-6399 after</p>
        <p>5.</p>
        <p>CORVETTE '78. Good condition, convertible, 350 cubic inch, 350 HP. Also 5 placa set of Rogers 380 drums, white oaarl. 758-1314 after 6:30.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOMES</p>
        <p>Mobile Homti For Ront</p>
        <p>12 K 68,2 BEDROOM mobile home for rent. 758-5831 or 756-5228.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM FURNISHED mobile</p>
        <p>homes. Good location. 752-3286, 825-5391.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM MOBILE home</p>
        <p>available. Rent free for part-time laborer. 758-2861.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL SPRING quarter rates for students on 2 bedroom mobile homes. Call today for appointment. 758-3644. No pets.</p>
        <p>MOBILE HOME spaces. City water, city sewage, swimming pool, pavad streets, underground utilities, recreation area. Mobile homes for rent. 758-4413.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>SALESPERSON</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>Ideal Career Opportunity For One Salesperson To Work Out Of Greenvillo, N.C. o</p>
        <p>NoOvtrnlghtTravBt e  H</p>
        <p>Ne Sales Experience Necettiry e</p>
        <p>Wflf Train Ttw Right Ptrten</p>
        <p>Ideal Working Conditions With Good Salary And Yearly Bonus</p>
        <p>a</p>
        <p>This Could Ba What You Are Looking Fori a</p>
        <p>Write-Giving Past Work Experience  Te:</p>
        <p>SALES</p>
        <p>P.O. Box 314 OrttnvlllBy N.C. 27814</p>
        <p>MebiltHoiiiotFor Ront</p>
        <p>2 BEDROOM MOBILB home. WoBhar, air, fully furnlshod. Ceuplaa prafarrad, no pita. Call 752-6735 days.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOMS, air, waahar, fur-nlahad. Call 756-1900.</p>
        <p>MobHo Homos For Slo _</p>
        <p>12 X 65, '73 MADISON. 2 badrooms, dan, washar and dryar, air con-ditloning. Aasumt paymantt. 752-1699.</p>
        <p>13 X 56, FULLY FURNISHED with air cmdltionfng. IV baths, carpatatf, washar and dryar. Excatlant con-dition. $3995. 752-6020.</p>
        <p>1965, 12 X 68 PARKWAY. 2 badrooms, washtf and dryar, dishwasher, $2950. Also 10 X 45 valiant, $1650. Call 825-7661 or 752-9589.</p>
        <p>BEFORE YOU BUY or tail your homa, contact Colonial Park. Wt hava a wlda aalaction of re-manufacturad homai at tow, tow pricaa. 751-4413, 758-2525.</p>
        <p>'78 SILVER KNIGHT. 3 badrooms, IV^ baths, V/ ton central air conditioning, washar-dryar hookups. 756-5417 or 756-2909.</p>
        <p>SAVE TIME, savt affort end savt monav, toa^ by shopping tht Claaaif lad Ads fn Tha Dally Rafiactv first 10 find iti# things you svant.</p>
        <p>OPPORTUNITY</p>
        <p>FOR SALE OR rant. Homaataad Caah Groctry, Old RIvtr Road. Raasonabiai Contact ownar. Jack Lloyd at bualnasi from 6 tit 10 p.m. dally._</p>
        <p>TWO 0PBRAT9RI for baauty salon. Good businasa, good location in Washington. Sailing dua to Mtnass. 758-2321, Emmy. 7SI-26t9, Sam Irwin.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>COMMERCIAL CLEANING AND MAINTENANCE. Painting and dacorating. 756-6X1. Try our winttr ratas.</p>
        <p>PROFESSIONAL</p>
        <p>R.C. WATERS Conatruction Company. Room additlom, r&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>ry work. Foroualttv with raftrancat, cell 756^091. if no</p>
        <p>aniwar.</p>
        <p>aeHmata.</p>
        <p>call 756-6765 for fraa</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE</p>
        <p>LET WIDCO REALTY do your laq work. Wt ara concarnad about your housing r&amp;gt;Mdl. Call 756-1595.</p>
        <p>Buying or Selling, For Best Results Try Our "Personal Service."</p>
        <p>|rn D.G. NICHOL^ Ixl AGENCY</p>
        <p>SfAiio? Phone 752-4012 anytime</p>
        <p>FOR BETTER BUYS In reel esteta,</p>
        <p>ata or call E.H. WHIiford, Realtor, 222-B Cotaneha Straat, 758-3911. List your property with us.</p>
        <p>To Buy Or Sail Real fatata Call</p>
        <p>nrHon-xvaiucc</p>
        <p>etAic&amp;lt;ut</p>
        <p>DIckAAcKlnney</p>
        <p>752-51T3</p>
        <p>7SS-5948</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Farms</p>
        <p>44-</p>
        <p>-a-Tt-m  48,880 POUNDS Of to tht farm. 35 cents 7861, Bathal.</p>
        <p>BCCO</p>
        <p>m t</p>
        <p>i-</p>
        <p>r rant off und. I2B</p>
        <p>HouitFf</p>
        <p>Saii</p>
        <p>DUPLBX TO BE 8 days. Quota bast b atan at Frad Wab North Graant Strea</p>
        <p>&amp;gt;vei</p>
        <p>. HP Inc 758-</p>
        <p>within n a can bt aitvator,</p>
        <p>41.</p>
        <p>TRANSFERRED. IMMEDIATELY, badrooms, 2 baths, Chen, large sapara with tub. larga dan V cast and cabinet diapoaal, formal i condition. Vf par ci Hon. $49,900. 752-47 night.</p>
        <p>MU</p>
        <p>istor</p>
        <p>irge</p>
        <p>lam</p>
        <p>Ihbu</p>
        <p>Di</p>
        <p>aaa.</p>
        <p>1 108 1 da</p>
        <p>SELL</p>
        <p>built, 3 it in kit-ry room -In book-washar, xcallant assump-758-5518</p>
        <p>BETHEL. 5 badrooi homa. Just tha th family. Jamas A. Estate 8i Insurance,</p>
        <p>s, 2 ig f&amp;lt; Man ietha</p>
        <p>ith brick  Tariga tg Rat)</p>
        <p>1825-5631.</p>
        <p>1 BEDROOMS, llvir bath. $11,900. Loca Road. Call 752-2965 and 10 p.m. .</p>
        <p>i</p>
        <p>rooiC kitchen, d ormumford xrtvw 1 6 p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED!</p>
        <p>3ISF AY</p>
        <p>DON'T FiiRGir TO C/LL JOHN WHIRTIN</p>
        <p>SCOni MUFFLER</p>
        <p>CENTER</p>
        <p>Now iecatid at M ft W Chevroiet in speciaiize in custom taiiplpo isonding axhaust systems.</p>
        <p>Call 746-3141</p>
        <p>We</p>
        <p>ndfduai</p>
        <p>Kcratlng. 754301. Try our winttr exiWUST sySTemi. atas.</p>
        <p>CUSSIFIEO DISPLAY  _Coll  746-3141  :  I</p>
        <p>12000</p>
        <p>MILES</p>
        <p>OR</p>
        <p>MONTHS!</p>
        <p>WARRANTY ON SLIGHTLY USED CARS AT TARHIEL TOYOTA THIS IS A CONTRACT BETWEEN THE* CUSTOMER AND TARHEEL TOYOTA GUARANTEE) BY THE PRESIDENT OF THE COMPANY.</p>
        <p>For a pwiod of twafva thousand (12.000) milaa or ona (1) yaar from tha abova data (whichav* shall accomplishtd first). Tarhaai Toyota. Inc. guarantaaa rtpair or raplaoa on a 50/50 basis any of tha rollowirf partU &amp;lt; aaid car that fail under normal driving eondttlons. Thla appliaa to automobilaa purchaaad at a cost ol $' mora.</p>
        <p>TRANBMfSSION  REAR</p>
        <p>Slwtdard  Airtomatie</p>
        <p>Trananeailon Valva Body. Bands. Clutch  Qaara,</p>
        <p>Oaarsand  PtataaandOlaca, Pianatary  Seals,</p>
        <p>Bearings  (3aar, Oil Pumpa (fronts roar) AxliB</p>
        <p>MOTOR</p>
        <p>Cylinder Head. Cylinder Walls, Plitont. Piston Rings, Platon Pina. Piston Pin Bushings, Crankthaft Bearings. Cwnahaft, Camshaft Baarlngs. Cionnacting Rod Bearings. Oil Pump. Valva Liftars, Valvas, Starter &amp;amp; (Stnarahx^, Water Pump, A/C.</p>
        <p>rf</p>
        <p>TARHEEL TOYOTIi</p>
        <p>109 Trade St. DEALER NO. 3035</p>
        <p>Open Til 8 P.M.</p>
        <p>75-3228 USEDCAROFFK :7Sf3231</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>Brown-Wood, Inc. is in a sales contes with another Pontiac Dealer.The winn will eat steak and the loser will eat beans. If you at are slightly Interested In a new car&amp;gt; see us today.</p>
        <p>1976 Pontiac Grand Prix</p>
        <p>stock No. 136647</p>
        <p>Equipment:</p>
        <p>Air Condition AM-FM Radio Accent Stripe Tinted Glass Custom Wheel Covers Automatic Transmission</p>
        <p>Body Side Molding WSW Radial Tires Rear Seat Speaker Floor Mats Power Disc Brakes Power Steering</p>
        <p>*5217!</p>
        <p>BROWN-WOOD, INd</p>
        <p>Dickinson Ave.</p>
        <p>752-7</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0019" />
        <p>The Daily Reflector. Greenville. N.a-WedneMlay. Febmary II.</p>
        <p>Hmist Far Sale</p>
        <p>ROOK ORKIN. You can own vour very own recreation area, mcludine a lovely swimmlno pool, along wittt this very large brick home with an flegant Interior, all on a bouble lot In one of me moat prtlgiout and convenient neighborhoods in town. Thia property could not be replaced today for $125,000. We offer it substantially below that cost, in the nineties. Call Nelson-Waliace. Inc., 752-5113; Dick McKinney, 7Sa-5948.</p>
        <p>FOR SALi SY OWNIR. 3 bedroom.</p>
        <p>2 bath home in Lake Dienwood. Large lot with fenced In bock yard. $43,100. Call 75I-SM9 after 5 p.m.</p>
        <p>3 Bf DROOMS, 2 baths, fireplace, air condition, large lot. Forest Acres, Grlfton. Call Joe Quinerly Real Estate, 524-5338.</p>
        <p>BY OWNIR. In Griffon. 3 bedrooms, bath, completely carpeted. Nice lot and location. S4-5884 anytime.</p>
        <p>BELVBOERl. By owner. Three bedrooms, two full baths, central air, well landscaped, and much more. 754-4273.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 4 bedrooms, m baths. Large rooms, nice yard. $27,000. 754-1484.</p>
        <p>PRICED AT $u,see, mis house win win your heart. A beautiful 3 bedroom, iVi bath home with formal living room, entry hall and many other features. A 7^ per cent loan assumption is available with a minimal down payment. Call 754-5549.</p>
        <p>MINUTES FROM GREENVILLE. Three bedrooms, 2 full baths, family room, kitchen with eating area, single carport. No down payment, monthly payments 1182 if you qualify. Aldridge A Southerland, 7$2-2408; nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge, 754-7871.</p>
        <p>BY OWNER in Ayden. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, foyer, living room with fireplace, den and kitchen combination, lust been carpeted, finished parage. $32,000. 746-4584.</p>
        <p>SHAMROCK TERRACE, Wln-terville. Beautiful iH'Ick home. 3 bedrooms, 1V^ baths, plush carpet and tastefully dKorated. A real treat I $24,500. Aldridge B Southerland, 752-2608,- nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge, 754-7871.</p>
        <p>ON MUMFORD ROAD. 4 bedrooms,</p>
        <p>2 full baths, kitchen with eating arta, large utility area, roomy family room, carport, sopaate building for recreation room or wslness. $32X100. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 752-2608; nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge. 754-7871.</p>
        <p>INVSSTORSI Duplex. Brand new. 2 bedrooms each unit. Wood deck off back. Excellent potential. $37400. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 752-2608; nlghts, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge, 754-7871.</p>
        <p>RED OAK. A super home! 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, country kitchen with eating area, formal living and dining room, entrance foyer, coay den, wooded lot. $37,500. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 752-2408; nIghH, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge. 754-7871.</p>
        <p>TUCKER ESTATES. 2 Story Williamsburg In Greenville's hottest subdivision. 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, family room with fireplace, formal dining room, roomy kitchen with breakfast area. 149,900. Aldridge 8, Southerland, 752-2408; nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge, 754-7871.</p>
        <p>BEAUTIFUL RANCH on wooded lot In Cherry Oaks. Tremendous den with fireplace and bookcases, roomy kitchen with eating area, formal living and dining room, 3 bedrooms and 2 full baths. Double garage. $51,000. Aldridge 4 Southerland, 752-2600; nights, Dick Evans, 7S8&amp;gt;1119; Mike Aldridge. 754-7871._</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM HOME, Forest Hill Drive. 1800 square feet, excellent location within walking distance of shopping, schools and University. $S5X)00. Call The Rich Company, Washington, N.C., 944A021 days, 944-4829 nights._</p>
        <p>BY OWNER. 2300 square feet living area. Outside building, 24 x 24 with heated cement floor and K x 20 attached closed in shelter. 20 x 24 double carport. Fully landscaped 1V^ acre lot. 744-3221 after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY ~</p>
        <p>Houst For Solt</p>
        <p>BUY A TOWNHOUSE at Yorktown Square. 2 and 3 bedroom homes. Convenient, economical, personal. Excellent financing. Don't pay rent another day, you be the boss In your own home. Make an appointment and see for yourself. Call Colony Real Estate, 752-8469; nights, 752-2910.</p>
        <p>WALK TO THE UNIVERSITY. 4</p>
        <p>bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen Includes dishwasher, disposal, range, refrigerator, washer, dryer and air conditioner. Recently painted. Separate single car garage. $23.500. Call Colony Real Estate, 752-8649; nights, 752-2910. (Exclusive listing).</p>
        <p>FRESHLY PAINTED 3 bedroom home at 203 Arlington Circle. Living room with large fireplace, dining room, eat-in kitchen, enclosed garage offers expandable space. Shaded lot 75'X 135', completely fenced on quiet street at $23,500. A good buy. Call Colony Real Estate, 752-8449; nights, 752-2910. (Exclusive listing).</p>
        <p>FOUR BEDROOM brick home at a very affordable price. \Vi baths, garage, lot 100 x 200 and assumable loan. Priced to sell at only $29,900. Estate Realty Company, 752-K)5B; Robert Edwards, 756-4452; Jarvis or Dorils Mills. 752-3647.</p>
        <p>COLLEGE COURT'S Belt. An ex</p>
        <p>ceptional split level with additional features. Custom cabinets and cfapes, large den, 4 bedrooms, 2^/i bams, central air and heat, tvm picture windows viewing picturesque landscaping In front and rear. Large tot. Call Carl Darden today at Bowen-Darden Realty, 752-7194.</p>
        <p>Check These Prices!</p>
        <p>This home is in the city limits and close to the grade school and tennis courts. Absolutely spotless with three bedrooms, bath, living room with fireplace, formal dining room, kitchen with pantry. Central air. Carpets, drapes and refrigerator. $33,100.</p>
        <p>The family room Is right out of a magazine. Curved brick fireplace, woodbox, and raised hearth. Gorgeous kitchen with dining area, three bedrooms, 1Vi baths, living room, carpeted. You must see it. $34,000.</p>
        <p>If you always wanted that pretty home among the trees, this Is It. Looks like a painting with a kitchen you wilt love, fabulous fireplace and family room, formal dining and living room, three bedrooms, two baths. Only seven months old. Walt until you see the carpeting. 144,000. Two new homes In Lake Glenwood. Both with foyers, living rooms, dining rooms, kitchens with breakfast areas, family rooms with fireplaces, three bedrooms, two baths. Garage. Low forties. We have sold three new homes In Lake Olenvwod In the past four weeks. Better hurry!</p>
        <p>DUFFUS</p>
        <p>REALTY, INC</p>
        <p>Call Anytime</p>
        <p>756-5395</p>
        <p>Thelma Whitehurst Darrell Hignite Anhe Stott Duffus Jack Duffus</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p> M" and 30" cut.</p>
        <p> S HP or I HP onglnw.</p>
        <p>CLARK &amp;amp; CO.</p>
        <p>Mimorlal Dr.</p>
        <p>rS-lS57</p>
        <p>Barbecue and Miscellaneous Auction Sale</p>
        <p>FEBRUARY 21, 1976 TIME: 10 A.M.</p>
        <p>Black Jack Volunteer Fire Department</p>
        <p>IttRH to bo conslgntd should bo ot tho Art doportmont by i:00 o'clock on lilt list.</p>
        <p>Itoms for solo includod:</p>
        <p>Tractors, harrows, broking plows, cultivators, transplantors, fumlturo, odds and ands.</p>
        <p>Join tha community offort to Iwlp us to htip you.</p>
        <p>THE REAL ESTATE CORNER</p>
        <p>Hookor Road</p>
        <p>Heath Realty</p>
        <p>7S2-2000</p>
        <p>9S% COIIVHTIOIUI HOME LOUS</p>
        <p>CallJoe Bowen 752-7194</p>
        <p>Condominium, Greonvillo, N.C.</p>
        <p>Apt. No.T; University Condominium, a bedrooms^ baftis.central heat and air, carpet. Shown by appointment onty.ABbifOT Make me an offer.</p>
        <p>North Hill Estate  Ayden, N.C.</p>
        <p>489 North Hill Dfivt'^ Unusual residence, yet very eifivenlent. 2 bathv 3 bedrooms, den, living room, carpet, stove and dithwashor, central bapf and air, doubla carport.  Prict $40 OM</p>
        <p>,2</p>
        <p>802 North Hill Drive</p>
        <p>H2 Narth Hill orlvs- Hsw rMldane, undtr cMitruetlwi. irleli</p>
        <p>baths, I hadpaams, dan and living raam, firaplaca, itava and dlt.........</p>
        <p>gtriia. Pinch Styla.</p>
        <p>Price $40,000</p>
        <p>Maury, N.C.</p>
        <p>S badmams, IIS balhi, brick vaniar wllh carp^, &amp;lt;*y;j&amp;lt; Hnead In, ctnhrni haat and nir candlllin, vary attracllva and qvldt IdcallM.</p>
        <p>Iiiiii tmnnn- $27,000</p>
        <p>Chester Stox</p>
        <p>REAL ESTATE BROKER 741 61U D#y  746-3308  ifttr  5:30  P.M.</p>
        <p>Houm For Said</p>
        <p>445 FAIRLAHE ROAD. 3 bedrooms, 2 boths, formal dining, family room-kitchen combination, garage and greenhouse plus carport. $43,500. Bill Williams Real Estate, 752-2415.</p>
        <p>WILLIAMSBURG. 4 bedrooms, 3&amp;lt;/^ baths, formal living room with fireplace, modem kitchen with eating area, double garage. $43,000. Aldridge 8. Southerland, 752-2401; nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike AkJridge, 754-7871.</p>
        <p>$23,000 IF YOU QUALITY for this Farmers h4ome Loan. 3 bedrooms, large family room, kitchen with eating area, plush carpet, payments of $182 month. Aldridge &amp;amp; Southerland, 752-2606; nights, Dick Evans, 758-1119; Mike Aldridge, 756-7871.</p>
        <p>RENTALS</p>
        <p>2500 SQUARE FOOT commercial building, suitable for office, warehouse, retail ust at 213 Wast Ninth Street. Contact l.j. Edwards, Jr., 758-2614 or 756-5024.</p>
        <p>OFFICES AND STORAGE for rent. 308 and 310 Pennsylvania Avenue. Call Pete West. 752-4220.</p>
        <p>754-0070</p>
        <p>746-4447</p>
        <p>754-2646</p>
        <p>754-5395</p>
        <p>Apprtmdnts For Rdnt</p>
        <p>Oie and two bedroom garden apartments. Located just off East Tenth Street.</p>
        <p>PHONE 752-3519</p>
        <p>THE MOST SPACE for your rental dollar. Newly carpeted University Condominium with 2 bedrooms, 1,^ baths. $180. Call 752-0152 or 754-3410.</p>
        <p>ray I</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p>I M. kbansfw iggg i CMrkn Sum* TM. (1*1 r4M</p>
        <p>Modern, convenient, luxurious, exclusive, affordable 1, 2, and 3 bedroom garden ipts. and two bedroom town houses. Furnished or unfurnished.</p>
        <p>AM applications are accepted subject to availability.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>KAWASAKI</p>
        <p>MOTORS</p>
        <p>CORPORATION</p>
        <p>At This Time Is Offering An Exciting Motorcycle Business Opportunity In The Greenville Area.</p>
        <p>For Mort lirfermaNen Rteardinf TM OPPORTUNITY Ta iOln Tlw FMtMt Orowidf Malar Mafarcycia Mtf. Contact:</p>
        <p>Mr. Henry Noda Kawasaki Motors Corporation</p>
        <p>PO.dax 11447 Santa Ana.Ca.91711 (714) I3S-II7S</p>
        <p>Apartmdnts For Rdnt</p>
        <p>Beautiful large 2 bedroom garden apartments with wall to wail carpet, draperies, dishwasher and two swimming pools. Located off Country Club Drive adjacent to Greenville Golf and Country Club.</p>
        <p>754-4849</p>
        <p>Eastbpaok</p>
        <p>apartments</p>
        <p>Two bedroom luxury apartments with optional dens and all the new amenities including wall to wall carpeting, draperies, dishwashers, individual air conditioning and healing AND MORE.</p>
        <p>CALL 758-4012</p>
        <p>Most luxurious 2 bedroom townhouses and 1 bedroom apartments in Greenville. Chandeler, trash compactor, fully carpeted, drapes, etc., plus washer and dryer hook-ups, fabulous pool, sauna baths, tennis court and club room.</p>
        <p>752 1557</p>
        <p>RIVER BLUFF APARTMENTS</p>
        <p>I and 2 bedroom apartments available for rent now. Located lust inside city limits and easily accessible to downtown Greenville.</p>
        <p>Phone 758-4015</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Apartments For Rent</p>
        <p>(D</p>
        <p>Ultimate In Apartment Living</p>
        <p>1. 2, and 3 bedroorrts. washer, dryer hook ups, pool, club house. Oily 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>; +|-irtp_olrLr</p>
        <p>kitcmenappliances</p>
        <p>nice FURNISHED APARTMENT.</p>
        <p>Air conditioned, fully carpeted. 1 block from university. Call 752-2430.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM DUPLEX. 118B North Meade Street. Available March l. Central air conditioning, range, refrigerator supplied. 754-7480.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Aptrtmfnts For Rent</p>
        <p>FURNISHED apprtment in private home adioining campus. Available 15. 1 stu(- *</p>
        <p>March  752-5529.</p>
        <p>student. Call mornings</p>
        <p>^ Housts For Rtnt</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM, 2 bath house available March 1. Cantral heat and air, garage, fully carpeted. Lake Glen-wood. $325. 754-2220, 9 til 5.</p>
        <p>3 BEDROOM furnished house. Students preferred. No pets. On Pactoius Highway. 758-5771.</p>
        <p>OHice Spice For Rent</p>
        <p>10M SQUARE FOOT office with four private offices, lobby. Fully carpeted. Available March 1. Fleming 8. Associates, phone 754-4234.</p>
        <p>ALL OR PART OF 1575 square feet of office space for rent. Will divide to suit tenant. Excellent Ixation in Oakmont Plaza. 752-5249 night, 752-4120 day.</p>
        <p>2000 SQUARE FEET Of warehouse with offices and toilets. Located behind J.H. Hudson, inc. Highway 244 East, 758-2138,</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>ROW BUSTER PLOW $370.00 Plus Tax</p>
        <p>HENDRIX-BARNHILL</p>
        <p>ARE YOU READY...</p>
        <p>to take that important step that will lead to financial success? We have an unusual sales opportunity which can mean $10,000 - $15,000 or more your first year. Excellent training program and unusual pension  savings plan for the right person. Experience not necessary.</p>
        <p>Send brief resume with phone number to:</p>
        <p>J. GALLIHER 3700 National Drive Suite 104 Raleigh, N.C. 27412</p>
        <p>ENGINE TUNE-UP SPECIAL</p>
        <p>Total pric. includis initillition o( Ksht Autalitt tptrk pluit, Molorcratt point set ond Motorcraft condonsor and laMr. Fours, sixes and solid stnta Ignitions tvan lass. Must bo Ford, Lincoln or Mtrcury passangar cars.</p>
        <p>TOTAL SPECIAL PRICEPARTS and LABOR</p>
        <p>*24,99</p>
        <p>Cuttomvr SIgnaturt</p>
        <p>Customtr T*lphoot No.</p>
        <p>Rtpoir Qrdor No.</p>
        <p>BRING INTHISCOUPON</p>
        <p>Authorizod Dooltrship SiBMturo</p>
        <p>Smith-Waldrop</p>
        <p>Motors</p>
        <p>PHONE 7S-4]t7, GREENVILLE, N.C.</p>
        <p>POST-SEASON</p>
        <p>SALE-A-THOIM</p>
        <p>For February</p>
        <p>BIGGEST BOATING BUYS IN YOUR AREA</p>
        <p>BIG DISCOUNTS ON INSTOCK Evinrude Motors Cobia Boats Newport Sailboats OMC Accessories</p>
        <p>30 PER CENT OFF (Ail New Stock)</p>
        <p>Skis</p>
        <p>Accessories</p>
        <p>Ladders</p>
        <p>Trailer Jacks Life Jackets Powerwinches</p>
        <p>Special 20 Per Cent Off VHF Radios OPEN SUNDAYS</p>
        <p>Whidiards Marina</p>
        <p>Washington, N.C.</p>
        <p>Mkldia or 11 Week Specials</p>
        <p>1973 GRAND PRIX</p>
        <p>Mvar matnlllc wltK black vinyl tap. Automatic tranimlulan, pawar taring, pawar brakai, air candltian. AM-FM radia, lilt taring wkaal, ana ewnar.</p>
        <p>*3490</p>
        <p>490 990</p>
        <p>1945 FORD PICKUP</p>
        <p>V4, 3 tptad.</p>
        <p>1972 GREMLIN X</p>
        <p>Idaar Hatcbback. Black wlHi gatd Mrlpt, I xpaad. V-S. Only</p>
        <p>1972 CHEVROLET IMPALA</p>
        <p>4 dear. Brawn mttalllc. Autamntlc lranimlian, pewnr tnring, pawar braktt, air canditkm, ana awnar. Rtdacad.</p>
        <p>1590</p>
        <p>1974 MAVERICK</p>
        <p>4 dear. Ortan mttalllc. Aulamatlc lr*niml&amp;gt;an, pawar atring, pawar braktt, V-g. Air candllian, ana awnar. Rtductd.</p>
        <p>2690</p>
        <p>1949 FORD TORINO</p>
        <p>1 dear hard tap. Avipmallc tranimiitian, pawar itaaring, v-a. Oaad lacandcar.  *549</p>
        <p>1944 MUSTANG</p>
        <p>Yallaw with black vinyl lap. Automatic trantmltan, V4, Oaad ibapa.</p>
        <p>BARGAIN HUNTER'S SPECIAL 1945 PLYMOUTH</p>
        <p>1 doar nard tap. Automatic trantmlulen, V4.</p>
        <p>790</p>
        <p>249</p>
        <p>"We trade for anytbing that moves or bresthes."</p>
        <p>GOODMAN</p>
        <p>AUTO SALES</p>
        <p>4 Wheel Drive Headguarters 3004 S. Memorial Dr.  754-4353</p>
        <p>(Adiacantto Edwards Motor Co.)</p>
        <p>Rooms For Ront</p>
        <p>LIMITED NUMBER Of rooms for r#nt by the month. Each with private bath. 754-1130 after 3:30.</p>
        <p>SPECIAL NOTICE</p>
        <p>TAX RETURNS by exparienctd accountant. 753-5619 for evening or weekend appointment.</p>
        <p>WANTED</p>
        <p>FOR GENERAL repairs on houses and mobile homes, call Ken Manning, 744-432B after 4 p.m.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>TOP CASH DOLLAR for your car or truck. 754-'s353.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>Wanted To Buy</p>
        <p>WANT ST ANDINO timber. Pine and hardwood. Top pricas. Collect, 734-9144, Goldsboro.</p>
        <p>WOULD LIKE TO purchase your usedfarm equipment. Call 758-ir5 or 758-1758.</p>
        <p>Wanted To Lease</p>
        <p>WANT TOBACCO pounds to transfer to my farm. Will pay 30 cents per pound. 754-3509.</p>
        <p>WANT TO BUY 42,000 pounds of tobacco to be moved to my ferm In Pitf County. Will pay 30 cants a pound. 795-4578, Robersonvllle.</p>
        <p>WANT 28,000 POUNDS Of tObaccO tO be moved fo my farm. Will pay 31 cents a pound. 753-3130 day, 753-3644</p>
        <p>night.</p>
        <p>CLASSIFIED DISPLAY</p>
        <p>FOR SALE AT PUBLIC AUCTION</p>
        <p>Whitehurst Farm, Conetoe, N.C. Wednesday  February 25,1974 10:30 A.M.</p>
        <p>Two Excallant Farm Tracts to ba offerad saparataly and combined.</p>
        <p>Farm No. I  24J Total Acres</p>
        <p>130 Acres Cultlvsted 22 Acres Peanuts li,tO lbs. tobacco, l7 base allotment. Good hovM end leveral buildings.</p>
        <p>Ferm No. 2  7 Totil Acres</p>
        <p>102 Acres CuRivated is Acres Peanuts 13,200 lbs. tobacco, 1974 base allotment.</p>
        <p>Six Tracis all with road frontage. Ringing in size from 3.44 to 21 acres. Beautiful S acre lake in 1 tract. Very good neighborhood. Meal for bulMIng with room for garden and livestock. WitMn convenient communicating distance to Greenville, Tartaoro, Wilton end Rocky AAount.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 3  3.44 acres. Fronting on N.C. Highway 42 end State Paved Road 1524. Good corner loceRon.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 4  3.44 acres. 500' frontage on N.C. Highway 42.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 5 10 acrts. 7 acras cuRivatsd and 3 acras in woods. 434' frontage on State Paved Road Number 1514.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 420 acres. 12 acres cultivated and a beauRlul S acre pond. Long frontage on State Paved Roed 1524. A very baauHful pert time farm.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 7  10 acres of woodsland with 412 laet of Highway frontage. Good high land. Ideal for bulMing.</p>
        <p>Tract No. 0  14 acres of woodsland with 412 f40t ot Mghway frontage. Can ba aatily cleared for pashire or farm land.</p>
        <p>So la wi II ba conducted by:</p>
        <p>Vx</p>
        <p>Tidewater Auctien Co.</p>
        <p>N.C.LICMM No.571 PiRttgo  Kinston  Fiyctttvlllc</p>
        <p>For Furthtr Information Contact</p>
        <p>Wilton P. MItcholl Kinston, N.C. PtMno: 919-S23-35M</p>
        <p>R.D. (Bill) Aotthows Fayottovillo, N.C. Phono 919423-8791</p>
        <p>Or</p>
        <p>Col. Lo Roy Alans Liconsos No. M Pantogo, N.C.</p>
        <p>Phono 919-935-8104</p>
        <p>Field Offkt Located at Conetoe</p>
        <p>THE BID THREE OF THE AUCTION WORLD.</p>
        <p>SALE-A-THON</p>
        <p>Continues At PHELPS CHEVROLET</p>
        <p>WITH THESE SPECIALS</p>
        <p>1976 Chevrolet Malibu</p>
        <p>4 door Sedan Stock Number 359</p>
        <p>*3950</p>
        <p>plus tax</p>
        <p>1976 Impala</p>
        <p>4 door Sedon Stock Number 366</p>
        <p>*421</p>
        <p>plus tax</p>
        <p>1976 Camaro Sport Coupe $4|0|;094</p>
        <p>stock Number 364  OQOA  Piu:</p>
        <p>plus tax</p>
        <p>150 Units in Stock 75 More Due In March</p>
        <p>PHELPS CHEVRULET</p>
        <p>Salei Representatives</p>
        <p>W.D. Phelps, President</p>
        <p>Norman VonHorne, Sales Manager</p>
        <p>James Phelps, Used Cor Manager</p>
        <p>Rex Weinwright Jimmy Pace Clyn Barber</p>
        <p>Regan Jones Ed Briley Joy Mills</p>
        <p>West End Circle</p>
        <p>Open 8 A.M. lo 7:30 P.M.</p>
        <p>Phone 756-2150</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0020" />
        <p>2*-The D*Uy Reflector. GreenvUle. N.C.We^oeeday, Fehniery 18. I3</p>
        <p>Frustrations Still Haunt Retiring FCC Chairman</p>
        <p>Colleges Train Farriers Today</p>
        <p>By GEORGE BOOSEY</p>
        <p>SPERRY, Okpa. (UPI) - The blacksmith  that grizzled old character who populated the towns of the Old West and decorated the sets of B Western movies - is still around. And chances are he, or nowadays she. went to school to learn the craft.</p>
        <p>The specialist in making and fitting horseshoes, now known as a farrier rather than a blacksmith, may be seen following the rodeos across the nation, helping out at the race tracks or just caring for the hooves of privately owned horses,</p>
        <p>"There are 10 million horses in the nation today, said Bud Beaston, president of Oklahoma Farrier's College where many of today's farriers learned their craft. "Thats why there is a demand for horseshoers"</p>
        <p>Beauton founded OFC 11 years ago and has turned out thousands of farriers. Students attend classes six days a week for eight weeks. They learn to work the old-fashioned forge and modern gas forges, make standard horseshoes and form corrective shoes which can save horses from being destroyed.</p>
        <p>There are many horses that</p>
        <p>go to the dog food people that could have been saved by the right shoe, said Charles Dohn, who came from California to take Beastons course and stayed on as an instructor.</p>
        <p>Dohn said he, like many other OFC students, knew nothing about being a farrier before showing up at the college, which is composed of a large room full of forges, metal work shops and a rodeo arena.</p>
        <p>Some students were familiar with horseshoeing before they enrolled but wanted to improve their work.</p>
        <p>1 wasnt sure of myself, said Steve Gregory of Homer, Alaska, as he stood at an anvil beating a red-hot steel rod into a horseshoe. Gregory, 17, began shoeing horses about three years ago.</p>
        <p>Another student. Denny Flatray, 34, of Seattle, Wash., used to do drafting and designing work for an engineering firm.</p>
        <p>Flatray said he became interested in hoof problems when he took his own horse to a farrier and decided then to enroll in the college.</p>
        <p>"I want to set up a blacksmith shop and also have a portable rig, said Flatray.</p>
        <p>WASHINGTON (AP) - Richard E. Wiley completes his second year as chairman of the Federal Communications Commission next month with a feeling of accomplishment, but unable to eliminate two big frustrations in the job.</p>
        <p>They involve personal soft spots, his love of children and his strong belief in the role of religion in his and others lives.</p>
        <p>I gel letters from people who ask why dont you do something to protect those kids from violence and sex on television? he said. 'It frustrates me. They dont understand that I can't under the law say this program is too violent or take this program off.</p>
        <p>The FCC has gone about as far as we can, Wiley said.</p>
        <p>What makes his frustration so great is that Wiley, 41, the father of three children, was the person who persuaded the television industry to institute the early evening family viewing period. This is aimed at reducing exposure of children to television sex and violence.</p>
        <p>The boyish-looking chairman said in an interview that broadcasters have a responsibility to protect children from programs that can have a deleterious effect on kids. Thats why Ive been a vigorous spokesman tor self-regulation and will continue to be.</p>
        <p>The other frustration is that the FCC hasn't been able to persuade millions of people the FCC isnt considering, and never considered, banning religion from radio and TV.</p>
        <p>What the FCC did was get a petition over a year ago from</p>
        <p>two California residents, asking for a freeze on FM radio licenses to religious groups to see if they were getting too many of&amp;gt; the scarce channels. The commission turned that down unanimously last Aug. 1, saying it would do nothing to promote nor inhibit religion.</p>
        <p>But the erroneous rumor that the decision involved banning religion brought the biggest avalanche of mail in FCC history, and its still coming in big batches along with petitions of protest. The letters may total over two million, although nobodys actually counted them.</p>
        <p>Im still getting letters and phone calls at home, Wiley said. 1 try as decently as I can to explain the facts. I do feel some sense of frustration because I happen to believe that religious broadcasting is an important part of public interest.</p>
        <p>Wiley is a pillar of the Cherrydale Methodist church in Arlington, Va., and when asked what effect this has on his actions as FCC chairman, said; If you believe in religion, Christianity in my case, you have to feel that affects the whole man. It isnt just a Sunday morning operation. So obviously theres an intangible aspect to it that I would hope pervades all my life, not only my working life, but hopefully in my home life and in my relation with others. I cant say 1 always meet the Christian ideal, but I think I make a reasonable effort to treat others as you hope to be treated.</p>
        <p>As he nears his second anniversary as FCC chairman, Wi</p>
        <p>ley said he hopes one of his accomplishments is to make government more efficient ... Im interested in trying to get the commission making decisions more quickly because I think a lot of people are frustrated with administrative delay.</p>
        <p>His efforts are demonstrated in a fivefold increase in the number of decisions handed down weekly  from about 20 to too  and that much of the backlog of major questions has been cleared up. People have to judge whether the decisions are good ones or bad ones, but I think were making good decisions and quick decisions, Wiley said.</p>
        <p>This has been accomplished, he said, largely by creating management mechanism and setting deadlines for everybody, even commissioners.</p>
        <p>Wiley has stressed a program of deregulation, trying to make rules for broadcasters</p>
        <p>simpler and less cumbersome.</p>
        <p>We found we had a lot of outmoded regulations, a lot of unnecessary regulations and we changed nearly 400 of them, he said.</p>
        <p>Wiley also is trying to cut down the length of hearings on applications, that sometimes take years, Unless youre wealthy, you really cant afford to go to hearing, Wiley said. Its almost like losing at the outset.</p>
        <p>He wants to get the public more involved in the FCC with open hearings to answer questions, regional meetings, a new publication that allows public interest groups to know what the FCC is doing and allowing them to give their views.</p>
        <p>He has been criticized for being too involved with staff details, but chooses to let that kind of criticism go by because Im going to be an activist chairman ... Somebody has to provide leadership.</p>
        <p>Wiley works long hours, about 11 hours at the office and two or three at home. I work rather late in the evening, so I can enjoy a family hour early in the evening before the kids go to bed, he said. So I work late at night. I have the fortunate ability not to require a lot of sleep, so I get by.</p>
        <p>The FCC has been criticized as being too oriented toward the broadcasting industry, but Wiley denies it, saying our job is to regulate in the public interest.</p>
        <p>Asked why more criticism has come from Capitol Hill on this score, he said, I think theres heightened congressional activity falling from the Watergate scandal and I dont think that altogether bad. I think more oversight of the regulatory agencies will inevitably lead to a better regulatory process. I reserve the right to disagree with individual congressmen or some indi</p>
        <p>vidual staff members.</p>
        <p>Despite a busy work life, Wiley watches his son Dave, id play basketball and footbffli and will coach a Little League baseball team this summer. He proudly says his team won its county championship last year, losing only one game. He watches his 11-year-oId daughter Pam play soccer and basketball. The youngest child is Kim, age 4.</p>
        <p>Wileys FCC term expires June 30, 1977, and he said I havent made up my mind about the future. Whether he stays in government, he said, depends on which administration is in power. Hes a Republican.</p>
        <p>There has been talk of Wiley running for Congress in his home state of Illinois, but he said, 1 have no plans for that. "Im going to serve my term out, God willing, he said adding lets say President Ford willing, too.</p>
        <p>CONCORDES IN CONSTRUCTION - Fair produetloi msdeb of</p>
        <p>the Anglo-French supersonic Concmiie alrUner are shown under production at the British Aircraft Corporation's assembly plant in Filton recently. The aircraft are the 6th, 8th, 10th and 14th</p>
        <p>production models of the Concorde. Thus far, 10 Concordes have flowntwo prototypes, two pre-production and six production aircraft. (AP Wlrephoto)'OVAAILAB</p>
        <p>\</p>
        <p>NEWflOM</p>
        <p>CAROUNA DAIRES</p>
        <p>SA/ee\ Acicbohilus-cwfcitM</p>
        <p>Available At Any Carolina Dairies Products Dealer If Your Grocer Doesn't Have It-Ask For It by Name</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0021" />
        <p>The Dally Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wedneaday, February 18, 197821</p>
        <p>ABRIGHT" NEW PROMISE FROM THE MAN IN THE</p>
        <p>BRIGHT" REO JACKET!</p>
        <p>Look for the Man In Red at A&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>The bright new jacket worn by our store manager is a symbol of his renewed commitment to be more responsive to you. You can go to him if you have a question, if you have a problem, or if you have a special need. Our manager can do a lot to help make your shopping easier and more satisfying. And he will. Were proud of him.</p>
        <p>If We Cant Do It, Nobody Can.</p>
        <p>ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for sale at or below the advertised price in each A&amp;amp;P Store, except as specifically noted in this ad.</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU Feb. 22 In Greenville, N.C.</p>
        <p>ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAILERS OR WHOLESALERS</p>
        <p>SUPER RIGHT  QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF</p>
        <p>DELMONICO</p>
        <p>STEAKS</p>
        <p>USDA INSPECTED FRESH</p>
        <p>SUPER RIGHT QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF</p>
        <p>lb.</p>
        <p>BONELESS BOTTOM</p>
        <p>ROUND ROAST</p>
        <p>SUPER RIGHT QUALITY HEAVY WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF BONELESS  ^  ^</p>
        <p>BONELESS</p>
        <p>SWISS $ STEAK lb.</p>
        <p>169</p>
        <p>"SUPER RKSHT' TENDER</p>
        <p>SMOKED</p>
        <p>HAMS</p>
        <p>SHANK PORTION</p>
        <p>lb. 79*</p>
        <p>BUn PORTION lb. 89^</p>
        <p>CENTER SLICES lb.</p>
        <p>SUPER RIGHT CORN FED</p>
        <p>FRESH PORK</p>
        <p>PICNICS I</p>
        <p>"SUPER RIGHT -FRESH PORK</p>
        <p>Super Right Que lily Heevy Weitern Grein Fed Beef</p>
        <p>WHOLE RIBS</p>
        <p>24-30 Lb. Avg.</p>
        <p>Cut Free Into Steake, Roast And Trimmings</p>
        <p>Lb.</p>
        <p>2 IN A BAG  lb.</p>
        <p>LIMIT 2 BAGS PLEASE</p>
        <p>I WHOLE</p>
        <p>I FRYERS</p>
        <p>43'</p>
        <p>ARMOUR STAR ALL MEAT</p>
        <p>FRANKS</p>
        <p>79*</p>
        <p>JESSE JONES ALL MEAT</p>
        <p>BOLOGNA</p>
        <p>1 lb. PKG.</p>
        <p>$|19</p>
        <p>CAP'N JOHN S FISH STICKS</p>
        <p>10 oz. PKG:</p>
        <p>494</p>
        <p>1 lb. PKG. 79^</p>
        <p>GWALTNEY PURE</p>
        <p>PORK</p>
        <p>SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>1 lb. PKG.</p>
        <p>990</p>
        <p>CRISCO PURE VEGETABLE</p>
        <p>SHORTENING</p>
        <p>$H19</p>
        <p>1^,'  I  liMiiONF</p>
        <p>[IN    WlIH COUPON AND</p>
        <p> s;morofr</p>
        <p>TEXAS, NEW  </p>
        <p>Igreen cabbage g y'</p>
        <p>3 lb. CAN</p>
        <p>^ MAZOLA COBN OIL</p>
        <p> 48 oz. 4^ i</p>
        <p>Bottle</p>
        <p>88</p>
        <p>LIMIT ONE WITH A S7.50 ORDER</p>
        <p>CAMPBELLS CHICKEN NOODLE AND VEGETABLE</p>
        <p>SOUP</p>
        <p>1</p>
        <p>SWEET, JUICE FILLED</p>
        <p>FLORIDA</p>
        <p>f^^RANGES 20 100</p>
        <p>^ Extra Fancy, Wash. State I or Golden Delicious</p>
        <p>teBnPPLES</p>
        <p>3.*1</p>
        <p>MEATY, VmE-RIPENED</p>
        <p>TOMATOES</p>
        <p>3 J100</p>
        <p>NDRTH CARDUNA QRDWN</p>
        <p>SWEET</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>5ibs$ioo</p>
        <p>BULK RUSSET I</p>
        <p>BAKING</p>
        <p>POTATOES</p>
        <p>5ibs$|oo</p>
        <p>LIMIT 6 WITH COUPON AND $7.50 ORDER</p>
        <p>100% ORANGE JUICE FROM FLORIDA</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P FROZEN CONCENTRATED</p>
        <p>ORANGE jmCE</p>
        <p>6'"9 9*</p>
        <p>WHIPPED BLUE BONNET</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>1 lb. PKG.</p>
        <p>6 STICK PKG.</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>Chicken</p>
        <p>Noodle</p>
        <p>10% oz. ^  </p>
        <p>CANS</p>
        <p>BETTY CROCKER</p>
        <p>MORTONS FROZEN DINNERS</p>
        <p> Boneless Chicken  mm  mm,*</p>
        <p> Fried Chicken  ''</p>
        <p> Turkey  W</p>
        <p>BREMNER</p>
        <p>SALTINES</p>
        <p>2 88*</p>
        <p>M CORN</p>
        <p>3 - 98*</p>
        <p>STOKELY CREAM STYLE OR</p>
        <p>3  WHOLE  KERNEL</p>
        <p>:: STOKELY FRENCH OR CUT</p>
        <p>^ GBEEN BEANS</p>
        <p>4 98*</p>
        <p>JANE PARKER</p>
        <p>FLAKY</p>
        <p>ROLLS</p>
        <p>AtP ROUND HAMBURGER</p>
        <p>CHEESE</p>
        <p>SLICES</p>
        <p>6oz.</p>
        <p>PKG.</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>IONA</p>
        <p>TOMATOES</p>
        <p>3 s q</p>
        <p>PEPSI com</p>
        <p>MOUNTAIN DEW</p>
        <p>M Oz. Bottk</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>BARBARA DEE</p>
        <p>SANDWICH</p>
        <p>CREMES</p>
        <p>LEMON - PEANUT BUTTER. VANILLA. CHOCOLATE FUDGE. FUDGE</p>
        <p>3 ^$1</p>
        <p>PKGS.</p>
        <p>2-1</p>
        <p>PKGS. f</p>
        <p>MARS FUN SIZE</p>
        <p>CANDY</p>
        <p> M&amp;amp;M PUm Oft ftCANUT, 12 ox.</p>
        <p> HH.KV WAV, 1 01.</p>
        <p> MUCKERS. t oz.</p>
        <p> 9 MUSKETEERS, 16 oz.</p>
        <p>BELFAST FROZEN</p>
        <p>STUFFED /|i2ozQQ^ POTATOES Ht PKGS. W 9</p>
        <p>CHEESE 8 SOUR CREAM  2 SERVINGS</p>
        <p>SEALTEST FROZEN ASST.</p>
        <p>POPS</p>
        <p>'s99</p>
        <p>CAKE MIXES</p>
        <p>55</p>
        <p>WHITE - YELLOW BUTTER -LEMON - GERMAN CHOCOLATE</p>
        <p>18% OZ.</p>
        <p>BOX</p>
        <p>AUNT JANES HAMBURGER</p>
        <p>DIU SLICES ^ IS, OB KOSHG gg</p>
        <p>MCt.</p>
        <p>PKG.</p>
        <p>119</p>
        <p>WHtre. DEC. OR COLORED</p>
        <p>VIVA</p>
        <p>TOWELS</p>
        <p>2 Jumbo Rolls</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P LONG GRAIN</p>
        <p>RICE</p>
        <p>3-"79'</p>
        <p>25c OFF LABEL</p>
        <p>CHEER</p>
        <p>LADNDBY</p>
        <p>BETEBGENT</p>
        <p>A&amp;amp;P</p>
        <p>Facial Tissue</p>
        <p>2 1WCI. fiQI Boxes O V</p>
        <p>AP COUPON</p>
        <p>CHEF BOY-AR-OEE</p>
        <p>BEEFARONI - BEEFOGETTI</p>
        <p>SPAGHETTI</p>
        <p>AND MEAT BALLS</p>
        <p>2 .79</p>
        <p>W miSKMB</p>
        <p>A</p>
        <p>24 oz. JAR</p>
        <p>STOKELY</p>
        <p>FflUlT COCKTAIL</p>
        <p>OR PEAR HALVES</p>
        <p>.  16 oz.  WlH</p>
        <p>M CANS ^  ^</p>
        <p>LAND 0 DIXIE</p>
        <p>DRY ROASTED</p>
        <p>PEANUTS</p>
        <p>u</p>
        <p>2</p>
        <p>STOKEl Y</p>
        <p>12 oz. JAR</p>
        <p>79</p>
        <p>TOMATO SAUCE</p>
        <p>5  9 8^</p>
        <p>You PAY ONLY</p>
        <p>84 OZ. BOX</p>
        <p>$199</p>
        <p>ASP COOKBOOK</p>
        <p>AND</p>
        <p>SHOPPING GUIDE</p>
        <p>; AAP COUPON</p>
        <p>dan CRISCO</p>
        <p>PURE VEGETABLE</p>
        <p>SHOBTENING $119</p>
        <p>CAN m</p>
        <p>LMT ONE WITH COUPON AND |7 90 OftCCR 0000 7hu FEB 22  gg  I</p>
        <p>BS AAP COUPON Ifl&amp;amp;BJifllfli</p>
        <p>CEBd A&amp;amp;P FROZEN CONCENTRATED</p>
        <p>OBANGE JUICE</p>
        <p>6a%99*</p>
        <p>LMT 6 WITH COUPON ANO $7 90 ORDER 0000 thru FEB n</p>
        <p>67Store Hours Monday thru Saturday</p>
        <p>8:30 A.M. to 10:00 P.M.   T~Conveniently Located At 2808 East leth StreetOpen Sunday 12 Noon to 7:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0022" />
        <p>2iThe Daily Reflector, Greenville, N.C.Wednesday, February Ig, 1*7*</p>
        <p>No-Smoking Signs Being Enforced</p>
        <p>By CHERYL L. DEBES Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>James Moore lit a cigarette, took a long drag and stepped aboard a subway train. Moments later, he was under arrest.</p>
        <p>The next day, after spending a night in jail, he appeared in Branch 95 of Circuit Court of Cook County, commonly known as Smokers Court.</p>
        <p>Some 800 persons were arrested last year for lighting up on Chicago Transit Authority trains and buses, a petty offense punishable by fines of *50 to *300. Those like Moore who couldnt post *25 bond spent a night behind bars.</p>
        <p>Similarly, tobacco smokers across the nation are encountering new restraints and suffer penalties for indiscriminately indulging their habit.</p>
        <p>An Associated Press survey shows that since mid-1973 nearly half the states in the country have enacted laws restricting smoking in public places. Although enforcement is normally lax, penalties range from token fines to 60 days in jail.</p>
        <p>Federal regulations limit smoking on airlines and interstate buses and trains, while pending lawsuits seek to outlaw the nicotine habit at New Orleans Superdome and DeU-oits PonUac Stadium.</p>
        <p>Scores of restaurants provide separate seatig for nonsmokera. Students at several colleges and universities have voted to ban the weed in classrooms. Some employers forbid smoking on the job.</p>
        <p>Behind the curbs are a growing number of nonsmokers who say they are entitled to breathe smoke-free air.</p>
        <p>"For years, smokers have been able to smoke wherever they wanted, says Rare DeCa-valcante, smoking and health consultant for the American Lung Association. Now, were trying to switch that around. While Chicago's crackdown is unusually tough, the smoking arrests dramatize the change. Before the citys smoking ordinance was toughened, said one law enforcement official, "smokers were treated like jaywalkers or spitters  they were virtually ignored.</p>
        <p>Only a few years ago, the idea that nonsmokers constituted a silent majority whose rights were being denied was almost unheard of.</p>
        <p>Miss DeCavalcante traces active participation in a nonsmokers' rights movement to the 1972 surgeon general's report.</p>
        <p>It included the first hard, scientific facts on the effects of secondhand smoke.</p>
        <p>"When Joe Citizen got wind of it, he said, Hey, thats me. People who had always been bothered by smoke found out they werent alone</p>
        <p>Evidence that simply breathing tohacco smoke may be physically harmful - involuntary smoking" as it was called by one government report  led many nonsmokers to re-evaluate the habit they previously considered merely annoying.</p>
        <p>Today, a proliferation of groups with such likely names as ASH  Action on Smoking and Health: GASP  Group Against Smokers Pollution; and ANSR  Association for Nonsmokers Rights  actively encourage nonsmokers to assert their right to breathe smokeless air.</p>
        <p>The bills principal lobbyist was a Scottsdaie, Ariz., woman who says her involvement in nonsmokers rights began after her best friend died of lung cancer at age 29, It controlled smoking in confined piaces such as elevators, theaters, libraries and buses.</p>
        <p>California and Connecticut, where the state health commissioner carries his own no smoking sign to public meetings, followed suit the same year by restricting smoking on common carriers. Oregon issued a ban at meetings of public bodies.</p>
        <p>Seven states were added to the list in 1974. Nonsmokers</p>
        <p>rights groups in Florida pushed for a law that made lighting up in elevators an offense punishable by a *500 fine or 60 days in jail.</p>
        <p>The upswing in antismoking legislation moved into 1975 with the introduction of more than 400 bills in 48 states. Many states strengthened existing laws, and a dozen enacted new bans, including the most extensive yet: the Minnesota Clean Indoor Air Act,</p>
        <p>This law is a total reversal of the basic philosophy that smokers can smoke wherever there isnt a no smoking sign, said its sponsor. State Rep. Phyllis Kahn. The law states specifically that smoking is prohibited except in designated areas.</p>
        <p>But if 1975 was a boom year for laws geared to nonsmokers rights, it also was the year many businesses started taking a serious, and rather disapproving, look at the issue. It costs money to set up special smoking areas, </p>
        <p>Critics, including many lawmakers, point to widespread lack of prosecution under the laws and claim they are unenforceable. Its silly to have a regulation that cant be enforced, said one California legislator.</p>
        <p>Anne Duffin of the Tohacco Institute agreed. You cant legislate courtesy," she said. And thats what these laws amount to.</p>
        <p>The National Restaurant Association has a position statement opposing government mandated no smoking sections,</p>
        <p>Lawmakers in states with smoking bans say enforcement is difficult, and most states dont even attempt it.</p>
        <p>Its the people in the elevators, the clerks in the stores and the nonsmokers in the checkout lines, who by their remarks to offenders are enforcing the law, said a Dade County, Fla., commissioner.</p>
        <p>The controversy has been particularly keen in Minnesota, where the Clean Indoor Air Act took effect in August.</p>
        <p>The Pillsbury Co., which employs 900 persons at its national headquarters in Minneapolis, initially estimated it could cost the company *500,000 a year to comply with the acts requirement of segregated smoking areas in offices and factories.</p>
        <p>After a trial period, though, a Piiisbury spokesman said the law is working out fairly well.</p>
        <p>Its helped nonsmokers greatly and although it may cost us some money, the problem is more health than dollars.</p>
        <p>Despite Pillsburys acceptance, the states Association for Commerce and Industry considers the regulations unduly restrictive.</p>
        <p>The tobacco industry says there's no evidence that healthy nonsmokers are harmed by being near smokers.</p>
        <p>The 1975 surgeon generals report said, Tobacco smoke</p>
        <p>can be a significant source of atmospheric pollution in enclosed areas." But with inconclusive evidence to date, medical researchers are trying to determine whether secondhand smoke is dangerous to all nonsmokers or an irritant only to persons with respiratory and heart ailments.</p>
        <p>A nonsmokers movement slogan, coined by a Brentwood, N.Y., housewife, has been used in recent years by countless nonsmokers who Inform family, friends and total strangers, Yes, I do mind if you smoke. The firm, but polite approach is recommended by most non-smokers groups.</p>
        <p>Nevertheless, the movement also has its militants who employ such tactics as hiding ashtrays, uncorking bottles of ammonia when smokers light up and carrying little fans to blow the stuff back into another guy's face.</p>
        <p>A Flint, Mich., schoolteacher recently endured smoke drifting from an adjoining booth at a restaurant throughout his meal. Upon finishing, he walked over to the smoker and dropped some gnawed chicken bones on her plate. Maam, you've been giving me your garbage for quite a while, he said. I thought you might like some of mine.</p>
        <p>UBbccustomed to such rebuffs even in their milder forms, some of the nation's estimated 52 million smokers respond belligerently.</p>
        <p>When Miami GASP members donned gas masks at a sports event to protest heavy smoke and poor ventilation, past-presi-dent Arthur Frankl recalls that one fellow to show his hostility put three cigarettes in his mouth and lit them.</p>
        <p>In East Hartford, Conn., an angry smoker took a physician to court, charging he sprayed her with a disinfectant. After a three-day trial, Dr. Joseph J, Kristan, who insisted he merely doused the cigarette, was acquitted by a jury of one cigarette smoker, one pipe smoker, one cigar smoker, two exsmokers and one person who had never smoked.</p>
        <p>For decades, the only smoking regulations on state books were a Maine law written in 1848 to prevent fires in mil-lyars, stables and covered bridges and a 1921 Utah statute that was largely ignored.</p>
        <p>In early 1973, Arizona became the first state to enact legislation to protect nonsmokers.</p>
        <p>Dogs Suffer Same Ailments</p>
        <p>FRESNO, Calif. (API -Dogs suffer many of the same diseases as people, including arthritis, heart diseases, dietetic and kidney problems. They also suffer ailments of old age and have bones broken, need corrective surgery and specialized treatment.</p>
        <p>Many pet hospitals today are as modern and up-to-date as hospitals for humans. When a dog enters a veterinary hospital for an examination, it can be given blood tests and X-rays as needed, sometimes even a dental checkup, but cavities are rare among dogs.</p>
        <p>Dr. EMdie Gunner, a Fresno veterinarian, says many of the same surgical instruments as well as drugs are used to treat a dogs illness as are used for humans.</p>
        <p>Now Producing Exotic Yo-Yos</p>
        <p>SEATTLE (AP) - Peter Gantt and Per Nilsen, who once lost money restoring antiques, now make some of the world's fanciest yo-yos out of such exotic hardwoods as birds-eye maple and zebra wood.</p>
        <p>If I tell people that I am the major West Coast manufacturer of yo-yos, their jaws slack and their eyes do funny things, said Gantt. But we didnt make a nickel fixing antiques.</p>
        <p>Gantt and Nilsen, both 1972 graduates of the University of Washington School of Art, spent two years as custom wood turners before going into the yo-yo business.</p>
        <p>In two days, they sold their first 500 yo-yos, which retail for $3 to *10 at major department stores across the country.</p>
        <p>NewiVfilnot.</p>
        <p>So rich it udiips without chilling.</p>
        <p>Tell Your Employees!</p>
        <p>ABOUT ADULT BASIC EDUCATION</p>
        <p>If you know an adult who could benefit from basic instruction in reading, writing, or math, help him complete the information below and</p>
        <p>Grnl!fle N.C.</p>
        <p>Name.</p>
        <p>Address.</p>
        <p>.Telephone.</p>
        <p>.Age.</p>
        <p> I would like to enroll in a class with other adults.</p>
        <p>D I would like to join a class in my community.</p>
        <p>D I would like a volunteer tutor to work with me at a convenient locaTion.</p>
        <p>T</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0023" />
        <p>The Dily Reftector, Greenville. N.C.Wednesdi;, February It, tmO</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE $10.12</p>
        <p>WITHOUT CLIPPING COUPONS</p>
        <p>PRICES GOOD THRU SAT., FEB. 21ST  NONE TO DEALERS &amp;gt; WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES</p>
        <p>ALL GRINDS ASTOR</p>
        <p>1-LB.</p>
        <p>CAN</p>
        <p>COFFEE</p>
        <p>YOU SAVE 40c</p>
        <p>WITH nm on more order</p>
        <p>(LIMIT ONE CAN COFFEEI</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>OFTHE MANY ITEMS WITH GREAT SAVINGS IN THIS AO, YOU CAN . SAVE $10.12 ON JUST 7 OF THEMI</p>
        <p>CHECK THESE SAVINGS! ITEM  SAVINGS</p>
        <p> 5-LB. BAG SUGAR</p>
        <p> 1-LB. CAN COFFEE</p>
        <p> 8CHEK  DRINKS</p>
        <p> 10-LB. BAG FLOUR</p>
        <p> 5-LB. FAMILY ROAST</p>
        <p> 5-LB. E.Z. CARVE RIB ROAST</p>
        <p> 17-OZ. LAYER CAKE TOTAL SAVINGS</p>
        <p>CHEK  ASSORTED FLAVORS (REGULAR OR DIET)</p>
        <p>DRINKS</p>
        <p>A8T0R  COFFEE</p>
        <p>CREAMER JAR</p>
        <p>ARROW  2-PLY 500 (4.5" X 4.6") SHEET</p>
        <p>BATHROOM TISSUE</p>
        <p>DEEP SOUTH </p>
        <p>MAYONNAISE ,&amp;gt;</p>
        <p>PRESTONE OR ZEREX</p>
        <p>ANTIFREEZE</p>
        <p>ASTOn </p>
        <p>INSTANT POTATOES</p>
        <p>THRIFTY MAID</p>
        <p>1t-02</p>
        <p> GREEN LIMAS ino sioi</p>
        <p>CUT  21.07</p>
        <p> GREEN BEANS (NO iHi</p>
        <p>QUEEN BEANS WITH 2S.02</p>
        <p>, POTATOES iSTh)</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>CANS</p>
        <p>FOR</p>
        <p>THRIFTY MAID  BEANS</p>
        <p> NAVY</p>
        <p> PINTO</p>
        <p>QNEAT</p>
        <p> NORTHERN</p>
        <p> KIDNEY</p>
        <p>(NO. SOS)</p>
        <p>DIXIE DARLING  BETTER BAKERY PRODUCTS</p>
        <p>THIN SLICED</p>
        <p>SANDWICH BREAD</p>
        <p>BROWN B SERVE PLAIN OR</p>
        <p>SEEDED DINNER ROLLS</p>
        <p>DCUCIOU8</p>
        <p>CREME FILLED HONEY BUNS</p>
        <p>PRCSH</p>
        <p>VVHITE HOT MINI ROLLS</p>
        <p>SUPERBRAND </p>
        <p>GRADE 'A' EGGS MEDIUM DOZ. 59c</p>
        <p>79c PINTO BEANS</p>
        <p>3 iOA^s$1.00 3^Si$1.00 2pkqs.99c</p>
        <p>1B02</p>
        <p>2pos$1.09y</p>
        <p>m</p>
        <p> BRAND U.S. CHOICE BEEF BgM FREEZER SALE! &amp;lt;9</p>
        <p>WHOll</p>
        <p> BONELESS TOP ROUNDS aDLBS.AVQ.1 LB. $1.39</p>
        <p> BONELESS FAMILY ROASTS "v" i. $1.19</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p> lO-INCH BEEF RIBS imlbs avo)  lb  $1.09</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p> BONELESS ROUNDS l IBS. AVO.I  IS.  $1.29</p>
        <p>WHOLE</p>
        <p> TRIMMED LOINS ilbs.avq.i  ls  $1.49</p>
        <p>V_ABOVE ITEMS CUT fUEE  J</p>
        <p>(SAVE $1.00 PER LB.)  BRAND U.S. CHO(CE BEEF</p>
        <p>HOLLY FARMS CHILL PACKEd&amp;gt; FRYER PARTS</p>
        <p> LIVERS  LS  69c</p>
        <p> BACKS  LS  19c</p>
        <p> DRUMSTICKS  ls 79c</p>
        <p> THIGHS  LB  79c</p>
        <p>COMBINATION CHOICE PARTS  ls 79c^</p>
        <p>E.Z. CARVE RIB ROASTS r . $1.69</p>
        <p>laiss.</p>
        <p>avq.i</p>
        <p>QWALTNEV'S oneless</p>
        <p>BUFFET HAMS</p>
        <p> BRAND U.R CHOICE IEEE</p>
        <p>BONELESS RIB STEAKS</p>
        <p> MANO U.S. CHOICE BEEF BONELESS</p>
        <p>FULL-CUT ROUND STEAKS</p>
        <p> MANO u.a CHOICf BSEF</p>
        <p>MEATY SHORT RIBS</p>
        <p> MANO U.r CHOKE SEEF</p>
        <p>BONELESS SHOULDER ROASTS lo $1.69</p>
        <p> BRANO NEOULAR OR BEEF</p>
        <p>SKINLESS FRANKS</p>
        <p>L. $2.29 L. $2.49 l.$1.59 L. 89c</p>
        <p>U-OZ. M</p>
        <p>PRO. BBC</p>
        <p>ECONOMY SLICED BACON</p>
        <p> SRAND IMPORTED</p>
        <p>SLICED COOKED HAM</p>
        <p>FRESH FORK</p>
        <p>LINK SAUSAGE l. $1.09</p>
        <p>SUNNTLANO OSOROIA RRANO</p>
        <p>PORK SAUSAGE</p>
        <p>JESSE JONES</p>
        <p>MEAT FRANKS</p>
        <p>MEAT* MORE</p>
        <p>WINNIES</p>
        <p>a89c</p>
        <p>?K^$1.1</p>
        <p>:o1$9.99</p>
        <p>il;^$2.29</p>
        <p>MO $1.09</p>
        <p>"Jii$1.09</p>
        <p>FRESH</p>
        <p>FLORIDA ORANGES</p>
        <p>58'</p>
        <p>HARVEST FRESH PRODUCE</p>
        <p>ASTOR  FROZEN</p>
        <p> BROCCOLI SPEARS o WHOLE CORN o BABY OR FORDHOOK LIMAS</p>
        <p>3p*si$1.00</p>
        <p>MIX OR MATCH  &amp;gt;</p>
        <p>YOUR</p>
        <p>CHOICE</p>
        <p>FROZEN FOOD DEPT</p>
        <p>WMIt HOUM</p>
        <p>APPLE SAUCE</p>
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        <p>KOTEX</p>
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        <p>'*c^n' 21c MAXI pads  opu  !</p>
        <p>CHARMtN 1-HV m tU" X 4.n</p>
        <p>? *1.71 TISSUE  4M1U  I</p>
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        <p>DELICIOUS APPLES</p>
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        <p>12-OZ.</p>
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        <p>57c ^ 37c</p>
        <p>OVERMIQHT</p>
        <p>PAMPERS</p>
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        <p>PAMPERS</p>
        <p>DAYTIMI</p>
        <p>KIMBIES</p>
        <p>IXTRA ABSORBENT</p>
        <p>KIMBIES</p>
        <p>BOX</p>
        <p>wn$1.39</p>
        <p>$2.19</p>
        <p>$2.19</p>
        <p>HARVEST FREBH</p>
        <p>LETTUCE</p>
        <p>HARVltT FREBH</p>
        <p>GREEN CABBAGE</p>
        <p>NC. QROWN</p>
        <p>SWEET POTATOES</p>
        <p>YELLOW</p>
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        <p>ooz98c PERCH FILLET</p>
        <p>MINUTE MAK 1Bt% PURE aORWA</p>
        <p>l. 29c ORANGE JUICE</p>
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        <p>BEA PAK</p>
        <p>4 L.B 89c ONION RINGS</p>
        <p>ITOUPPfRf</p>
        <p>BAG</p>
        <p>65c MACARONI r CHEESE</p>
        <p>$1.09</p>
        <p>;1:99c</p>
        <p>89c</p>
        <p>:k^99c</p>
        <p>59c</p>
        <p>GENERAL MERCHANDISE DEPT.</p>
        <p>LAVORIS</p>
        <p>MOUTHWASH</p>
        <p>14-02.</p>
        <p>BTL.</p>
        <p>$1.09</p>
        <p>ALBERTO BALSAM CONDITIONER</p>
        <p>8-OZ. BTL.</p>
        <p>$1.29</p>
        <p>ALKA SELTZER PLUS</p>
        <p>COLD TABLETS</p>
        <p>BOX OF 38</p>
        <p>$1.48</p>
        <p>EFFERDENT</p>
        <p>TABLETS</p>
        <p>BOX OF60</p>
        <p>$1.39</p>
        <p>CONTAC</p>
        <p>CAPSULES</p>
        <p>BOX OF 10</p>
        <p>$1.19</p>
        <p>BAYER'S CHILDREN S</p>
        <p>COLD</p>
        <p>TABLETS</p>
        <p>BTL. OF 30</p>
        <p>69c</p>
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        <p>PLASTIC BOTTLES</p>
        <p>8-OZ. SIZE</p>
        <p>53c</p>
        <p>MR. COFFEE</p>
        <p>FILTERS</p>
        <p>PKG. OF 60</p>
        <p>59c</p>
        <p>CREST</p>
        <p>TOOTHPASTE</p>
        <p>(REGULAR OR MINT)</p>
        <p>7-02.</p>
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        <p>99c</p>
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        <p>uzf $1.66Open Sunday Afternoons 12 To 7 P.M.</p>
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        <p>HOMES FOR AMERICANS</p>
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        <p>floor plan - upper- level</p>
        <p>42'. Q"</p>
        <p>lower level floor plan Hh9Z0Q-DM THIS BI-LEVEL HOUSE the lower level brick siding combines, with upper-level frame construction and features con-strasting shutters. A side-light entrance provides plenty of natural light. On entering one may immediately go either up or downstairs.The stairway is completely open.The main level has a center hallway with the sleeping wing on one side and the activity area on the opposite. The dining-kitchen U the hub of the home. A spacious balcony features stairs to the backyard. Carl Gaiser, 2500 Telegraph Rd., Southfield, Mich., 475, designed Plan HA920G with 1,175 square feet on the upper level and 1,050 on the lower. Anyone wishing to ask questions can write the architect, enclosing a stamped, self-addressed envelope.</p>
        <p>Annual Soviet Congress Due</p>
        <p>By FRANK CREPEAU Associated Press Writer</p>
        <p>MOSCOW (AP) - The Soviet Unions aging leaders next week will convene the 25th Communist party Congress, a ritual gathering that is supposed to erect another milestone on the road to communism.</p>
        <p>Party congresses, now held every five years, are a major opportunity for Soviet leaders to assess achievements and to chart the immediate future.</p>
        <p>Perhaps more important, the sessions provide a focus for the partys economic and political goals and are used to fan the enthusiasm of the party faithful.</p>
        <p>The proceedings starting next 'Tuesday will be closely watched in other countries to see what the Congress discloses about Soviet foreign and domestic aims and for signs that new leaders are emerging.</p>
        <p>The 5,000 hand-picked delegates who will gather in the Kremlins Palace of Congresses will elect a new Central Committee of the party to exercise authority until the next Congress.</p>
        <p>TTie current Central Committee  which comprised 241 members when it was named in 1971  is made up of regional party bosses, important ambassadors, government ministers, secret police officials, military men, top scientific admin</p>
        <p>istrators and a sprinkling of workers and farmers.</p>
        <p>The elite Central Committee delegates its authority to the Politburo  the seat of real power in the Soviet Union.</p>
        <p>New members of the Central Committee  and perhaps the Politburo  have been chosen already at the top and the election is a formality at the windup of the Congress.</p>
        <p>Western Kremlin watchers in Moscow, conceding they cannot know for sure, expect a tame Congress dedicated to more of the same in foreign and domestic policy and without major personnel changes at the top.</p>
        <p>Still, the little knot of men that makes up the Politburo are elderly and changes cannot be put off too long. General Secretary Leonid I. Brezhnev is 69 and there are persistent rumors he is in bad health.</p>
        <p>President Nikolai V. Podgor-ny is 73 and Premier Alexei N. Kosygin is 72. The average age of the 15-member Politburo is above 66 years, well past the normal Soviet retirement limit of 60.</p>
        <p>But Brezhnev is scheduled to deliver the traditional keynote address and Kosygin to discuss directives of the 1976-80 economic plan  two major items on the agenda of a Congress that will probably last about 10 days. As President, Podgornys role  it any  would be ceremonial.</p>
        <p>TEBnNG FOR WEST POINT- Jennifer Howard, 17. of Bta^ mlngham, Mich., heavei the ball in the kneeling basketball throw, a portion of the physical aptitude exam, as Sgt Ron Vendittelli monitors at Detroits Light Guard Armory during testing and interviews of West Point appiicants. Eight of the appiicjl^ts were women. (AP Wlrephoto)</p>
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        <p>Quantity Rights ReservedIBANANAS</p>
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        <p>READING THE MAIL  Roy Acuff reads some of his fan mail at his dressing room at the Grand Ole Opry. (AP Wirephoto)</p>
        <p>Country Music Stars Keep Up With  The Mail</p>
        <p>I By JOE EDWARDS  keep my family going. I have</p>
        <p>Associated Press Writer no mom.</p>
        <p>NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) Kenny Starr, who recorded Some ask for career advice, the hit The Blind Man in the Many request pictures. Others Bleachers, recalled one letter are quite personal.  from a handicapped woman.</p>
        <p>Ckiuntry music fans, known She said she was crippled for their loyalty, are letter and couldnt get out, he said, writers. Some stars get so She was collecting pictures many letters they have salaried and asked for one." employes whose primarily re- Most letter writers are highly sponsibility is reading and an- complimentary, swering fan mail.  A  Kentucky girl wrote  this</p>
        <p>Its a full-time job, said letter to Fender:</p>
        <p>Mrs. Jeanne Gaddis, who works I stay up all night talking tor Bill Anderson and directs about you and I play your his 2,(XX)-member fan club. records so much I have to buy Most ask tor pictures and a new needle every week. If ask abour journals and for his you ever come to Kentucky, I tour schedule, she said, They would tear the house down try-also ask about his family, how ing to come and see you." long he's been in the business,</p>
        <p>things like (hat.  Meridianville,  Ala.,  Caffie</p>
        <p>Others are quite touching.  P  ^ six hours</p>
        <p>We just got a Christmas  for  Dolly</p>
        <p>card from California, Mrs. "orton.</p>
        <p>Gaddis said. They said they You never get caught up, were late because their dog had she said. Sometimes I have to died Nov. 11 and the dogs son make two trips every day to had died the Week before.  the post office.</p>
        <p>You'd be surprised the personal things these people tell a stranger, she said. Some of them tell their family problems. A lot of them are from lonely people and many of them dont get any mail. We are very compassionate and try to see that these people get a good letter back.</p>
        <p>Bill also gets a great deal of letters from convicts; most</p>
        <p>Most people want to know if shes married, has children, information about her albums and husband. Some tell what they really feel about her and some send in poems they have written</p>
        <p>She said the mail is forwarded to Miss Parton, who lives in Nashville,</p>
        <p>She has a vault in her home have a song theyd like him to where she keeps them," she see  said.</p>
        <p>Tammy Wynette received a letter last week from a Massachusetts man who noted he was lonely.</p>
        <p>I live alone, and you cant realize how you've salvaged many an evening for me," he wrote</p>
        <p>A spokesman for Loretta Lynn said Miss Lynn's mail is similar.</p>
        <p>I wish people could read them," she said. Some of them are people trying to get back on their feet after being an alcoholic or something</p>
        <p>ABC Dot Records in Los Angeles received a letter from a 12-year-old girl whose paralyzed father is a fan of Freddy Fender.</p>
        <p>What hurts is that before he dies, he wants to get a letter or see him in person," the girl wrote. You were my only choice. The doctors think it's only a matter of time</p>
        <p>Roy Acuff checks his mail several times a week at the Grand Ole Opry.</p>
        <p>I read all my fan mail, he said But people dont write like they used to. Nobody gets mail like they used to.</p>
        <p>He read for a reporter a letter from a fan complaining about suggestive lyrics sung by other performers.</p>
        <p>1 think Ill read this on the air, Acuff said.</p>
        <p>Starr recently received a rather typical letter from a young woman asking how to start a career She even included her husband.</p>
        <p>"My husband has an ICC license, which enables him to drive any vehicle," the woman wrote. So he has always wanted to drive a bus for someone. Right now, he drives a tractor-</p>
        <p>Please try to help me!" 1  trailer for a furniture company</p>
        <p>have one brother and a baby  I Suess what I am really Irying</p>
        <p>sister nine. My brother is 10. I  to say Is do you have any job</p>
        <p>am the only thing irying to  openings for your show?</p>
        <p>UNIVERSAL SPORT- Ir the United SUtet ITt called Johnny OB the pony; InJtpnnlficiUed-Umtnorf', which Irniwlateotn Riding on a Hone," bat whatever It In called If* nnlveiwally populara! evidenced hy loohs of joy on thete Japaaeie hoy* and (Irl* In thi* pllevp at Yoyogl Olympic Park la Tthya (AR| Wirephoto)  *</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0026" />
        <p>T '  -----</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector. GreenvUle. N.C.Wwlnentoy, Febrtiy 18, int</p>
        <p>HES A DOLLJ. J. Armes, i Texas private detective who lost both hands In a dynamite accident when he was a boy, holds In New York Monday a J.J. Armes doll which is complete with an assortment ol mechanical hands. It was one ol the dolls placed on display as toy manufacturers showed their 1976 offerings. The seven-inch-high doll will sell for aboutfd. (AP Wlrephoto)</p>
        <p>Hepatifis Said Constant Risk</p>
        <p>By BILL JOHNSON Associated Press Writer I NORMAN, Okla. (AP) - One person, who did not even know he was sick, apparently spread a potentially fatal disease to more than 100 local residents. Health officials say theres no way to keep it from happening again  anywhere.</p>
        <p>The disease is hepatitis A, formerly called infectious hepatitis, a liver inflamation caused by a virus in the gastrointestinal tract and capable of causing permanent liver damage.</p>
        <p>By the time the state health department got into the situation, there were 116 confirmed cases in this city about 25 miles south of Oklahoma City and 19 other possible cases that could not be confirmed.</p>
        <p>It was one of the largest outbreaks of the disease in the United States in recent years. The majority of the cases were clustered around schools in the western part of town and most of the victims were between the ages of 10 and IB.</p>
        <p>The national Center for Disease Control in Atlanta said the outbreak was the result of contaminated icing on doughnuts.</p>
        <p>It refused to say where the doughnuts originated, but said the source of the disease was a baker's helper with hepatitis.</p>
        <p>Dr. Mark Roberts, state epidemiologist, said hepatitis A is spread through fecal material finding its way somehow into the mouth of a victim.</p>
        <p>Generally, there are two basic types of spread, he said. One comes when people live in very, very close contact such as a mother and child, a husband and wife or a boyfriend</p>
        <p>and a girl friend.</p>
        <p>The other comes through food contamination, when a person with the disease handles the food and someone else eats it."</p>
        <p>Roberts said the person responsible for spreading the infection in Norman had removed himself before the state health department became involved. He refused to identify the source, but said he would have done so if the threat of continued infection had been present.</p>
        <p>Hepatitis is an ever-present danger throughout the country," Roberts added. Were all eating out more. We can check restaurants for some communicable diseases or for things such as temperature control, but there is no way to check on hepatitis. You cant legislate against food-borne outbreaks. He said it is impossible to follow every employe of every restaurant fo the toilet to make sure they wash their hands.</p>
        <p>What we have to get across is that a person can help prevent the spread of hepatitis by very close attention to personal hygiene habits.</p>
        <p>In food establishments, everyone has to be very particular in the manner in which they handle the foods, everyplace, from the backyard picnic or church social to the large sit-down banquets."</p>
        <p>While stressing that personal hygiene can help prevent future outbreaks, the hepatitis virus is a very opportunistic bug, said Roberts. If there is any sort of a foulup in the food handling, it is going to get in there. It's a little scary.</p>
        <p>When Is Your Selling</p>
        <p>No Secret At All?</p>
        <p>When people read about it in the Classified Section of</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>"Pitt County's Home Newspaper"</p>
        <p>If you've got something to sell . . . we'll get your message across! And our big reodership guarantees you lots of prospectsi</p>
        <p>Phone 752-6166</p>
        <p>MEMBER OF THE FOODLAMD SYSTEM</p>
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        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM HEAVY WESTERN STEER CHUCK</p>
        <p>STEAK</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM HEAVY WESTERN STEER SHOULDER ROUND BONE</p>
        <p>ROAST</p>
        <p>CAMBELL'S</p>
        <p>VEGETABLE</p>
        <p>SOUP</p>
        <p>MAXWELL HOUSE INSTANT</p>
        <p>COFFEE $1^29</p>
        <p>VEGETABLE OIL</p>
        <p>CRISCO ^39</p>
        <p>WELCH'S GRAPE</p>
        <p>JAM, JELLY OR PRESERVES</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM HEAVY WESTERN STEER BONELESS</p>
        <p>Beef Stew</p>
        <p>$il9</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>SWIFT PREMIUM HEAVY WESTERN STEER</p>
        <p>RIB BONE-IN</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>BIRO'S EYE FROZEN FOODS</p>
        <p>^ .. 59</p>
        <p>KRAFT</p>
        <p>Whip</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>DULANY MIXED</p>
        <p>Vegetables 69^</p>
        <p>MORTON</p>
        <p>Macaroni &amp;amp; Cheese</p>
        <p>20-01.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>69</p>
        <p>PET RITZ</p>
        <p>Pie Shells</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>Of2</p>
        <p>39</p>
        <p>PEPPERIDGE FARM ALL FLAVORS</p>
        <p>Layer Calces'^99*</p>
        <p>MAOLA</p>
        <p>ICE CREAM SANDWICHES</p>
        <p>6-Pk.</p>
        <p>59</p>
        <p>SUPERFINE CUT</p>
        <p>Green Beans</p>
        <p>SOO</p>
        <p>4  303</p>
        <p>Cans</p>
        <p>NABISCO PREMIUM</p>
        <p>Saltines 59</p>
        <p>FLAP JACK PANCAKE</p>
        <p>LIQUID DETERGENT</p>
        <p>JOY</p>
        <p>22 Oz. Size</p>
        <p>SYRUP</p>
        <p>69&amp;lt;</p>
        <p>24 Oz. Size</p>
        <p>SHORTENING  Vv^eY"*'"^</p>
        <p>3-Lb.</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>5HORTENING</p>
        <p>CRISCO</p>
        <p>$1 57</p>
        <p>maxwell house every day low PRICES</p>
        <p>SAVE toe ^ ||</p>
        <p>COFFEE</p>
        <p>1-LB.</p>
        <p>CAN</p>
        <p>SIMILAC</p>
        <p>MILK</p>
        <p>EVERY DAY LOW PRJC SAVE &amp;lt;c 13-OZ.</p>
        <p>CAN</p>
        <p>-PLASTIC WRAP-</p>
        <p>SARAN WRAP</p>
        <p>FOODLAND</p>
        <p>MARGARINE</p>
        <p>s^OO</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>1-Lb.</p>
        <p>Pkg.</p>
        <p>BOUNTY</p>
        <p>Towels</p>
        <p>Whitt or Asiortod Jumbo Roll</p>
        <p>BEECHNUT STRAINED</p>
        <p>Baby Food</p>
        <p>ALL FLAVORS</p>
        <p>4-Oz.</p>
        <p>Jar</p>
        <p>VISIT OUR:</p>
        <p>DELICATESSEN</p>
        <p>SHOP-EZE WEST END SHOPPING CENTER OPEN DAILY EXCEPT SUNDAY</p>
        <p>Take-Ont Orders Daily</p>
        <p>100' Roll</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>Sausage Biscuits Friday-Whole Chicken Saturday-Hot Dogs</p>
        <p>2 For 49'</p>
        <p>n.99</p>
        <p>4 Frn.00</p>
        <p>Two Convenient Foodland Locofioitt Now Serving You In The Greenville Area</p>
        <p>SHOP-EZE</p>
        <p>WEST END SHOPPING CENTER</p>
        <p>. MANAGER: JAMES WILLIAMS</p>
        <p>Store Hogrs:</p>
        <p>Mon. Thru Sot.</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. To 9:00 P.M. Opon Sunday</p>
        <p>1:00 P.M. To 6:00 P.M.</p>
        <p>!-</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0027" />
        <p>ThmNDLYSnm with mPRICES</p>
        <p>USDA Inspected Carolina Pride</p>
        <p>FRYERSQUANTITY RIGHTS RESERVED - NONE SOLD TO DEALERS</p>
        <p>Swift Premium Heavy Western Steer</p>
        <p>HEN</p>
        <p>Turkeys</p>
        <p>10-Lbs. And Up</p>
        <p>WHITE</p>
        <p>Pota toe</p>
        <p>The Daily Reflector, GreenviUe, N.CWednesday. Febmary 18,1*7827</p>
        <p>Here's How They Voted</p>
        <p>CHUCK</p>
        <p>ROAST</p>
        <p>CENTER CUT</p>
        <p>LB.</p>
        <p>FROSTY MORN</p>
        <p>Franks</p>
        <p>10-Lb. Bag</p>
        <p>DEL MONTE</p>
        <p>/</p>
        <p>Pear Halves</p>
        <p>303</p>
        <p>Can</p>
        <p>TOMATOES I 25^</p>
        <p>SNAPPY, FRESH</p>
        <p>CARROTS io</p>
        <p>GRAPEFRUIT Bag 69*</p>
        <p>BUNKER HILL</p>
        <p>Beef Chunks</p>
        <p>89*</p>
        <p>300 Can</p>
        <p>SUPERFINE</p>
        <p>SOUTHERN BISCUIT</p>
        <p>FLOUR</p>
        <p>Lima Grands</p>
        <p>FOODLANO WHITE</p>
        <p>BREAD ^</p>
        <p>$goo</p>
        <p>3</p>
        <p>m-LB.</p>
        <p>LONG</p>
        <p>LOAVES</p>
        <p>MARTINDALE</p>
        <p>YAMS</p>
        <p>49*</p>
        <p>T/2 Can</p>
        <p>Tirt EVERY DAY LOW PRICES save i2c</p>
        <p>S|65</p>
        <p>MILK</p>
        <p>GALLON</p>
        <p>RED GLO</p>
        <p>TOMATOES $^00</p>
        <p>4</p>
        <p>y!n&amp;lt;*i&amp;gt; Hln EVERY DAY LOW PRICES SAV^</p>
        <p>^CakeMixB^SS^</p>
        <p>EVERY DAY LOW PRICES^'^J ^</p>
        <p>49</p>
        <p>Clorox</p>
        <p>Half</p>
        <p>Gallon</p>
        <p>FOODLAND</p>
        <p>TRASH CAN LINERS</p>
        <p>MUELLER'S THIN</p>
        <p>SPAGHETTI</p>
        <p>JOO</p>
        <p>4 8 Oz.</p>
        <p>Pkgs.</p>
        <p>AIR FRESHENER</p>
        <p>GLADE</p>
        <p>PLASTIC WRAP</p>
        <p>HANDI-WRAP</p>
        <p>89</p>
        <p>300'</p>
        <p>ROLL</p>
        <p>LIQUID BLEACH</p>
        <p>Clorox</p>
        <p>5* OFF</p>
        <p>Gallon Jug</p>
        <p>Store Hours:</p>
        <p>Mon. Thru Thurs.</p>
        <p>8:00 A.M. To 7:00 P.M. Frl.-Sot. 8:00 A.M. To 8:30 P.M. Closed Sunday</p>
        <p>SPAIN'S</p>
        <p>1414 CHARLES ST.</p>
        <p>OWNER! ALTON SPAIN</p>
        <p>Two Convenient Foodkind Locations Now Serving You In The Greenville Area</p>
        <p>By</p>
        <p>ROLL CALL REPORT WASHINGTON-Heres how area House members were recorded on major roll call votes Feb. 5 through Feb. 11. There were no Senate votes during that period.</p>
        <p>House</p>
        <p>NATURAL GAS-Adopted, 205-201, an amendment deregulating prices for natural gas sold by small producers, but expanding existing federal controls over prices charged by the approximately 30 major producers who account for an estimated 75 per cent of the nation's gas sales.</p>
        <p>The amendment was added to HR 9464, an emergency natural gas supply bill, in place of another amendment that was designed to substantially repeal federal gas price controls. HR 9464 was sent to conference with' the Senate.  ^</p>
        <p>The amendment would free producers with sales of less than 100 billion cubic feet of gas annually from price controls on gas dedicated for sale through interstate pipelines after Jan. l, 1976. For major producers, it continues Federal Power Commission controls on interstate sales and extends that regulation to intrastate sales.</p>
        <p>Rep. Neal Smith (D-lowa), the sponsor, said his amendment would "treat the very big companies more or less like public utilities." He added that the FPC could concentrate its regulatory work on the large producers in order to assure them a fair profit.</p>
        <p>One opponent, Rep. Jake Pickle (D-Tex.), charged that the amendment would be intolerable because it would cause "more uncertainty in the industry, more controls given to the FPC, and control of intrastate gas to the FPC."</p>
        <p>Reps. Stephen Neal (D-5) and Charles Rose (D-7) voted yea. Reps. Walter Jones (D-1), L.H. Fountain (D-2), David Henderson (D-3), Ike Andrews (D-4), Richardson Preyer (D-6), W.G. Hefner (D-8), James Martin (R-9), James Broyhill (R-10) and Roy Taylor (D-11) voted nay.</p>
        <p>RECESSPassed, 327 for and 80 against, a resolution recessing the House from Feb. U to 16 and the Senate from Feb.</p>
        <p>6 to 16 in observance of Lincolns Birthday. The measure (S Con Res 92) was passed without debate, following routine Senate apix'oval by voice vote. Each chamber has scheduled five additional recesses before the planned adjournment of the 94th Congress some time before the November elections.</p>
        <p>Jones, Fountain, Henderson, Andrews, Preyer, Rose, Hefner, Martin, Broyhill and Taylor voted yea.</p>
        <p>Neal voted nay.</p>
        <p>SCHOOL MONEY-Rejected, 134 for and 267 against, an amendment to cut *97.3 million from the fiscal 1976 appropriation for impacted school aid. It was proposed to HR 11665, a budget recission bill later passed and sent to the Senate. Defeat of the amendment signalled House approval of a $680 million impacted aid</p>
        <p>expenditure for the 1976-77 school year.</p>
        <p>This type of federal aid defrays the added costs a school district incurs in educating pupils who are enrolled because a federal activity (usually a military base) placed them in the district. It is a politically-sacred program that sends money into at least 90 per cent of the 435 congressional districts.</p>
        <p>Rep. Robert Michel (R-Ill.), sponsor of the amendment, said a main advantage of the cut would be to prevent the beginning of a new variation of impacted aid, that which reimburses schools which educate students living in federally-assisted public housing. Such aid is due to begin in the coming school year.</p>
        <p>Opponents of the budget cut argued that, due to legal technicalities, eliminating the public housing funding would require cutting the impacted aid earmarked for the costs of educating military children. Some opponents defended the need for the new public housing funding.</p>
        <p>Fountain, Andrews, Martin and Broyhill voted yea.</p>
        <p>Jones, Henderson, Neal, Preyer, Rose, Hefner and Taylor voted nay."</p>
        <p>School Song Is Nonsexist</p>
        <p>UNIVERSITY PARK, Pa (AP)  Pennsylvania State University has a new, "nonsex-ist version of its 75-year-old Alma Mater.</p>
        <p>Recognizing that there are thousands of faithful students and alumnae who never "stood at boyhoods gate and at no time were molded into men, the university has revised the song.</p>
        <p>The boyhoods gate men tioned in the song  When we stood at boyhoods gate, shapeless in the hands of fate  has been forever locked, replaced by the more equitable "childhoods gate.</p>
        <p>And no longer will sons  and daughters  of Alma Ma ter proclaim in song: "Thou didst mold us, dear old State, into men, into men.</p>
        <p>The words have been changed to read: Thou didst mold us, dear old State, dear old State, dear old State.</p>
        <p>The changes were approved by Dr. John W Oswald, president of the university, with agreement from the Alumni Council and Executive Board of the Penn State Alumni Association.</p>
        <p>I-I)AV SEASON RUSK, Tex. (UPl) - The Wilcox Syrup Mill, an independ ent family operation, begins production every year aboul mid-November and closes down again 10 days later.</p>
        <p>During that time they collect enough maple and sweet gum from their trees to sustain their business for the resi of the year.</p>
        <p>When Are Services You Need</p>
        <p>No Becret At All?</p>
        <p>When people read about it in the Classified Section of</p>
        <p>THE DAILY REFLECTOR</p>
        <p>"Pitt County's Home Newspaper"</p>
        <p>looking for a housekeeper? Baby sitter? Someone to repair your lawn mower? Rely on our clossifiecls to service your needsi</p>
        <p>Phone</p>
        <pb facs="00092987_0028" />
        <p>T-BONE OR SIRLOIN</p>
        <p>EDtEMONT</p>
        <p>Imilerized</p>
        <p>Hot Or Mild</p>
        <p>iWALTNEY SAUSAGE 99!</p>
        <p>Bagged in singles</p>
        <p>YELLOW ONLY</p>
        <p>Half or Whole</p>
        <p>% PORK</p>
        <p>Sliced 7 to 9</p>
        <p>Ckops</p>
        <p>1:9</p>
        <p>Overtons</p>
        <p>Finest</p>
        <p>We reserve tlie rj{lit to</p>
        <p>lisit qiaetities!</p>
        <p>PRICES EFFECTIVE WEDMESDAY THRU SI|Ty|}My</p>
        <p>^GWAlffisY^</p>
        <p>BACON</p>
        <p>QT. JAR</p>
        <p>10 IB. FHEZER SPECULS:</p>
        <p>10 LB. PORK CHOPS3! T... o. 12.50 10 LB. GROUND BEEF PAniES o</p>
        <p>Box of 50 Made from Overton's Finest Ground Beef O  # </p>
        <p>10 LB. CHITTERLINGS  M.95</p>
        <p>10 LB. SMOKED SAUSAGE  ^8.90</p>
        <p>3 Lb. Pkg. Or More</p>
        <p>Per. Lk.</p>
        <p>12 Oz. Pkg.</p>
        <p>MORRELL WEINERS</p>
        <p>2 Roll Pkg.</p>
        <p>r OR SCOTT</p>
        <p>PAPER TOWELS</p>
        <p>Ciait Roll</p>
        <p>WESTERN</p>
        <p>Lettuce</p>
        <p>Heads</p>
        <p>Pink Grapefruit</p>
        <p>4 Roll Package</p>
        <p>or Apple Jelly</p>
        <p>18 oz</p>
        <p>MR</p>
        <p>FAB</p>
        <p>Detergent</p>
        <p>Giant Size</p>
        <p>CARROTS*, CABBAGE Hi</p>
        <p>42 Oz. Can</p>
        <p>, SHORTBNIHO</p>
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